Mercantile Law Amendment Act 1860
Mercantile Law Amendment Act 1860
Mercantile Law Amendment Act 1860
Mercantile Law Amendment Act 1860
Public Act |
1860 No 8 |
|
Date of assent |
28 September 1860 |
|
Contents
An Act to amend the Laws affecting Trade and Commerce.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of New Zealand, in Parliament assembled, and by authority of the same:—
I Short Title.
The Short Title of this Act shall be the Mercantile Law Amendment Act, 1860.
II Persons acquiring title to Goods before they have been seized or attached under writ against the seller protected.
No Writ of Fieri Facias or other Writ of Execution, and no Writ of attachment against the goods of a Debtor shall prejudice the title to such goods acquired by any person bonâ fide, and for a valuable consideration before the actual seizure or attachment thereof by virtue of such Writ: Provided such person had not, at the time when he acquired such title, notice that such Writ, or any other Writ by virtue of which the goods of such owner might be seized or attached, had been delivered to and remained unexecuted in the hands of the Sheriff.
III Specific delivery of goods sold.
In all Actions and Suits in any Court of Record for breach of contract to deliver specific goods for a price in money, on the application of the Plaintiff, and by leave of the Judge before whom the cause is tried, the jury shall, if they find the Plaintiff entitled to recover, find by their verdict what are the goods in respect of the nondelivery of which the Plaintiff is entitled to recover and which remain undelivered; what (if any) is the sum the Plaintiff would have been liable to pay for the delivery thereof; what damages (if any) the Plaintiff would have sustained if the goods should be delivered under execution, as hereinafter mentioned, and what damages if not so delivered; and thereupon, if judgment shall be given for the Plaintiff, the Court or any Judge thereof, at their or his discretion, on the application of the Plaintiff, shall have power to order execution to issue for the delivery of the said goods, on payment of such sum (if any) as shall have been found to be payable by the Plaintiff as aforesaid, without giving the Defendant the option of retaining the said goods upon paying the damages assessed: and such Writ of Execution may be for the delivery of such goods; and if such goods so ordered to be delivered, or any part thereof, cannot be found and unless the Court, or such Judge as aforesaid shall otherwise order, the Sheriff, or other officer of such Court of Record shall distrain the Defendant by all his lands and chattels in the said Sheriff’s bailiwick, or within the jurisdiction of such Court of Record, till the Defendant deliver such goods, or, at the option of the Plaintiff, cause to be made of the Defendant’s goods the assessed value or damages, or a due proportion thereof: Provided that the Plaintiff shall, either by the same or a separate Writ of Execution be entitled to have made of the Defendant’s goods, the damages, costs, and interest in such action or suit.
IV Consideration for Guarantee need not appear by writing.
No special promise to be made by any person after the passing of this Act to answer for the debt, default, or miscarriage of another person being in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or some other person by him thereunto lawfully authorised, shall be deemed invalid to support an action, suit or other proceeding, to charge the person by whom such promise shall have been made, by reason only that the consideration for such promise does not appear in writing or by necessary inference from a written document.
V Guarantee to or for a Firm to cease upon a change in the firm, except in special cases.
No promise to answer for the debt, default, or miscarriage of another made to a firm, consisting of two or more persons, or to a single person trading under the name of a firm, and no promise to answer for the debt, default, or miscarriage of a firm consisting of two or more persons, or of a single person trading under the name of a firm shall be binding on the person making such promise in respect of any thing done or omitted to be done after a change shall have taken place in any one or more of the persons constituting the firm, or in the person trading under the name of a firm, unless the intention of the parties, that such promise shall continue to be binding notwithstanding such change, shall appear either by express stipulation or by necessary implication from the nature of the firm or otherwise.
VI A Surety who discharges the Liability to be entitled to Assignment of all Securiries held by the Creditor.
Every person who, being surety for the debt or duty of another, or being liable with another for any debt or duty, shall pay or satisfy such debt or perform such duty, shall be entitled to have assigned to him or to a Trustee for him, every judgment, specialty, or other security which shall be held by the Creditor in respect of such debt or duty, whether such judgment, specialty, or other security shall or shall not be deemed at Law to have been satisfied by the payment of the debt or performance of the duty, and such person shall be entitled to stand in the place of the Creditor, and to use all the remedies, and if need be and upon a proper indemnity to use the name of the Creditor in any Action or other Proceeding at Law or in Equity, in order to obtain from the principal Debtor or any Co-Surety, Co-Contractor, or Co-Debtor as the case may be, indemnification for the advances made and loss sustained by the person who shall have so paid or satisfied such debt or performed such duty, and such payment, satisfaction, or performance so made by such surety, shall not be pleadable in Bar of any such Action or other Proceeding by him: Provided always that no Co-Surety, Co-Contractor, or Co-Debtor shall be entitled to recover from any other Co-Surety, Co-Contractor, or Co-Debtor by the means aforesaid more than the just proportion to which, as between those parties themselves, such last mentioned person shall be justly liable.
