Railway Regulations & Land Lease Determination




1672
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
[No. 78

(10.) The Returning Officer for the election shall be the Chief Clerk to the General Manager, Wellington, or other person for the time being performing the duties of such Chief Clerk. The General Manager shall appoint two scrutineers for each election.

(11.) As soon as possible after the date for receiving nominations is past the Returning Officer shall cause ballot-papers, in the form or to the effect following, to be printed and supplied to every member :—

ELECTION of a Member of First Division [or Second Division] for Member of Appeal Board, North [or Middle] Island, under “The Government Railways Department Classification Act, 1896.”

Candidates for election :—
JONES, JOHN.
ROBINSON, GEORGE.
SMITH, WILLIAM.

Directions.—The voter can only vote for one candidate. The voter is to strike out with pen and ink or pencil the name of every candidate for whom he does not intend to vote. The voter must take care not to leave uncancelled the names of more than one candidate, or this paper will be invalid. The ballot-paper is to be folded up so that the contents cannot be seen, and then forthwith transmitted to the Returning Officer on or before [Here insert date].

(12.) The voter’s name must not be written on the voting-paper.

(13.) The ballot-paper shall contain a list of all the persons validly nominated in the division and for the Island to which the voter to whom it is sent belongs (and of no other persons), arranged alphabetically in the order of their surnames. Each paper shall have a number corresponding with that on the list. The number shall be written in the left-hand bottom corner of the paper by the Returning Officer, and the corner folded and gummed down before being sent out.

(14.) The ballot-paper will be sent to each member whose name appears on the list, and each member shall, immediately on receiving the ballot-paper, sign the receipt-form which will accompany it, and forward the receipt to the address marked upon it.

(15.) All ballot-papers shall be transmitted by post or otherwise to the Returning Officer at Wellington, in envelopes which will be provided for the purpose, and must reach him not later than the ordinary course of post computed from the day after the polling-day.

(16.) No member shall in any case be compelled to record his vote, and no member shall canvass for votes or attempt in any way to influence voters.

(17.) Immediately after the last day fixed for the receipt at Wellington of ballot-papers, the Returning Officer shall, in the presence of the scrutineers, proceed to ascertain the total number of votes recorded for each candidate; and the Returning Officer shall cause the result to be published in an official circular, and shall declare the candidates obtaining the majority of votes in the respective divisions in the respective Islands duly elected. The voting-papers shall, after being counted, be enclosed in a sealed packet, and be retained by the Returning Officer. They shall not be opened unless a scrutiny be demanded, when such scrutiny shall be conducted by the Returning Officer and the two scrutineers. The papers will remain in the Returning Officer’s custody for two months and will then be destroyed. If a scrutiny be demanded, application therefor must be made in writing to the Returning Officer by not less than seven voters within fourteen days after the publication of the results aforesaid.

(18.) Whenever there is an equality of votes at the election, and the addition of one vote will entitle any of the candidates to be elected, the Returning Officer shall himself record such additional vote.

(19.) In the event of any dispute or question arising as to the meaning of the regulations, or any portion thereof, for the conduct of elections of Appeal Boards, the same shall be referred to the Minister for determination, and his decision shall be final and conclusive.

(20.) Appeals shall be heard at such convenient times and places as the Board may determine.

(21.) Members of the Board shall be paid such reasonable travelling-expenses, and be accorded such facilities for attending the sittings of the Board, as the Minister may determine.

(22.) Where notice of appeal has been lodged, and a person, whether a party to such appeal or not, shall—
Be resident more than twenty miles from the place of the sittings of the Board where the hearing of the appeal is appointed to be held, or
Be about to go and remain beyond such distance until after the hearing—
the party desiring to use the evidence of himself or of such person at the hearing may give notice of such desire to the Minister. Such notice shall specify the name of every person intended to be examined.

(23.) Immediately upon receiving such notice the Minister may appoint a Stipendiary Magistrate to take such evidence, or may fix a time and place for such examination, and shall transmit a copy of such notice of appointment, with a memorandum of the time and place appointed for the taking of such examination, to the Stipendiary Magistrate.

(24.) Notice of the intention to hold such examination, and of the time and place of holding the same, shall forthwith be given to the party against whom such evidence is intended to be used.

