Admiralty Powers, &c. Act 1865

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The Admiralty Powers,
&c. Act 1865[1]
Long titleAn Act for consolidating certain Enactments relating to the Admiralty.
Citation28 & 29 Vict c 124
Dates
Royal assent6 July 1865
Status: Repealed

The Admiralty Powers, &c. Act (28 & 29 Vict. c. 124.) was a British act of parliament passed in 1865.[2] It gained royal assent on 6 July 1865.

It is notable for its Section 5, which made the admiral-superintendent of every UK dockyard a justice of the peace "in all Places ... in respect of all Offences specified in this Act, and of all matters relating to Her Majesty's Naval Service, and the Stores, Provisions, and Accounts thereof". This gave him the authority to hear cases brought before him by the dockyard police (which were then the dockyard divisions of the Metropolitan Police). The rest of the act dealt with punishments for forgery and impersonation of naval seamen (Sections 6 to 9) and clarified issues over the Board of Admiralty's involvement in legal actions (Sections 1–4). The final sections set up a reporting system for Orders in Council relating to the Act (Section 11), set 1 January 1866 as the latest date for the Act to come into effect (Section 10) and specified the Act's short title (Section 12).

Section 2 of the Act was repealed by the Crown Proceedings Act 1947[3] and the 1865 Act's Sections 6 to 9 (as well as the phrase "of all the offences specified in this Act, and" in its Section 5) were repealed by the Theft Act 1968[4] The rest of the Act has also been repealed.

References[]

  1. ^ Short title specified in its Section 12.
  2. ^ "The Statutes of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Volume 28, pages 214-215". 1865.
  3. ^ "Crown Proceedings Act 1947".
  4. ^ "1968 Theft Act".
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