β¨ Orders in Council and Appointments
84
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
[No. 5
Removal of Drift-wood, &c., prohibited at Collingwood.
JAMES PRENDERGAST,
Administrator of the Government.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government House, at Wellington, this sixteenth day of
January, 1883.
Present:
HIS EXCELLENCY THE ADMINISTRATOR OF THE GOVERNMENT
IN COUNCIL.
WHEREAS by the one hundred and third section of "The
Harbours Act, 1878," it is enacted that any Harbour
Board may from time to time make by-laws for regulating,
restricting, or prohibiting the taking away of any ballast, rock,
stone, slate, shingle, gravel, sand, earth, cinders, rubbish, or
other substance or thing from any tidal land or a tidal water,
or from the seashore below high-water mark, in any harbour
within its jurisdiction: And whereas by the twelfth section
of the said Act it is enacted that in harbours where there is
no Harbour Board the Governor in Council shall have all the
powers, functions, duties, and authorities by that Act conferred
upon Harbour Boards, and may exercise the same in accordance
with the said Act: And whereas there is no Harbour Board at
Collingwood, and it is expedient to prohibit the removal of
drift-wood, ballast, rock, stone, slate, shingle, gravel, sand, and
earth from the seashore and from tidal lands within the Harbour
of Collingwood :
Now, therefore, His Excellency the Administrator of the
Government of the Colony of New Zealand, by and with the
advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said colony,
and in pursuance and exercise of the powers and authorities
vested in him by the hereinbefore in part recited Act, doth
order that, on and after the first day of February, one thousand
eight hundred and eighty-three, the following by-law shall be
in force within the Port of Collingwood :--
BY-LAW.
No drift-wood, ballast, rock, stone, slate, shingle, gravel,
sand, or earth shall be taken away from any tidal land, or from
the seashore below high-water mark, without permission in
writing from the Harbourmaster at Collingwood.
FORSTER GORING,
Clerk of the Executive Council.
Additional Rules under "The Supreme Court Act, 1882."
JAMES PRENDERGAST,
Administrator of the Government.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government House, at Wellington, this eighteenth
day of January, 1883.
Present:
HIS EXCELLENCY THE ADMINISTRATOR OF THE GOVERNMENT
IN COUNCIL.
IN exercise and pursuance of the powers and authorities
enabling him in this behalf conferred by the thirty-first
section of "The Supreme Court Act, 1882," His Excellency Sir
James Prendergast, the Administrator of the Government of
the Colony of New Zealand, by and with the advice of the
Executive Council, and with the concurrence of his Honour
Mr. Justice Johnston, and his Honour Mr. Justice Richmond,
two Judges of the Supreme Court of New Zealand, doth make
the rules in the Schedule hereto as additional rules to the code
in the said section mentioned.
SCHEDULE.
- THE rules hereafter referred to are the rules contained in
the said code.
Bills of Exchange.
-
The plaintiff may sign final judgment as provided in
Rule 481 only in case the defendant shall not have obtained
leave to file a statement of defence, and shall not have filed
and served such statement within the time and at the place
appointed by the Registrar or Judge. -
Where the defendant resides at the time of the service of
any such writ as is provided for in Rule 480, within fifty miles
of the Supreme Court office at which, according to the rules,
the defendant would have to file his statement of defence in the
action if the writ were in the ordinary form, the period within
which application may be made under Rules 482 or 483 for
leave to defend the action shall be twelve days from the service
thereof, inclusive of the day of such service; and where the
defendant resides at the time of such service beyond the
distance of fifty miles from such office, the period within which
such applications may be made shall be eighteen days from
such service, inclusive of the day of such service. -
After judgment in an action commenced by such writ as is
provided for in Rule 480, the Court or a Judge may, under
Officer appointed to grant Licenses under Section 15 of
"The Licensing Act Amendment Act, 1882."
JAMES PRENDERGAST,
Administrator of the Government.
IN exercise and pursuance of the powers and authorities
vested in me in that behalf by "The Licensing Act
Amendment Act, 1882," I, James Prendergast, the Adminis-
trator of the Government of the Colony of New Zealand, do
hereby appoint Harry Kenrick, Esquire, Resident Magistrate
for the District of Hauraki, to exercise, in terms of section
fifteen of the said Act, a special authority in the granting of
publicans' licenses within the district the limits of which are
defined in the Schedule hereto.
SCHEDULE.
- THE rules hereafter referred to are the rules contained in
the said code.
Bills of Exchange.
-
The plaintiff may sign final judgment as provided in
Rule 481 only in case the defendant shall not have obtained
leave to file a statement of defence, and shall not have filed
and served such statement within the time and at the place
appointed by the Registrar or Judge. -
Where the defendant resides at the time of the service of
any such writ as is provided for in Rule 480, within fifty miles
of the Supreme Court office at which, according to the rules,
the defendant would have to file his statement of defence in the
action if the writ were in the ordinary form, the period within
which application may be made under Rules 482 or 483 for
leave to defend the action shall be twelve days from the service
thereof, inclusive of the day of such service; and where the
defendant resides at the time of such service beyond the
distance of fifty miles from such office, the period within which
such applications may be made shall be eighteen days from
such service, inclusive of the day of such service. -
After judgment in an action commenced by such writ as is
provided for in Rule 480, the Court or a Judge may, under
special circumstances, set aside the judgment, and, if necessary,
stay or set aside execution, and may give leave to appear to
the writ and to defend the action, if it shall appear to be
reasonable to the Court or Judge so to do, and on such terms
as to the Court or Judge may seem just.
