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London and India Docks Company.

ST. KATHARINE DOCK.

TEA DEPARTMENT.

ROTN

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Master C. from X. and Sold by W.

and

Deliverable to D. or Assigns by endorsement hereon, subject to the

conditions hereon named. Prompt

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(date)

and all other charges from the date

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London and India Docks Company.

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London and India Docks Company.

NEW STREET WAREHOUSES.

Goods put up at Public Sale.

Dated this

1901

ROT

Warrant for (quantity of Silk piece goods) imported in the Ship A., Master B., from X., entered by C., on the (date) deliverable to D., or Assigns by endorsement hereon, subject to the undermentioned conditions. from the date hereof.

Rent commences (date) and all other charges

Stamp
Three
Pence.

Mark.

Dock No.

A LOT NOTE for the above Gools has been issued, and no delivery will be made under this Warrant prior to the expiration of the abovenamed Prompt, without the production of such Lot Note. The Pssessor of the Lot Note is entitled to this Warrant upon payment of the balance of Purchase Money, as expressed on the Lot Note, at any time before the expiration of the Prompt. After the expiration of the Prompt the Lot Note will be of no validity. Fo.

Ledger

Clerk.

Warrant Clerk.

Warehouse-Keepers' Certificates.

A warehouse-keeper's certificate is a document issued by warehouse-keepers admitting that certain goods therein mentioned are in their warehouse.

It is sometimes in the form of an acknowledgment that the warehouse-keepers hold the goods at the disposal of the person therein named, subject to certain conditions, and is expressed to be not transferable ;* and it is sometimes in the form of a transferable warrant to deliver the goods to such person or his assigns, also subject to conditions.†

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We hold at your disposal in our warehouse subject to conditions as per back hereof 500 tons steel rails ex. S.S. Persia.

(Signed)

(Conditions endorsed.)

No. 6.

Warrant for Eighty bales of wool imported in S.S. Australia, Capt. Cook, from Sydney, entered by A., on the 1st June, 1901, deliverable to B. & Co. or assigns by endorsement hereon, subject to the undermentioned conditions.

W. & Co.

3d. Stamp.

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* See Form No. 5, infra; and cf. Gunn v. Bolckow, where the wharfinger's certificate was not such an acknowledgment, pest.

See Forms Nos. 6 and 7, infra.

No. 7.

Office, 56, Hope Street,

Glasgow, 17th December, 1894.

Warrant for ten hhds. whiskey transferred in our books and held to the order of Walter Goldsmith or assigns by endorsement hereon.

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Delivery orders must be signed by members of firms, or per procuration.

Merchants are particularly requested in granting delivery orders to state the date to which rent is payable.

Goods in bond are held subject to a general lien by the warehouse-keeper for all debts, present or future, due on any account to the warehouse-keeper by the party to whose order or in whose name the goods are lying in bond.

Coopering, etc., will be performed as required, at owner's expense. Amount of duty should accompany order to clear from bond, as warehouse-keeper does not undertake to advance cash for duty.

Goods are not insured by warehouse-keeper, but lie in bond at owner's risk.*

This warrant, with the conditions indorsed, is taken from the Appendix to the Cases lodged in the House of Lords in Inglis v. Robertson (1898). The conditions are not printed in the reports of that case.

Dock Warrants, Delivery Orders, etc.

The true nature of these documents will more clearly appear by observing the purposes and mode of their employment.

If the owner of goods lodge them with a warehouseman, they remain the owner's property, and constructively in his possession, because the warehouseman holds them for him. If the owner sells them to a buyer, they become the property of the buyer, and he has the right to take possession. Upon the buyer's presenting an order from the seller requesting the warehouseman to deliver the goods to the buyer, it becomes the warehouseman's duty to give him possession. It may be that the buyer prefers the goods to remain where they are for a time, and if the warehouseman consents to hold them for him he is said to "attorn" to the buyer. The goods are then constructively in the possession of the buyer.* The warehouseman on his first receiving the goods makes an entry in his books, and in some cases gives a receipt to the owner when depositing the goods indicating them by marks, numbers, or description. This being merely a receipt, before the goods are removed the owner must give a delivery order.

But very probably the owner may, as we have seen, desire to sell the goods while lying in the warehouse. In order to facilitate dealings with them, and to enable himself to act with greater safety, the warehouseman may, instead of a mere receipt, give a warrant, the forms of which have been already shown, promising to deliver the goods to the person named therein or to his assigns by indorsement.‡

The first warrants will be issued to the order of the importers or their assigns (provided there is no stop for freight or otherwise) upon payment of the prime rates or landing charges. Such payments must include all charges incurred to the time of passing the order or issuing the warrants excepting rent; charges accruing subsequently, and the rent, must be paid by the holders of the warrants before delivery of the goods. The owners of goods may, however, clear the rent and incidental charges to any desired date, and can then obtain fresh warrants.§

Sometimes warrants are issued subject to landing charges, and they are then called "Prime Warrants."

Weight or gauge notes, corresponding to the warrants are furnished when required. The weight note states the weight of the

* See Mr. A. T. Carter's Article on Dock Warrants, etc., Law Quarterly Review, 1892, Vol. 8, 301.

The form of receipt is given by Mr. Carter, ibid., and is practically identical with Form of Certificate, No. 5, supra.

1 Ibid.

§ McCulloch's Dictionary of Commerce, ed., 1880, "Docks," p. 502.

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