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at his own request, in any Court of justice in respect of the circumstances which led to the issue of the warrant.

Interpretation Clause.

tion of

30. In this Act, if not inconsistent with the context, the Interpretafollowing terms have the meanings herein-after respectively terms. assigned to them; that is to say,

state :

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'Foreign state" includes any foreign prince, colony, pro- “Foreign vince, or part of any province or people, or any person or persons exercising or assuming to exercise the powers of government in or over any foreign country, colony, province, or part of any province or people:

service:

"

"Military service" shall include military telegraphy and "Military any other employment whatever, in or in connexion with any military operation:

service:"

"Naval service" shall, as respects a person, include service "Naval as a marine, employment as a pilot in piloting or directing the course of a ship of war or other ship when such ship of war or other ship is being used in any military or naval operation, and any employment whatever on board a ship of war, transport, store ship, privateer or ship under letters of marque; and as respects a ship, include any user of a ship as a transport, store ship, privateer or ship under letters of marque:

"United Kingdom" includes the Isle of Man, the Channel "United

Islands, and other adjacent islands:

Kingdom:"

"British possession" means any territory, colony, or place "British

posses

being part of Her Majesty's dominions, and not part of sion: " the United Kingdom, as defined by this Act:

"The Secretary of State" shall mean any one of Her "The SecMajesty's Principal Secretaries of State:

retary of State:"

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The Governor" shall as respects India mean the Governor General or the governor of any presidency, and where a British possession consists of several constituent colonies, mean the Governor General of the whole possession or the Governor of any of the constituent colonies, and as respects any other British possession it shall mean the officer for the time being administering the government of such possession; also any person acting for or in the capacity of a governor shall be included under the term "Governor ":

Court of Admiralty" shall mean the High Court of Admiralty of England or Ireland, the Court of Session of Scotland, or any Vice-Admiralty Court within Her Majesty's dominions :

Ship" shall include any description of boat, vessel, floating battery, or floating craft; also any description of boat, vessel, or other craft or battery, made to move either on the surface of or under water, or sometimes on the surface of and sometimes under water :

Building" in relation to a ship shall include the doing any act towards or incidental to the construction of a ship, and all words having relation to building shall be construed accordingly:

Equipping" in relation to a ship shall include the furnishing a ship with any tackle, apparel, furniture, provisions, arms, munitions, or stores, or any other thing which is used in or about a ship for the purpose of fitting or adapting her for the sea or for naval service, and all words relating to equipping shall be construed accordingly : "Ship and equipment" shall include a ship and everything in or belonging to a ship.

"Master" shall include any person having the charge or "Master." command of a ship.

Repeal of Acts and Saving Clauses.

ment Act.

31. From and after the commencement of this Act, an Act Repeal of Foreign passed in the fifty-ninth year of the reign of His late Majesty Enlist King George the Third, chapter sixty-nine, intituled "An Act 59 G. 3. c. to prevent the enlisting or engagement of His Majesty's sub- 69. jects to serve in foreign service, and the fitting out or equipping, in His Majesty's dominions, vessels for warlike purposes, without His Majesty's license," shall be repealed: Provided that such repeal shall not affect any penalty, forfeiture, or other punishment incurred or to be incurred in respect of any offence committed before this Act comes into operation, nor the institution of any investigation or legal proceeding, or any other remedy for enforcing any such penalty, forfeiture, or punishment as aforesaid.

to commis

32. Nothing in this Act contained shall subject to forfeit- Saving as ure any commissioned ship of any foreign state, or give to any sioned foreign British Court over or in respect of any ship entitled to recog- ships. nition as a commissioned ship of any foreign state any jurisdiction which it would not have had if this Act had not passed. 33. Nothing in this Act contained shall extend or be con- Penalties strued to extend to subject to any penalty any person who enters tend to into the military service of any prince, state, or potentate in entering Asia, with such leave or license as is for the time being required tary serby law in the case of subjects of Her Majesty entering into Asia. the military service of princes, states, or potentates in Asia.1

1 "Instructions for the guidance of the Commanders-in-Chief, or the senior officers present, as to the course to be pursued in carrying into effect, and in assisting the civil authorities to carry into effect, the provisions of the Foreign Enlistment Act, 1870," will be found in the Queen's Regulations and Admiralty Instructions, 1879, p. 141.

not to ex

persons

into mili

vice in

59 G. 3. c.

69, s. 12.

Short title.

Capacity

of an alien

as to pro

perty.

No. XIII.

NATURALIZATION ACT, 1870.

An Act to amend the law relating to the legal condition of
Aliens and British Subjects.-[12th May 1870.]

Whereas it is expedient to amend the law relating to the legal condition of aliens and British subjects:

Be it enacted by the Queen's most Excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:

1. This Act may be cited for all purposes as Naturalization Act, 1870."

Status of Aliens in the United Kingdom.

"The

2. Real and personal property of every description may be taken, acquired, held, and disposed of by an alien in the same manner in all respects as by a natural-born British subject; and a title to real and personal property of every description may be derived through, from, or in succession to an alien, in the same manner in all respects as through, from, or in succession to a natural-born British subject: Provided,(1.) That this section shall not confer any right on an alien

to hold real property situate out of the United Kingdom, and shall not qualify an alien for any office or for any municipal, parliamentary, or other franchise :

(2.) That this section shall not entitle an alien to any right

or privilege as a British subject, except such rights

and privileges in respect of property as are hereby
expressly given to him:

(3.) That this section shall not affect any estate or interest
in real or personal property to which any person has
or may become entitled, either mediately or imme-
diately, in possession or expectancy, in pursuance of
any disposition made before the passing of this Act,
or in pursuance of any devolution by law on the
death of any person dying before the passing of this
Act.

natural

to divest

of their

certain

cases.

3. Where Her Majesty has entered into a convention with Power of any foreign state to the effect that the subjects or citizens of ized aliens that state who have been naturalized as British subjects may themselves divest themselves of their status as such subjects, it shall be status in lawful for Her Majesty, by Order in Council, to declare that such convention has been entered into by Her Majesty; and from and after the date of such Order in Council, any person being originally a subject or a citizen of the state referred to in such Order, who has been naturalized as a British subject, may, within such limit of time as may be provided in the convention, make a declaration of alienage, and from and after the date of his so making such declaration such person shall be regarded as an alien, and as a subject of the state to which he originally belonged as aforesaid.

A declaration of alienage may be made as follows; that is to say, If the declarant be in the United Kingdom in the presence of any justice of the peace, if elsewhere in Her Majesty's dominions in the presence of any judge of any court of civil or criminal jurisdiction, of any justice of the peace, or

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