An act for granting certain duties in the British colonies and plantations in
America,; for continuing, amending, and making perpetual, an act passed in the
sixth year of the reign of his late majesty King George the Second, (initituled,
An act for the better securing and encouraging the trade of his Majesty’s
sugar colonies in America;) for applying the produce of such duties, and of the
duties to arise by virtue of the said act, towards defraying the expences of
defending, protecting, and securing the said colonies and plantations; for
explaining an act made in the twenty fifth year of the reign of King Charles the
Second, (intituled, An act for the encouragement of the Greenland and Eastland
trades, and for the better securing the plantation trade;) and for altering and
disallowing several drawbacks on exports from this kingdom, and more effectually
preventing the clandestine conveyance of goods to and from the said colonies and
plantation, and improving and securing the trade between the same and Great
Britain.
Whereas it is expedient that new provisions and regulations should be
established for improving the revenue of this kingdom, and for extending and
securing the navigation and commerce between Great Britain and your Majesty’s
dominions in America, which, by the peace, have been so happily enlarged: and
whereas it is just and necessary, that a revenue be raised, in your Majesty’s
said dominions in America, for defraying the expences of defending, protecting,
and securing the same; we, your Majesty’s most dutiful and loyal subjects, the
commons of Great Britain, in parliament assembled, being desirous to make some
provision, in this present session of parliament, towards raising the said
revenue in America, have resolved to give and grant unto your Majesty the
several rates and duties herein after-mentioned; and do most humbly beseech your
Majesty that it may be enacted; and be it enacted by the King’s most excellent
majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the lords spiritual and temporal,
and commons, in this present parliament assembled, and by the authority of the
same, That from and after the twenty ninth day of September, one thousand seven
hundred and sixty four, there shall be raised, levied, collected, and paid, unto
his Majesty, his heirs and successors, for and upon all white or clayed sugars
of the produce or manufacture of any colony or plantation in America, not under
the dominion of his Majesty, his heirs and successors; for and upon indigo, and
coffee of foreign produce or manufacture; for and upon wines (except French
wine;) for and upon all wrought silks, bengals, and stuffs, mixed with silk or
herbs of the manufacture of Persia, China, or East India, and all callico
painted, dyed, printed, or stained there; and for and upon all foreign linen
cloth called Cambrick and French Lawns, which shall be imported or brought into
any colony or plantation in America, which now is, or hereafter may be, under
the dominion of his Majesty, his heirs and successors, the several rates and
duties following; that is to say,
For every hundred weight avoirdupois of such foreign white or clayed sugars, one
pound two shillings, over and above all other duties imposed by any former act
of parliament.
For every pound weight avoirdupois of such foreign indigo, six pence.
For every hundred weight avoirdupois of such foreign coffee, which shall be
imported from any place, except Great Britain, two pounds, nineteen shillings,
and nine pence.
For every ton of wine of the growth of the Madeiras, or of any other island or
place from whence such wine may be lawfully imported, and which shall be so
imported from such islands or place, the sum of seven pounds
For every ton of Portugal, Spanish, or any other wine (except French wine)
imported from Great Britain, the sum of ten shillings.
For every pound weight avoirdupois of wrought silks, bengals, and stuffs, mixed
silk or herbs, of the manufacture of Persia, China, or East India, imported from
Great Britain, two shillings.
For every piece of callico painted, dyed, printed, or stained, in Persia, China,
or East India, imported from Great Britain, two shillings and six pence.
For every piece of foreign linen cloth, called Cambrick, imported from Great
Britain, three shillings.
For every piece of French lawn imported from Great Britain, three shillings.
And after those rates for any greater or lesser quantity of such goods
respectively.
II. And it is hereby further enacted by the
authority aforesaid, That from and after the said twenty ninth day of September,
one thousand seven hundred and sixty four, there shall also be raised, levied,
collected, and paid, unto his Majesty, his heirs and successors, for and upon
all coffee and pimento of the growth and produce of any British colony or
plantation in America, which shall be there laden on board any British ship or
vessel, to be carried out from thence to any other place whatsoever, except
Great Britain, the several rates and duties following; that is to say,
III. For every hundred weight avoirdupois of such
British coffee, seven shillings.
For every pound weight avoirdupois of such British pimento, one halfpenny.
And after those rates for any greater or lesser quantity of such goods
respectively.
IV. And whereas an act was made in the sixth year
of the reign of his late majesty King George the Second, intituled, An act for
the better securing and encouraging the trade of his Majesty’s sugar colonies
in America, which was to continue in force for five years, to be computed from
the twenty fourth day of June, one thousand seven hundred and thirty three, and
to the end of the then next session of parliament, and which, by several
subsequent acts made in the eleventh, the nineteenth, the twenty sixth, and
twenty ninth, and the thirty first years of the reign of his said late Majesty,
was, from time to time, continued; and, by an act made in the first year of the
reign of his present Majesty, was further continued until the end of this
present session of parliament; and although the said act hath been found in some
degree useful, yet it is highly expedient that the same should be altered,
enforced, and made more effectual; but, in consideration of the great distance
of several of the said colonies and plantations from this kingdom, it will be
proper further to continue the said act for a short space, before any
alterations and amendments shall take effect, in order that all persons
concerned may have due and proper notice thereof; be it therefore enacted by the
authority aforesaid, That the said act made in the sixth year of the reign of
his late majesty King George the Second, intituled, An act for the better
securing and encouraging the trade of his Majesty’s sugar colonies in America,
shall be, and the same is hereby further continued, until the thirtieth day of
September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four.
V. And it be further enacted by the
authority aforesaid, That from the twenty ninth day of September, one thousand
seven hundred and sixty four, the said act, subject to such alterations and
amendments as are herein after contained, shall be, and the same is hereby made
perpetual.
