Public Stores Act, 1875

PUBLIC STORES ACT 1875

CHAPTER XXV.

An Act to consolidate, with amendments, the Acts relating to the Protection of Public Stores. [29th June 1875.]

Short title.

1. This Act may be cited as “The Public Stores Act, 1875.”

Interpretation of terms.

Court of summary jurisdiction.

2. In this Act—

The term “stores” includes all goods and chattels, and any single store or article:

The term “court of summary jurisdiction” means—

In Scotland, the sheriff or sheriff substitute.

Stores to which the Act applies.

3. This Act shall apply to all stores under the care, superintendence, or control of a Secretary of State or the Admiralty, or any public department or office, or of any person in the service of Her Majesty, and such stores are in this Act referred to as Her Majesty’s stores. The Secretary of State, Admiralty, public department, office, or person having the care, superintendence, or control of such stores, are herein-after in this Act included in the expression public department.

Marks in schedule appropriated for public stores.

4. The marks described in the First Schedule to this Act may be applied in or on stores therein described in order to denote Her Majesty’s property in stores so marked; and it shall be lawful for any public department, and the contractors, officers, and workmen of such department, to apply those marks, or any of them, in or on any such stores; and if any person without lawful authority (proof of which authority shall lie on the party accused) applies any of those marks in or on any such stores he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall on conviction thereof be liable to be imprisoned for any term not exceeding two years, with or without hard labour.

Obliteration with intent to concealment.

5. If any person with intent to conceal Her Majesty’s property in any stores takes out, destroys, or obliterates, wholly or in part, any such mark as aforesaid, or any mark whatsoever denoting the property of Her Majesty in any stores, he shall be guilty of felony, and on conviction thereof be liable, in the discretion of the court before which he is convicted, to be kept in penal servitude for any term not exceeding seven years

Power to stop suspected boats, persons, &c.

6. A constable of the metropolitan police force may, within the limits for which he is constable, and any constable, if deputed by a public department, may, within the limits for which he is constable, stop, search, and detain any vessel, boat or vehicle in or on which there is reason to suspect that any of Her Majesty’s stores stolen or unlawfully obtained may be found, or any person reasonably suspected of having or conveying in any manner any of Her Majesty’s stores stolen or unlawfully obtained.

A constable shall be deemed to be deputed by a public department within the meaning of this section if he is deputed by any writing signed by the person who is the head of such department, or who is authorised to sign documents on behalf of such department.

Unlawful possession of Her Majesty’s stores.

7. If any person is brought before a court of summary jurisdiction charged with conveying or with having in his possession or keeping any of Her Majesty’s stores reasonably suspected of being stolen or unlawfully obtained, and does not give an account to the satisfaction of the court how he came by the same, he shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall be liable, on summary conviction, to a penalty not exceeding five pounds, or, in the discretion of the court, to be imprisoned for any term not exceeding two months, with or without hard labour.

Prohibition of sweeping, &c. near dockyards, artillery ranges, &c.

25 & 26 Vict. c. 36.

8. It shall not be lawful for any person, without permission in writing from a public department, or from some person authorised by a public department in that behalf (proof of which permission shall lie on the party accused,) to gather or search for stores, or to creep, sweep, or dredge in the sea or any tidal water, within one hundred yards from any vessel belonging to Her Majesty or in Her Majesty’s service, or from any mooring place or anchoring place appropriated to such vessels, or from any moorings belonging to Her Majesty, or from any of Her Majesty’s wharves, or dock, victualling, or steam factory yards, or within one thousand yards from any battery or fort used for the practice of artillery either by the Royal Artillery or by militia or volunteer artillery, or in or on any part of the spaces or distances, whether covered with water or not, from time to time marked out as ranges for artillery practice for the use of Her Majesty’s ships, or marked out and appropriated for ranges under the provisions of the Artillery Ranges Act, 1862.

If any person acts in contravention of this provision he shall be liable, on summary conviction, to a penalty not exceeding five pounds, or, in the discretion of the court, to be imprisoned for any term not exceeding two months, with or without hard labour.

Penalty on dealer, &c. found in possession of stores, and not accounting for them.

9. If stores are found in the possession or keeping of a person being in Her Majesty’s service, or in the service of a public department, or being a dealer in marine stores or in old metals, or a pawnbroker (within the meaning of any enactments for the time being in force relating to such dealers or to pawnbrokers), and he is taken or summoned before a court of summary jurisdiction, and the court sees reasonable grounds for believing the stores found to be or to have been Her Majesty’s property, then if such person does not satisfy the court that he came lawfully by the stores so found, he shall be liable, on summary conviction, to a penalty not exceeding five pounds.

Criminal ossession explained.

