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Statutes of Northern Ireland


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EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - LONG TITLE

An Act to amend the Law with respect to manufacturing, keeping,
selling, carrying, and importing Gunpowder, Nitro-glycerine, and other
Explosive Substances.{1}
[14th June 1875]
Preliminary

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 1

1. This Act may be cited as "The Explosives Act, 1875."

S.2 rep. by SLR 1893 (No. 2)

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 3
Substances to which this Act applies.

3. This Act shall apply to gunpowder and other explosives as
defined by this section.

The term "explosive" in this Act

(1)Means gunpowder, nitro-glycerine, dynamite, gun-cotton, blasting
powders, fulminate of mercury or of other metals, coloured fires,
and every other substance, whether similar to those above-mentioned
or not, used or manufactured with a view to produce a practical
effect by explosion or a pyrotechnic effect; and

(2)Includes fog-signals, fireworks, fuzes, rockets, percussion caps,
detonators, cartridges, ammunition of all descriptions, and every
adaptation or preparation of an explosive as above defined.

Gunpowder to be manufactured only at factory lawfully existing or
licensed under this Act.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 4

4. The manufacture of gunpowder shall not, nor shall any process of
such manufacture, be carried on except at a factory for gunpowder
either lawfully existing or licensed for the same under this Act.

Provided that nothing in this section shall apply to the making of
a small quantity of gunpowder for the purpose of chemical experiment
and not for practical use or for sale.

If any person manufactures gunpowder or carries on any process of
such manufacture at any place at which he is not allowed by this
section so to do, he shall be deemed to manufacture gunpowder at
an unauthorised place.

Where gunpowder is manufactured at an unauthorised place

(1)All or any part of the gunpowder or the ingredients of gunpowder
which may be found either in or about such place or in the
possession or under the control of any person convicted under this
section, may be forfeited; and

(2)The person so manufacturing shall be liable to a penalty not
exceeding [five hundred pounds or to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding twelve months or to both such penalty and imprisonment].

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 5
Gunpowder (except for private use) to be kept only in existing or
new magazine or store, or in registered premises.

5. Gunpowder shall not be kept at any place except as follows;
that is to say,

(1)Except in the factory (either lawfully existing or licensed for
the same under this Act) in which it is manufactured; or

(2)Except in a magazine or store for gunpowder either lawfully
existing or licensed under this Act for keeping gunpowder; or

(3)Except in premises registered under this Act for keeping
gunpowder.

Provided that this section shall not apply

(1)To a person keeping for his private use and not for sale
gunpowder to an amount not exceeding on the same premises thirty
pounds; or

(2)To the keeping of any gunpowder by a carrier or other person
for the purpose of conveyance, when the same is being conveyed or
kept in accordance with the provisions of this Act with respect to
the conveyance of gunpowder.

Any gunpowder kept in any place other than as above in this
section mentioned shall be deemed to be kept in an unauthorised
place.

Where any gunpowder is kept in an unauthorised place

(1)All or any part of the gunpowder found in such place may be
forfeited; and

(2)The occupier of such place, and also the owner of, or other
person guilty of keeping the gunpowder, shall each be liable to a
penalty not exceeding [five hundred pounds or to imprisonment for a
term not exceeding twelve months or to both such penalty and
imprisonment].

Application for license for new factory or magazine.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 6

6. A new factory or magazine for gunpowder shall not be established
except on the site and in the manner specified in a license for
the same granted under this Act.

An applicant for such a license shall submit to the Secretary of
State the draft of a license accompanied by a plan (drawn to
scale) of the proposed factory or magazine, and the site thereof
(which plan shall be deemed to form part of and to be in this
Act included in the expression "the license").

The draft license shall contain the terms which the applicant
proposes to have inserted in the license, and shall specify such of
the following matters as are applicable; namely,

(a)The boundaries of the land forming the site of the factory or
magazine and either any belt of land surrounding the site which is
to be kept clear, and the buildings and works from which it is to
be kept clear, or the distances to be maintained between the
factory or magazine, or any part thereof, and other buildings and
works; and

(b)the situation, character, and construction of all the mounds,
buildings, and works on or connected with the factory or magazine,
and the distances thereof from each other; and

(c)The nature of the processes to be carried on in the factory and
in each part thereof, and the place at which each process of the
manufacture, and each description of work connected with the factory
or magazine, is to be carried on, and the places in the factory
or magazine at which gunpowder and any ingredients of gunpowder, and
any articles liable to spontaneous ignition, or inflammable or
otherwise dangerous, are to be kept; and

(d)The amount of gunpowder and of ingredients thereof wholly or
partly mixed to be allowed at the same time in any building or
machine or any process of the manufacture or within a limited
distance from such building or machine, having regard to the
situation and construction of such building, and to the distance
thereof from any other building or any works; and

(e)The situation, in the case of a factory, of each factory
magazine, and in the case of another magazine, of each building
forming part of such magazine in which gunpowder is to be kept,
and the maximum amount of gunpowder to be kept in each factory
magazine, and in each such building as aforesaid; and

(f)The maximum number of persons to be employed in each building in
the factory; and

(g)Any special terms which the applicant may propose by reason of
any special circumstances arising from the locality, the situation or
construction of any buildings or works, or the nature of any
process, or otherwise.

The Secretary of State, after examination of the proposal, may
reject the application altogether or [may grant a licence in terms
of the draft with or without modification or addition].

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 7
Application for assent of Ministry of Home Affairs to site of new
factory or magazine.

7. [The Ministry of Home Affairs, before a licence is granted],
shall cause notice to be published by the applicant in manner
directed by this Act of the application and of the time and place
at which they will be prepared to hear the applicant, and any
persons objecting to such establishment who have not less than seven
clear days before the day of hearing sent to ... [the Ministry]
and to the applicant notice of their intention to appear and
object, with their name, address and calling, and a short statement
of the grounds of their objection.

Upon the hearing of the application, or any adjournment thereof, the
[Ministry of Home Affairs] may dissent altogether from the
establishment of such new factory or magazine on the proposed site,
or assent thereto, either absolutely or on any conditions requiring
additional restrictions or precautions.

Where the site of the proposed factory or magazine is situate
within or within one mile of the limits of the jurisdiction ... of
any harbour authority, the applicant shall serve on such authority,
..., notice of the application and of the time and place of
hearing fixed by the [Ministry of Home Affairs].

The said notices shall be published and served by the applicant not
less than one month before the hearing.

The [Ministry of Home Affairs] shall fix the time and place of
hearing as soon as practicable after application [has been made],
and the time so fixed shall be as soon as practicable after the
expiration of the said month from the publication and service of
the notices by the applicant, and their final decision shall be
given as soon as practicable after the expiration of the said
month.

....

The costs of any objections which the [Ministry of Home Affairs]
may deem to be frivolous shall be ascertained by an order made by
the [Ministry of Home Affairs], and shall be a debt due from the
objector to the applicant, of which such order shall be conclusive
evidence.

....

Grant and confirmation of license.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 8

8. ....

The Secretary of State, when satisfied that the factory or magazine
is sufficiently completed according to the license to justify the
use thereof, shall confirm the license, but until so confirmed the
license shall not come into force.

The land forming the site bounded as described in the license
shall, with every mound, building, and work thereon for whatever
purpose, be deemed, for the purposes of this Act, to be the
factory or magazine referred to in the license.

Regulation of factories and magazines for gunpowder.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 9

9. In every gunpowder factory and magazine

(1)The factory or magazine, or any part thereof, shall not be used
for any purpose not in accordance with the license; and

(2)The terms of the license shall be duly observed, and the
manufacture or keeping or any process in or work connected with the
manufacture or keeping of gunpowder shall not be carried on except
in accordance with those terms; and

(3)The factory or magazine and every part thereof shall be
maintained in accordance with the license; and any material
alteration in the factory or magazine by enlarging or adding to the
site, or by externally enlarging or adding to any building, or by
altering any mound otherwise than by enlargement, or by making any
new work, shall not be made except in pursuance of an amending
license granted under this Act.

In the event of any breach (by any act or default) of this
section in any factory or magazine,

(a)All or any part of the gunpowder or ingredients thereof in
respect to which, or being in any building or machine in respect
to which, the offence was committed, may be forfeited; and

(b)The occupier shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding [five
hundred pounds].

The occupier of a factory shall not be deemed guilty of a breach
of this section for using in a case of emergency, or temporarily,
one building or part of a building in which any process of the
manufacture is, under the terms of the license, carried on, for
another process of the manufacture, if he do not carry on in such
building or part more than one process at the same time, and if
the quantity of gunpowder or ingredients thereof in such building or
part do not exceed the quantity allowed to be therein, or any less
quantity allowed to be in the building or part of a building in
which such other process is usually carried on; and if upon such
use being continued after the lapse of twenty-eight days from the
first beginning of such use he send notice of such use to a
Government inspector, and the Government inspector do not require the
discontinuance of such use.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 10
General rules for factories and magazines.

10. In every gunpowder factory and magazine the following general
rules shall be observed:

(1)In a factory every factory magazine, and in any other magazine
every building in which gunpowder is kept, shall be used only for
the keeping of gunpowder, and receptacles for or tools or implements
for work connected with the keeping of such gunpowder; and

(2)The interior of every building in which any process of the
manufacture is carried on or in which gunpowder or any ingredients
thereof, either mixed or partially mixed, are kept, or in the
course of manufacture are liable to be (in this Act referred to as
a danger building), and the benches, shelves, and fittings in such
building (other than machinery), shall be so constructed or so lined
or covered as to prevent the exposure of any iron or steel in
such manner, and the detaching of any grit, iron, steel, or similar
substance in such manner, as to come into contact with the
gunpowder or ingredients thereof in such building, and such interior,
benches, shelves, and fittings shall, so far as is reasonably
practicable, be kept free from grit and otherwise clean; and

(3)Every factory magazine and expense magazine in a factory, and
every danger building in a magazine, shall have attached thereto a
sufficient lightning conductor, unless, by reason of the construction
by excavation or the position of such magazine or building, or
otherwise, the Secretary of State considers a conductor unnecessary,
and every danger building in a factory shall, if so required by
the Secretary of State, have attached thereto a sufficient lightning
conductor; and

(4)Charcoal, whether ground or otherwise, and oiled cotton, oiled
rags, and oiled waste, and any articles whatever liable to
spontaneous ignition, shall not be taken into any danger building,
except for the purpose of immediate supply and work or immediate
use in such building, and upon the cessation of such work or use
shall be forthwith removed; and

(5)Before repairs are done to or in any room in or other part of
a danger building, that room or part shall, so far as practicable,
be cleaned by the removal of all gunpowder, and wholly or partly
mixed ingredients thereof, and the thorough washing out of such room
or part; and such room or part of the building after being so
cleaned shall not be deemed to be a danger building within the
meaning of these rules until gunpowder or the wholly or partly
mixed ingredients thereof are again taken into it; and

(6)There shall be constantly kept affixed in every danger building,
either outside or inside, in such manner as to be easily read, a
statement of the quantities of gunpowder or ingredients allowed to
be in the building, and a copy of these rules, and of any other
part of this Act required by the Secretary of State to be affixed,
and of such part of the license and special rules made under this
Act as applied to the building; and with the addition in a factory
of the name of the building, or words indicating the purpose for
which it is used; and

(7)All tools and implements used in any repairs to or in a danger
building shall be made only of wood or copper or brass or some
soft metal or material, or shall be covered with some safe and
suitable material; and

(8)Due provision shall be made, by the use of suitable working
clothes without pockets, suitable shoes, searching, and otherwise, or
by some of such means, for preventing the introduction into any
danger building of fire, lucifer matches, or any substance or
article likely to cause explosion or fire, and for preventing the
introduction of any iron, steel, or grit into any part of a danger
building where it would be likely to come into contact with
gunpowder or the wholly or partly mixed ingredients thereof; but
this rule shall not prevent the introduction of an artificial light
of such construction, position, or character as not to cause any
danger of fire or explosion; and

(9)No person shall smoke in any part of the factory or magazine,
except in such part (if any) as may be allowed by the special
rules; and

<(10)Any carriage, boat, or other receptacle in which gunpowder, or the wholly or partly mixed ingredients thereof, are conveyed from one building to another in a factory or magazine, or from any such building to any place outside of such factory or magazine, shall be constructed without any exposed iron or steel in the interior thereof, and shall contain only the gunpowder and ingredients, and shall be closed or otherwise properly covered over; and the gunpowder and ingredients shall be so conveyed with all due diligence, and with such precautions and in such manner as will sufficiently guard against any accidental ignition; and

<(12)In a factory the ingredients in course of manufacture into gunpowder shall be removed with all due diligence from each working building so soon as the process connected with those ingredients which is carried on in such building is completed, and all finished gunpowder shall with all due diligence either be removed to a factory magazine, or sent away immediately from the factory, and such ingredients and gunpowder shall be loaded and unloaded with all due diligence; and

<(13)In a factory all ingredients to be made or mixed into gunpowder shall, before being so made or mixed, be carefully sifted, for the purpose of removing therefrom, so far as practicable, all dangerous foreign matter.

The Secretary of State may, from time to time, by order, make, and
when made rescind and alter, such modifications in the foregoing
general rules as may appear to him to be necessary for adapting
the same to floating magazines, and such modifications shall have
effect as if they were contained in this section.

In the event of any breach (by any act or default) of the general
rules in any factory or magazine

(a)All or any part of the gunpowder or ingredients thereof in
respect to which, or being in any building or machine in respect
to which, the offence was committed, may be forfeited; and

(b)The occupier shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding [two
hundred pounds].

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 11
Special rules for regulation of workmen in factory or magazine.

11. Every occupier of a gunpowder factory or magazine shall, with
the sanction of the Secretary of State, make special rules for the
regulation of the persons managing or employed in or about such
factory or magazine, with a view to secure the observance of this
Act therein, and the safety and proper discipline of the said
persons and the safety of the public.

There may be annexed to any breach of special rules made in
pursuance of this section such penalties, not exceeding [twenty
pounds] for each offence, as may be deemed just.

The occupier may, and if required by the Secretary of State shall,
with the sanction of the Secretary of State, repeal, alter, or add
to any special rules made in pursuance of this section.

If an occupier is required by the Secretary of State to make,
repeal, alter, or add to any rules under this section, and fail
within three months after such requisition to comply therewith to
the satisfaction of the Secretary of State, the Secretary of State
may make, repeal, alter, or add to the special rules, and anything
so done by the Secretary of State shall have effect as if done by
the occupier with the sanction of the Secretary of State.

If the occupier feel aggrieved by any such requisition, or by
anything so done by the Secretary of State, he may, after receiving
such requisition or notice of the same being so done, require the
matter to be referred to arbitration in manner provided by this
Act.