VI. And it be further enacted by the authority
aforesaid, That in lieu and instead of the rate and duty imposed by the said act
upon molasses and syrups, there shall, from and after the said twenty ninth day
of September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four, be raised, levied,
collected, and paid, unto his Majesty, his heirs and successors, for and upon
every gallon of molasses or syrups, being the growth, product, or manufacture,
of any colony or plantation in America, not under the dominion of his Majesty,
his heir or successors, which shall be imported or brought into any colony or
plantation in America, which now is, or hereafter may be, under the dominion of
his Majesty, his heirs or successors, the sum of three pence.
VII. And it be hereby further enacted by the authority
aforesaid, That the said rates and duties hereby charged upon such foreign white
or clayed sugars, foreign indigo, foreign coffee, wines, wrought silks, bengals,
and stuffs, mixed with silk or herbs, callico, cambricks, French lawns, and
foreign molasses or syrups, imported into any British American colony or
plantation shall be raised, levied, collected, and paid, in the same manner and
form, and by such rules, ways and means, and under such penalties and
forfeitures (not otherwise altered by this act) as are mentioned and expressed
in the said act of parliament, made in the sixth year of the reign of his late
majesty King George the Second, with respect to the raising, levying,
collecting, and payment, of the rates and duties thereby granted; and that the
aforesaid duties hereby charged upon British coffee and pimento, exported from
any British colony or plantation, shall be raised, levied, collected, and paid,
in the same manner and form, and forfeitures, as are mentioned and referred unto
in an act of parliament, made in the twenty fifth year of the reign of King
Charles the Second, intituled, An act for the encouragement of the Greenland and
Eastland trades, and for the better securing the plantation trade, with respect
to the raising, levying, collecting, and payment of the rates and duties thereby
granted upon the several goods therein particularly enumerated: and that all
powers, penalties, provisions, articles, and clauses, in those acts respectively
contained and referred unto (except in such cases where any alteration is made
by this act) shall be observed, applied, practiced, and put in execution, for
the raising, levying, collecting, and answering, the respective rates and duties
granted by this act, as fully and effectually, as if the same were particularly
and at large re-enacted in the body of this present act, and applied to the
rates and duties hereby imposed; and as fully and effectually, to all intents
and purposes, as the same could have been at any time put in execution, for the
like purposes, with respect to the rates and duties granted by the said former
acts.
VIII. Provided always, and it is hereby further enacted by the
authority aforesaid, That if the importer of any wines shall refuse to pay the
duties hereby imposed thereon, it shall and may be lawful for the collector, or
other proper officer of the customs where such wines shall be imported, and he
is hereby respectively required to take and secure the same, with the casks or
other package thereof, and to cause the same to be publickly sold, within the
space of twenty days at the most after such refusal made, and at such time and
place as such officer, shall, by four or more days publick notice, appoint for
that purpose; which wine shall be sold to the best bidder, and the money arising
by the said duties, together with the charges that shall have been occasioned by
the said sale; and the overplus, if any, shall be paid to such importer, or any
other person authorized to receive the same.
IX. Provided also, That if the money offered for the
purchase of such wine shall not be sufficient to discharge the duty and charges
aforesaid, then, and in every such case, the collector, or other proper officer,
shall cause the wine to be staved, split, or otherwise destroyed, and shall
return the casks or other package wherein the same was contained to such
importer.
X. And it is hereby declared and enacted, That
every piece of callico intended to be charged with the duty herein
beforementioned, if of the breadth of one yard and a quarter or under, shall not
exceed in length ten yards; and if above that breadth, shall not exceed six
yards in length, and that every piece of cambrick and French lawn shall contain
thirteen ells each, and shall pay duty for the same in those proportions for any
greater or lesser quantity, according to the sum herein before charged upon each
piece of such goods respectively.
XI. And it is hereby further enacted by the authority
aforesaid, That all the monies which, from and after the twenty ninth day of
September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four shall arise by the several
rates and duties herein before granted; and also by the duties which, from and
after the said twenty ninth day of September, one thousand seven hundred and
sixty four, shall be raised upon sugars and paneles, by virtue of the said act
made in the sixth year of the reign of his said late majesty King George the
Second (except the necessary charges of raising, collecting, levying,
recovering, answering, paying, and accounting for the same) shall be paid into
the receipt of his Majesty’s Exchequer, and shall be entered separate and
apart from all other monies paid or payable to his Majesty, his heirs or
successors: and shall be there reserved, to be, from time to time, disposed of
by parliament, towards defraying the necessary expences of defending,
protecting, and securing, the British colonies and plantations in America,
XII. And it is hereby further enacted by the authority aforesaid,
That from and after the tenth day of September, one thousand seven hundred and
sixty four, upon the exportation of any sort of wine (except French wines) from
this kingdom to any British colony or plantation in America, as merchandize, the
exporter shall be paid, in lieu of all former drawbacks, a drawback or allowance
of all the duties paid upon the importation of such wine, except the sum of
three pounds ten shillings per ton, part of the additional duty of four pounds
per ton, granted by an act made in the last session of parliament (intituled, An
act for granting to his Majesty several additional duties upon wines imported
into this kingdom, and certain duties upon all cyder and perry, and for raising
the sum of three millions five hundred thousand pounds, by way of annuities and
lotteries, to be charged on the said duties) and also except such part of the
duties paid upon wines imported by strangers or aliens, or in foreign ships, as
exceeds what would have been payable upon such wines, if the same had been
imported by British subjects and in British ships; any law, custom, or usage, to
the contrary notwithstanding; which drawback or allowance shall be made in such
manner, and under such rules, regulations, penalties, and forfeitures, in all
respects, as any former drawback or allowance, payable out of the duties of
customs upon the exportation of such wine, was, could, or might be made, before
the passing of this act.
