Legal and Game Regulations




APRIL 9.] THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE. 735

  1. The Committee may dispense with any requirements of the rules respecting notices, affidavits, documents, service, or time, or any other matter in any case where it appears to the Committee to be just so to do.

  2. The Committee may extend the time for doing anything under these rules.

  3. All affidavits and other records shall be filed and kept by the Clerk to the Committee. The Committee may order that any books, papers, or other exhibits produced or used at a hearing shall be retained by the Clerk to the Committee until the time for appealing has expired, and, if notice of appeal is given, until the appeal is heard or otherwise disposed of.

  4. The several expressions to which meanings are assigned in the Law Practitioners Amendment Act, 1935, shall have the same meanings in these rules.

  5. These rules shall come into force on the 23rd day of January, 1936, and may be cited as the Law Practitioners Act (Disciplinary) Rules, 1936.

———

SCHEDULE.

[Form 1.

FORM OF NOTICE TO APPLICANT BY THE CLERK TO THE DISCIPLINARY COMMITTEE.

In the matter of C.D., a Solicitor,

and

In the matter of the Law Practitioners Amendment Act, 1935.

To

The __ day of __, 19____, is the day fixed for the hearing of your application in the matter of C.D.: solicitor, by the Disciplinary Committee constituted under the Law Practitioners Amendment Act, 1935.

The Committee will sit at __ at __ o’clock in the noon.

You are required by the rules made under the Law Practitioners Amendment Act, 1935, to furnish to the said C.D., and to the Clerk to the Disciplinary Committee at the offices of the New Zealand Law Society, Supreme Court Buildings, Wellington, at least fourteen days before the said __ day of __, 19____, a list of all the documents on which you propose to rely.

Either party may inspect the documents included in the list furnished by the other, and a copy of any document mentioned in the list of either party must, on application and at the expense of the party requiring it, be furnished to that party by the other within three days after receipt of the application.

In the event of the practitioner complained of not appearing and of the Committee being asked to proceed in his absence, the complainant must be prepared to prove service, in accordance with the rules issued under the Act, of the list of documents and any other notice or correspondence since the lodging of the application.

You are requested to acknowledge receipt of this notice without delay.

Dated this __ day of __, 19____.

Clerk to the Committee.

———

[Form 2.

FORM OF NOTICE TO THE SOLICITOR BY THE CLERK TO THE DISCIPLINARY COMMITTEE.

In the matter of C.D., a Solicitor,

and

In the matter of the Law Practitioners Amendment Act, 1935.

To C.D., of __, Solicitor,

Application has been made by __ to the Disciplinary Committee constituted under the Law Practitioners Amendment Act, 1935, that you may be required to answer the allegations contained in the affidavit, whereof a copy accompanies this notice, and that your name may be struck off the Roll of Barristers and/or Solicitors, or that you may be suspended from practice as a barrister and/or solicitor, or that such order may be made as the Committee shall think right.

The __ day of __, 19, is the day fixed for the hearing of the application by the Committee. The Committee will sit at __ at __ o’clock in the noon. If you fail to appear, the Committee may, in accordance with the rules made under the Law Practitioners Amendment Act, 1935, proceed in your absence.

You are required by the rules made under the Law Practitioners Amendment Act, 1935, to furnish to the said __, and to the Clerk to the Disciplinary Committee at the offices of the New Zealand Law Society, Supreme Court Buildings, Wellington, at least fourteen days before the said __ day of __, 19____, a list of all the documents on which you propose to rely.

Either party may inspect the documents included in the list furnished by the other, and a copy of any document mentioned in the list of either party must, on application and at the expense of the party requiring it, be furnished by that party to the other within three days after receipt of the application.

You are requested to acknowledge receipt of this notice without delay.

Dated this __ day of __, 19____.

Clerk to the Committee.

(N.B.—A print of the rules is sent herewith for your information and guidance.)

The foregoing rules were duly made by the Disciplinary Committee of the New Zealand Law Society at a meeting of the said Committee held at Wellington on the 23rd day of January, 1936.