Alteration of terms of license and enlargement of factory or
magazine.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 12

12. Where the occupier of any gunpowder factory or magazine desires
that any alteration should be made in the terms of his license, or
any material alteration made in the factory or magazine by enlarging
or adding to the site or by externally enlarging or adding to any
building, or by altering any mound otherwise than by enlargement, or
by making any new work, he may apply for an amending license.

If he satisfy the Secretary of State that the alteration may be
properly permitted, having regard to the safety of the persons
employed in the factory or magazine, and will not materially either
increase the danger to the public from fire or explosion, or
diminish the distance of any danger building in the factory or
magazine from any building or work outside and in the neighbourhood
of the factory or magazine, or increase the amount of gunpowder
allowed to be kept in the factory magazine or in any building in
the magazine, the Secretary of State may grant the amending license
of his own authority, but, save as aforesaid, the provisions of
this Act with respect to the application for and grant of a new
license shall apply to such amending license.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 13
Devolution and determination of license.

13. A gunpowder factory or magazine license shall not be avoided by
any change in the occupier of the factory or magazine; but notice
of the name, address, and calling of the new occupier shall be
sent to the Secretary of State within three months after the
change, and in default such new occupier shall be liable to a
penalty not exceeding [twenty pounds].

A factory or magazine license shall be determined by a
discontinuance of the business carried on in pursuance of any such
license if such discontinuance continues for a period of two years
or more, or if the factory or magazine is used for any purpose
not authorised by the license.

Provided that if the occupier sends to the Secretary of State, and
publishes in manner directed by the Secretary of State, a notice to
the effect that the right to the factory or magazine license is
not intended to be surrendered, the license shall not be determined
until after the expiration of five years after the first
discontinuance of the business, whether the factory or magazine has
or has not been used for any purpose not authorised by the
license.

Continuing certificate for existing factories and magazines.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 14

14. A factory or magazine for gunpowder used at the time of the
passing of this Act shall not be deemed to be a lawfully existing
factory or magazine within the meaning of this Act unless the
occupier thereof apply for and obtain in manner provided by this
Act a certificate (in this Act referred to as a continuing
certificate) in respect of such factory or magazine.

The occupier desirous of obtaining such certificate shall, before the
expiration of three months after the commencement of this Act, send
to the Secretary of State an application for such certificate,
stating his name, address, and calling, and the situation of his
factory or magazine, and accompanied with such particulars respecting
the factory or magazine and the site thereof, and the mounds,
buildings, and works thereon or connected therewith, and such copies
of any plans in the possession of the occupier, as the Secretary
of State may deem necessary for enabling him to make out the
certificate.

The Secretary of State upon receiving such application shall grant
the continuing certificate for the factory or magazine to which the
application relates, and shall insert therein, by reference to a
plan (which shall be deemed part of the certificate) or otherwise,
such particulars as he may consider sufficient to identify the
factory or magazine and indicate the site and all the existing
mounds, buildings, and works thereon or connected therewith: the plan
so referred to may be either the plan sent by the occupier or
such other plan as the Secretary of State may cause to be made
for the purpose.

The continuing certificate shall specify the maximum amount of
gunpowder to be kept if the certificate is for a factory in each
factory magazine, or in all the factory magazines of the factory,
and if for a magazine in each building in the magazine, or in all
the buildings of the magazine, and the amount so specified, where
the maximum amount so to be kept is at the passing of this Act
limited by any Act or by license or otherwise, shall be that
amount, and where there is no such limitation, shall be the maximum
amount which the factory magazine, or all the factory magazines of
the factory, or the building or all the buildings of the magazine,
was or were capable of holding on the first day of January one
thousand eight hundred and seventy-five.

The regulations in Part One of the First Schedule to this Act
shall be deemed to form part of the terms of a continuing
certificate for a factory.

The land forming the site bounded as described in the certificate
shall, with every mound, building, and work thereon, for whatever
purpose, be deemed for the purpose of this Act, to be the factory
or magazine referred to in the certificate.

Where a license has been obtained before the twenty-fifth day of
February one thousand eight hundred and seventy-five, for a factory
or magazine for gunpowder, and such factory or magazine has not
been completed before the passing of this Act, such factory or
magazine shall be deemed to be, for the purposes of this section,
a factory or magazine for gunpowder used at the time of the
passing of this Act:

Provided that

(1)The particulars to be stated in the continuing certificate shall,
as regards such mounds, buildings, and works as are not completed
at the date of the certificate, relate to the same as designed on
the commencement of the construction of the factory or magazine; and

(2)The maximum amount of gunpowder to be specified in the continuing
certificate as being allowed to be kept in any building shall,
subject to the provisions of any Act or license, be the maximum
amount which such building was designed on the commencement of the
building thereof to hold, or such less amount as it is completed
or holding at the time of the passing of this Act.

For the purposes of this Act, a continuing certificate shall (save
as otherwise expressly provided) be deemed to be a license, and the
factory or magazine, as the case may be mentioned therein to be a
factory or magazine licensed under this Act, and the provisions of
this Act shall be construed accordingly.

Provided that

Proviso (1) rep. by SRO (NI) 1973/341

(2)Such factory or magazine, if the certificate is determined by the
discontinuance of the business carried on therein, shall cease to be
deemed an existing factory or magazine.

....

Store license to be obtained from Ministry of Home Affairs.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 15

15. Any person may apply for a license for a gunpowder store to
the [Ministry of Home Affairs] at the time and place appointed by
such [Ministry], stating his name, address, and calling, the proposed
site and construction of the store and the amount of gunpowder he
proposes to store therein; and the [Ministry of Home Affairs] shall,
as soon as practicable, if the proposed site, construction of the
store, and amount of gunpowder are in accordance with the Order in
Council herein-after mentioned, grant to the applicant, on payment of
such fee, not exceeding [#2.25], as may be fixed by that
[Ministry], the license applied for.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 16
Order in Council prescribing situation and construction of stores.

16. Her Majesty may from time to time by Order in Council made on
the recommendation of the Secretary of State

(1)Regulate the construction and materials and fittings of gunpowder
stores; and

(2)Prescribe the buildings and works from which gunpowder stores are
to be separated, and the distances by which they are to be
separated; and

(3)Prescribe the maximum amount of gunpowder, not exceeding two tons,
to be kept in stores, graduated according to their construction and
situation and their distance from the said buildings and works.

Provided that an order under this section shall not require the
removal of any building lawfully in use at the date of the making
of such order.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 17
General rules for stores.

17. In every gunpowder store the following general rules shall be
observed; that is to say,

(1)The provisions of an Order in Council relating to stores, so far
as they apply to such store, shall be duly observed:

(2)There shall not be at the same time in the store an amount of
gunpowder exceeding the amount specified in the license; and

(3)The store shall be used only for the keeping of gunpowder, and
receptacles for or tools or implements for work connected with the
keeping of such gunpowder; and

(4)The interior of the store, and the benches, shelves, and fittings
therein, shall be so constructed or so lined or covered as to
prevent the exposure of any iron or steel and the detaching of any
grit, iron, steel, or similar substance, in such manner as to come
into contact with the gunpowder, and such interior, benches, shelves,
and fittings shall, so far as is reasonably practicable, be kept
free from grit, and otherwise clean; and

(5)The store shall have attached thereto a sufficient lightning
conductor, unless it is made by excavation or is licensed for less
than one thousand pounds of gunpowder; and

(6)Before repairs are done to or in any part of a store, the
store shall, so far as practicable, be cleaned by the removal of
all gunpowder and the thorough washing out of the store; and after
such cleaning, these rules shall cease to apply to the store until
gunpowder is again taken there; and

(7)Except after such cleaning, all tools and implements used in or
in any repairs to the store shall be made only of wood, copper,
or brass, or some soft metal or material, or shall be covered with
some safe and suitable material; and

(8)Due provision shall be made, by the use of suitable working
clothes without pockets, suitable shoes, searching, and otherwise, or
by some of such means, for preventing the introduction into the
store of fire, lucifer matches, or any substance or article likely
to cause explosion or fire, or any iron, steel, or grit; but this
rule shall not prevent the introduction of an artificial light of
such construction, position, or character as not to cause any danger
of fire or explosion; and

(9)No person shall smoke in any part of the store; and

In the event of any breach (by any act or default) of the general
rules in any store

(a)All or any part of the gunpowder in respect to which or being
in the store when the offence was committed may be forfeited; and

(b)The occupier shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding [two
hundred pounds].

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 18
Non-transferability, renewal, and forms of store licenses.

18. A store license shall be valid only for the person named in
it, and shall, annually, unless the circumstances have so changed
that the grant of a new license would not be authorised by this
Act, on application by post or otherwise, and payment of such fee,
not exceeding [#0.63], as may be from time to time fixed by the
[Ministry of Home Affairs], be renewed by that [Ministry], by
endorsement or otherwise, for that year, and unless so renewed shall
expire.

Store licenses shall be in the form from time to time directed by
the Secretary of State.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 19
Special rules for regulation of workmen in stores.

19. Every occupier of a gunpowder store may, with the sanction of
the Secretary of State, make, and when made, may, with the like
sanction, repeal, alter, or add to, special rules for the regulation
of the persons managing or employed in or about such store, with a
view to secure the observance of this Act therein, and the safety
and proper discipline of the said persons and the safety of the
public.

There may be annexed to any breach of special rules made in
pursuance of this section such penalties, not exceeding [twenty
pounds] for each offence, as may be deemed just.

Definition of and continuing certificate for existing stores.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 20

20. Any magazine established without a license from a local
authority in pursuance of the Gunpowder Act, 1860, or of any
enactment repealed by that Act, for the use of any mine, quarry,
colliery, or factory of safety fuzes, and in use at the passing of
this Act, is in this Act referred to as an existing gunpowder
store.

An existing gunpowder store shall not require a continuing
certificate as a magazine from the Secretary of State, but shall
require a continuing certificate from the local authority, and if
such certificate is not applied for and obtained in manner provided
by this Act, shall not be deemed to be a lawfully existing store.

The occupier of the store desirous of obtaining a continuing
certificate shall, before the expiration of three months after the
commencement of this Act, send an application for such certificate
to the local authority, stating his name, address, and calling, and
the situation and construction of the store, and accompanied by such
particulars respecting the store as may be necessary to enable the
local authority to make out the certificate.

The local authority upon receiving such application shall, as soon
as practicable, on payment of such fee, not exceeding half a crown
as may be fixed by that authority, grant the continuing certificate,
inserting therein such particulars as appear to them to be
sufficient to identify the store, and inserting the maximum amount
of gunpowder which the store is to be limited to hold, and such
amount shall be the maximum amount which the store was capable of
holding on the first day of January one thousand eight hundred and
seventy-five, or such less amount as is limited by the regulations
below in this section mentioned.

The regulations in Part Two of the First Schedule to this Act
shall apply to every store to which a continuing certificate is
granted, as if they were contained in an Order in Council under
this Act relating to stores.

For the purposes of this Act a continuing certificate for a store
shall, save as otherwise expressly provided, be deemed to be a
license, and the store a store licensed under this Act, and the
provisions of this Act shall be construed accordingly.

Provided that

(1)The store shall not be enlarged, or added to, or so altered as
to be of a less secure construction, and any breach of this
proviso shall be deemed to be a breach of the general rules
relating to stores; and

(2)The continuing certificate shall not be limited in duration, but
if the business carried on in the store is discontinued, and either
such discontinuance continues for a period of twelve months or more,
or the store is used for another purpose, such store shall cease
to be deemed an existing gunpowder store.

Nothing in this section shall prevent the obtaining for any existing
gunpowder store of a license from the [Ministry of Home Affairs]
under this Act, as in the case of a new store, and a store for
which such license is obtained shall, whether a continuing
certificate has or has not been previously obtained for the same,
cease to be deemed an existing gunpowder store.

....

Registration of premises with Ministry of Home Affairs.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 21

21. A person desirous of registering with the [Ministry of Home
Affairs] any premises for the keeping of gunpowder shall register
his name and calling, and the said premises (in this Act referred
to as his registered premises) in such manner and on payment of
such fee, not exceeding [#0.63], as may be directed by the
[Ministry].

Such registration shall be valid only for the person registered, and
shall be annually renewed by sending by post or otherwise notice of
such renewal to the [Ministry of Home Affairs], together with such
fee, not exceeding [#0.63], as may be fixed by that [Ministry].

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 22
General rules for registered premises.

22. The following general rules shall be observed with respect to
registered premises:

(1)The gunpowder shall be kept in a house or building, or in a
fire-proof safe, such safe, if not within a house or building, to
be at a safe distance from any highway, street, public thoroughfare,
or public place; and

(2)The amount of gunpowder on the same registered premises shall not

(a)If it is kept in a substantially constructed building exclusively
appropriated for the purpose and detached from a dwelling-house, or
in a fire-proof safe outside a dwelling-house, and detached
therefrom, and at a safe distance from any highway, street, public
thoroughfare, or public place, exceed two hundred pounds; and

(b)If it is kept inside a dwelling-house, or in any building other
than as last aforesaid, exceed fifty pounds, unless it is kept in
a fire-proof safe within such house or building, in which case the
amount shall not exceed one hundred pounds; and

(3)An article or substance of an explosive or highly inflammable
nature shall not be kept in a fire-proof safe with the gunpowder,
and in every case shall be kept at a safe distance from the
gunpowder or the safe containing the same; and

(4)Neither the building exclusively appropriated for the purpose of
keeping the gunpowder nor the fire-proof safe shall have any exposed
iron or steel in the interior thereof; and

(5)All gunpowder exceeding one pound in amount shall be kept in a
substantial case, bag, canister, or other receptacle made and closed
so as to prevent the gunpowder from escaping.

In the event of any breach (by any act or default) of such
general rules in any registered premises

(a)All or any part of the gunpowder in respect to which, or being
in any house, building, place, safe, or receptacle in respect to
which, the offence was committed may be forfeited; and

(b)The occupier shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding [two
hundred pounds].

Precautions against fire or explosion to be taken by occupier.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 23

23. The occupier of every factory, magazine, store, and registered
premises for gunpowder, and every person employed in or about the
same, shall take all due precaution for the prevention of accidents
by fire or explosion in the same, and for preventing unauthorised
persons having access to the factory, magazine, or store, or to the
gunpowder therein or in the registered premises, and shall abstain
from any act whatever which tends to cause fire or explosion and
is not reasonably necessary for the purpose of the work in such
factory, magazine, store, or premises.

Any breach (by any act or default) of this section in any factory,
magazine, store, or registered premises shall be deemed to be a
breach of the general rules applying thereto.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 24
Explanation as to quantities of gunpowder allowed in buildings.