XIII. Provided always, and it is hereby further enacted, That upon the
entry of any such wine for exportation to any British colony or plantation in
America, and before any debenture shall be made out for allowing the drawback
thereon, the exporter shall give bond, with sufficient security, to his Majesty,
his heirs and successors, to be approved of by the collector, or other principal
officer of the customs at the port of exportation, in treble the amount of the
drawback payable for the goods, that the same, and every part thereof, shall
(the danger of the seas and enemies excepted) be really and truly exported to,
and landed in, some British colony or plantation in America, and that the same
shall not be exported, or carried to any other place or country whatsoever, nor
relanded in any part of Great Britain, Ireland, or the islands of Guernsey,
Jersey, Alderney, Sark, or Man or either of them: and such bonds shall not be
delivered up nor discharged, until a certificate shall be produced, under the
hands and seals of the collector or other principal officer of the customs at
the port or place where such goods shall be landed, testifying the landing
thereof: and the condition of such bond shall be, to produce such certificate in
eighteen months from the date of the bonds (the dangers of the seas and enemies
excepted.) And it is hereby further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That
from and after the first day of May, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four,
no part of the rate or duty, commonly called The old subsidy, shall be repaid or
drawn back for any foreign goods of the growth, production, or manufacture, of
Europe, or the East Indies, which shall be exported from this kingdom to any
British colony or plantation in America (wines, white callicoes, and muslins,
only excepted;) any law, custom, or usage, to the contrary notwithstanding.
XIV. And it is hereby further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That
from and after the tenth day of September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty
four, upon the exportation of any sort of white callicoes or muslins, except as
herein after is mentioned, from this kingdom to any British colony or plantation
in America, besides the one half of the rate or duty commonly called The old
subsidy, which now remains, and is not drawn back for the same, there also shall
not be repaid or drawn back the further sum of four pounds fifteen shillings for
every hundred pounds of the true and real value of such goods, according to the
gross price at which they were sold at the sale of the united company of
merchants trading to the East Indies, being the third part of the net duties
granted thereon respectively by two several acts of parliament, the one made in
the eleventh and twelfth year of the reign of King William the Third, intituled,
An act for the laying further duties upon wrought silks, muslins, and some other
commodities of the East Indies, and for enlarging the time for purchasing
certain reversionary annuities therein mentioned; and the other made in the
third and fourth year of the reign of Queen Anne, intituled, An act for
continuing duties upon low wines, and upon coffee, tea, chocolate, spice, and
pictures, and upon hawkers, pedlars, and petty chapmen, and upon muslins; and
for granting new duties upon several of the said commodities, and also upon
callicoes, China-ware, and drugs; any law, custom, or usage to the contrary
notwithstanding.
XV. Provided always, and be it further enacted by the authority
aforesaid, That until the first day of March, one thousand seven hundred and
sixty five, upon the exportation from this kingdom, to any British colony or
plantation in America of white callicoes or muslins only as were sold on or
before the twenty fifth day of March, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four,
at the sale of the united company of merchants trading to the East Indies, such
and the same drawbacks shall be allowed as are now payable upon the exportation
of the said goods.
XVI. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That if any
merchant or other person, shall from and after the said fifth day of May, one
thousand seven hundred and sixty four, enter any goods for exportation to parts
beyond the seas, in order to obtain any drawback not allowed by this act upon
the exportation of such goods to the said British colonies or plantations in
America, and the said goods shall nevertheless be carried to any British colony
or plantation in America, and landed there contrary to the true intent and
meaning hereof, that then, and in such case, the drawback shall be forfeited,
and the exporter of such goods, and the master of the ship or vessel on board
which the same were loaden and exported, shall forfeit double the amount of the
drawback paid or to be paid for the same, and also treble the value of the said
goods.
XVII. And it is further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That from and
after the said first day of May, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four, if
any goods, not allowed to draw back any part of the old subsidy, or any other
duty by this act, shall be entered for exportation from this kingdom to any
other place beyond the seas, except to some British colony or plantation in
America, in every case where the exporter is required, by any law now in force,
to swear that such goods are not landed or intended to be landed in Great
Britain, Ireland, or the isle of Man, there shall also be added to and included
in, the oath upon the debenture, for such goods, "any British colonies or
plantations in America."
XVIII. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That from
and after the twenty ninth day of September, on thousand seven hundred and sixty
four, no rum or spirits of the produce or manufacture of any of the colonies or
plantations in America, not in the possession or under the dominion off his
Majesty, his heirs or successors, shall be imported or brought into any of the
colonies or plantations in America which now are, or hereafter may be, in the
possession or under the dominion of his Majesty, his heirs or successors, upon
forfeiture of all such rum or spirits, together with the ship or vessel in which
the same shall be imported, with the tackle, apparel, and furniture thereof; to
be seized by any officer or officers of his Majesty’s customs, and prosecuted
in such manner and form as herein after is expressed; any law, custom, or usage,
to the contrary notwithstanding.
XIX. And it is hereby further enacted and declare by the authority
aforesaid, That from and after the twenty ninth day of September, one thousand
seven hundred and sixty four, nothing in the before-recited act made in the
fifth year of the reign of his late majesty King George the Second, or any other
act of parliament, shall extend, or be construed to extend, to give liberty to
any person or persons whatsoever to import into the kingdom of Ireland any sort
of sugars, but such only as shall be fairly and bona fide loaden and shipped in
Great Britain, and carried directly from thence in ships navigated according to
law.
