Malicious Damage Act, 1861

Justices may issue warrants for searching houses, &c. for such gunpowder, &c.

55. Any justice of the peace of any county or place in which any machine, engine, implement, or thing, or any gunpowder or other explosive, dangerous, or noxious substance is suspected to be made, kept, or carried for the purpose of being used in committing any of the felonies in this Act mentioned, upon reasonable cause assigned upon oath by any person, may issue a warrant under his hand and seal for searching in the daytime any house, mill, magazine, storehouse, warehouse, shop, cellar, yard, wharf, or other place, or any carriage, waggon, cart, ship, boat, or vessel, in which the same is suspected to be made, kept, or carried for such purpose as herein-before mentioned; and every person acting in the execution of any such warrant shall have, for seizing, removing to proper places, and detaining every such machine, engine, implement, and thing, and all such gunpowder, explosive, dangerous, or noxious substances, found upon such search, which he shall have good cause to suspect to be intended to be used in committing any such offence, and the barrels, packages, cases, and other receptacles in which the same shall be, the same powers and protections which are given to persons searching for unlawful quantities of gunpowder under the warrant of a justice by [1] the Act passed in the session holden in the twenty-third and twenty-fourth years of the reign of Her Majesty, chapter one hundred and thirty-nine, intituled “An Act to amend the law concerning the making, keeping, and carriage of gunpowder and compositions of an explosive nature, and concerning the manufacture, sale, and use of fireworks.”

Other Matters.

[1 The Act 23 & 24 Vict. c. 139. is rep. 38 & 39 Vict. c. 17. s. 122. See s. 86. of that Act.]