24. Where any provision of this Act limits the quantity of
gunpowder or ingredients of gunpowder to be allowed in any building
at any one time, all gunpowder and ingredients within the radius of
twenty yards from the building and in course either of removal from
the building, or of removal to the building for the supply and
work thereof, shall be deemed to be in the building:

Provided that, if while the gunpowder or ingredients so in course
of removal are within the radius, every machine and manufacturing
process in the building is wholly stopped, there may, in addition
to the quantity so allowed as aforesaid to be in the building, be
within the radius a further quantity of gunpowder and ingredients so
in course of removal as aforesaid, not exceeding the quantity
specified in that behalf in the license, or in the case of an
existing building in a lawfully existing factory for gunpowder ten
hundredweight, or any less quantity so allowed as aforesaid to be
in the building.

Where any provision of this Act limits the quantity of gunpowder or
ingredients of gunpowder to be allowed in any machine at any one
time, but does not limit the quantity to be in the building
containing such machine, the foregoing provisions of this section
shall apply, so far as circumstances admit, as if such machine were
a building.

Where the quantity allowed to be in any building is limited to
what is required for the immediate supply and work of such
building, or by words not specifying the exact quantity, a
Government inspector who considers that the quantity in any such
building is in excess, may, after hearing the explanation of the
occupier, require the occupier to diminish such quantity to the
maximum named in the requisition.

The occupier, if he feel aggrieved by such requisition, may require
the matter to be referred to arbitration in manner provided by this
Act.

The exact quantity to be allowed in such building shall be
determined by the requisition, or if the matter is referred to
arbitration, by the award.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 25
Regulations as to arbitration.

25. An occupier authorised by this Act to require any matter to be
referred to arbitration may, within one month after receiving the
requisition, notice, or document relating to the matter to be so
referred, send an objection thereto to the Secretary of State; and
if the cause of such objection is not, within one month after such
objection is received by the Secretary of State, removed by the
Secretary of State waiving or varying the said requisition, notice,
document, or matter, or otherwise (which the Secretary of State is
hereby authorised to do), such occupier may, by notice sent within
seven days after the expiration of the said month to the Secretary
of State, require the matter to be referred to arbitration, and the
date of the receipt by the Secretary of State of the last-mentioned
notice shall be deemed to be the date of the reference.

Arbitrations under this Act shall be conducted in manner provided by
the Second Schedule to this Act.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 26
Fees for licenses.

26. There shall be payable in respect of licenses and continuing
certificates granted by the Secretary of State such fees as may be
from time to time fixed by him with the consent of the Treasury
not exceeding the fees in the Third Schedule to this Act, and if
no fee is fixed the fees mentioned in the said schedule.

Such fees shall be taken and paid into the [Consolidated Fund of
the United Kingdom].

The Secretary of State may also require any applicant for a new
license to pay such sum as the Secretary of State may think
reasonable for expenses incurred upon any inquiry made by order of
the Secretary of State with respect to the grant of such license.

When the [Ministry of Home Affairs] do not fix any fee which they
are authorised by this Act to fix, the fee payable shall be the
maximum fee which such [Ministry] are authorised to fix.

....

Adjoining places occupied together to be one place.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 27

27. For the purposes of the provisions of this Act with respect to
the manufacture and keeping of gunpowder, all buildings and places
adjoining each other and occupied together shall be deemed to be
the same factory, magazine, store, or premises, and shall accordingly
be included in one license or one registration.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 28
Register of store licenses and registered premises to be kept by
Ministry of Home Affairs.

28. The [Ministry of Home Affairs] shall cause registers of all
store licenses granted by and of all premises registered with them
under this Act to be kept in such form and with such particulars
as they may direct.

....

A ratepayer ..., upon payment of a fee of [5p], ... and an
officer of police, without payment, shall be entitled at all
reasonable times to inspect and take copies of or extracts from any
register kept in pursuance of this section; ....

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 29
Provision in case of death, &c. of occupier of store or registered
premises.

29. If the occupier of a store or registered premises dies or
becomes bankrupt, or has his affairs liquidated by arrangement, or
becomes mentally incapable or otherwise disabled, the person carrying
on the business of such occupier shall not be liable to any
penalty or forfeiture under this Act for carrying on the business
and acting under the license or registration during such reasonable
time as may be necessary to allow him to obtain a store license
from or to register with the [Ministry of Home Affairs], so that
he otherwise conform with the provisions of this Act.

Restriction on sale of gunpowder in highways, &c.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 30

30. Gunpowder shall not be hawked, sold, or exposed for sale upon
any highway, street, public thoroughfare, or public place.

If any gunpowder is hawked, sold, or exposed for sale in
contravention of this section

(1)The person hawking, selling, or exposing for sale the same, shall
be liable to a penalty not exceeding [fifty pounds or to
imprisonment for a term not exceeding three months or to both such
penalty and imprisonment]; and

(2)All or any part of the gunpowder which is so hawked or exposed
for sale, or is found in the possession of any person convicted
under this section, may be forfeited.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 31
Penalty for sale of gunpowder to children.

31. Gunpowder shall not be sold to any child apparently under the
age of thirteen years; and any person selling gunpowder in
contravention of this section shall be liable to a penalty not
exceeding [twenty pounds].

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 32
Sale of gunpowder to be in closed packages labelled.

32. All gunpowder exceeding one pound in weight, when publicly
exposed for sale or sold, shall be in a substantial case, bag,
canister, or other receptacle made and closed so as to prevent the
gunpowder from escaping, and (except when the same is sold to any
person employed by or on the property occupied by the vendor for
immediate use in the service of the vendor or on such property,)
the outermost receptacle containing such gunpowder shall have affixed
the word "gunpowder" in conspicuous characters by means of a brand
or securely attached label, or other mark.

If any gunpowder is sold or exposed for sale in contravention of
this section

(1)The person selling or exposing for sale the same shall be liable
to a penalty not exceeding [fifty pounds]; and

(2)All or any part of the gunpowder so exposed for sale may be
forfeited.

General rules as to packing of gunpowder for conveyance.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 33

33. The following general rules shall be observed with respect to
the packing of gunpowder for conveyance.

Rules rescinded, SRO 1904/1221 (p.137); see now SRO (NI) 1950/34
(p.204)

In the event of any breach (by any act or default) of any general
rule in this section the gunpowder in respect of which the breach
is committed may be forfeited, and the person guilty of such breach
shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding [one hundred pounds].

The Secretary of State may from time to time make, and when made,
repeal, alter, and add to rules for the purpose of rescinding,
altering, or adding to the general rules contained in this section,
and the rules so made by the Secretary of State shall have the
same effect as if they were enacted in this section.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 34
Byelaws by harbour authority as to conveyance, loading, &c. of
gunpowder.

34. Every harbour authority shall, with the sanction of the Board
of Trade, make byelaws for regulating the conveyance, loading and
unloading of gunpowder within the jurisdiction of the said authority
and in particular for declaring or regulating all or any of the
following matters within the jurisdiction of the said authority;
namely,

(1)Determining the notice to be given by ships and boats conveying,
loading, or unloading gunpowder as merchandise within the said
jurisdiction; and

(2)Regulating the navigation and place of mooring of such ships and
boats; and

(3)Regulating, subject to the general rules with respect to packing
in this Act contained, the mode of stowing and keeping gunpowder on
board any such ship or boat, and of giving notice by brands,
labels, or otherwise of the nature of the package containing the
gunpowder; and

(4)Regulating the description, construction, fitting up, and licensing
of the ships, boats, or carriages to be used for the conveyance of
gunpowder, and the licensing and dress of the persons having charge
thereof; and

(5)Prohibiting or subjecting to conditions and restrictions the
conveyance of gunpowder with any explosive or any articles or
substances, or in passenger ships, boats, trains, or carriages; and

(6)Prohibiting in cases where the loading or unloading of gunpowder
within the jurisdiction of such authority appears to be specially
dangerous to the public such loading or unloading, and fixing the
places and times at which the gunpowder is to be loaded or
unloaded, and the quantity to be loaded or unloaded or conveyed at
one time or in one ship, boat, or carriage; and

(7)Regulating the mode of and the precautions to be observed in
conveying any gunpowder, and in the loading or unloading any ship,
boat, or carriage conveying gunpowder as merchandise, and the time
during which gunpowder may be kept during such conveyance, loading
or unloading; and

(8)Fixing the times at which lights or fires are to be allowed or
not allowed on board such ships or boats, as before mentioned, or
at which a constable or officer of the harbour authority is to be
on board them; and

(9)Providing for the publication and supply of copies of the
byelaws; and

<(10)Enforcing the observance of this Act both by their own servants and agents and also by other persons when within the said jurisdiction; and

<(11)Generally for protecting, whether by means similar to those above mentioned or not, persons and property from danger.

The penalties to be annexed to any breach or attempt to commit any
breach of any such byelaws may be all or any of the following
penalties, and may be imposed on such persons and graduated in such
manner as may be deemed just, according to the gravity of the
offence, and according as it may be a first or second or other
subsequent offence, that is to say, pecuniary penalties not exceeding
[one hundred pounds] for each offence, and ten pounds for each day
during which the offence continues, and forfeiture of all or any
part of the gunpowder in respect of which, or found in the ship,
boat, or carriage in respect of which, the breach of byelaw has
taken place.

In the event of any breach of a byelaw under this section in the
case of any ship, boat, carriage, or gunpowder, whether there has
or has not been any conviction for such breach, it shall be lawful
for the harbour-master, or other officer named in the byelaws, or
any person acting under the orders of the harbour authority, to
cause such ship, boat, carriage, or gunpowder, at the expense of
the owner thereof, to be removed to such place or otherwise dealt
with in such manner as may be in conformity with the byelaws; and
all expenses incurred in such removal may be recovered in the same
manner as a penalty under this section; and any person resisting
such harbour-master or officer or other person in such removal shall
be liable to the same penalties as a person is liable to for
obstructing the harbour-master in the execution of his duty.

On any part of the coast of the United Kingdom or in any tidal
water for which there is no harbour authority, the Board of Trade
may, if they think it expedient, make byelaws under this section
for that part or water as if it were a harbour and they were the
harbour authority, and such byelaws shall be deemed to have been
made by a harbour authority with the sanction of the Board of
Trade; and they may by such byelaws define the area within which
such byelaws are to be observed, and the authorities and officers
by whom such byelaws are to be enforced and carried into effect
within such area; and every such authority and officer shall for
the purposes of this Act, other than making byelaws or assenting to
a site for a new factory or magazine, have the same power within
the said area as a harbour authority and an officer of a harbour
authority have respectively under this Act in a harbour.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 35
Byelaws by railway and canal company as to conveyance, loading, &c.
of gunpowder.

35. Every railway company and every canal company over whose railway
or canal any gunpowder is carried, or intended to be carried,
shall, with the sanction of the Board of Trade, make byelaws for
regulating the conveyance, loading, and unloading of such gunpowder
on the railway or canal of the company making the byelaws, and in
particular for declaring and regulating all or any of the following
matters in the case of such railway or canal; that is to say,

(1)Determining the notice to be given of the intention to send
gunpowder for conveyance as merchandise on the railway or canal; and

(2)Regulating, subject to the general rules with respect to packing
in this Act contained, the mode of stowing and keeping gunpowder
for conveyance and of giving notice by brands, labels, or otherwise
of the nature of the package containing the gunpowder; and

(3)Regulating the description and construction of carriages, ships, or
boats to be used in the conveyance of gunpowder; and

(4)Prohibiting or subjecting to conditions and restrictions the
conveyance of gunpowder with any explosive, or with any articles or
substances, or in passenger trains, carriages, ships, or boats; and

(5)Fixing the places and times at which the gunpowder is to be
loaded or unloaded, and the quantity to be loaded or unloaded or
conveyed at one time, or in one carriage, ship, or boat; and

(6)Determining the precautions to be observed in conveying gunpowder,
and in loading and unloading the carriages, ships, and boats used
in such conveyance, and the time during which the gunpowder may be
kept during such conveyance, loading, and unloading; and

(7)Providing for the publication and supply of copies of the
byelaws; and

(8)Enforcing the observance of this Act both by their servants and
agents and also by other persons when on the canal or railway of
such company; and

(9)Generally for protecting, whether by means similar to those above
mentioned or not, persons and property from danger.

Such byelaws, when confirmed by the Board of Trade, shall apply to
the railway, canal, agents, and servants of the company making the
same, and to the persons using such railway or canal, or the
premises connected therewith and occupied by or under the control of
such company.

The penalties to be annexed to any breach, or attempt to commit
any breach of any such byelaws may be all or any of the following
penalties, and may be imposed on such persons and graduated in such
manner as may be deemed just, according to the gravity of the
offence, and according as it may be a first, second, or other
subsequent offence, that is to say, pecuniary penalties not exceeding
[one hundred pounds] for each offence, and ten pounds for each day
during which the offence continues, and forfeiture of all or any
part of the gunpowder in respect of which, or being in the
carriage, ship, or boat or train of carriages, ships, or boats in
respect of which, the breach of byelaw has taken place.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 36
Byelaws as to wharves in which gunpowder is loaded or unloaded.

36. The occupier of every wharf or dock on or in which gunpowder
is loaded or unloaded (if such loading or unloading is not
otherwise subject to any byelaws under this Act) may, and if so
required by the Secretary of State shall, from time to time, with
the sanction of the Secretary of State, make byelaws for regulating
the loading and unloading of gunpowder on or in such wharf or
dock, and in particular for declaring or regulating all or any of
the matters which can be declared or regulated in the case of any
wharf or dock within the jurisdiction of a harbour authority by
byelaws made by such authority in pursuance of this Act.

The penalties to be annexed to any breach, or attempt to commit
any breach, of any such byelaws may be all or any of the
following penalties, and may be imposed on such persons and
graduated in such manner as may be deemed just, according to the
gravity of the offence, and according as it may be a first or
second or other subsequent offence, that is to say, pecuniary
penalties not exceeding [in the case of a first offence fifty
pounds or, in the case of any subsequent offence, two hundred
pounds], and forfeiture of all or any part of the gunpowder in
respect of which, or found on the wharf or in the dock or part
of the wharf or dock in respect of which, the breach of byelaw
has taken place.

Any byelaws made in pursuance of this section may, and if required
by the Secretary of State shall, be rescinded, altered, or added to
by byelaws made by the occupier, with the sanction of the Secretary
of State.

If an occupier is required by the Secretary of State to make
byelaws under this section for any matter, and fail within three
months after such requisition to comply therewith to the satisfaction
of the Secretary of State, the Secretary of State may make such
byelaws, which shall have effect as if made by the occupier with
the sanction of the Secretary of State.