XX. And, for the better preventing frauds in the importation of foreign
sugars and paneles, rum and spirits, molasses and syrups, into any of his
Majesty’s dominions, under pretence that the same are the growth, produce, or
manufacture, of the British colonies or plantations, it is further enacted by
the authority aforesaid, That from and after the twenty ninth day of September,
one thousand seven hundred and sixty four, every person or persons loading on
board any ship or vessel, in any of the British colonies or plantations in
America, any rum or spirits, sugars or paneles, molasses or syrups, as of the
growth, product, or manufacture, of any British colony or plantation, shall,
before the clearing out of the said ship or vessel, produce and deliver to the
collector or other principal officer of the customs at the loading port, an
affidavit signed and sword to before some justice of the peace in the said
British colonies or plantation, either by the grower, maker, or shipper, of such
goods, or his or their known agent or factor, expressing, in words at length and
not in figure, the quality of the goods so shipped, with the number and
denomination of the packages, and describing the name or names of the plantation
or plantations, and the name of the colony where the same grew or were produced
and manufactured; which affidavit shall be attested, under the hand of the said
justice of the peace, to have been sworn to in his presence; who is hereby
required to do the same without fee or reward: and the collector or other
principal officer of the customs to whom such affidavit shall be delivered,
shall thereupon grant to the master, or other person having the charge of the
ship or vessel, a certificate under his hand and seal of office (without fee or
reward) of his having received such affidavit pursuant to the directions of this
act; which certificate shall express the quality of the goods shipped on board
such ship or vessel, with the number and denomination of the packages: and such
collector or other principal officer of the customs shall also (without fee or
reward) within thirty days after the sailing of the ship or vessel, transmit an
exact copy of the said affidavit to the secretary’s office for the respective
colony or plantation where the goods were shipped, on forfeiture of five pounds.
XXI. And it is further enacted, That upon the arrival of such ship or
vessel into the port of her discharge, either in Great Britain or any other port
of his Majesty’s dominions, where such goods may be lawfully imported, the
master or other person taking the charge of the ship or vessel shall, at the
time he makes his report of his cargo, deliver the said certificate to the
collector or other principal officer of the customs, and make oath before him,
that the goods so reported are the same that are mentioned in the said
certificate, on forfeiture of one hundred pounds; and if any rum or spirits,
sugars or paneles, molasses or syrups, shall be imported or found on board any
such ship or vessel, for which no such certificate shall be produced, or which
shall not agree therewith, the same shall be deemed and taken to be foreign rum
and spirits, sugar and paneles, molasses and syrups, and shall be liable to the
same duties, restrictions, regulations, penalties, and forfeitures, in all
respects, as rum, spirits, sugar, paneles, molasses, and syrups, of the growth,
produce, or manufacture, of any foreign colony or plantation, would respectively
be liable to by law.
XXII. Provided always, That if any rum of spirits, sugar or paneles,
molasses or syrups, shall be imported into Great Britain from any British colony
or plantation in America, without being included in such certificate as is
herein before directed, and it shall be made to appear, to the satisfaction of
the commissioners of his Majesty’s customs at London or Edinburgh
respectively, that the goods are really and truly the produce of such British
plantation or colony, and that no fraud was intended, it shall and may in such
case be lawful for the said respective commissioners to permit the said goods to
be entered, upon the payment of the like duties as such goods would be liable to
if this law had not been made.
XXIII. And whereas by an act of parliament made in the twelfth year of
the reign of King Charles the Second, intituled, An act for encouraging and
increasing of shipping and navigation, and several subsequent acts of parliament
which are now in force, it is amongst other things, directed, that for every
ship or vessel that shall load any commodities, in those acts particularly
enumerated, at any British plantation, being the growth, product, or manufacture
thereof, bonds shall be given with one surety, to the value of one thousand
pounds, if the ship be of less burthen than one hundred tons, and of the sum of
two thousand pounds; if the ship be of greater burthen, that the same
commodities shall be brought by such ship or vessel to some other British
plantation, or to some port in Great Britain; notwithstanding which, there is
great reason to apprehend such goods are frequently carried to foreign parts,
and landed there: and whereas great quantities of foreign molasses and syrups
are clandestinely run on shore in the British colonies, to the prejudice of the
revenue, and the great detriment of the trade of this kingdom, and it’s
American plantations: to remedy which practices for the future, be it further
enacted by the authority aforesaid, That from and after the twenty ninth day of
September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four, bond and security, in the
like penalty, shall also be given to the collector or other principal officer of
the customs at any port or place in any of the British American colonies or
plantations, with one surety besides the master of every ship or vessel that
shall lade or take on board there any goods not particularly enumerated in the
said acts, being the product or manufacture of any of the said colonies or
plantations, with condition, that, in case any molasses or syrups, being the
produce of any of the plantations, not under the dominions of his Majesty, his
heirs or successors, shall be laden on board such ship or vessel, the same shall
(the danger of the seas and enemies excepted) be brought, without fraud or
wilful diminution, by the said ship or vessel to some of his Majesty’s
colonies or plantations in America, or to some port in Great Britain; and that
the master or other person having the charge of such ship or vessel, shall,
immediately upon his arrival at every port or place in Great Britain, or in the
British American colonies and plantations, make a just and true report of all
the goods laden on board such ship or vessel under their true and proper
denominations; and if any such non-enumerated goods shall be laden on board any
such ship or vessel before such bond shall be given, the goods so laden together
with the ship or vessel and her furniture shall be forfeited, and shall and may
be seized by any officer of the customs, and prosecuted in the manner herein
after directed.
XXIV. And it is hereby further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That
every master or person having the charge of any ship or vessel shall, before he
departs from any British colony or plantation where he receives his lading, take
a certificate under the hands and seals of the collector or other principal
officer of the customs there (which certificate such officers are hereby
required to grant without fee or reward) that bond hath been given, pursuant to
the directions of this or any other act of parliament, as the case shall
require; and the master or person having the charge of such ship or vessel,
shall keep such certificate in his custody till the voyage is compleated, and
shall then deliver the same up to the collector or other chief officer of the
customs at the port or place where he shall discharge his lading, either in
Great Britain, or any British American colony or plantation, on forfeiture of
one hundred pounds for each and every offence.
