11 Miss. Code. R. 1-3.9 - Circumstances In Which Declaratory Opinions Will Not Be Issued
The Department on behalf of the Commission may, for good cause, refuse to issue a declaratory opinion. The circumstances in which declaratory opinions will not be issued include, but are not necessarily limited to:
A. lack of clarity
concerning the question presented or situations in which the facts presented in
the request are not sufficient to answer the question presented;
B. pending or anticipated litigation,
administrative action, or other adjudication or decision making which either
may answer the question presented by the request or otherwise make an answer
unnecessary;
C. requests that fail
to contain information required by these rules or in which the requestor failed
to follow the procedures set forth in these rules;
D. issues which have become moot, or are
abstract or hypothetical such that the requestor is not substantially affected
by the application of the statute or rule;
E. issues in which no present controversy
exists, meaning that the requestor is not faced with existing facts or those
certain to arise which raise a question concerning the application of the
statute or rule;
F. questions
concerning the legal validity of a statute or rule;
G. requests not based upon facts calculated
to aid in the planning of future conduct, but rather, adjudication of the
correctness of past conduct or efforts to establish the effect of that
conduct;
H. questions involving the
application of a criminal statute or sets of facts that may constitute a
crime;
I. questions the answer to
which would require disclosure of information which is privileged or otherwise
protected from disclosure by law;
J. questions that are known to be currently
the subject of an Attorney General's opinion request or which already have been
answered by an Attorney General's opinion;
K. questions on which a similar request is
pending before the Commission, or concerning which a proceeding is known to be
pending on the same subject matter before any agency, administrative or
judicial tribunal;
L. questions
where issuance of a declaratory opinion may adversely affect the interests of
the State, the Commission, or any of their officers or employees in any
litigation pending or which reasonably may be expected to arise;
M. questions that involve eligibility for a
license, permit, certificate, or other approval by the Commission or some other
agency, where there is a statutory or regulatory application process by which
eligibility for said license, permit, certificate, or other approval would be
determined; or
N. requests not
directed to the Executive Director of the Department.
Notes
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