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(2) The certificate shall, in any court of a British possession in which the bond may be put in suit, be conclusive evidence of the due execution of the bond by the master and the other person bound, and it shall not be necessary to prove the handwriting of the officer of customs who signed the certificate, nor that he was at the time of signing it chief officer of customs at the port of clearance.
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[1 As to “continuing master’s bond,” see 6 Edw. 7. c. 41. s. 20, and Board of Trade Regulations, Stat. Rules and Orders, 1908, p. 629, adapting ss. 309, 310 to such, a bond.]
[1 As to “continuing master’s bond,” see 6 Edw. 7. c. 41. s. 20, and Board of Trade Regulations, Stat. Rules and Orders, 1908, p. 629, adapting ss. 309, 310 to such, a bond.] |