XXV. And it is hereby further enacted, That if any British ship or vessel
laden, as aforesaid, with any goods of the produce or manufacture of any British
colony or plantation in America, or having on board any molasses or syrups the
produce of any foreign colony or plantation, shall be discovered by any officer
of his Majesty’s customs within two leagues of the shore of any British colony
or plantation in America, and the master or person taking charge of such ship or
vessel shall not produce a certificate that bond has been given, pursuant to the
direction of this or any other act of parliament, as the case may require; or if
he shall not produce certificate to the collector or other chief officer of the
customs where he shall arrive, either in Great Britain or any British American
colony or plantation, such ship or vessel, with her tackle, apparel, and
furniture, and all the goods therein laden, shall be forfeited, and shall and
may be seized and prosecuted as herein after is directed.
XXVI. And it is hereby further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That
the said bond directed to be given by this act with respect to such
non-enumerated goods, shall continue in force for one year from and after the
completion of the voyage; and in case no fraud shall appear within that time, it
shall be lawful for the commissioners of his Majesty’s customs, or any four or
more of them, to direct the said bond to be delivered up.
XXVII. And it is hereby enacted by the authority aforesaid, That from and
after the twenty ninth day of September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty
four, all coffee, pimento, cocoa nuts, whale fins, raw silks, hides and skins,
pot and pearl ashes, of the growth, production, or manufacture, of any British
colony or plantation in America, shall be imported directly from thence into
this kingdom, or some other British colony or plantation, under the like
securities, penalties, and forfeitures, as are particularly mentioned in two
acts of parliament made in the twelfth and twenty fifth years of the reign of
King Charles the Second, the former intituled, An act for the encouraging and
increasing of shipping and navigation, and the latter intituled, An act for the
encouragement of the Greenland and eastland trades and for the better securing
the plantation trade, or either of them, with respect to the goods in those acts
particularly enumerated; any law, custom, or usage, to the contrary
notwithstanding.
XXVIII. And it is hereby further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That
from and after the twenty ninth day of September, one thousand seven hundred and
sixty four, no iron, nor any sort of wood, commonly called Lumber, as specified
in an act passed in the eighth year of the reign of King George the First,
intituled, An act for giving further encouragement of the importation of naval
stores, and for other purposes therein mentioned, of the growth, production, or
manufacture, of any British colony or plantation in America, shall be there
loaden on board any ship of vessel to be carried from thence, until sufficient
bond shall be given, with one surety besides the master of the vessel, to the
collector or other principal officer of the customs at the loading port in a
penalty of double the value of the goods, which condition, that the said goods
shall not be landed in any part of Europe except Great Britain; which bonds
shall be discharged in the manner hereafter mentioned; that is to say, for such
of the said goods as shall be entered for, or landed in, Great Britain, the
condition of the bonds shall be, to bring a certificate in discharge thereof
within eighteen months from the date of the bond; and within eighteen months
from the date of the bond; and within six months for such of the said goods as
shall be entered for, or landed in, any of the British colonies or plantations
in America; which respective certificates shall be under the hands and seals of
the collector or other principal officer of the customs resident at the port or
place where such goods shall be landed, testifying the landing thereof; and for
such of the said goods as shall be entered for, or landed at, any other place in
America, Africa, or Asia, to bring the like certificate within twelve months,
under the common seal of the chief magistrate, or under the hands and seals of
two known British merchants residing there; or such bond or bonds shall be
discharged, in either of the said cases, by proof upon oath made by credible
persons, that the said goods were taken by enemies, or perished in the seas.
XXIX. And, for the better preventing frauds in the importation or
exportation of goods that are liable to the payment of duties, or are
prohibited, in the British colonies or plantations in America, it is further
enacted by the authority aforesaid, That from and after the twenty ninth day of
September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four, no goods, wares, or
merchandizes, of any kind whatsoever, shall be shipped or laden on board any
ship or vessel in any of the British colonies or plantations in America, to be
carried from thence to any other British colony or plantation, without a
sufferance or warrant first had and obtained from the collector or other proper
officer of the customs at the port or place where such goods shall be intended
to be put on board; and the master of every such ship or vessel shall, before
the same be removed or carried out from the port or place where he takes in his
lading, take out a cocket or cockets expressing the quantity and quality of the
goods, and marks of the package, so laden, with the merchants names by whom
shipped and to whom consigned; and if they are goods that liable to the payment
of any duty, either upon the importation into, or upon the exportation from, the
said colonies or plantation, the said cocket or cockets shall likewise
distinctly specify that the duties have been paid for the same, referring to the
times or dates of entry and payment of such duties, and by whom they were paid;
which cocket or cockets shall be produced by the master of such ship or vessel,
to the collector or other principal officer of the customs at the port of place
where such ship or vessel shall arrive in any of the British colonies or
plantations in America, before any part of the goods are unladen or put on
shore: and if any goods or merchandizes shall be shipped as aforesaid without
such sufferance, or the vessel shall depart and proceed on her voyage without
such cocket or cockets are produced at the port of place of discharge, or if the
goods do not agree in all respects therewith, the goods, in any of either of
those cases, shall be forfeited and lost; and any office of his Majesty’s
customs is hereby empowered to stop any such ship or vessel, bound aforesaid,
which shall be discovered within two leagues of the shore of any of the said
British colonies of plantations in America, and to seize and take from thence
all the goods which shall be found on board such ship or vessel for which no
such cocket or cockets shall be produced to him.