VII Acceptance of a Bill, Inland or Foreign, to be in writing on it, and signed by the acceptor or his agent.
No Acceptance of any Bill of Exchange, whether Inland or Foreign, made after the thirty first day of December, one thousand eight hundred and sixty, shall be sufficient to bind, or charge any person unless the same be in writing on such Bill, or if there be more than one part of such Bill on one of the said parts, and signed by the Acceptor or some person duly authorised by him.
VIII Limitation of Actions for “Merchants’ Accounts.”
All Actions Of Account, or for not Accounting, and Suits for such Accounts as concern the Trade of Merchandize between Merchant and Merchant, their Factors or Servants, shall be commenced and sued within six years after the cause of such Actions or Suits, or when such cause has already arisen then within six years after the passing of this Act, and no Claim in respect of a matter which arose more than six years before the commencement of such Action or Suit, shall be enforceable by Action or Suit, by reason only of some other matter of Claim comprised in the same Account having arisen within six years next before the commencement of such Action or Suit.
IX Absence beyond seas or imprisonment of a Creditor, not to be a disability.
No person or persons who shall be entitled to any Action or Suit with respect to which the period of limitation within which the same shall be brought is fixed by the Act of the Twenty-first year of the Reign of King James the First, Chapter Sixteen, Section Three, or by the Act of the Fourth year of the Reign of Queen Anne, Chapter Sixteen, Section Seventeen, or by the Act of the Fifty-third year of the Reign of King George the Third, Chapter One Hundred and Twenty-seven Section Five, or by the Acts of the Third and Fourth years of the Reign of King William the Fourth, Chapter Twenty-seven, Sections Forty, Forty-one, and Forty-two, and Chapter Forty-two, Section Three, shall be entitled to any time within which to commence and sue such Action or Suit beyond the period so fixed for the same by the enactments aforesaid, by reason only of such person or some one or more of such persons being beyond the Seas at the time such cause of Action or Suit accrued, or in the cases in which by virtue of any of the aforesaid enactments, imprisonment is now a disability by reason of such person or some one or more of such persons being imprisoned at the time such cause of Action or Suit accrued.
X Period of limitation to run as to Joint Debtors in the Colony though some are beyond seas.
Judgment recovered against Joint Debtors in the Colony to be no bar to proceeding against others beyond seas, after their return.
Where such cause of Action or Suit with respect to which the period of limitation is fixed by the enactments aforesaid or any of them lies against two or more joint Debtors, the person or persons who shall be entitled to the same shall not be entitled to any time within which to commence and sue any such Action or Suit against any one or more of such Joint Debtors who shall not be beyond the Seas at the time such cause of Action or Suit accrued by reason only that some other one or more of such Joint Debtors, was or were at the time such cause of Action accrued beyond the Seas, and such person or persons so entitled as aforesaid shall not be barred from commencing and suing any Action or Suit against the Joint Debtor or Joint Debtors, who was or were beyond Seas at the time the cause of Action or Suit accrued after his or their return from beyond Seas, by reason only that judgment was already recovered against any one or more of such Joint Debtors who was not or were not beyond Seas at the time aforesaid.
XI Provisions of 9 G. 4 c 14 s s. 1 & 8, extended to acknowledgments by agents.
In reference to the provisions of the Act of the Imperial Parliament, of the Ninth year of the Reign of King George the Fourth, Chapter Fourteen, Sections One and Eight, an acknowledgement or promise made or contained by or in writing signed by an Agent of the party chargeable thereby duly authorised to make such acknowledgement or promise shall have the same effect as if such writing had been signed by such party himself.
XII Part payment by one contractor &c., not to prevent Bar by certain statutes of limitations in favour of another contractor. &c.
In reference to the provisions of the Acts of the Twenty-first year of the Reign of King James the First, Chapter Sixteen, Section Three, and of the Act of the Third and Fourth years of the Reign of King William the Fourth, Chapter Forty two, Section Three, when there shall be two or more Co-Contractors, or Co-Debtors, whether bound or liable jointly only, or jointly and severally, or Executors or Administrators of any Contractor, no such Co-Contractor or Co-Debtor, Executor or Administrator, shall lose the benefit of the said enactments or any of them, so as to be chargeable in respect or by reason only of payment of any Principal interest or other money by any other or others of such Co-Contractors, or Co-Debtors, Executors, or Administrators.