Subchapter A. General Provisions
§ 4101. Short title.
§ 4102. Definitions.Subchapter B. Weights and Measures Generally
§ 4105. Systems of weights and measures.
§ 4106. State standards of weight and measure.
§ 4107. Office and working standards and equipment.
§ 4108. Director and inspectors of weights and measures.
§ 4109. General powers and duties of department.
§ 4110. Specific powers and duties of department; regulations.
§ 4111. Testing and inspections of standards.
§ 4112. General testing and inspections.
§ 4113. Registration of sellers, installers and repairers of weighing and measuring devices.
§ 4114. Registration and report of inspection and testing of weighing and measuring devices used for commercial purposes.
§ 4115. Training program.
§ 4116. Investigations.
§ 4117. Inspection of packages.
§ 4118. Stop-use, stop-removal and removal orders.
§ 4119. Disposition of correct and incorrect apparatus.
§ 4120. Police powers; right of entry and stoppage.
§ 4121. Powers and duties of director and inspector.
§ 4122. City and county sealers and deputy sealers of weights and measures; appointment, powers and duties, removal from office and reports.
§ 4123. City and county standards and equipment.
§ 4124. Concurrent jurisdiction.
§ 4125. Division of responsibilities.
§ 4126. Duty of owners of incorrect apparatus.
§ 4127. Method of sale of commodities.
§ 4128. Packages; declarations of quantity and origin; variations; exemptions.
§ 4129. Declarations of unit price on random packages.
§ 4130. Misleading packages.
§ 4131. Advertising packages for sale.
§ 4132. Sale by net weight.
§ 4133. Misrepresentation of price.
§ 4134. Meat, poultry and seafood.
§ 4135. Butter, oleomargarine and margarine.
§ 4136. Fluid dairy products.
§ 4137. Flour, corn meal and hominy grits.
§ 4138. Potatoes.
§ 4139. Construction of contracts.
§ 4140. Hindering or obstructing officer; penalties.
§ 4141. Impersonation of officer; penalties.
§ 4142. Prohibited acts.
§ 4143. Presumptive evidence.Subchapter C. Public Weighmasters
§ 4150. Enforcement and regulations.
§ 4151. Licenses.
§ 4152. Weighmasters' certificates.
§ 4153. Preparation of weighmaster's certificate.
§ 4154. Use of approved weighing device required.
§ 4155. Scale requirement.
§ 4156. Disposition of copies of certificates.
§ 4157. License required; definition.
§ 4158. Suspension or revocation of licenses.
§ 4159. Prohibited acts.
§ 4160. Sales by weight.
§ 4161. Separation required.
§ 4162. Substitution of another purchaser in weighmaster's certificate.
§ 4163. Authorization to inspect and direct to nearest scales.
§ 4164. Weighmaster's certificate required.
§ 4165. Small lots.
§ 4166. Exception for boatloads or railroad carloads.
§ 4167. Rules and regulations.
§ 4168. Sales by employer-producer to employees.
§ 4169. Existing licenses.Subchapter D. Device Type Approval
§ 4170. Approval of types of weights and measures and weighing and measuring devices.
§ 4171. Submission of types for approval.
§ 4172. Certificates of approval; notice of disapproval; appeals.
§ 4173. Manufacture, sale or use of unapproved weights, measures and devices.
§ 4174. Marking of approved weights and measures.
§ 4175. Marking of weights and measures "not legal for trade."
§ 4176. Rules and regulations.
§ 4177. Sealing of approved weights and measures.
§ 4178. Fees.
§ 4179. Enforcement.Subchapter E. Domestic Fuel Oil
§ 4180. Meter required.
§ 4181. Small deliveries.
§ 4182. Exceptions.
§ 4183. Enforcement of chapter, rules and regulations.Subchapter F. Miscellaneous Provisions
§ 4190. Rules and regulations.
§ 4191. Offenses and penalties.
§ 4192. Temporary or permanent injunctions.
§ 4193. Disposition of funds.
§ 4194. Validity of prosecutions.
The complete Pennsylvania Statutes are not yet available on the web. However, selected portions have been made available and can be accessed by CLICKING HERE. These statutes, though available instantaneously over the web, may not be the current law. Court decisions overturning them, later statutes amending them, and a host of other factors come into play when interpreting them. They are provided here as a resource. They should provide some information about the state of the law. However, a competent lawyer, who from other sources will research the law to insure what is current, should always be employed in matters of importance.