XXX. And whereas British vessels arriving from foreign parts at several
of the out ports of this kingdom, fully or in part laden abroad with goods that
are pretended to be destined to some foreign plantation, do frequently take on
board some small parcels of goods in this kingdom which are entered outwards for
some British colony or plantation, and a cocket and clearance thereupon granted
for such goods, under cover of which the whole cargoes of such vessels are
clandestinely landed in the British American dominions, contrary to several acts
of parliament now in force, to the great prejudice of the trade and revenue of
the kingdom; for remedy whereof, be it further enacted by the authority
aforesaid, That from and after the first day of May, one thousand seven hundred
and sixty four, no ship or vessel shall, upon any pretence whatsoever, be
cleared outwards from any port of this kingdom, for any land, island,
plantation, colony, territory, or place, to his Majesty belonging, or which
shall hereafter belong unto or be in the possession or under the dominion of his
Majesty, his heirs or successors, in America, unless the whole and entire cargo
of such ship or vessel shall be bona fide, and without fraud, laden and shipped
in this kingdom; and any officer of is Majesty’s customs is hereby empowered
to stop any British ship or vessel arriving from any part of Europe, which shall
be discovered within two leagues of the shore of any of the said British
colonies or plantations in America, and to seize and take from thence, as
forfeited, any goods (except as herein after mentioned) for which the master or
other person taking the charge of such ship or vessel shall not produce a cocket
or clearance from the collector or proper officer of his Majesty’s customs,
certifying that the said goods were laden on board the said ship or vessel in
some port of Great Britain.
XXXI. Provided always, That this act shall not extend, nor be construed
to extend, to forfeit, for want of such cocket or clearance, any salt laden in
Europe for the fisheries in New England, Newfoundland, Pennsylvania, New York,
and Nova Scotia, or any other place to which salt is or shall be allowed by law
to be carried; wines laden in the Madeiras, of the growth thereof; and wines of
the growth of the Western Islands, or Azores, and laden there; nor any horses,
victuals, or linen cloth, of and from Ireland, which may be laden on board such
ships or vessels.
XXXII. And it is hereby further enacted, That if any person or persons
shall counterfeit, raise, alter, or falsify, any affidavit, certificate,
sufferance, cocket, or clearance, required or directed by this act, or shall
knowingly or willingly make use of any affidavit, certificate, sufferance,
cocket, or clearance, so counterfeited, raised, altered, or falsified, such
person or persons shall knowingly or willingly , or every such offence, forfeit
the sum of five hundred pounds; and such affidavit, certificate, sufferance,
cocket, or clearance, shall be invalid and of no effect.
XXXIII. And whereas by an act of parliament, made in the ninth year of
the reign of his late majesty King George the Second, intituled, An act for
indemnifying persons who have been guilty of offences against the laws made for
securing the revenue of customs and excise, and for enforcing those laws for the
future, and by other acts of parliament since made, which are now in force, in
order to prevent the clandestine landing of goods in this kingdom from vessels
which hover upon the coasts thereof, several goods and vessels, in those laws
particularly mentioned and described, are declared to be forfeited, if such
vessels are found at anchor, or hovering within two leagues of the shore of this
kingdom, without being compelled thereto by necessity or distress of weather;
which laws have been found very beneficial to the publick revenue: and whereas,
if some provision of that sort was extended to his Majesty’s American
dominions, it may be a means of preventing an illicit trade therewith, and tend
to enforce an act made in the twelfth year of the reign of King Charles the
Second, intituled, An act for the encouraging and increasing of shipping and
navigation, and another act made in the seventh and eighth years of the reign of
King William the Third, intituled, An act for preventing frauds, and regulating
abuses in the plantation trade, so far as those laws do prohibit any goods or
commodities to be imported into or exported out of any British colony or
plantation in America, in any foreign ship or vessel; to which end therefore, be
it enacted by the authority aforesaid, That from and after the twenty ninth day
of September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four, if any foreign ship or
vessel whatsoever shall be found at anchor, or hovering within two leagues of
the shore of any land, island, plantation, colony, territory, or place, which
shall or may be in the possession or under the dominion of his Majesty, his
heirs or successors, in America, and shall not depart from the coast, and
proceed upon her voyage to some foreign port or place, within forty eight hours
after the master or other person taking the charge of such ship or vessel shall
be required so to do by any officer of his Majesty’s customs, unless in case
of unavoidable necessity and distress of weather, such ship or vessel, with all
the goods therein laden, shall be forfeited and lost, whether bulk shall have
been broken or not; and shall and may be seized and prosecuted by any officer of
his Majesty’s customs, in such manner and form as herein after is expressed.
XXXIV. Provided always, that nothing herein contained shall extend, or be
construed to extend, to any ship or vessel belonging to the subjects of the
French king, which shall be found fishing, and not carrying on any illicit
trade, on that part of the island of Newfoundland, which stretches from the
place called Cape Bonavista to the northern part of the said island, and from
thence running down to the western side, reaches as far as the place called
Point Riche.
XXXV. And, in order to prevent an illicit trade or commerce between his
Majesty’s subjects in America, and the subjects of the crown of France in the
islands of Saint Pierre and Miquelon, it is hereby further enacted by the
authority aforesaid, That from and after the twenty ninth day of September, one
thousand seven hundred and sixty four, if any British ship or vessel shall be
found standing into, or coming out from, either of those islands, or hovering or
at anchor within two leagues of the coasts thereof, or shall be discovered to
have taken any goods or merchandizes on board at either of them, or to have been
there for the purpose; such ship or vessel, and all the goods so taken on board
there, shall be forfeited and lost, and shall and may be seized and prosecuted
by any officer of his Majesty’s customs; and the master or other person having
the charge of such ship or vessel, and every person concerned in taking any such
goods on board, shall forfeit treble the value thereof.
