Licensing and Regulations




Aug. 11.] THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE. 1153

  1. The company shall have no right to or control of the road through the reclamation, which is coloured in red on plan marked M.D. 1719, and deposited as aforesaid, which road the public shall have free and full liberty to use at all times as a highway without charge.

  2. For the purposes of this Order in Council the foreshore shall be deemed to extend to the line marked “Old H.W.M.,” on the plan marked M.D. 1719 so deposited as aforesaid.

  3. The rights, powers, and privileges conferred by or under this Order in Council shall continue in force for fourteen years from the 1st January, 1892, unless in the meantime such rights, powers, and privileges shall be altered, modified, or revoked by competent authority; and the company shall not in any manner assign, charge, or part with any such right, power, or privilege without the previous written consent of the Minister first obtained.

  4. The said rights, powers, and privileges may be at any time resumed by the Governor, without payment of any compensation whatever, on giving to the company three calendar months’ previous notice in writing. Any such notice shall be sufficient if given by the Minister, and delivered at or posted to the last known registered office of the company in New Zealand.

  5. The company shall be liable for any injury which the said reclamation may cause any vessel or boat to sustain through any default or neglect on its part.

  6. In case the company shall at any time during the continuance of the license hereby granted—
    (1.) Commit or suffer a breach of the conditions hereinbefore set forth, or any of them;
    (2.) Cease to use or occupy the said reclamation for a period of three calendar months;
    (3.) Do, commit, or suffer any act which would entitle any creditor or other person to take any proceedings to have the company wound up in accordance with any law for the time being in force relating to registered companies, or suffer or obtain an order of some Court of competent jurisdiction, or procure or allow to be passed a special or extraordinary resolution for the winding-up of the said company, or suffer a distress or execution to be respectively levied or sued out upon or against the property of the company in New Zealand; or
    (4.) Fail to pay the sums specified in clause 2 of these conditions;
    then and in either of the said cases this Order in Council, and every license, right, power, or privilege thereby conferred, may be revoked and determined by the Governor in Council without any notice to the company or other proceeding whatsoever; and publication in the New Zealand Gazette of an Order in Council containing such revocation shall be sufficient notice to the company, and to all persons concerned or interested, that this Order in Council, and the license, rights, and privileges thereby granted and conferred, have been revoked and determined.

  7. In these conditions the term “Minister” means the Minister having charge of the Marine Department, as defined by “The Shipping and Seamen’s Act, 1877,” and includes any officer, person, or authority acting by or under the direction of such Minister.

ALEX. WILLIS,
Clerk of the Executive Council.


Validating License granted to M. McMahon.


GLASGOW, Governor.

ORDER IN COUNCIL.

At the Government House, at Wellington, this ninth day of August, 1892.

Present:

His Excellency the Governor in Council.

WHEREAS by the two hundred and twenty-seventh section of “The Licensing Act, 1881” (hereinafter termed “the said Act”), it is enacted that, if, through any accidental or unavoidable impediment, misfeasance, or omission, anything required by the said Act to be done is omitted to be done, or is not done within the time fixed, the Governor in Council may take all such measures as may be necessary for removing such impediment or rectifying such misfeasance or omission, and may validate anything which may have been irregularly done in matter of form, so that the intent and purpose of the said Act may have effect: And whereas, at the quarterly meeting of the Licensing Committee for the District of Karamea, held in June last, Michael McMahon applied for a renewal of a license for the Sons of Freedom Hotel, and the application was granted by the said Committee, and a certificate was thereupon issued for such renewal: And whereas the said Michael McMahon, through an accidental omission, did not pay the necessary fee within the required time, but did afterwards pay the said fee, and thereupon the Treasurer of the Buller County Council granted such license to the said Michael McMahon:

Now, therefore, His Excellency the Governor of the Colony of New Zealand, in pursuance and exercise of the powers conferred by the said Act, and of all other powers enabling him in this behalf, and acting with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said colony, doth hereby validate the said recited certificate and the grant of the said license to the said Michael McMahon as aforesaid.

ALEX. WILLIS,
Clerk of the Executive Council.


Validating License granted to Robert Barton.


GLASGOW, Governor.

ORDER IN COUNCIL.