10. For the purposes of this Act stores shall be deemed to be in the possession or keeping of any person if he knowingly has them in the actual possession or keeping of any other person, or in any house, building, lodging, apartment, field, or place, open or enclosed, whether occupied by himself or not, and whether the same are so had for his own use or benefit or for the use or benefit of another.

Conviction of dealer in old metals.

24 & 25 Vict. c. 110.

11. A conviction in England under any provision of this Act of a dealer in old metals shall, for the purposes of registration and its consequences under the Old Metal Dealers Act, 1861, be equivalent to a conviction under that Act.

Parts of 24 & 25 Vict. c. 96. incorporated.

12. The following sections of the Larceny Act, 1861, are hereby incorporated with this Act, and shall for the purposes of this Act be real as if they were here re-enacted, namely, sections ninety-eight to one hundred, one hundred and three, one hundred and seven to one hundred and thirteen, and one hundred and fifteen to one hundred and twenty-one, all inclusive; and for this purpose the expression “this Act,” where used in those sections, shall be taken to include the present Act.

Provision for regimental necessaries, &c.

13. The provisions of this Act relative to the taking out, destroying, or obliterating of marks, or to the having in possession or keeping Her Majesty’s stores, shall not apply to stores issued as regimental necessaries or otherwise for any soldier, militiaman, or volunteer; but nothing herein shall relieve any person from any obligation or liability to which he may be subject under any other Act in respect of any such stores.

Summary proceedings for offences, penalties, &c. in England, Ireland, and Scotland.

14. In England and Ireland all offences for which a person is liable under this Act on summary conviction to any punishment or penalty may be prosecuted, and any such penalty may be recovered before a court of summary jurisdiction in manner directed by the Summary Jurisdiction Acts.

Provided as follows:

The court of summary jurisdiction, when hearing and determining an information or complaint, shall be constituted—

(a.) In England, either of two or more justices of the peace in petty sessions sitting at a place appointed for holding petty sessions, or of some magistrate or officer sitting alone or with others at some court or other place appointed for the administration of justice, and for the time being empowered by law to do alone any act authorised to be done by more than one justice of the peace; and

(b.) In Ireland, within the police district of Dublin metropolis, of one of the divisional justices of that district sitting at a police court within the district, and elsewhere of two or more justices of the peace sitting in petty sessions at a place appointed for holding petty sessions:

In Scotland, all offences for which a person is liable under this Act on summary conviction to any punishment or penalty may be prosecuted, and any such penalty may be recovered before the sheriff or sheriff substitute, and may be so prosecuted and recovered under the provisions of the Summary Jurisdiction Acts, and all jurisdictions, powers, and authorities necessary for that purpose are hereby conferred on sheriffs and their substitutes.

Penalties, &c. to be paid into Exchequer.

15. Any pecuniary penalty or other money recovered under this Act in relation to any stores shall, in such manner as the Treasury from time to time direct, be paid into the receipt of the Exchequer, and carried to the Consolidated Fund; and this section shall supersede any enactment to the contrary contained in any Act relating to municipal corporations or the metropolitan police, or in any other Act.

Not to prevent persons being indicted.

16. Nothing in this Act shall prevent any person from being indicted under this Act or otherwise for any indictable offence made punishable on summary conviction by this Act, or prevent any person from being liable under any other Act or otherwise to any other or higher penalty or punishment than is provided for any offence by this Act, so that no person be punished twice for the same offence.

Amendment of 28 & 29 Vict. c. 89. s. 45.

17. Section forty five of the Greenwich Hospital Act, 1865, shall be read and have effect as if this Act, instead of the Naval and Victualling Stores Act, 1864, were referred to in that section.

Act to apply to stores marked before its passing.

18. . . . this Act shall apply to stores bearing any such mark or part of a mark as in this Act mentioned, whether applied before or after the passing of this Act.

FIRST SCHEDULE.

Sect. 4 .

Marks appropriated for use in or on Her Majesty’s Stores.

Stores.

Marks.

Hempen cordage and wire rope

White, black, or coloured worsted threads laid up with the yarns and the wire respectively.

Canvas, fearnought, hammocks, and seamen’s bags.

A blue line in a serpentine form.

Buntin -    -    -    -

A double tape in the warp.

Candles -    -    -    -

Blue or red cotton threads in each wick or wicks of red cotton.

Timber or metal -    -   

Any stores not before enumerated, whether similar to the above or not.

{

The name of Her Majesty, her predecessors, her heirs or successors, or of any public department, or any branch thereof, or the broad arrow, or a crown, or Her Majesty’s arms, whether such broad arrow, crown, or arms be alone or be in combination with any such name as aforesaid, or with any letters denoting any such name.

[Second Sched. rep. 46 & 47 Vict. c. 39. (S.L.R.)]