LawWiki
HomeCodesSearchGlossaryAPIAbout
LawWiki

Plain English summaries of California law with zero-hallucination AI. Every summary is verified against official source text.

Product

  • Search
  • Codes
  • About

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Disclaimer

© 2026 LawWiki. All rights reserved.

HomeFinancial CodeDiv. 5Ch. 12Art. 9§ 16900 Enforcement Actions And Receivers

§ 16900 Enforcement Actions And Receivers

Financial Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 16900 Enforcement Actions And Receivers

This law lets the state commissioner go to court to stop rule‑breakers, force them to follow the rules, and collect fines, and it lets the court put a monitor or receiver in charge of the offender’s business.

Key Takeaways

  • •The commissioner can file a lawsuit to stop violations, force compliance, or collect penalties.
  • •The court can issue injunctions, restraining orders, or appoint a monitor, receiver, or similar officer to run the offender’s affairs.
  • •Those appointed officers can act like the company’s leaders and cannot be sued for doing their court‑ordered job.
  • •The commissioner can also ask for money to pay people hurt by the violation.
  • •Other people still have the right to bring their own lawsuits about the same problem.

Example

A factory is dumping toxic waste into a river, which is against state environmental rules.

The commissioner can sue the factory in superior court. The judge can order the factory to stop dumping, fine it, and appoint a monitor to run the waste‑disposal system until the factory follows the law.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 16900 Enforcement Actions And Receivers

(a) The commissioner may bring an action in the name of the people of this state in the superior court to enjoin any violation of, to enforce compliance with, or to collect any penalty or other liability imposed under this division or any regulation or order issued under this chapter. Upon a proper showing, a permanent or preliminary injunction, restraining order, or writ of mandate shall be granted, and a monitor, receiver, conservator, or other designated fiduciary or officer of the court may be granted as appropriate. (b) A receiver, monitor, conservator, or other designated fiduciary officer of the court appointed by the court pursuant to this section may, with the approval of the court, exercise all of the powers of the defendant’s officers, directors, partners, trustees, or persons who exercise similar powers and perform similar duties, including the filing of a petition for bankruptcy. No action at law or in equity may be maintained by any party against the commissioner, or a receiver, monitor, conservator, or other designated fiduciary or officer of the court by reason of their exercising these powers or performing these duties pursuant to the order of, or with the approval of, the court. (c) If the commissioner finds that it is in the public interest, the commissioner may include in a claim for restitution, disgorgement, or damages on behalf of the person injured by the act or practice constituting the subject matter of the action, and the court shall have jurisdiction to award ancillary relief. (d) The provisions of this section that authorize the commissioner to bring actions and seek relief are not intended to, and do not, affect any right that any other person may have to bring the same or similar actions or to seek the same or similar relief. (Added by Stats. 2000, Ch. 612, Sec. 4. Effective January 1, 2001.)

Last verified: January 11, 2026

Key Terms

restitutioncomplianceinjunctionregulationliabilitycommissiondamagesfiduciary

Related Statutes

  • § 509 Commissioner Enforcement Authority
  • § 17607 Commissioner Enforcement Injunctions
  • § 28168 Commissioner Enforcement Injunction
  • § 50324 Commissioner Enforcement Actions
  • § 566 Commissioner Enforcement Actions

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Financial Code. Section 16900.
View Official Source