✨ War Regulations and Orders
1756
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
[No. 66
at Lyttelton on the usual trade terms, with the following additions only
to such lawful price—namely, an addition of 15 per cent., together with
a further addition of the transit charges actually paid by the retail
seller of such wheat.
J. F. ANDREWS,
Clerk of the Executive Council.
Additional Regulations under the War Regulations Act, 1914.
LIVERPOOL, Governor-General.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government House at Wellington, this seventh day of May, 1918.
Present:
HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR-GENERAL IN COUNCIL.
WHEREAS by regulations made under the War Regulations Act,
1914, and its amendments, on the sixteenth day of March, one
thousand nine hundred and seventeen, and published in the Gazette of
the nineteenth day of the same month, certain provisions were made for
the protection of soldiers against judicial and other process: And
whereas it is expedient that such protection be extended to the guarantors
of soldiers, in the manner and to the extent hereinafter set forth:
Now, therefore, I, Arthur William de Brito Savile, Earl of Liverpool,
the Governor-General of the Dominion of New Zealand, acting by and
with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said Do-
minion, and in pursuance of the War Regulations Act, 1914, and its
amendments, do hereby make the following additional regulations under
that Act, and do hereby declare that the regulations hereby made shall
be read together with and deemed part of the hereinbefore-recited regula-
tions of the sixteenth day of March, one thousand nine hundred and
seventeen, and shall also be read together with and deemed part of the
War Regulations of the tenth day of November, one thousand nine
hundred and fourteen.
REGULATIONS.
PROTECTION OF THE GUARANTORS OF SOLDIERS AGAINST JUDICIAL AND OTHER
PROCESS.
-
WITHOUT the previous consent in writing of the Attorney-General, it
shall not be lawful for any person to issue or be concerned in the issue of
any process of execution against the property of a guarantor of a
soldier in pursuance of any judgment, decree, or order of any Court in
its civil jurisdiction obtained against the guarantor in respect of the
guaranteed obligation, whether so obtained before or after the making
of these regulations, or to continue or be concerned in the continuance
of any such process of execution, whether commenced before or after
the making of these regulations. -
Without the previous consent of the Attorney-General, it shall
not be lawful for any person to file a bankruptcy petition against a
guarantor of a soldier in respect of any debt or liability incurred by
reason of the guaranteed obligation. -
In these regulations the expression “guarantor of a soldier”
means a person liable upon any covenant or contract in respect of the
obligation whereof he is legally or equitably entitled to be indemnified
by a soldier.
J. F. ANDREWS,
Clerk of the Executive Council.
By Authority: MARCUS F. MARKS, Government Printer, Wellington.
Online Sources for this page:
VUW Te Waharoa —
NZ Gazette 1918, No 66
NZLII —
NZ Gazette 1918, No 66
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🏭
Fixing the Maximum Retail Price of Wheat
(continued from previous page)
🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry7 May 1918
Wheat, Retail Price, Order in Council, Regulation of Trade and Commerce Act
- J. F. Andrews, Clerk of the Executive Council
🛡️ Additional Regulations under the War Regulations Act, 1914
🛡️ Defence & Military7 May 1918
War Regulations, Soldiers, Guarantors, Judicial Process, Bankruptcy
- Arthur William de Brito Savile, Earl of Liverpool, Governor-General
- J. F. Andrews, Clerk of the Executive Council