Where by reason of a wharf being a public wharf or otherwise,
there is no occupier thereof, or the occupier thereof is unknown,
the Secretary of State may make byelaws with respect to such wharf
in like manner as if the occupier had failed to comply with his
requisition: Provided that where such wharf abuts on any harbour,
canal, or railway, the harbour authority or canal or railway company
shall have the same power, and, if so required by the Secretary of
State, shall be under the same obligation to make byelaws under
this section for such wharf as if they were the occupiers thereof.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 37
Byelaws as to conveyance by road or otherwise, or loading of
gunpowder.

37. The Secretary of State may from time to time make, and when
made, rescind, alter, or add to, byelaws for regulating the
conveyance, loading, and unloading of gunpowder in any case in which
byelaws made under any other provision of this Act do not apply,
and in particular for declaring or regulating all or any of the
following matters; that is to say,

(1)Regulating the description and construction of carriages to be
used in the conveyance of gunpowder as merchandise; and

(2)Prohibiting or subjecting to conditions and restrictions the
conveyance of gunpowder with any explosive, or with any articles or
substances, or in passenger carriages; and

(3)Fixing the places and times at which the gunpowder is to be
loaded or unloaded, and the quantity to be loaded or unloaded or
conveyed at one time or in one carriage; and

(4)Determining the precautions to be observed in conveying gunpowder,
and in loading and unloading the carriages used in such conveyance,
and the time during which the gunpowder may be kept during such
conveyance, loading and unloading; and

(5)Providing for the publication and supply of copies of the
byelaws; and

(6)Generally for protecting, whether by means similar to those above
mentioned or not, persons or property from danger; and

(7)Adapting on good cause being shown the byelaws in force under
this section to the circumstances of any particular locality.

The penalties to be annexed to any breach, or attempt to commit
any breach, of any such byelaws may be all or any of the
following penalties, and may be imposed on such persons and
graduated in such manner as may be deemed just, according to the
gravity of the offence, and according as it may be a first,
second, or other subsequent offence, that is to say, pecuniary
penalties not exceeding [one hundred pounds] for each offence, and
ten pounds for each day during which the breach continues, and
forfeiture of all or any part of the gunpowder in respect of
which, or being in the carriage in respect of which, the breach of
byelaw has taken place.

For the purpose of any mode of conveyance which is not a
conveyance by land this section shall be construed as if ship and
boat were included in the term carriage.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 38
Confirmation and publication of byelaws.

38. Any recommendation to Her Majesty in Council, any general rules
with respect to packing, and any byelaws which is or are proposed
to be made under this Act by a Secretary of State or the Board
of Trade shall, before being so made, be published in such manner
as the Secretary of State or the Board of Trade, as the case may
be, may direct as being in his or their opinion sufficient for
giving information thereof to all [district councils], corporations,
and persons interested.

The byelaws framed by any railway company, canal company, or harbour
authority under this Act shall before being sanctioned by the Board
of Trade, be published in such manner as may be directed by the
Board of Trade, with a notice of the intention of such company or
authority to apply for the confirmation thereof, and may be
sanctioned by the Board of Trade with or without any omission,
addition, or alteration, or may be disallowed.

Every such byelaw may be from time to time added to, altered or
rescinded by a byelaw made in like manner and with the like
sanction as the original byelaw.

The Secretary of State or the Board of Trade, as the case may be,
shall receive and consider any objections or suggestions made by any
[district council], corporation, or persons interested with respect to
any recommendation, general rules, or byelaws published in pursuance
of this section, and may, if it seem fit, amend such
recommendation, general rules, or byelaws with a view of meeting
such objections or suggestions without again publishing the same.

Part I relating to gunpowder applied to other explosives.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 39

39. Subject to the provisions hereafter in this part of this Act
contained, Part One of this Act relating to gunpowder shall apply
to every other description of explosive, in like manner as if those
provisions were herein re-enacted with the substitution of that
description of explosive for gunpowder.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 40
Modification of Part I as applied to explosives other than
gunpowder.

40. The following modifications and additions shall be made in and
to Part One of this Act as applied to explosives other than
gunpowder:

(1)The draft license for a factory or magazine submitted by an
applicant to the Secretary of State shall specify such particulars
as the Secretary of State may require; and

(2)The prescribed general rules shall be substituted for the general
rules in Part One of this Act relating to factories, magazines,
stores, and registered premises respectively; but no such general
rule shall require the removal of any building or work in use at
the date of the Order in Council by which such rule is made;

(3)The Secretary of State may from time to time alter the general
rules relating to packing contained in Part One of this Act for
the purpose of adapting the same to the packing of any explosive
other than gunpowder; and

(4)For the maximum amount limited by Part One of this Act to be
kept for private use and not for sale, or in a store, and for
the minimum amount limited by Part One of this Act to be exposed
for sale or sold otherwise than in a substantial case, box,
canister, or other receptacle as therein mentioned, there shall be
substituted in the case of explosives other than gunpowder the
following amounts; namely,

(a)Where such explosive consists of safety cartridges made with
gunpowder, an amount containing not more than five times the maximum
or minimum amount of gunpowder, as the case may be, above
mentioned; and

(b)In the case of any other explosive, the prescribed amount; and

(5)Two or more descriptions of explosives shall not be kept in the
same store or registered premises except such descriptions as may be
prescribed in that behalf; and, when so kept, shall be kept subject
to the prescribed conditions and restrictions; and

(6)Where any explosive, other than gunpowder, is allowed to be kept
in the same store or registered premises with gunpowder, the maximum
amount of gunpowder to be kept therein shall be the prescribed
amount in lieu of the amount fixed by Part One of this Act; and

(7)Where any explosive, other than gunpowder, is allowed to be kept
in the same magazine, store, or registered premises with gunpowder,
the prescribed general rules shall be observed instead of the
general rules in Part One of this Act; and

(8)There shall be on the outermost package containing the explosive
in lieu of the word "gunpowder" the name of the explosive, with
the addition of the word "explosive," and if such name is
materially false the person selling or exposing for sale such
explosive, and also the owner of the explosive, shall be liable to
a penalty not exceeding [two hundred pounds]:

(9) With respect to the importation from any place out of the
United Kingdom of either dynamite or gun-cotton, or any explosive
(other than gunpowder, cartridges made with gunpowder, percussion
caps, fireworks, and any prescribed explosive), the following
provisions shall have effect; that is to say,

(a)The owner and master of any ship having on board any such
explosive shall not permit the same to be unloaded and delivered to
any person who does not hold a license to import the same (in
this Act called an importation license) from the Secretary of State,
and any transhipment shall for the purpose of this section be
deemed to be delivery; and

(b)The Secretary of State may grant an importation license for any
such explosive, and may annex thereto any prohibitions and
restrictions with respect to the composition and quality of the
explosive, and the unloading, landing, delivery, and conveyance
thereof, and such further provisions and restrictions as he may
think fit, for the protection of the public from danger; and

<(c)The license shall be of such duration as the Secretary of State may fix, and shall be available only for the person named in the license; and

(d)In the event of any breach (by any act or default) of the
provisions of this section with respect to the importation of an
explosive, or of the provisions of any importation license, all or
any part of the explosive with respect to which such breach is
committed, or being in any ship or boat in connexion with which
such breach is committed, may be forfeited; and the owner and
master of such ship or boat, and the licensee or person to whom
the explosive is delivered, shall each be liable to a penalty not
exceeding one hundred pounds, and to a further penalty not exceeding
[10p] for every pound of such explosive; and

<(e)The Commissioners of Customs and their officers shall have the same power with respect to any such explosive, and the ship containing the same, as they have for the time being with respect to any article on the importation of which restrictions are for the time being imposed by the law relating to [customs or excise], and the ship containing the same, and the enactments for the time being in force relating to [customs or excise] or any such article or ship shall apply accordingly.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 41
Exemption of safety cartridges for private use.

41. Nothing in this Act shall apply to the filling or conveying
for private use and not for sale, of any safety cartridges to the
amount allowed by this Act to be kept for private use.

S.42 rep. by 1894 c.60 s.745(1) sch.22

Power to prohibit manufacture, importation, storage, and carriage of
specially dangerous explosives.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 43

43. Notwithstanding anything in this Act, Her Majesty from time to
time, by Order in Council, may prohibit, either absolutely, or
except in pursuance of a license of the Secretary of State under
this Act, or may subject to conditions or restrictions the
manufacture, keeping, importation from any place out of the United
Kingdom, conveyance, and sale, or any of them, of any explosive
which is of so dangerous a character that, in the judgment of Her
Majesty, it is expedient for the public safety to make such order:

Provided that such order shall not absolutely prohibit anything which
may be lawfully done in pursuance of any continuing certificate
under this Act.

Any explosive manufactured or kept in contravention of any such
order shall be deemed to be manufactured or kept, as the case may
be, in an unauthorised place.

Any explosive conveyed in contravention of any such order shall be
deemed to be conveyed in contravention of a byelaw made under this
Act with respect to the conveyance of explosives.

If any explosive is imported or sold in contravention of any such
order

(1)All or any part of such explosive may be forfeited; and

(2)The owner or master of the ship in which it was imported shall
be liable to a penalty not exceeding [three hundred pounds]; and

(3)The person to whom it was delivered and the person selling the
same shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding [three hundred
pounds].

The Commissioners of Customs and their officers shall have the same
power with respect to any such explosive, and the ship containing
the same, as they have for the time being with respect to any
article prohibited to be imported by the law relating to [customs
or excise], and the ship containing the same, and the enactments
for the time being in force relating to [customs or excise] and
any such article or ship shall apply accordingly.

Provision in favour of makers, &c. of blasting cartridges.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 44

44. The occupier of a factory for any explosive shall not be
required by this Act to take out a factory license for making up
on such factory the explosive made thereon into cartridges or
charges for cannon or blasting not containing within themselves their
own means of ignition.

The occupier of any magazine, store, or registered premises for
keeping any explosive may keep that explosive when made up into
such cartridges or charges as above in this section mentioned, as
if it were not so made up, and the provisions of this Act with
respect to the keeping of any explosive shall apply to the keeping
of that explosive when made up into the said cartridges or charges,
in like manner as if the explosive were not so made up.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 45
Provision in favour of makers of new explosives for experiment.

45. The occupier of a factory for any explosive who manufactures a
new explosive or new form of explosive similar to the one specified
in his license, shall not be deemed to have manufactured the same
in an unauthorised place if he manufacture the same on a small
scale, and exclusively for the purpose of trial and not for sale,
and he send notice of the same, as soon as he has manufactured
it, to the Secretary of State, and if he observe the provisions of
this Act, so far as they are applicable.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 46
Provision in favour of gunmakers, &c. making cartridges.

46. The occupier of a magazine, store, or registered premises for
any explosive shall not be required by this Act to take out a
factory license by reason that in connexion with such magazine,
store, or premises he fills for sale or otherwise any cartridge for
small arms with the said explosive, so that he observe the
following regulations; namely,

(1)There shall not be in the room in which such filling is being
carried on more than five pounds of gunpowder, or the prescribed
amount of any other explosive, except it is made up into safety
cartridges; and

(2)Any work unconnected with the making of the cartridges shall not
be carried on in the room while such filling is being carried on;
and

(3)There shall not be in the room while such filling is being
carried on any fire nor any artificial light, except a light of
such construction, position, or character as not to cause any danger
of fire or explosion; and

(4)In the case of a magazine or store, the room in which the
filling is carried on shall be detached from the magazine or store,
but in the immediate neighbourhood thereof, and at such distance
therefrom as may be specified in the case of a magazine by the
license, and in the case of a store by an Order in Council
relating to stores; and

(5)The occupier shall give notice in the case of a magazine to the
Secretary of State, and in the case of a store or registered
premises to the [Ministry of Home Affairs], that he intends to
carry on such filling of cartridges as is allowed by this section.

The regulations in this section and any conditions so made by the
Secretary of State as last aforesaid, shall be deemed to be general
rules under this Act relating to the magazine, store, and registered
premises respectively, and the breach of them shall be punished
accordingly.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 47
Provision in favour of owners of mines and quarries, as to making
charges, &c. for blasting.

47. The occupier of any magazine or store for any explosive shall
not be required by this Act to take out a factory license by
reason that, in connexion with such magazine or store, he, by
filling cartridges, making charges, drying, sifting, fitting, or
otherwise adapts or prepares the said explosive for use exclusively
in his mine or quarry, or in some excavation or work carried on
by him or under his control, so that he observe the following
regulations; namely,

(1)There shall not be in the workshop in which such adaptation or
preparation is carried on more than one hundred pounds of gunpowder
or the prescribed amount of any other explosive; and

(2)Any work unconnected with such adaptation or preparation shall not
be carried on in the said workshop while such adaptation or
preparation is being carried on; and

(3)The said workshop shall be detached from the magazine or store,
but in the immediate neighbourhood thereof, and such distance
therefrom as may be specified, in the case of a magazine by the
license, and in the case of a store by an Order in Council
relating to stores; and

(4)An explosive of one description shall not be converted into an
explosive of another description, and shall not be unmade or
resolved into its ingredients; and

(5)The occupier shall give notice in the case of a magazine to the
Secretary of State, and in the case of a store to the [Ministry
of Home Affairs], that he intends to carry on such adaptation or
preparation as is allowed by this section.

The regulations in this section, and any conditions so made by the
Secretary of State as last aforesaid, shall be deemed to be general
rules under this Act relating to the magazine and store
respectively, and the breach of them shall be punished accordingly.

The following general rules shall apply as if the said workshop
were a danger building, that is to say, if the adaptation or
preparation carried on is of gunpowder only, the general rules with
respect to a factory in Part One of this Act, and in any other
case the prescribed general rules; and the breach of such general
rules shall be punished in like manner as the breach of general
rules with respect to a factory.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 48
Provision in favour of small firework manufacturer who may obtain a
license from the Ministry of Home Affairs.

48. A firework factory shall not be deemed to be a small firework
factory for the purposes of this Act if there is upon the same
factory at the same time

(a)More than one hundred pounds of any explosive other than
manufactured fireworks and coloured fires and stars; or

(b)More than five hundred pounds of manufactured fireworks, either
finished or partly finished; or

(c)More than twenty-five pounds of coloured fires or stars, not made
up into manufactured fireworks.

The occupier of a small firework factory shall not be required to
obtain a license under Part One of this Act for such factory if
he has obtained a license from the [Ministry of Home Affairs] under
this part of this Act.

A person having such license from the [Ministry of Home Affairs]
who manufactures an explosive (other than nitro-glycerine or any
prescribed explosive) for the purpose only of the manufacture of
coloured fires or a manufactured firework in accordance with this
Act, and does not sell the same except in the form of coloured
fires packed in the manner required by this Act, or of a
manufactured firework, shall not be deemed to manufacture an
explosive in an unauthorised place.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 49
Licensing by Ministry of Home Affairs and regulation of small
firework factories.