XXXVI. And, to prevent the concealing any goods in false packages, or
private places, on board any ship or vessel arriving at any of the British
colonies or plantations in America, with intent to their being clandestinely
landed there, be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That from and
after the twenty ninth day of September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty
four, all goods which shall be found concealed in any place whatsoever on board
any such ship or vessel, at any time after the master thereof shall have made
his report to the collector or other proper officer of the customs, and which
shall not be comprized or mentioned in the said report, shall be forfeited and
lost, and shall and may be seized and prosecuted by any officer of the customs;
and the master or other person having the charge or command of such ship or
vessel (in case it can be made appear, that he was any wise consenting or privy
to such fraud or concealment) shall forfeit treble the value of the goods so
found.
XXXVII. And it is hereby further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That
from and after the twenty ninth day of September, one thousand seven hundred and
sixty four, if any goods or merchandizes whatsoever, liable to the payment of
duties in any British colony or plantation in America by this or any other act
of parliament, shall be loaded on board any ship or vessel outward bound, or
shall be unshipped or landed from any ship or vessel inward bound, before the
respective duties due thereon are paid, agreeable to law; or if any prohibited
goods whatsoever shall be imported into, or exported out of, any of the said
colonies or plantations, contrary to the true intent and meaning of this or any
other act of parliament; every person who shall be assisting, or otherwise
concerned, either in the loading outwards, or in the unshipping or landing
inwards, such goods, or to whose hands the same shall knowingly come after the
loading or unshipping thereof, shall, for each and every offence, forfeit treble
the value of such goods, to be estimated and computed according to the best
price that each respective commodity bears at the place where such offence was
committed; and all the boats, horses, cattle, and other carriages whatsoever,
made use of in the loading, landing, removing, carriage, or conveyance, of any
of the aforesaid goods, shall also be forfeited and lost, and shall and may be
seized and prosecuted, by any officer of his Majesty’s customs, as herein
after mentioned.
XXXVIII. And it is hereby further enacted by the authority aforesaid,
That from and after the twenty ninth day of September, one thousand seven
hundred and sixty four, if any officer of his Majesty’s customs shall,
directly or indirectly, take or receive any bribe, recompence, or reward, in any
kind whatsoever; or connive at any false entry, or make any collusive seizure or
agreement; or do any other act or deed whatsoever by which his Majesty, his
heirs or successors, shall or may be defrauded in his or their duties, or
whereby any goods prohibited shall be suffered to pass either inwards or
outwards, or whereby the forfeitures and penalties inflicted by this or any
other act of parliament relating to his Majesty’s customs in America may be
evaded; every such officer therein offending shall, for each and every offence,
forfeit the sum of five hundred pounds, and be rendered incapable of serving his
Majesty in any office or employment civil or military: and if any person or
persons whatsoever shall give, any officer, or promise to give, any bribe,
recompence, or reward, to any officer of the customs, to do, conceal, or connive
at, any act, whereby any of the provisions made by this or any other act of
parliament relating to his Majesty’s customs in America may be evaded or
broken, every such person or persons shall, for each and every such offence
(whether the same offer, proposal, or promise, be accepted or performed, or not)
forfeit the sum of fifty pounds.
XXXIX. And whereas by an act of parliament made in the seventh and eighth
year of the reign of King William the Third, intituled, An act for preventing
frauds, and regulating abuses, in the plantation trade, all governors or
commanders in chief of any of his Majesty’s colonies or plantations, are
required to take a solemn oath, to do their utmost that all the clauses,
matters, and things, contained in that act, and several other acts of parliament
therein referred to, relating to the said colonies and plantations, be
punctually and bona fide observed, according to the true intent and meaning
thereof: and whereas divers other good laws have been since made, for the better
regulating and securing the plantation trade: be it further enacted by the
authority aforesaid, That all the present governors or commanders in chief of
any British colony or plantation shall, before the twenty ninth day of
September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four, and all who hereafter
shall be made governors or commanders in chief of the said colonies or
plantations, or any of them, before their entrance into their government, shall
take a solemn oath, to do their utmost that all the clauses, matters, and
things, contained in any act of parliament heretofore made, and now in force,
relating to the said colonies and plantations, and that all and every the
clauses contained in this present act, be punctually and bona fide observed,
according to the true intent and meaning thereof, so far as appertains unto the
said governors or commanders in chief respectively, under the like penalties,
forfeitures, and disabilities, either for neglecting to take the said oath, or
for wittingly neglecting to do their duty accordingly, as are mentioned and
expressed in the said recited act made in the seventh and eighth year of the
reign of King William the Third; and the said oath, hereby required to be taken,
shall be administered by such person or persons as hath or have been, or shall
be, appointed to administer the oath required to be taken by the said act made
in the seventh and eighth year of the reign of King William the Third.
XL. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That all
penalties and forfeitures herein before mentioned, which shall be incurred in
Great Britain, shall and may be prosecuted, sued for, and recovered, in any of
his Majesty’s courts of record at Westminister, or in the court of Exchequer
in Scotland, respectively; and (all necessary charges for the recovery thereof
being first deducted) shall be divided and applied, one moiety to and for the
use of his Majesty, his heirs and successors, and the other moiety to the seizor
or prosecutor.