H. F. O’LEARY, K.C.,
Chairman of the Disciplinary Committee.

H. J. THOMPSON,
Clerk to the Disciplinary Committee.

———

Amending Warrant declaring Open Seasons for Imported and/or Native Game in certain Acclimatization Districts in so far as it affects the Tauranga Acclimatization District, and declaring an Open Season for Imported Game and Native Game in the Tauranga Acclimatization District.

———

IN exercise of the powers vested in me by the Animals Protection and Game Act, 1921-22, I, William Edward Parry, Minister of Internal Affairs of the Dominion of New Zealand, do hereby amend the Warrant dated 13th March, 1936, made under the Animals Protection and Game Act, 1921-22, and published in New Zealand Gazette No. 22 of the 16th idem, at page 484, by deleting all that portion of such Warrant included under the heading “Tauranga Acclimatization District,” and do hereby declare the period from the 1st day of May to the 31st day of July, 1936 (both days inclusive), to be an open season in the Tauranga Acclimatization District, as described in New Zealand Gazette No. 17 of the 12th March, 1935, at page 753, for the taking or killing of the following imported game, viz., cock pheasants, Californian quail, and Australian quail, and the period from the 1st day of May to the 30th day of June, 1936 (both days inclusive), to be an open season in the said district for the taking or killing of the following native game, viz., grey duck, spoonbill duck, and black swan, and the period from the 1st day of February to the 31st day of March, 1937 (both days inclusive), to be an open season in the said district for the taking or killing of the following native game, viz., godwits, subject to the following conditions.

CONDITIONS.

  1. Licenses to take or kill such imported game and native game (including godwits) within the Tauranga Acclimatization District will be issued to any person on payment of the sum of twenty shillings (20s.) each, and licenses to take or kill such native game only, viz., godwits, will be issued to any person on payment of the sum of ten shillings (10s.) each; and the Postmasters at Tauranga, Katikati, Paengaroa, Maketu, and Te Puke are hereby authorized to sign and issue the said licenses.

  2. No person shall in any one day take or kill native game exceeding in number twenty-five head in all of grey duck, spoonbill duck, and black swan, or take or kill more than fifteen head in all of grey duck and/or spoonbill duck, or take or kill more than twenty head of godwits.

  3. No person shall commence shooting earlier than one hour after sunrise or continue shooting later than one hour after sunset on any day during the open season.

  4. (a) No person shall use live birds of any species as decoys, nor shall use more than fifteen artificial decoys at any one time, and no such artificial decoys shall be spread over a greater area than thirty yards square.

(b) No person shall place any artificial decoys within one hundred yards of the nearest of any other artificial decoys set out by any other person.

  1. No person shall use or cause to be used any motor-vehicle in connection with the taking or killing of imported or native game: Provided that this condition shall not be so construed as to prohibit the use of any motor-vehicle for the purpose of travelling either generally or to or from a rendezvous.

  2. No person shall use or cause to be used for the purpose of taking or killing any imported or native game any unmoored floating stand, pontoon, hide, mai-mai, or lou, or any boat artificially dressed or covered in any way.

  3. No person engaged in shooting from any shelter, mai-mai, mndhole, boat, louvre, or other contrivance shall use more than one gun: Provided that a person so engaged may have a second gun in a condition not immediately suitable for use and held for use only in the event of the first gun becoming damaged or otherwise unfit for use.

As witness my hand at Wellington, this 6th day of April, 1936.

W. E. PARRY, Minister of Internal Affairs.

(I.A. 1933/39/28.)



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✨ LLM interpretation of page content

⚖️ Disciplinary Rules of the New Zealand Law Society (continued from previous page)

⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement
23 January 1936
Disciplinary Rules, Law Practitioners, Professional Misconduct, New Zealand Law Society
  • H. F. O’Leary, K.C., Chairman of the Disciplinary Committee
  • H. J. Thompson, Clerk to the Disciplinary Committee

🌾 Amendment to Open Seasons for Game in Tauranga Acclimatization District

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
6 April 1936
Game Regulations, Hunting Seasons, Tauranga, Imported Game, Native Game
  • William Edward Parry, Minister of Internal Affairs