49. Any person may apply for a small firework factory license to
the [Ministry of Home Affairs] at the time and place appointed by
such [Ministry], stating his name, address, and calling, and the
proposed site and construction of the factory, and the amount and
description of explosive he proposes to have therein, and in any
building therein; and the [Ministry of Home Affairs] shall, as soon
as practicable, if the proposed site, construction of the factory,
and amount of explosive is in accordance with the Order in Council
regulating small firework factories, grant to the applicant, on
payment of such fee, not exceeding [25p], as may be fixed by that
[Ministry], the license applied for.

The powers of this Act of making Orders in Council with respect to
stores and of prescribing general rules with respect to stores shall
extend to making Orders in Council and prescribing general rules
with respect to small firework factories and the buildings thereon;
and any breach (by any act or default) of any such general rule
shall involve the same penalties and forfeitures as a breach of a
general rule relating to stores.

A small firework factory license shall be valid only for the person
named in it, and the provisions of this Act with respect to the
renewal, expiration, and form of store licenses, and fees for such
renewal, and to special rules for the regulation of persons managing
or employed in or about stores, shall apply in like manner as if
they were herein enacted, and in terms made applicable to small
firework factory licenses and small firework factories respectively.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 50
Keeping without a license and conveyance of percussion caps.

50. A person shall not be required by this Act to take out a
license or to register any premises for the keeping of percussion
caps, or safety-fuzes for blasting, or fog-signals kept by any
railway company for use on the railway of such company, or any
prescribed explosive.

It shall not be obligatory on any harbour authority, railway
company, canal company, or occupier of a wharf, to make any byelaws
with respect to the conveyance, loading, or unloading of any
explosives to which this section applies.

It shall be lawful for Her Majesty, by Order in Council, to exempt
any explosive to which this section applies, or any description
thereof, from any other of the provisions of this Act, or to
declare that a license shall be required for the keeping of any
explosive to which this section applies, or any description thereof,
or that byelaws shall be made with respect to the loading,
unloading, and conveyance thereof.

Application of Part I of the Act to existing factories and
magazines.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 51

51. In any continuing certificate for a lawfully existing factory or
magazine for any explosive other than gunpowder, the regulations set
out in the First Schedule to this Act shall not form part of the
terms of such certificate, but in lieu thereof the Secretary of
State shall insert in the certificate as the terms thereof

(1)If the factory or magazine is for dynamite or any substance
having nitro-glycerine as one of its component parts or ingredients,
the conditions contained in the existing license, with such
modifications (if any) as the Secretary of State may think necessary
in order to bring the same into conformity with this Act, and also
any limitation of time for the expiration of the license contained
in the existing license, and also the existing power of the
Secretary of State to revoke the license; and

(2)In any other case, such terms as the Secretary of State may
think expedient, having regard to the conditions (if any) contained
in the license under which the factory or magazine is established;
and such terms shall include any limitation of time contained in
such license, but shall not require the removal of any lawfully
existing building or work.

If a new license under this Act is obtained for keeping in an
existing gunpowder store any explosive other than gunpowder, the
continuing certificate of such store shall be determined, and the
store shall cease to be deemed to be an existing gunpowder store
within the meaning of this Act.

S.52 rep. by SLR 1898

Appointment of Government inspectors.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 53

53. The Secretary of State may from time to time by order appoint
any fit persons to be inspectors for the purposes of this Act, and
assign them their duties, and award them such salaries as the
Treasury may approve, and remove such inspectors, and any such
inspector is referred to in this Act as a Government inspector.

Every order appointing an inspector shall be published in the
[Belfast Gazette].

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 54
Disqualification of persons as inspectors.

54. Any person who practises or acts, or is a partner with any
person who practises or acts, as a manufacturer, storer, carrier,
importer or exporter of or trader or dealer in an explosive, or
holds any patent connected with an explosive, or is otherwise
directly or indirectly engaged or interested in any such manufacture,
storage, conveyance, importation, exportation, trade, dealing, or
patent, shall not act as an inspector under this Act.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 55
Powers of Government inspectors.

55. A Government inspector shall have power to make such examination
and inquiry as may be necessary to ascertain whether this Act is
complied with, and for that purpose

(1)He may enter, inspect, and examine any factory, magazine, or
store of any explosive, and every part thereof, at all times by
day and night, but so as not to unnecessarily impede or obstruct
the work in such factory, magazine, or store, and may make
inquiries as to the observance of this Act and all matters and
things relating to the safety of the public or of the persons
employed in or about such factory, magazine, or store; and

(2)He may enter, inspect, and examine any premises registered under
this Act, and every part thereof, in which any explosive is kept,
or is reasonably supposed by him to be kept, at all reasonable
times by day; and

(3)He may require the occupier of any factory, magazine, store, or
premises which he is entitled, under this section, to enter, or a
person employed by such occupier therein, to give him samples of
any explosive or ingredients of an explosive therein, or of any
substance therein, the keeping of which is restricted or regulated
by this Act, or of any substance therein which the inspector
believes to be an explosive, or such ingredients or substance.

The occupier of every such factory, magazine, store and registered
premises, his agents and servants, shall furnish the means required
by the inspector as necessary for every such entry, inspection,
examination, and inquiry.

Any person who fails to permit a Government inspector to enter,
inspect, examine, or make inquiries in pursuance of this section, or
to comply with any requisition of such inspector in pursuance of
this section, or who in any manner obstructs such inspector in the
execution of his duties under this Act, shall be liable to a
penalty not exceeding [three hundred pounds or to imprisonment for a
term not exceeding six months or to both such penalty and
imprisonment].

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 56
Notice by Government inspector to remedy dangerous practices, &c. and
penalty for non-compliance.

56. If in any matter (which is not provided for by any express
provision of this Act) an inspector find any factory, magazine, or
store for an explosive, or any part thereof, or any thing or
practice therein or connected therewith, to be unnecessarily dangerous
or defective, so as in his opinion to tend to endanger the public
safety or the bodily safety of any person, such inspector may
require the occupier of such factory, magazine, or store to remedy
the same.

Where the occupier objects to comply with the requisition he may
require the matter to be referred to arbitration in manner provided
by this Act.

No person shall be precluded by any contract from doing such acts
as may be necessary to comply with a requisition or award under
this section; and no person shall be liable under any contract to
any penalty or forfeiture for doing those acts if he gave notice
of such contract to the inspector at or before the time at which
the inspector made the requisition or to the arbitrators before the
award was made.

If the occupier fail to comply with the requisition or award within
twenty days after the expiration of the time for requiring the
matter to be referred to arbitration if there is no reference to
arbitration, or if there is such a reference after the date of the
award, he shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding [two hundred
pounds].

Provided that the court, if satisfied that the occupier has taken
active measures for complying with the requisition or award, but has
not, with reasonable diligence, been able to complete the works, may
adjourn any proceedings taken before them for punishing such failure,
and if the works are completed within a reasonable time in the
opinion of the court, no penalty shall be inflicted.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 57
Annual report by inspectors of proceedings.

57. A report of the proceedings under this Act shall be made
annually to the Secretary of State, by such inspectors and in such
manner and form as may be directed by him, and shall be laid
before both houses of [the Parliament of the United Kingdom].

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 58
Inspection by railway inspectors or inspectors of Board of Trade.

58. The Board of Trade may from time to time, by order, direct

(a)Any person acting under the Board as an inspector of railways to
inquire into the observance of this Act by any railway company or
canal company, and generally to act with respect to any railway or
canal as an inspector under this Act; or

(b)Any person acting under the Board as an inspector or otherwise
for the purposes of the Merchant Shipping Act, 1854, or the Acts
amending the same, to inquire into the observance of this Act in
any harbour or in the case of any ship, and generally to act in
such harbour and with respect to ships as an inspector under this
Act.

The Board of Trade may revoke any such order; and each such
inspector shall, while such order is in force, have for that
purpose the same powers and authorities as he has under the Acts
in pursuance of which he was originally appointed inspector, and
also the powers and authorities of a Government inspector under this
Act.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 59
Application of 1969 c.6 to magazines used for mines.

59. Where a magazine or store is established for the purpose of
any mine subject to [the Mines Act (Northern Ireland) 1969], by the
owner (as defined by [that Act]) of the mine, the Secretary of
State may from time to time by order direct an inspector under
[that Act] to act with respect to such magazine or store as a
Government inspector under this Act, and may revoke any such order;
and such inspector shall, while such order is in force, have for
that purpose the same powers and authorities as he has under [that
Act], and also the powers and authorities of a Government inspector
under this Act.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 60
License and certified special rules to be evidence.

60. A copy of any license confirmed by the Secretary of State
under this Act, and of any special rules under this Act, certified
by a Government inspector, shall be evidence of such license and
special rules respectively, and of the fact of such license having
been duly granted and confirmed and such special rules duly
established under this Act.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 61
Keeping and carriage of samples by Government inspector.

61. A Government inspector, and any other person authorised by him
for the purpose, may keep and convey any sample taken for the
purposes of this Act by or by authority of such inspector, so that
the amount of it do not exceed what is reasonably necessary for
the purpose of enabling such inspector to perform his duties under
this Act, and be kept and carried with all due precautions to
prevent accident; and such inspector or person shall not be liable
to any penalty, punishment, or forfeiture under this or any other
Act for keeping or conveying such sample.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 62
Salaries of inspectors and expenses of Act.

62. The salaries of the Government inspectors, and the expenses
incurred by the Secretary of State or the Government inspectors in
carrying this Act into execution, shall be defrayed out of moneys
provided by [the Parliament of the United Kingdom].

Notice to be given of accidents connected with explosive.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 63

63. Whenever there occurs any accident by explosion or by fire in
or about or in connexion with any factory, magazine, or store, or
any accident by explosion or by fire causing loss of life or
personal injury in or about or in connexion with any registered
premises, the occupier of such factory, magazine, store, or premises
shall forthwith send or cause to be sent notice of such accident
and of the loss of life or personal injury (if any) occasioned
thereby to the Secretary of State. A notice of any accident of
which notice is sent in pursuance of this section to a Government
inspector need not be sent to any inspector or sub-inspector of
factories or any inspector of mines.

Where in, about, or in connexion with any carriage, ship, or boat,
either conveying an explosive, or on or from which an explosive is
being loaded or unloaded, there occurs any accident by explosion or
by fire causing loss of life or personal injury, or if the amount
of explosive conveyed or being so loaded or unloaded exceeds in the
case of gunpowder half a ton, and in the case of any other
explosive the prescribed amount, any accident by explosion or by
fire, the owner or master of such carriage, ship, or boat, and the
owner of the explosive conveyed therein or being loaded or unloaded
therefrom, or one of them, shall forthwith send or cause to be
sent notice of such accident, and of the loss of life or personal
injury, if any, occasioned thereby, to the Secretary of State.

Every such occupier, owner, or master as aforesaid who fails to
comply with this section shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding
[two hundred pounds].

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 64
Reconstruction of buildings destroyed by accident.

64. Where an accident by explosion or fire has occurred in, and
wholly or partly destroyed a factory magazine, or any magazine or
store, the factory magazine, magazine, or store shall not be
reconstructed, and any further supply of an explosive shall not be
put therein, except with the permission of the Secretary of State;
and any explosive put therein in contravention of this section shall
be deemed to be kept in an unauthorised place, and the offence may
be punished accordingly:

Provided, that this enactment shall not prevent the reconstruction of
a factory magazine in any lawfully existing factory upon such site
in the factory, and with such precautions as may seem reasonable to
the Secretary of State, due regard being had to the working of the
factory as well as to the safety of the public and of the persons
employed therein.

Where an accident by explosion or fire in a factory has wholly or
partly destroyed any building of such factory as to which a
Government inspector has previously to the accident sent to the
occupier a notice that the building is unduly near to some building
or work outside the factory, such building shall be reconstructed
only upon such site in the factory and with such precautions as
may seem reasonable to the Secretary of State, due regard being had
to the working of the factory as well as to the safety of the
public and of the persons employed therein.

Where an accident by explosion or by fire in a factory has wholly
or partly destroyed two or more buildings in such factory, not more
than one of such buildings shall be reconstructed except with the
permission of the Secretary of State: Provided that this enactment
shall not apply to any buildings in a lawfully existing factory, if
either both or all such buildings are incorporating mills, or if as
regards any other buildings a Government inspector has not previously
to the accident sent to the occupier a notice that such buildings
are unduly near to each other.

Where a building is constructed on a different site in pursuance of
this section, the Secretary of State shall cause the necessary
alterations to be made in the license; and such alterations shall
be deemed to be part of the license.

The reconstruction of any building in contravention of this section
shall be deemed to be a breach of the terms of the license, and
shall be punished accordingly.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 65
Provisions as to coroners inquests.

65. With respect to coroners inquests on the bodies of persons
whose death may have been caused by the explosion of any explosive
or by any accident in connexion with an explosive, the following
provisions shall have effect:

(1)Where a coroner holds an inquest upon a body of any person
whose death may have been caused by any accident of which notice
is required by this Act to be given to the Secretary of State, or
by the explosion of any explosive, the coroner shall adjourn such
inquest unless a Government inspector or some person on behalf of
the Secretary of State is present to watch the proceedings:

(2)The coroner, at least four days before holding the adjourned
inquest, shall send to the Secretary of State notice in writing of
the time and place of holding the adjourned inquest:

(3)The coroner, before the adjournment, may take evidence to identify
the body, and may order the interment thereof:

(4)If an explosion or accident has not occasioned the death of more
than one person, and the coroner has sent to the Secretary of
State notice of the time and place of holding the inquest not less
than forty-eight hours before the time of holding the same, it
shall not be imperative on him to adjourn such inquest in pursuance
of this section, if the majority of the jury think it unnecessary
so to adjourn:

(5)A Government inspector or person employed on behalf of the
Secretary of State shall be at liberty at any such inquest to
examine any witness, subject nevertheless to the order of the
coroner on points of law:

(6)Where evidence is given at an inquest at which no Government
inspector or person employed on behalf of the Secretary of State is
present, of any neglect as having caused or contributed to the
explosion or accident or of any defect in or about or in connexion
with any factory, magazine, store, or registered premises, or any
carriage, ship, or boat carrying an explosive, appearing to the
coroner or jury to require a remedy, the coroner shall send to the
Secretary of State notice in writing of such neglect or defect.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 66
Inquiry into accidents and formal investigation in serious cases.

