✨ Government Orders and Regulations
JULY 10.]
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
2119
then and in any of the said cases this Order in Council, and every right, power, and privilege, may be revoked and determined by the Governor in Council without any notice to the licensees or other proceedings whatsoever; and publication in the New Zealand Gazette of an Order in Council containing such revocation shall be sufficient notice to the licensees, and to all persons concerned or interested, that this Order in Council, and the rights and privileges thereby conferred, have been revoked and determined; and upon such revocation the Minister may cause the said timber-booms to be removed, and may recover the costs incurred by any such removal from the licensees.
11. The construction of the timber-booms shall be deemed to be an acceptance by the licensees of the conditions of this Order in Council.
J. F. ANDREWS,
Clerk of the Executive Council
Prohibiting Net Fishing in a Portion of Lake Wakatipu.
LIVERPOOL, Governor.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government House, at Wellington, this seventh day of July, 1913.
Present:
HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR IN COUNCIL.
WHEREAS by section eighty-three of the Fisheries Act, 1908 (hereinafter called "the said Act"), it is enacted that the Governor may from time to time by Order in Council make regulations, to have force and effect throughout New Zealand, or only in such waters or places as are specified in such regulations, for, inter alia, imposing any conditions or restrictions upon the taking of fish:
And whereas it is desirable to prohibit the taking of fish by means of nets in that portion of Lake Wakatipu hereinafter described:
Now, therefore, His Excellency the Governor of the Dominion of New Zealand, in pursuance and exercise of the power and authority conferred upon him by the said Act, and of all other powers and authorities enabling him in that behalf, and acting by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said Dominion, doth hereby make the following regulations for the purpose hereinbefore mentioned.
REGULATIONS.
- No persons shall haul or use a net for the purpose of taking fish in Queenstown Bay, Lake Wakatipu, inside a straight line drawn from the outermost point of the Tourist Park to the outermost boundary of the Borough Immigration Barracks Reserve.
- Any person committing a breach of the above regulation is liable to a fine of not less than £1 or more than £20.
J. F. ANDREWS,
Clerk of the Executive Council
Regulations under the Crimes Amendment Act, 1910.
LIVERPOOL, Governor.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government House, at Wellington, this seventh day of July, 1913.
Present:
HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR IN COUNCIL.
IN pursuance and exercise of the power and authority conferred upon him by section twenty-nine of the Crimes Amendment Act, 1910, His Excellency the Governor of the Dominion of New Zealand, acting by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said Dominion, doth hereby make the following regulations for the purposes of the said Act, and doth declare that the regulations shall come into force on the first day of August, one thousand nine hundred and thirteen.
REGULATIONS.
PART I.—HABITUAL CRIMINALS AND OFFENDERS.
PRISON REGULATIONS TO APPLY. - The rules and regulations made under the provisions of the Prisons Act, 1908, and all general orders in regard to prisons, except where they are in conflict with these or any special regulations which may be hereafter brought into operation, shall apply to prisoners declared to be habitual criminals as regards their conduct, the requirements of discipline and health, their working-hours, diets, educational, religious, and other instruction, and other details.
VISITING JUSTICES. - The Visiting Justices shall have the same power to hear and determine complaints respecting habitual criminals as are provided for under the Prisons Act, 1908, and the regulations thereunder in regard to other prisoners, and shall have the same powers as regards the infliction of punishments.
- In addition to or in substitution for any punishment they may inflict under the Prisons Act, 1908, Visiting Justices are empowered to punish any such prisoner for any breach of discipline by imposing a fine not exceeding 10s., to be deducted from any sum standing to the credit of such prisoner in the accounts kept in the prison.
- Visiting Justices shall visit the prisons frequently, and shall carefully investigate any complaints made to them, and, when necessary, furnish a report to the Minister of Justice (hereinafter referred to as the Minister).
MEDICAL OFFICER. - The Medical Officer shall forward quarterly reports to the Permanent Head of the Department of Justice respecting the condition of health, &c., of each prisoner.
CLASSIFICATION. - Prisoners declared to be habitual criminals shall, on entering upon their habitual sentences, be dealt with under a progressive stage system by which they will practically determine their own treatment as regards the enjoyment of privileges or the reverse. They will be classified into three grades—the Lower, the Intermediate, and the Higher. Prisoners in the Intermediate and Higher
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Online Sources for this page:
VUW Te Waharoa —
NZ Gazette 1913, No 55
NZLII —
NZ Gazette 1913, No 55
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🌾
Licensing T. Hartley and Son to use and occupy a Part of the Foreshore and Land below Low-water Mark in the Mangamuka River, Hokianga Harbour, as a Site for Timber-booms
(continued from previous page)
🌾 Primary Industries & Resources1 July 1913
Foreshore, Timber-booms, Mangamuka River, Hokianga Harbour, Licensing, Hartley and Son
- J. F. Andrews, Clerk of the Executive Council
🌾 Prohibiting Net Fishing in a Portion of Lake Wakatipu
🌾 Primary Industries & Resources7 July 1913
Fishing, Regulations, Lake Wakatipu, Queenstown Bay
- J. F. Andrews, Clerk of the Executive Council
⚖️ Regulations under the Crimes Amendment Act, 1910
⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement7 July 1913
Crimes Amendment Act, Regulations, Habitual Criminals, Prison Regulations
- J. F. Andrews, Clerk of the Executive Council