(25.) Notices to witnesses to attend such examination, and to produce books, papers, documents, and writings, may issue, and the procedure of such examination shall be the same in all respects as if such examination were the hearing of an appeal, except as may be otherwise prescribed by regulations from time to time.

(26.) All evidence given at such examination shall be reduced to writing, and signed by the Magistrate before whom it is taken, and by the persons giving such evidence respectively, and such writing shall be forwarded by the Magistrate to the Chairman of the Appeal Board, together with all books, documents, papers, writings, and things admitted in evidence, or copies thereof respectively.

(27.) The costs of such examination, together with the allowances for witnesses, shall be fixed by the Magistrate on the same scale as is allowed by the Appeal Board.

(28.) Such costs and allowances, as fixed by the Magistrate, will be dealt with by the Board as if the same had been incurred at the hearing.

(29.) Every person giving evidence at such examination shall be deemed to have given his evidence in such appeal; and in any appeal it shall be sufficient to allege that such examination was held under the provisions of the said Act; and the evidence of any person given at such examination, and having been signed by the Magistrate, shall be judicially noticed by the Appeal Board without any further proof.

General.

  1. Nothing in these regulations contained shall affect the probationary conditions subject to which members or persons were admitted into the service of the department within three years prior to the date of these regulations.

  2. All departmental regulations and instructions in force at the coming into operation of these regulations are hereby revoked or modified in so far as they are in conflict with these regulations.

ALEX. WILLIS,
Clerk of the Executive Council.

Determining Lease over Lands acquired from Natives and required for Purposes of Settlement.

RANFURLY, Governor.

ORDER IN COUNCIL.

At the Government House, at Wellington, this thirty-first day of August, 1900.

Present:

His Excellency the Governor in Council.

WHEREAS by the seventieth section of “The Native Land Laws Amendment Act, 1895,” it is, inter alia, enacted that when any land heretofore acquired, or hereafter to be acquired, by the Crown from Natives is subject to any valid and duly registered lease, and is required for purposes of settlement, the Minister of Lands may require the Board of Land Purchase Commissioners to report thereon; and upon the recommendation of the Board the Governor may, by Order in Council, absolutely determine such lease either as to the whole or any part of the land:

And whereas the lands described in the Schedule hereto have heretofore been acquired by the Crown from the Native owner thereof, and are (with other lands adjoining) subject to a valid and duly registered lease to Annie Moore, of Kai-iwi, widow: And whereas the said lands described in the Schedule hereto are required for purposes of settlement: And whereas the Minister of Lands has required the Board of Land Purchase Commissioners to report thereon, and the said Board has recommended that the lease aforesaid should be absolutely determined in respect of the lands described in the said Schedule hereto:

Now, therefore, I, Uchter John Mark, Earl of Ranfurly, the Governor of the Colony of New Zealand, in exercise and pursuance of the powers and authorities conferred by the seventieth section of the Native Land Laws Amendment Act, and by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said colony, do hereby absolutely determine the said lease in respect of and as far only as affects the lands described in the Schedule hereto.

SCHEDULE.

All those parcels of land, situated in the Nukumaru Survey District, known as Sections Nos. 4b and 1 of the Kai-iwi No. 6f Block, containing respectively 407 acres 1 rood, and 92 acres 3 roods, being the whole of the lands comprised in Vol. xcv., folio 162, of the Land Transfer Register of the Wellington District.

ALEX. WILLIS,
Clerk of the Executive Council.



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1900, No 78





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🚂 Railway Department Regulations under Classification Act 1896 (continued from previous page)

🚂 Transport & Communications
31 August 1900
Government Railways, Classification Act, Elections, Ballot Papers, Scrutineers, Appeal Board, Voting Procedures, Ministerial Determination
  • John Jones, Candidate for Appeal Board election
  • George Robinson, Candidate for Appeal Board election
  • William Smith, Candidate for Appeal Board election

  • Alex. Willis, Clerk of the Executive Council

🗺️ Determination of Lease over Native Lands for Settlement Purposes

🗺️ Lands, Settlement & Survey
31 August 1900
Native Land Laws, Lease Determination, Crown Land, Settlement, Nukumaru Survey District, Kai-iwi Block, Annie Moore
  • Annie Moore (Widow), Lessee of Crown land subject to determination

  • Uchter John Mark, Earl of Ranfurly, Governor
  • Alex. Willis, Clerk of the Executive Council