66. The Secretary of State may direct an inquiry to be made by a
Government inspector into the cause of any accident which is caused
by an explosion or fire either in connexion with any explosive, or
of which notice is required by this Act to be given to the
Secretary of State, and where it appears to the Secretary of State,
either before or after the commencement of any such inquiry, that a
more formal investigation of the accident, and of the causes
thereof, and of the circumstances attending the same, is expedient,
the Secretary of State may by order direct such investigation to be
held, and with respect to such inquiry and investigation the
following provisions shall have effect:

(1)The Secretary of State may, by the same or any subsequent order,
appoint any person or persons possessing legal or special knowledge
to asisst the Government inspector in holding the formal
investigation, or may direct the county court judge, [resident
magistrate], ... or other person or persons named in the same or
any subsequent order, to hold the same with the assistance of a
Government inspector or any other assessor or assessors named in the
order:

(2)The persons holding any such formal investigation (in this section
referred to as the court) shall hold the same in open court in
such manner and under such conditions as they may think most
effectual for ascertaining the causes and circumstances of the
accident, and enabling them to make the report in this section
mentioned:

(3)The court shall have for the purpose of such investigation all
the powers of a court of summary jurisdiction when acting as a
court in hearing informations for offences against this Act, and all
the powers of a Government inspector under this Act, and in
addition the following powers; namely,

(a)They may enter and inspect any place or building the entry or
inspection whereof appears to them requisite for the said purpose:

(b)They may by summons under their hands require the attendance of
all such persons as they think fit to call before them and examine
for the said purpose, and may for such purpose require answers or
returns to such inquiries as they think fit to make:

<(c)They may require the production of all books, papers, and documents which they consider important for the said purpose:

(d)They may administer an oath, and require any person examined to
make and sign a declaration of the truth of the statements made by
him in his examination:

<(e)Persons attending as witnesses before the court shall be allowed such expenses as would be allowed to witnesses attending before a court of record; and in case of dispute as to the amount to be allowed, the same shall be referred by the court to a master of one of the superior courts, who, on request under the hands of the members of the court, shall ascertain and certify the proper amount of such expenses:

(4)The Government inspector making an inquiry into any accident and
the court holding an investigation of any accident under this
section shall make a report to the Secretary of State, stating the
causes of the accident and all the circumstances attending the same,
and any observations thereon or on the evidence or on any matters
arising out of the inquiry or investigation which he or they think
right to make to the Secretary of State, and the Secretary of
State shall cause every such report to be made public in such
manner as he thinks expedient:

(5)All expenses incurred in and about an inquiry or investigation
under this section shall be deemed to be part of the expenses of
the Secretary of State in carrying this Act into execution: and

(6)Any person who without reasonable excuse (proof whereof shall lie
on him) either fails, after having had the expenses (if any) to
which he is entitled tendered to him, to comply with any summons
or requisition of a court holding an investigation under this Act,
or prevents or impedes such court in the execution of their duty,
shall for every such offence incur a penalty not exceeding ten
pounds, and in the case of a failure to comply with a requisition
for making any return or producing any document, not exceeding ten
pounds during every day that such failure continues.

Duty of harbour authority and power of officer.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 69

69. It shall be the duty of every [harbour authority] to carry
into effect within their jurisdiction the powers vested in them
under this Act.

Any officer authorised by the [harbour authority] may, on producting,
if demanded, either a copy of his authority, purporting to be
certified by the clerk or some member of the [harbour authority],
or some other sufficient evidence of his authority, require the
occupier of any store (not being subject to the inspection under
this Act of any inspector of mines) or any registered premises, or
any small firework factory, to show him every or any place and all
or any of the receptacles in which any explosive or ingredient of
an explosive, or any substance, the keeping of which is restricted
or regulated by this Act, that is in his possession is kept, and
to give him samples of such explosive, ingredient, or substance, or
of any substance which the officer believes to be an explosive or
such ingredient or substance.

Any occupier of a store or registered premises or a small firework
factory who refuses to comply with any such requisition of an
officer of the [harbour authority], or to give him such assistance
as he may require for the purpose of this section, or who wilfully
obstructs the [harbour authority], or any officer of the [harbour
authority], in the execution of this Act, shall be liable to a
penalty not exceeding [two hundred pounds].

Undertaking of carriage by harbour authority and canal company.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 71

71. Every harbour authority and canal company shall, in addition to
any other powers they may have for the like purpose, have power to
provide carriages, ships, and boats for the conveyance, loading, or
unloading of an explosive within the jurisdiction of such authority
or company, and may charge a reasonable sum fixed by a byelaw
under this Act for the use of such carriage, ship, or boat.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 72
Provisions of magazines by harbour authority.

72. Where any [harbour authority] ... satisfy the Secretary of State
that the erection of a magazine ... within ... their jurisdiction
for the keeping of any explosive, would conduce to the safety of
the public ..., the Secretary of State may grant a license under
this Act for such a magazine.

....

Where any offence under this Act is committed in or about any
magazine erected in pursuance of this section, such offence may be
prosecuted and tried and the penalty and forfeiture therefor
recovered either in the county or place in which the magazine is
situate, or in any adjoining county or place.

Search for explosive when in place in contravention of this Act, or
offence being committed with respect to it.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 73

73. Where any of the following officersnamely, any Government
inspector, or any constable, or any officer of the [harbour
authority], if such constable or officer is specially authorised
either (a) by a warrant of a justice (which warrant such justice
may grant upon reasonable ground being assigned on oath), or (b)
(where it appears to a superintendent or other officer of police of
equal or superior rank, or to a Government inspector, that the case
is one of emergency and that the delay in obtaining a warrant
would be likely to endanger life,) by a written order from such
superintendent, officer, or inspectorhas reasonable cause to believe
that any offence has been or is being committed with respect to an
explosive in any place (whether a building or not, or a carriage,
boat, or ship), or that any explosive is in any such place in
contravention of this Act, or that the provisions of this Act are
not duly observed in any such place, such officer may, on
producing, if demanded, in the case of a Government inspector a
copy of his appointment, and in the case of any other officer his
authority, enter at any time, and if needs be by force, and as
well on Sunday as on other days, the said place, and every part
thereof, and examine the same, and search for explosives therein,
and take samples of any explosive and ingredient of an explosive
therein, and any substance reasonably supposed to be an explosive,
or such ingredient which may be found therein.

Any person who, by himself or by others, fails to admit into any
place occupied by or under the control of such person any officer
demanding to enter in pursuance of this section, or in any way
obstructs such officer in the execution of his duty under this
section, shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding [three hundred
pounds or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months, or
to both such penalty and imprisonment], and shall also be liable to
forfeit all explosives, and ingredients thereof, which are at the
time of the offence in his possession or under his control at the
said place.

Where a constable or officer of the [harbour authority] specially
authorised by written authority other than a warrant of a justice
of the peace, enters and searches as above provided, a special
report in writing of every act done by such constable or officer
in pursuance of that authority, and of the grounds on which it is
done, shall be forthwith sent by the person by whom or under whose
authority it was done to the Secretary of State.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 74
Seizure and detention of explosives liable to forfeiture.

74. Where any of the following officers, namely, any Government
inspector, or any constable, or any officer of the [harbour
authority], has reasonable cause to believe that any explosive or
ingredient of an explosive or substance found by him is liable to
be forfeited under this Act, he may seize and detain the same
until some court of summary jurisdiction has determined whether the
same is or is not so liable to be forfeited, and with respect
thereto the following provisions shall have effect:

(1)The officer seizing may either require the occupier of the place
in which it was seized (whether a building or not, or a carriage,
boat, or ship) to detain the same in such place or in any place
under the control of such occupier, or may remove it in such
manner and to such place as will in his opinion least endanger the
public safety, and there detain it, and may, where the matter
appears to him to be urgent and fraught with serious public danger,
and he is a Government inspector, or is authorised by an order
from a Government inspector or a justice of the peace, or from a
superintendent or other officer of police of equal or superior rank,
cause the same to be destroyed or otherwise rendered harmless; but
before destroying or rendering harmless the same he shall take and
keep a sample thereof, and shall, if required, give a portion of
the sample to the person owning the explosive, or having the same
under his control at the time of the seizure; and any such
occupier who, by himself or by others, fails to keep the same when
he is required in pursuance of this section to detain it, and any
such occupier or other person who, except with the authority of the
officer seizing the same, or of a Government inspector, or in case
of emergency for the purpose of preventing explosion or fire,
removes, alters, or in any way tampers or deals with the same
while so detained, shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding fifty
pounds, and shall also be liable to forfeit all explosives, and
ingredients thereof which are at the time of the offence in his
possession or under his control at the said place:

(2)The proceedings before a court of summary jurisdiction for
determining whether the same is or is not liable to forfeiture
shall be commenced as soon as practicable after the seizure; and

(3)The receptacles containing the same may be seized, detained, and
removed in like manner as the contents thereof; and

(4)The officer seizing the same may use for the purposes of the
removal and detention thereof any ship, boat, or carriage in which
the same was seized, and any tug, tender, engine, tackle, beasts,
and accoutrements belonging to or drawing or provided for drawing
such ship, boat, or carriage, and shall pay to the owner a
reasonable compensation for such use, to be determined, in case of
a dispute, by a court of summary jurisdiction, and to be recovered
in like manner as penalties under this Act; and

(5)The same shall, so far as practicable, be kept and conveyed in
accordance with this Act, and with all due precaution to prevent
accident, but the person seizing, removing, detaining, keeping, or
conveying the same shall not be liable to any penalty, punishment,
or forfeiture under this or any other Act, or to any damages, for
keeping or conveying the same, so that he use all such due
precautions as aforesaid; and

(6)The officer seizing the same, or dealing with the same in
pursuance of this section, shall not be liable to damages or
otherwise in respect of such seizure or dealing, or any act
incidental to or consequential thereon, unless it is proved that he
made such seizure without reasonable cause, or that he caused damage
to the article seized by some wilful neglect or default.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 75
Inspection of wharf, carriage, boat, &c. with explosives in transitu.

75. Any of the following officers, namely, any Government inspector
under this Act, any chief officer of police, and any superior
officer appointed for the purposes of this Act ... by the [harbour
authority] ... may, for the purpose of ascertaining whether the
provisions of this Act with respect to the conveyance, loading,
unloading, and importation of an explosive are complied with, enter,
inspect, and examine at any time, and as well on Sundays as on
other days, the wharf, carriage, ship, or boat of any carrier or
other person who conveys goods for hire, or of the occupier of any
factory, magazine, or store, or of the importer of any explosive,
on or in which wharf, carriage, ship, or boat he has reasonable
cause to suppose an explosive to be for the purpose of or in
course of conveyance, but so as not to unnecessarily obstruct the
work or business of any such carrier, person, occupier, or importer.

Any such officer, if he find any offence being committed under this
Act in any such wharf, carriage, ship, or boat, or on any public
wharf, may seize and detain or remove the said carriage, ship, or
boat, or the explosive, in such manner and with such precautions as
appear to him to be necessary to remove any danger to the public,
and may seize and detain the said explosive, as if it were liable
to forfeiture.

Any officer above mentioned in this section, and any officer of
police, or officer of the [harbour authority] who has reasonable
cause to suppose that any offence against this Act is being
committed in respect of any cariage (not being on a railway) or
any boat conveying, loading, or unloading any explosive, and that
the case is one of emergency, and that the delay in obtaining a
warrant will be likely to endanger life, may stop, and enter,
inspect, and examine, such carriage or boat, and by detention or
removal thereof or otherwise take such precautions as may be
reasonably necessary for removing such danger, in the like manner as
if such explosive were liable to forfeiture.

Every officer shall for the purpose of this section have the same
powers and be in the same position as if he were authorised by a
search warrant granted under this Act, and any person failing to
admit or obstructing such officer shall be liable to the same
penalty.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 76
Payment for samples of explosives.

76. When a Government inspector, constable, or officer of the
[harbour authority] in pursuance of this Act takes samples of any
explosive, or ingredient, or substance, he shall pay for or tender
payment for the same to such amount as he considers to be the
market value thereof, and the occupier of the place in which, or
the owner of the bulk from which, the sample was taken, may
recover any excess of the real value over the amount so paid or
tendered, and any amount so tendered, from the inspector, constable,
or officer taking the sample as a debt in the county court of the
district within which the sample was taken.

Penalty on and removal of trespassers.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 77

77. Any person who enters without permission or otherwise trespasses
upon any factory, magazine, or store, or the land immediately
adjoining thereto which is occupied by the occupier of such factory,
magazine, or store, or on any wharf for which byelaws are made by
the occupier thereof under this Act, shall for every such offence
if not otherwise punishable, be liable to a penalty not exceeding
[twenty pounds], and may be forthwith removed from such factory,
magazine, store, land, or wharf, by any constable, or by the
occupier of such factory, magazine, store, or wharf, or any agent
or servant of or other person authorised by such occupier.

Any person other than the occupier of or person employed in or
about any factory, magazine, or store who is found committing any
act which tends to cause explosion or fire in or about such
factory, magazine, or store, shall be liable to a penalty not
exceeding [three hundred pounds or to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding six months or to both such penalty and imprisonment].

The occupier of any such factory, magazine, store, or wharf shall
post up in some conspicuous place or places a notice or notices
warning all persons of their liability to penalties under this
section; but the absence of any such notice or notices shall not
exempt a person from a penalty under this section.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 78
Arrest without warrant of persons committing dangerous offences.

78. Any person who is found committing any act for which he is
liable to a penalty under this Act, and which tends to cause
explosion or fire in or about any factory, magazine, store, railway,
canal, harbour, or wharf, or any carriage, ship, or boat, may be
apprehended without a warrant by a constable, ..., or by the
occupier of or the agent or servant of or other person authorised
by the occupier of such factory, magazine, store, or wharf, or by
any agent or servant of or other person authorised by the railway
or canal company or harbour authority, and be removed from the
place at which he is arrested, and conveyed as soon as conveniently
may be before a court of summary jurisdiction.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 79
Imprisonment for wilful act of neglect endangering life or limb.

79. Where any person is guilty of any offence which under this Act
is punishable by a pecuniary penalty only, and which, in the
opinion of the court that tries the case, was reasonably calculated
to endanger the safety of or to cause serious personal injury to
any of the public or the persons employed in or about any factory,
magazine, store, or registered premises, or any harbour, railway,
canal, wharf, ship, boat, carriage, or place where such offence is
committed, or to cause a dangerous accident, and was committed
wilfully by the personal act, personal default, or personal
negligence of the person accused, such person shall be liable, if
the court is of opinion that a pecuniary penalty will not meet the
circumstances of the case, to imprisonment, ... for a period not
exceeding six months.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 80
Penalty for throwing fireworks in thoroughfare.

80. If any person throw, cast, or fire any firework in or into
any highway, street, thoroughfare, or public place, he shall be
liable to a penalty not exceeding [twenty pounds].