- In the year one thousand eight hundred and eighty-three
the vacation shall commence on the sixth of February and
terminate on the twenty-second of March, both days inclusive,
instead of as provided by Rule 564; but defences may be
filed and served during the period commencing on the eleventh
of March, and terminating on the twenty-second of March,
both days inclusive, anything in the Rule 556 to the contrary
notwithstanding; and the said last-mentioned period shall be
reckoned in the computation of the times appointed or allowed
by the rules for filing and serving any statement of defence,
anything in Rule 557 to the contrary notwithstanding.
Witnesses' Expenses.
- The disbursements for witnesses' expenses actually paid to
be allowed under Table C in the said code contained shall be
according to the following table, and such table may be referred
to as Table E; and the said Table C shall be read as if the said
Table E were part of the said code :--
Allowances to Witnesses.
Professional men, when their evidence as experts is
required, per diem...
Β£ s. d.
1 1 0
to
2 2 0
Professional men, bankers, merchants, auctioneers, (0 15 0
land agents, and other gentlemen not specially to
mentioned, per diem ...
1 1 0
Masters of ships, officers of police of superior grade,
farmers, clerks, shopkeepers and storekeepers, per
diem ...
0 12 0
Shopmen, journeymen, mechanics, petty officers of
ships, and officers of police of inferior grade, per
diem ...
0 10 0
Labourers, seamen, and police constables, per diem ..
0 6 0
To an interpreter, if engaged for any time not exceed-
ing one hour ...
0 10 6
For every additional hour or fraction of an hour he
may be actually employed beyond that time
But not exceeding one day
0 5 0
2 2 0
Female witnesses at the rate of two-thirds the allowance
of male witnesses of corresponding rank.
For witnesses residing beyond three miles from the Court
there will be allowed their coach, railway, or steamboat fares.
By railway or steamer second-class fares will be allowed for
labourers, journeymen, and mechanics; and first-class fares for
other witnesses. Where there is no public conveyance there
will be allowed for such witnesses a mileage rate not exceeding
9d. per mile one way.
There will also be allowed 3s. in addition for each night such
witnesses are necessarily detained from their own houses, except
when travelling by sea.
FORSTER GORING,
Clerk of the Executive Council.
ALL that area in the Provincial District of Auckland com-
prised within the following boundaries: Commencing at a
point on the Waihou River near the mouth of the Mangaiti
Stream; bounded towards the North by lines forming the
northern boundary of the Aroha Block to the Waitawhata
River; thence by that river and by the confiscation boundary
in the direction of Ngakuriawhare; towards the East by a line
drawn due south to the north-west corner of Section No. 15,
Block IV., Katikati Survey District, by that section, again by
a line to and by Section No. 16, Block IV. aforesaid, by
Sections Nos. 65 and 53A, Block VIII., Katikati Survey District,
again by a line to and by Sections Nos. 63, 62, and 70 of Block
VIII. aforesaid; towards the South by a line, being the pro-
duction of the southern boundary of Block XII., Aroha Survey
District, to its intersection with Section No. 70, Block VIII.,
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β¨ LLM interpretation of page content
ποΈ Prohibition of Removal of Drift-wood at Collingwood Port
ποΈ Provincial & Local Government16 January 1883
Harbour Board, By-law, Collingwood, Drift-wood, Ballast, Seashore
- JAMES PRENDERGAST, Administrator of the Government
- FORSTER GORING, Clerk of the Executive Council
βοΈ Additional Rules for Supreme Court regarding Bills of Exchange and Witness Expenses
βοΈ Justice & Law Enforcement18 January 1883
Supreme Court Act 1882, Rules, Bills of Exchange, Court Vacation, Witness Expenses
- JAMES PRENDERGAST, Administrator of the Government
- Mr. Justice Johnston
- Mr. Justice Richmond
- FORSTER GORING, Clerk of the Executive Council
ποΈ Appointment of Resident Magistrate to Grant Publicans' Licenses in Hauraki
ποΈ Governance & Central Administration18 January 1883
Licensing Act Amendment Act 1882, Publicans' Licenses, Resident Magistrate, Hauraki District
- Harry Kenrick (Esquire), Appointed to grant publicans' licenses
- JAMES PRENDERGAST, Administrator of the Government
πΊοΈ Unfinished description of land boundaries in Auckland Provincial District
πΊοΈ Lands, Settlement & SurveyLand description, Boundaries, Auckland Provincial District, Waihou River
ποΈ Order in Council prohibiting the removal of drift-wood and other materials from tidal lands at Collingwood Harbour
ποΈ Infrastructure & Public Works16 January 1883
Harbours Act 1878, Collingwood, Tidal land, Drift-wood removal, By-law, Harbourmaster
- James Prendergast, Administrator of the Government
- Forster Goring, Clerk of the Executive Council
βοΈ Order in Council establishing additional rules for the Supreme Court regarding Bills of Exchange and Witnesses' Expenses
βοΈ Justice & Law Enforcement18 January 1883
Supreme Court Act 1882, Additional Rules, Bills of Exchange, Witnesses' Expenses, Court vacation, Allowances to Witnesses
- James Prendergast, Administrator of the Government
- Mr. Justice Johnston, Judge of the Supreme Court
- Mr. Justice Richmond, Judge of the Supreme Court
- Forster Goring, Clerk of the Executive Council
βοΈ Appointment of an officer to grant publicans' licenses in the Hauraki District
βοΈ Justice & Law EnforcementLicensing Act Amendment Act 1882, Publicans' licenses, Appointment, Resident Magistrate, Hauraki District
- Harry Kenrick (Esquire), Appointed to grant publicans' licenses
- James Prendergast, Administrator of the Government
πΊοΈ Defining the boundaries of an area in the Provincial District of Auckland
πΊοΈ Lands, Settlement & SurveyBoundaries, Auckland Provincial District, Waihou River, Aroha Block, Katikati Survey District, Land definition
NZ Gazette 1883, No 5