ber, as specified in an Act passed in the Eighth Year of the
Reign of King
George the First, intituled, An Act for giving
further Encouragement of the Im-
portation of Naval Stores, and for other Purposes therein
mentioned, of the Growth,
Production, or Manufacture, of any British Colony or Plantation in
America,
shall be there loaden on Board any Ship or Vessel to be carried from
thence,
until sufficient Bond shall be given, with One Surety besides the Master
of
the Vessel, to the Collector or other principal Officer of the Customs at
the
Loading Port in a Penalty of Double the Value of the Goods, which
Con-
dition, that the said Goods shall not be landed in any Part of
Europe except
Great Britain; which Bonds shall be discharged in
the Manner hereafter
mentioned; that is to say, For such of the said Goods as shall be entered
for, or landed in,
Great Britain, the Condition of the Bonds shall be,
to
bring a Certificate in discharge thereof within Eighteen Months from the
Date of the Bond; and within Six Months for such of the said Goods as
shall be entered for, or landed in, any of the British Colonies or
Plantations
in America; which respective Certificates shall be
under the Hands and
Seals of the Collector or other Principal Officer of the Customs resident
at
g the Port or Place where such oods shall be landed, testifying the
Landing
thereof; and for such of the said Goods as shall be entered for, or landed
at, any other Place in
America, Africa, or
Asia, to bring the like Certificate
within Twelve Months, under the Common Seal of the Chief Magistrate,
or under the Hands and Seals of Two known British Merchants
residing
there; or such Bond or Bonds shall be discharged, in either of the said
Cases, by Proof upon Oath made by credible Persons, that the said Goods
were taken by Enemies, or perished in the Seas.
And, for the better preventing Frauds in the Importation or Exportation
of Goods that are liable to the Payment of Duties, or are prohibited, in
the British Colonies or Plantations in
America, it is further enacted by the
Authority aforesaid, That from and after the Twenty ninth Day of Septem-
ber, One Thousand seven Hundred and sixty four, no Goods, Wares,
or
Merchandizes, of any kind whatsoever, shall be
shipped or laden on Board
any Ship or Vessel in any of the British Colonies or Plantations
in America,
to be carried from thence to any other British Colony or
Plantation, with-
out a Sufferance or Warrant first had and obtained from the Collector
or
other proper Officer of the Customs at the Port or Place where such Goods
shall be intended to be put on Board; and the Master of every such Ship
or Vessel shall, before the same be removed or carried out from the Port
or Place where he takes in his Lading, take out a Cocket or Cockets
ex-
pressing the Quantity and Quality of the Goods, and Marks of the
Pack-
age, so laden, with the Merchants Names by whom shipped and to whom
consigned; and if they are Goods that liable to the Payment of any
Duty, either upon the Importation into, or upon the Exportation from the
said Colonies or Plantation, the said Cocket or Cockets shall likewise
distinctly specify that the Duties have been paid for the same, referring
to
the Times or Dates of Entry and Payment of such Duties, and by whom
they were paid; which Cocket or Cockets shall be produced by the
Mas-
ter of such Ship or Vessel, to the Collector or other Principal Officer
of
the Customs at the Port of Place where such Ship or Vessel shall arrive in
any of the British Colonies or Plantations in
America, before any Part of
the Goods are unladen or put on Shore: And if any Goods or
Merchan-
dizes shall be shipped as aforesaid without such Sufferance, or the
Vessel
shall depart and proceed on her Voyage without such Cocket or Cockets
or the Goods shall be landed or put on Shore before such Cocket or
Coc-
kets are produced at the Port of Place of Discharge, or if the Goods
do
not agree in all Respects therewith, the Goods, in any of either of those
Cases, shall be forfeited and lost; and any Officer of His Majesty’s
Cus-