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 81
Forgery and falsification of documents.

81. Every person who forges or counterfeits any license, certificate,
document, or plan granted or required in pursuance or for the
purposes of this Act, or gives or signs any such document or plan
which is to his knowledge false in any material particular, or
wilfully makes use of any such forged, counterfeit, or false
license, certificate, document, or plan, shall be liable to
imprisonment, ... for a term not exceeding [five years].

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 82
Punishment for defacing notices.

82. Every person who, without due authority, pulls down, ... any
notice, copy of rules, or document, when affixed in pursuance of
this Act or of the special rules, shall be liable to a penalty
not exceeding [twenty pounds].

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 83
Provisions as to Orders in Council and orders of Secretary of
State.

83. Her Majesty may from time to time make Orders in Council for
doing anything which is in this Act expressed to be authorised,
directed, regulated, prescribed, or done by Order in Council.

Every Order in Council or order of the Secretary of State, which
purports to be made in pursuance of this Act shall be presumed to
have been duly made and to be within the powers of this Act, and
no objection to the legality thereof shall be entertained in any
legal proceeding whatever.

Every Order in Council made in pursuance of this Act shall take
effect as if it were enacted in this Act, and shall be published
in the [Belfast Gazette] and shall be laid before both Houses of
[the Parliament of the United Kingdom] within one month after it is
made, if Parliament be then sitting, or if not, within one month
after the commencement of the then next session of Parliament.

Her Majesty may by Order in Council, and a Secretary of State may
by order, from time to time revoke, add to, or alter any previous
Order in Council or orders of the Secretary of State, as the case
may be, under this Act.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 84
Publication of byelaws, notices, &c.

84. All byelaws, notices, and documents directed by this Act to be
published or advertised shall, save as otherwise provided by this
Act, be published in the place which such notices and documents
affect, by advertisement in some newspapers circulating generally in
such place, or by placards or handbills, or in such manner as the
Secretary of State may from time to time direct as being in his
opinion sufficient for giving information thereof to all persons
interested.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 85
Requisitions, notices, &c., to be in writing, &c., and how to be
served.

85. All orders, permissions, notices, and documents issued or given
by the Secretary of State for the purposes of this Act, and all
notices under this Act, shall be in writing or print, or partly in
writing and partly in print, and all notices and documents required
by this Act to be served, given, or sent by, on, or to a
Government inspector or Secretary of State may be sent by post, by
a prepaid letter, and if sent by post shall be deemed to have
been served, given, and received respectively at the time when the
letter containing the same would be delivered in the ordinary course
of post; and in proving such service, giving, or sending, it shall
be sufficient to prove that the letter containing the notice was
properly addressed and prepaid and put into the post.

All notices and documents directed by or required for the purposes
of this Act to be given or sent to the Secretary of State shall,
if sent to a Government inspector under this Act, be deemed to
have been sent to the Secretary of State.

....

Construction of enactments referring to powers of searching for
gunpowder.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 86

86. Where any enactment refers to any power of searching for
gunpowder, or to any provisions of an Act of the twelfth year of
King George the Third, chapter sixty-one, or of any Act repealed by
this Act relative to the search for gunpowder, such enactment shall
be deemed to refer to the provisions of this Act with respect to
the search for and seizure, detention, and removal of an explosive
by a Government inspector.

Exemption of occupier from penalty upon proof of another being real
offender.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 87

87. Where any offence under this Act for which the occupier of any
factory, magazine, store, or registered premises is liable to a
penalty or forfeiture has in fact been committed by some other
person, such other person shall be liable to a penalty not
exceeding twenty pounds.

Where such occupier is charged with an offence so committed by some
other person, the occupier shall be exempt from any penalty and
forfeiture upon proving that he had supplied proper means and issued
proper orders for the observance and used due diligence to enforce
the observance of this Act, and that the offence in question was
actually committed by some other person without his connivance, and
if the actual offender be alive, that he has taken all practicable
means in his power to prosecute such offender to conviction.

Where a Government inspector, or an officer of the [harbour
authority], or the [harbour authority], is satisfied before
instituting a proceeding for any offence under this Act against an
occupier, that such occupier, if such proceeding were instituted
against him, would, under the foregoing provisions of this section,
upon taking all practicable means in his power to prosecute the
actual offender to conviction, be exempt from any penalty and
forfeiture, and the occupier gives all facilities in his power for
proceeding against and convicting the person whom the inspector,
officer, or [harbour authority], believes actually to have committed
the offence, the inspector, officer, or [harbour authority] shall
proceed against that person in the first instance, without first
proceeding against the occupier.

The occupier or other defendant, when charged in respect of any
offence by another person, may, if he think fit, be sworn and
examined as an ordinary witness in the case.

Where any offence under this Act for which any warehouseman,
carrier, occupier of a wharf or dock, or owner or master of any
ship, boat, or carriage, is liable to a penalty or forfeiture, has
in fact been committed by some other person, this section shall
apply in like manner as if the warehouseman, carrier, occupier of a
wharf or dock, owner, or master were such an occupier as above in
this section mentioned.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 88
Exemption of carrier and owner and master of ship where consignee,
&c. in fault.

88. Where a carrier or owner or master of a ship or boat is
prevented from complying with this Act by the wilful act, neglect,
or default of the consignor or consignee of the explosive, or other
person, or by the improper refusal of the consignee or other person
to accept delivery of the explosive, such consignor, consignee, or
other person who is guilty of such wilful act, neglect, default, or
refusal shall be liable to the same penalty to which the carrier,
owner, or master is liable for a breach of this Act, and his
conviction shall exempt the carrier, owner, or master from any
penalty or forfeiture under this Act.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 89
Supplemental provisions as to forfeiture of explosive.

89. Where a court before whom a person is convicted of an offence
against this Act has power to forfeit any explosive owned by or
found in the possession or under the control of such person, the
court may, if it think it just and expedient, in lieu of
forfeiting such explosive, impose upon such person, in addition to
any other penalty or punishment, a penalty not exceeding such sum
as appears to the court to be the value of the explosive so
liable to be forfeited.

Where any explosive, or ingredient of an explosive, is alleged to
be liable under this Act to be forfeited, any indictment,
information, or complaint may be laid against the owner of such
explosive or ingredient, for the purpose only of enforcing such
forfeiture; and where the owner is unknown, or cannot be found, a
court may cause a notice to be advertised, stating that unless
cause is shown to the contrary at the time and place named in the
notice, such explosive will be forfeited, and at such time and
place the court after hearing the owner or any person on his
behalf (who may be present), may order all or any part of such
explosive or ingredient to be forfeited.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 90
Jurisdiction in tidal waters or on boundaries.

90. For all purposes of this Act

(1)Any harbour, tidal water, or inland water which runs between or
abuts on or forms the boundary of the jurisdiction of two or more
courts shall be deemed to be wholly within the jurisdiction of each
of such courts; and

(2)Any tidal water not included in the foregoing descriptions and
within the territorial jurisdiction of Her Majesty, and adjacent to
or surrounding any part of the shore of the United Kingdom, and
any pier, jetty, mole, or work extending into the same, shall be
deemed to form part of the shore to which such water or part of
the sea is adjacent, or which it surrounds.[

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 91
Prosecution of offences under this Act.

91.(1) An offence under section 81 of this Act shall be triable on
indictment only.

(2) Other offences under this Act shall be summary offences and,
except as provided by subsection (3) of this section, the provisions
of the Summary Jurisdiction Acts (Northern Ireland) with respect to
summary offences shall apply to those other offences.

(3) Nothing in section 41 of the Magistrates' Courts Act (Northern
Ireland) 1964 shall apply to any offence under this Act.]

Ss.92, 93 rep. by 1970 c.10 (NI) s.9(1) sch.2. S.94 rep. by SLR
(NI) 1954

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 95
Distress of ship.

95. Where the owner or master of a ship or boat is adjudged to
pay a penalty for an offence committed with or in relation to such
ship or boat, the court may, in addition to any other power they
may have for the purpose of compelling payment of such penalty,
direct the same to be levied by distress or arrestment and sale of
the said ship or boat and her tackle.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 96
Disposal of forfeitures.

96. ...

Any explosive or ingredient forfeited in pursuance of this Act may
be sold, destroyed, or otherwise disposed of in such manner as the
court declaring the forfeiture, or the Secretary of State, may
direct, and the proceeds of any such sale or disposal shall be
paid, applied, and accounted for in like manner as penalties under
this Act.

The receptacle containing any such explosive or ingredient may be
forfeited, sold, destroyed, or otherwise disposed of, in like manner
as the contents thereof.

The provisions of Part Three of this Act with respect to an
explosive, or ingredient of an explosive, seized in pursuance of
this Act, and to the officer seizing, removing, detaining, keeping,
or conveying, or otherwise dealing with the same, shall apply to
any explosive and ingredient declared by any court to be forfeited,
and to the officer removing, detaining, keeping, conveying, selling,
destroying, or otherwise disposing of the same.

The court declaring the forfeiture, or the Secretary of State
directing the sale or other disposal of any forfeited explosive or
ingredient, and the receptacles thereof, may require the owner of
such explosive or ingredient to permit the use of any ship, boat,
or carriage containing such explosive or ingredient for the purpose
of such sale or disposal upon payment of a resonable compensation
for the same, to be determined in case of dispute by a court of
summary jurisdiction; and where the explosive or ingredient is
directed to be destroyed, the owner and the person having possession
of such explosive or ingredient, and the owner and master of the
ship, boat, or carriage containing the same, or some, or one of
them, shall destroy the same accordingly, and if the court or
Secretary of State so order, the ship, boat, or carriage may be
detained until the same is so destroyed; and if the Secretary of
State is satisfied that default has been made in complying with any
such direction by him or by a court, and that the detention of
the ship, boat, or carriage will not secure the safety of the
public, and that it is impracticable, having regard to the safety
of the public or of the persons employed in such destruction, to
effect the same without using such ship, boat, or carriage, or
otherwise, dealing with such ship, boat, or carriage, in like manner
as if it were a receptacle for an explosive forfeited under this
Act, the Secretary of State may direct such ship, boat, and
carriage, or any of them, to be, and the same may accordingly be,
so used or dealt with.

Exemption of Government factories, &c. from the Act.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 97

97. This Act shall not apply

(1)To any factory, magazine, store, premises, wharf, place, or
explosive under the control of the Secretary of State, ..., or
other department of the Government, or otherwise held for the
service of the Crown, or to the manufacture, keeping, or importation
of such explosive; or

(2)To any of Her Majesty's ships, boats, or carriages; or

(3)To the keeping or making up, or adapting for use of any
explosive issued ... by [or for the use of any naval or marine
reserve], so far as such explosive is kept, made up, and adapted
for use in accordance with the regulations of the Secretary of
State ...; or

(4)To any storehouse appointed for receiving any such explosive as
last above mentioned ..., if such storehouse is approved by the
Secretary of State ..., as a fit place for the storing of such
explosive, and is managed in accordance with the regulations of a
Secretary of State ... for the management of such storehouses, or
for the management of the like storehouses appointed for the use of
Her Majesty's army or navy; or

(5)To the conveyance of any explosive under the control of a
Secretary of State, ...,or other department of the Government or to
the conveyance of any explosive otherwise held for the service of
the Crown when the same is being conveyed in accordance with the
regulations of a Secretary of State or ... other department of the
Government:

Saving for rocket and fog stations.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 98

98. This Act shall not apply

(1)To the keeping of any rockets for use in any apparatus for
saving life, kept under the control of the [Secretary of State] or
the Board of Trade, or

(2)To the keeping of any explosive kept for the purpose of
signalling at or near a station on the sea coast, under the
control of any general lighthouse authority, as defined by the
Merchant Shipping Act, 1854.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 100
Saving for master of ship and carrier in case of emergency.

100. Nothing in this Act shall render liable to any penalty or
forfeiture the owner or master of any ship or boat, or any carrier
or warehouseman, or the person having charge of any carriage, for
any act done in breach of this Act, if he prove that by reason
of stress of weather, inevitable accident, or other emergency, the
doing of such act was, under the circumstances, necessary and
proper.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 101
Saving for rockets, gunpowder, &c. on board ship in compliance with
1854 c.104.

101. Where any gunpowder, rockets, or other explosive are on board
any ship in pursuance of the provisions of the Merchant Shipping
Act, 1854, and the Acts amending the same, or any order or
regulation made under any of those Acts, nothing in this Act shall
apply to such gunpowder, rockets, or explosive, except that the
conveyance and keeping thereof on board the ship or elsewhere while
the ship is in harbour shall be subject to the byelaws under this
Act, and byelaws under this Act may be made for regulating such
conveyance and keeping.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 102
Powers of Act cumulative, with power to make provisional order for
repealing local Acts.

102. This Act shall not, save as is herein expressly provided,
exempt any person from any action or suit in respect of any
nuisance, tort, or otherwise, which might, but for the provisions of
this Act, have been brought against him.

This Act shall not exempt any person from any indictment or other
proceeding for a nuisance, or for an offence which is indictable at
common law, or by any Act of Parliament other than this Act, so
that no person be punished twice for the same offence.

When proceedings are taken before any court against any person in
respect of any offence under this Act, which is also an offence
indictable at common law or by some Act of Parliament other than
this Act, the court may direct that, instead of such proceedings
being continued, proceedings shall be taken for indicting such person
at common law or under some Act of Parliament other than this Act.

A continuing certificate granted under this Act shall not make
lawful any factory, magazine, or store, or any part thereof, which
immediately before the passing of this Act was unlawful.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 103
Extension of definition of explosive to other explosive substances.

103. All powers given by this Act shall be deemed to be in
addition to and not in derogation of any other powers conferred on
any [harbour authority] by Act of [the Parliament of the United
Kingdom], but the Secretary of State may, on the application of any
[harbour authority, district council], or on the application of any
persons making, keeping, importing, exporting, or selling any
explosive within the jurisdiction of any [harbour authority], council,
or urban sanitary authority, after notice to such authority, make an
order for repealing, altering, or amending all or any of the
provisions of any Act of [the Parliament of the United Kingdom],
charter, or custom respecting the manufacture, keeping, conveyance,
importation, exportation, or sale of an explosive, or the powers of
such council or authority for regulating the same, or otherwise in
relation to an explosive.

Notice of the draft of every such order shall be advertised not
less than one month before the order is made, and the Secretary of
State shall consider all objections to such draft order sent to him
in writing during the said month, and shall, if it seem to him
necessary, directing a local inquiry into the validity of any such
objections.

Any such order shall be of no force unless confirmed by [the
Parliament of the United Kingdom], but when so confirmed shall have
effect, with such modifications or alterations as may be therein
made by [the Parliament of the United Kingdom].