XLI. And it is hereby further enacted and declared, That from and after
the twenty ninth day of September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four,
all sums of money granted and imposed by this act, and by an act made in the
twenty fifth year of the reign of King Charles the Second, intituled, An act for
the encouragement of the Greenland and Eastland trades, and for the better
securing the plantation trade, as rates or duties; and also all sums of money
imposed as penalties or forfeitures, by this or any other act of parliament
relating to the customs, which shall be paid, incurred, or recovered, in any of
the British colonies or plantations in America; shall be deemed, and are hereby
declared to be sterling money of Great Britain, and shall be collected,
recovered, and paid, to the amount of the value which such nominal sums bear in
Great Britain; and that such monies shall and may be received and taken
according to the proportion and value of five shillings and six pence the ounce
in silver; and that all the forfeitures and penalties inflicted by this or any
other act or acts of parliament relating to the trade and revenues of the said
British colonies or plantations where such offence shall be appointed over all
America (which court of admiralty or vice admiralty are hereby respectively
authorized and required to proceed, hear, and determine the same) at the
election of the informer or prosecutor.
XLII. And it is hereby further enacted, That all penalties and
forfeitures so recovered there, under this or any former act of parliament,
shall be divided, paid, and applied, as follows; that is to say, after deducting
the charges of prosecution from the gross produce thereof, one third part of the
net produce shall be paid into the hands of the collector of his Majesty’s
customs at the port or place where such penalties or forfeitures shall be
recovered, for the use of his Majesty, his heirs and successors; one third part
to the governor or commander in chief of the said colony or plantation; and the
other third part to the person who shall seize, inform, and sue for the same;
excepting such seizures as shall be made at sea by the commanders or officers of
his Majesty’s ships or vessels of war duly authorized to make seizures; one
moiety of which seizures, and of the penalties and forfeitures recovered
thereon, first deducting the charges of prosecution from the gross produce
thereof, shall be paid as aforesaid to the collector of his Majesty’s customs,
to and for the use of his Majesty, his heirs and successors, and the other
moiety to him or them who shall seize, inform, and sue for the same; any law,
custom, or usage, to the contrary notwithstanding; subject nevertheless to such
distribution of the produce of the seizures so made at sea, as well with regard
to the moiety herein before granted to his Majesty, his heirs and successors,
shall think fit to order and direct or by any order or orders of council, or by
any proclamation or proclamations, to be made for that purpose.
XLIII. Provided always, and it is hereby further enacted by the authority
aforesaid, That if the produce of any seizure made in America, shall not be
sufficient to answer the expences of condemnation and sale; or if, upon the
trial of any seizure of any ship or goods, a verdict or sentence shall be given
for the claimant, in either of those cases, the charges attending the seizing
and prosecuting such ship or goods shall and may, with the consent and
approbation of any four of the commissioners of his Majesty’s customs, be paid
out of any branch of the revenue of customs arising in any of the British
colonies or plantations in America; any thing in this or any other act of
parliament to the contrary notwithstanding.
XLIV. And it is hereby further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That
from and after the said twenty ninth day of September, one thousand seven
hundred and sixty four, no person shall be admitted to enter a claim to any ship
or goods seized in pursuance of this or any other act of parliament, and
prosecuted in any of the British colonies or plantations in America, until
sufficient security be first given, by persons of known ability, in the court
where such seizures is prosecuted, in the penalty of sixty pounds, to answer the
costs and charges of prosecution; and, in default of giving such security, such
ship or goods shall be adjudged to be forfeited, and shall be condemned.
XLV. And it is hereby further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That
from and after the twenty ninth day of September, one thousand seven hundred and
sixty four, if any ship or goods shall be seized for any cause of forfeiture,
and any dispute shall arise whether the customs and duties for such goods have
been paid, or the same have been lawfully imported or exported, or concerning
the growth, product, or manufacture, of such goods, or the place from whence
such goods were brought, then, and in such cases, the proof thereof shall lie
upon the owner or claimer of such ship or goods, and not upon the officer who
shall seize or stop the same; any law, custom, or usage, any law, custom, or
usage, to the contrary notwithstanding.
XLVI. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That from and
after the twenty ninth day of September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty
four, in case any information shall be commenced and brought to trial in
America, on account of any seizure of any ship or goods as forfeited by this or
any other act of parliament relating to his Majesty’s customs, wherein a
verdict or sentence shall be given for the claimer thereof; and it shall appear
to the judge or court before whom the same shall be tried, that there was a
probable cause of seizure, the judge or court before whom the same shall be
tried shall certify on the record or other proceedings, that there was a
probable cause for the prosecutors seizing the said ship or goods; and, in such
case, the defendant shall not be intitled to any costs of suit whatsoever; nor
shall the person who seized the said ship or goods, be liable to any action, or
other suit or prosecution, on account of such seizure: and in any case any
action, or other suit or prosecution, shall be commenced and brought to trial
against any person or persons whatsoever, on account of the seizing any such
ship or goods, where no information shall be commenced or brought to trial to
condemn the same, and a verdict or sentence shall be given upon such action or
prosecution against the defendant or defendants, if the court or judge before
whom such action or prosecution, shall certify in like manner as aforesaid that
there was a probable cause for such seizure, then the plaintiff besides his ship
or goods so seized, or the value thereof, shall not be intitled to above two
pence damages, nor to any costs of suit; nor shall the defendant in such
prosecution be fined above one shilling.
XLVII. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That if any
action or suit shall be commenced, either in Great Britain or America, against
any person or persons for any thing done in pursuance of this or any other act
of parliament relating to his Majesty’s customs, the defendant or defendants
in such action or suit may plead the general issue, and give the said acts, and
the special matter, in evidence at any trial to be had thereupon, and that the
same was done in pursuance and by the authority of such act; and if it shall
appear so to have been done, the jury shall find for the defendant or
defendants; and if the plaintiff shall be non-suited, or discontinue his action
after the defendant or defendants shall have appeared, or if judgment shall be
given upon verdict or demurrer against the plaintiff, the defendant or
defendants shall recover treble costs, and have the like remedy for the same as
defendants have in other cases by law.
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