✨ Regulations and Orders
APRIL 11.]
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
959
PRISONS.
-
The Administrator may if he thinks fit, by writing under his
hand, commit the custody and management of the property of any
convicted prisoner who shall be serving a sentence of imprisonment in
Samoa or otherwise to the Public Trustee, and such power may be
exercised either generally or as to individual convicts. -
On the appointment of the Public Trustee as aforesaid, all the
real and personal property, including choses in action, to which the
convict was at the time of his conviction entitled, or afterwards while
serving a sentence of imprisonment becomes entitled, shall vest in the
Public Trustee for all the estate and interest of such convict therein. -
The Public Trustee shall receive and retain out of any estate
of a convict which he shall administer such remuneration as the instru-
ment appointing him to administer such estate shall prescribe. -
The Public Trustee shall have all the rights and powers and
shall perform all the duties as regards each such estate that he shall
administer as are appointed and prescribed in New Zealand under the
Prisons Act, 1908, and its amendments, to or for the administrators of
the property of a convict. -
The Administrator shall have power from time to time to make
regulations with regard to prisons and in particular as to—
(1) The safe custody and control of prisoners;
(2) The management of prisons;
(3) The discipline, conduct, and employment of prisoners;
(4) The duties and discipline of all constables, warders, or other
persons engaged or employed in prisons;
(5) Penalties for breaches of such regulations.
C. A. JEFFERY,
Acting Clerk of the Executive Council.
Regulating the Use of Nets for taking Fish in certain Waters.
CHARLES FERGUSSON, Governor-General.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government House at Wellington, this 3rd day of
April, 1929.
Present:
His Excellency the Governor-General in Council.
WHEREAS it is provided by section five of the Fisheries
Act, 1908 (hereinafter called “the said Act”), that
the Governor-General may from time to time, by Order in
Council gazetted, make regulations imposing conditions and
restrictions on the taking of fish, and prohibiting any speci-
fied mode of taking fish, or the use of any specified engines,
tackle, or apparatus for taking the same:
And whereas it is considered expedient to make the regu-
lations hereinafter set forth with respect to the use of nets,
tackle, and apparatus for taking fish within the waters here-
inafter described:
Now, therefore, His Excellency the Governor-General of
the Dominion of New Zealand, in pursuance and exercise of
the powers and authorities 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, and doth hereby revoke the
regulations set forth in the Schedule hereto.
REGULATIONS.
Trawling.
(1) During the period from the 16th day of November in
any year until the 15th day of March following, both days
inclusive, no person shall haul or use a trawl-net for the
purpose of taking fish in that portion of the sea which is
bounded on the north by a straight line drawn from Cape
Colville to Rodney Point.
(2) During the period from the 16th day of March to the
15th day of November in any year, both days inclusive, no
person shall have or use a trawl-net for the purpose of taking
fish in that portion of the Hauraki Gulf which is bounded as
follows : On the north by a straight line drawn from the north
head of Colville Bay to Tiri Tiri Lighthouse ; on the west by a
straight line drawn from the said lighthouse to Flat Rock; and
thence by a straight line drawn north (true) to its intersection
with a straight line from Cape Colville to Rodney Point, and
again on the north by a straight line drawn from the said
point of intersection to Rodney Point.
DANISH SEINING.
(3) No person shall use a Danish seine net for taking fish
within the waters respectively specified within the following
boundaries:
(a) Commencing at high-water mark at Gull Point ; thence
by a straight line drawn to Rangitoto Beacon, and
then east (true) to a point at high-water mark on the
shore of Rangitoto Island ; thence by the western and
southern shores of Rangitoto Island and the south-
western and south-eastern shores of Motutapu Island
to a point at high-water mark to the eastward of the
shed at Emu Bay ; thence by a straight line drawn
from the said point to a point at high-water mark of
Waiheke Island in line with the house in Cable Bay ;
thence generally along the southern shores of Waiheke
Island to the eastern head of Matuku Bay (otherwise
known as McLeod’s Bay); thence by a straight line
to Thames Point on Ponui Island ; thence by high-
water mark to a point north (true) of Ponui Passage
Lighthouse, and thence by a straight line to the said
lighthouse ; thence by a straight line to Deadman
Point on the Coromandel Peninsula ; thence generally
by high-water mark of the mainland to the com-
mencing-point.
(b) Inside straight lines drawn across Little Passage from
Puri Point to Epuni Point, from the western extreme
of Waihau Island (also known as Cook and the
Maori) to the eastern extreme of Tuhuia Islet (other-
wise known as Cow Island); thence to the northern
extreme of Rangipukea Island, and from the southern
extreme of Rangipukea Island to Deadman Point;
as the said area is shown and delineated, coloured blue,
on plan marked M.D. 6428, and deposited in the office
of the Marine Department at Wellington.
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VUW Te Waharoa —
NZ Gazette 1929, No 25
NZLII —
NZ Gazette 1929, No 25
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🌏
Samoa Prisons and Constabulary Order, 1929
(continued from previous page)
🌏 External Affairs & Territories3 April 1929
Regulations, Samoa, Constabulary, Prisons, Order in Council
- C. A. Jeffery, Acting Clerk of the Executive Council
🌾 Regulations for the Use of Nets for Taking Fish
🌾 Primary Industries & Resources3 April 1929
Fisheries, Regulations, Nets, Trawling, Danish Seining, Hauraki Gulf
- Charles Fergusson, Governor-General