If while a Bill confirming any such order is pending in either
House of [the Parliament of the United Kingdom], a petition is
presented against such order, the Bill, so far as it relates to
such order, may be referred to a Select Committee, and the
petitioner shall be allowed to appear and oppose the same as in
the case of a Bill for a private Act.

An order under this section may also be made for revoking or
altering an order under this section previously made and confirmed
by Parliament.

Persons carrying on certain processes to be deemed manufacturers.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 104

104. Her Majesty may, by Order in Council, declare that any
substance which appears to Her Majesty to be specially dangerous to
life or property by reason either of its explosive properties, or
of any process in the manufacture thereof being liable to explosion,
shall be deemed to be an explosive within the meaning of this Act
and the provisions of this Act (subject to such exceptions,
limitations, and restrictions as may be specified in the order)
shall accordingly extend to such substance in like manner as if it
were included in the term explosive in this Act.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 105
Definition and classification of explosives by Order in Council.

105. Any person who carries on any of the following processes,
namely, the process of dividing into its component parts or
otherwise breaking up or unmaking any explosive, or making fit for
use any damaged explosive, or the process of remaking, altering, or
repairing any explosive, shall be subject to the provisions of this
Act as if he manufactured an explosive, and the expression
"manufacture" shall in this Act be construed accordingly.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 106
General definitions.

106. It shall be lawful for Her Majesty from time to time by
Order in Council, to define, for the purposes of this Act, the
composition, quality, and character of any explosive, and to classify
explosives.

Where the composition, quality, or character of any explosive has
been defined by an Order in Council, any article alleged to be
such explosive which differs from such definition in composition,
quality, or character, whether by reason of deterioration or
otherwise, shall not be deemed, for the purposes of this Act, to
be the explosive so defined.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 108
1860 c.139

108. In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires

The expression "this Act" includes any license, certificate, byelaw,
regulation, rule, and order granted or made in pursuance of this
Act:

The expression "existing" means existing at the passing of this Act:

The expression "person" includes a body corporate:

The expression "occupier" includes any number of persons and a body
corporate; and in the case of any manufacture or trade, includes
any person carrying on such manufacture or trade:

The expression "master" includes every person (except a pilot) having
command or charge of a ship, and in reference to any boat
belonging to a ship, means the master of the ship; and when used
in reference to any other boat, includes every person having command
or charge of such boat:

The expression "magazine" includes any ship or other vessel used for
the purpose of keeping any explosive:

The expression "factory magazine" means a building for keeping the
finished explosive made in the factory, and includes, if such
explosive is not gunpowder, any building for keeping the partly
manufactured explosive or the ingredients of such explosive which is
mentioned in that behalf in the license:

The expression "store" means an existing gunpowder store as defined
by this Act, or a place for keeping an explosive licensed by a
license granted ... under this Act:

Definition rep. by SLR 1893 (No.2)

The expression "warehouseman" includes all persons owning or managing
any warehouse, store, wharf, or other premises in which goods are
deposited:

The expression "carrier" includes all persons carrying goods or
passengers for hire by land or water:

The expression "harbour authority" means any person or body of
persons, corporate or unincorporate, being or claiming to be
proprietor or proprietors of or intrusted with the duty or invested
with the power of improving, managing, maintaining, or regulating any
harbour properly so called, whether natural or artificial, and any
port, haven, and estuary, or intrusted with the duty of conserving,
maintaining, or improving the navigation of any tidal water, and any
such harbour, port, haven, estuary, tidal water, and any wharf,
dock, pier, jetty, and work, and other area, whether land or water,
over which the harbour authority as above defined have control or
exercise powers, are in the other portions of this Act included in
the expression "harbour":

The expression "canal company" means any person or body of persons,
corporate or unincorporate, being owner or lessee or owners or
lessees of, or working, or entitled to charge tolls for the use of
any canal in the United Kingdom, constructed or carried on under
the powers of any Act of Parliament, or intrusted with the duty of
conserving, maintaining, or improving the navigation of any inland
water, and every such canal and inland water under the control of
a canal company as above defined, and any wharf, dock, pier, jetty,
and work in or at which barges do or can ship or unship goods or
passengers, and other area, whether land or water, which belong to
or are under the control of such canal company, are in the other
portions of this Act included in the expression "canal":

The expression "tidal water" means any part of the sea or of a
river within the ebb and flow of the tides at ordinary spring
tides:

The expression "inland water" means any canal, river, navigation,
lake, or water which is not tidal water:

The expression "railway company" means any person or body of
persons, corporate or unincorporate, being the owner or lessee or
owners or lessees of or working any railway worked by steam or
otherwise than by animal power in the United Kingdom, constructed or
carried on under the powers of any Act of Parliament and used for
public traffic, and every building, station, wharf, dock, and place
which belong to or are under the control of a railway company, are
in the other portions of this Act included in the expression
"railway":

The expression "wharf" includes any quay, landing-place, siding, or
other place at which goods are landed, loaded, or unloaded:

The expression "carriage" includes any carriage, waggon, cart, truck,
vehicle, or other means of conveying goods or passengers by land,
in whatever manner the same may be propelled:

The expression "ship" includes every description of vessel used in
sea navigation, whether propelled by oars or otherwise:

The expression "boat" means every vessel not a ship as above
defined which is used in navigation in any inland water or any
harbour, whether propelled by oars or otherwise:

The expression "prescribed" means prescribed by Order in Council:

...

The expression "county" does not include a county of a city or a
county of a town:

Every riding, division, liberty, or part of a county having a
separate commission of the peace and separate court of quarter
sessions is for the purposes of this Act to be deemed to be a
county:

...

The expression "safety cartridges" means cartridges for small arms of
which the case can be extracted from the small arm after firing,
and which are so closed as to prevent any explosion in one
cartridge being communicated to other cartridges:

The expression "Gunpowder Act, 1860," means the Act of the session
of the twenty-third and twenty-fourth years of the reign of Her
present 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," and the Acts amending
the same:

Definitions rep. by SLR 1893

This Act shall apply to Ireland, with the following modifications;
that is to say,

Ss.116, 117 rep. by SRO (NI) 1973/341. S.118 rep. by 1898 c.37
s.110 sch.6; SRO (NI) 1973/341

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 119
Definitions.

119.The register of store licenses and of registered premises to be
kept by the [Ministry of Home Affairs] in Ireland shall be kept in
such form and manner, and the fees for entries to be made therein
shall (subject to the limits as to fees prescribed by this Act) be
such as the Secretary of State shall from time to time approve.

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 120
Application of penalties in Ireland.

120. In this Act with respect to Ireland

The expression "police district" means

(2)The town of Belfast; and

(3)Elsewhere in Ireland, any district, whether city, town, or part
of a county, over which is appointed a sub-inspector of the Royal
Irish Constabulary.

The expression "chief officer of police" means

(2)In the town of Belfast, the town inspector, and in his absence
the sub-inspector of the Royal Irish Constabulary acting for him;
and

(3)Elsewhere in Ireland, the sub-inspector of the Royal Irish
Constabulary, and in his absence the head constable of such force
acting for him.

The expression "the county court judge" means the judge of the
civil bill court:

Definitions rep. by SLR 1893 (No. 2); SRO (NI) 1973/341

EXPLOSIVES ACT 1875 - SECT 121
1851 c.94

121. Except as by this Act expressly provided, all penalties imposed
under this Act in Ireland shall be applied in manner directed by
the Fines (Ireland) Act, 1851, and any Acts amending the same.

S.122 rep. by SLR 1893 (No. 2)

(1) The quantity of gunpowder or ingredients to be made into
gunpowder to be at one time under any single pair of mill stones
or rollers or runners shall not exceed fifty pounds as respects
sporting and Government powder, and sixty pounds as respects all
inferior powders; and every incorporating mill or group of
incorporating mills shall be provided with a charge house for the
store of mill charges properly constructed of stone or brick, and
situate at a safe and suitable distance from each incorporating mill
or group of incorporating mills.

(2) The quantity of gunpowder to be subjected to pressure at one
time in any press house shall not exceed ten hundredweight.

(3) The quantity of gunpowder to be corned or granulated at one
time in any corning or granulating house shall not exceed twelve
hundredweight.

(4) The quantity of gunpowder to be dried at one time in one
stove or place used for the drying of gunpowder shall not exceed
fifty hundredweight.

(5) The respective quantities to be at any one time in any press
house or corning or granulating house shall not exceed twice the
respective quantities hereby allowed to be subjected to pressure and
to be corned or granulated at one time; and the quantity to be at
any one time in any drying house or dusting house shall not be
more than is necessary for the immediate supply and work of such
house; and for the purposes of this provision any building used
with any such press house, corning or granulating house, drying
house or dusting house, shall be deemed part thereof, save only
magazines constructed with stone or brick and situate forty yards at
least from every such press house or other house as aforesaid
(herein-after distinguished as expense magazines), and save only the
stove in which the powder which has been dried may be cooling.

(6) Every person keeping or using any mill for the making of
gunpowder shall have (in addition to the expense magazines) a good
and sufficient factory magazine or magazines, situate (unless
otherwise authorised by a certificate of the Secretary of State
under the Gunpowder Act, 1860) at least one hundred and forty yards
distant from the mill or mills and every press house and other
house or place used for or in the making of gunpowder, such
magazine or magazines to be well and substantially built with brick
or stone, and situate in such place as may have been lawfully used
or duly licensed by justices before the commencement of the
Gunpowder Act, 1860, and not made unlawful by that Act, or may
have been after the commencement of that Act duly licensed under
the Gunpowder Act, 1860.

(7) No maker of gunpowder shall keep or permit to be kept any
charcoal within twenty yards of any mill or other engine for making
gunpowder, or of any press house, or drying, corning, or dusting
house or other place used in or for the making of gunpowder, or
any magazine or storehouse thereto belonging.

(1) The store shall be exclusively for the use of a mine, quarry,
colliery, or factory for safety fuzes.

(2) The amount of gunpowder in the store shall not exceed, if the
store is well and substantially built of brick or stone, four
thousand pounds, and in any other case three hundred pounds.

(3) Where the amount of gunpowder in the store exceeds three
hundred pounds, such store shall, unless otherwise authorised before
the passing of this Act by a certificate of the Secretary of
State, be within two hundred yards of the mine, quarry, colliery,
or factory for safety fuzes, or one of the mines, quarries,
collieries, or factories for safety fuzes for the use of which such
gunpowder is kept, and not within two hundred yards of any
inhabited house without the consent in writing of the occupier of
such house.

(4) Where such certificate has been given, the conditions on which
it was given shall be duly observed as if they were contained in
this schedule.

(5) Where the amount of gunpowder does not exceed three hundred
pounds, the store shall be within two hundred yards of the mine,
quarry, colliery, or factory for the use of which it is erected,
and unless it was erected and used for the said purpose before the
passing of the Gunpowder Act, 1860, shall not be within two hundred
yards from any inhabited house without the consent in writing of
the occupier of such house.

(6) The store shall not be ... within any borough or market town
or one mile of the same, or within two miles of any palace or
house of residence of Her Majesty, her heirs and successors, or
within two miles of any gunpowder magazine belonging to the Crown,
or within half a mile of any parish church.

With respect to arbitrations under this Act, the following provisions
shall have effect:

(1)The parties to the arbitration are in this section deemed to be
the occupier of the factory, magazine, or store on the one hand,
and on the other the government inspector (on behalf of the
Secretary of State):

(2)Each of the parties to the arbitration may, within twenty-one
days after the date of the reference, appoint an arbitrator:

(3)No person shall act as arbitrator or umpire under this Act who
is employed in or in the management of or is directly or
indirectly interested in the manufacture, trade, factory, magazine,
store, business, or premises to which the arbitration relates, or is
in any manner interested directly or indirectly in the matter to
which the arbitration relates:

(4)The appointment of an arbitrator under this section shall be in
writing, and notice of the appointment shall be forthwith sent to
the other party to the arbitration, and shall not be revoked
without the consent of such other party:

(5)The death, removal, or other change in any of the parties to
the arbitration shall not affect the proceedings under this section:

(6)If within the said twenty-one days either of the parties fail to
appoint an arbitrator, the arbitrator appointed by the other party
may proceed to hear and determine the matter in difference, and in
such case the award of the single arbitrator shall be final:

(7)If before an award has been made any arbitrator appointed by
either party die or become incapable to act, or for fourteen days
refuse or neglect to act, the party by whom such arbitrator was
appointed may appoint some other person to act in his place; and
if he fail to do so within fourteen days after notice in writing
from the other party for that purpose, the remaining arbitrator may
proceed to hear and determine the matters in difference, and in
such case the award of such single arbitrator shall be final:

(8)In either of the foregoing cases where an arbitrator is empowered
to act singly, upon one of the parties failing to appoint, the
party so failing may, before the single arbitrator has actually
proceeded in the arbitration, appoint an arbitrator, who shall then
act as if no failure had been made:

(9)If the arbitrators fail to make their award within twenty-one
days after the day on which the last of them was appointed, or
within such extended time (if any) as may have been appointed for
that purpose by both arbitrators under their hands, the matter in
difference shall be determined by the umpire appointed as hereinafter
mentioned:

<(10)The arbitrators, before they enter upon the matters referred to them, shall appoint by writing under their hands an umpire to decide on points on which they may differ:

<(11)If the umpire die or become incapable to act before he has made his award, or refuses to make his award within a reasonable time after the matter has been brought within his cognizance, the persons or person who appointed such umpires shall forthwith appoint another umpire in his place:

<(12)If the arbitrators refuse or fail or for seven days after the request of either party neglect to appoint an umpire, then on the application of either party an umpire shall be appointed by the chairman of the quarter sessions of the peace within the jurisdiction of which the factory, magazine, or store is situate:

<(13)The decision of every umpire on the matters referred to him shall be final:

<(14)If a single arbitrator fail to make his award within twenty-one days after the day on which he was appointed, the party who appointed him may appoint another arbitrator to act in his place:

The arbitrators and their umpire or any of them may examine the
parties and their witnesses on oath, they may also consult any
counsel, engineer, or scientific person whom they may think it
expedient to consult:

<(15)The payment, if any, to be made to any arbitrator or umpire for his services shall be fixed by the Secretary of State, and together with the costs of the arbitration and award shall be paid by the parties, or one of them, according as the award may direct.  Such costs may be taxed by a master of one of the superior courts, who on the written application of either of the parties, shall ascertain and certify the proper amount of such costs.  The amount, if any, payable by the Secretary of State shall be paid as part of the expenses of inspectors under this Act.  The amount, if any, payable by any other party may in the event of non-payment be recovered in the same manner as penalties under this Act.

Do., 


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