At the Government House, at Wellington, this ninth day of August, 1892.

Present:

His Excellency the Governor in Council.

WHEREAS by the two hundred and twenty-seventh section of “The Licensing Act, 1881” (hereinafter termed “the said Act”), it is enacted that, if, through any accidental or unavoidable impediment, misfeasance, or omission, anything required by the said Act to be done is omitted to be done, or is not done within the time fixed, the Governor in Council may take all such measures as may be necessary for removing such impediment or rectifying such misfeasance or omission, and may validate anything which may have been irregularly done in matter of form, so that the intent and purpose of the said Act may have effect: And whereas, at the quarterly meeting of the Licensing Committee for the District of Greytown, held in June last, Robert Barton applied for a renewal of a license for the Lake Ferry Accommodation-house, and the application was granted by the said Committee, and a certificate was thereupon issued for such renewal: And whereas the said Robert Barton, through an accidental omission, did not pay the necessary fee within the required time, but did afterwards pay the said fee, and thereupon the Treasurer of the Wairarapa South County Council granted such license to the said Robert Barton:

Now, therefore, His Excellency the Governor of the Colony of New Zealand, in pursuance and exercise of the powers conferred by the said Act, and of all other powers enabling him in this behalf, and acting with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said colony, doth hereby validate the said recited certificate and the grant of the said license to the said Robert Barton as aforesaid.

ALEX. WILLIS,
Clerk of the Executive Council.


Regulations for the Transmission of Ordinary Telegrams.


GLASGOW, Governor.

ORDER IN COUNCIL.

At the Government House, at Wellington, this ninth day of August, 1892.

Present:

His Excellency the Governor in Council.

IN exercise and pursuance of the powers and authorities conferred by “The Electric Lines Act, 1884,” His Excellency the Right Honourable David, Earl of Glasgow, the Governor of the Colony of New Zealand, by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said colony; doth hereby revoke the charges for ordinary telegrams, and the charges for the address and signature of telegrams, made and specified in the Schedule to an Order in Council dated the eighteenth day of January, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-two, published in the New Zealand Gazette of the twenty-eighth day of January, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-two, and in lieu thereof doth hereby make the regulations contained in the Schedule hereto; and doth hereby order and declare that such regulations shall come into force on and after the fifteenth day of August, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-two.


SCHEDULE.

REGULATIONS.

Ordinary Telegrams.

  1. EVERY telegram received from within New Zealand for transmission and delivery therein, not being a press telegram, or a telegram to be transmitted free on Government service, or a delayed telegram, shall be called an ordinary telegram.

  2. The charges for the transmission of any ordinary telegram shall be—

For the first eighteen words or less, including address and signature .. .. .. 1 0
For each additional word .. .. .. 0 1

Press Telegrams (Address and Signature).

  1. No charge shall be made for address and signature on any press telegram up to six words; for every word over six, tariff rates shall be charged.

ALEX. WILLIS,
Clerk of the Executive Council.



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1892, No 64





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🗺️ Licensing Kauri Timber Company for Foreshore Use (continued from previous page)

🗺️ Lands, Settlement & Survey
9 August 1892
Licensing, Kauri Timber Company, Hokianga Harbour, Foreshore, Saw-mills, Conditions, Rights, Privileges
  • ALEX. WILLIS, Clerk of the Executive Council

⚖️ Validation of License for Michael McMahon

⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement
9 August 1892
Licensing, Validation, Sons of Freedom Hotel, Karamea, Michael McMahon
  • Michael McMahon, License validated

  • GLASGOW, Governor
  • ALEX. WILLIS, Clerk of the Executive Council

⚖️ Validation of License for Robert Barton

⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement
9 August 1892
Licensing, Validation, Lake Ferry Accommodation-house, Greytown, Robert Barton
  • Robert Barton, License validated

  • GLASGOW, Governor
  • ALEX. WILLIS, Clerk of the Executive Council

🚂 Regulations for Transmission of Ordinary Telegrams

🚂 Transport & Communications
9 August 1892
Telegrams, Charges, Transmission, Regulations, Electric Lines Act
  • GLASGOW, Governor
  • ALEX. WILLIS, Clerk of the Executive Council