#THE INDIAN NAVAL ARMAMENT ACT, 1923
##ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
###SECTIONS
Short title, extent and commencement.
Definitions.
Restriction on building or equipping vessels of war.
Licences.
Offences.
Liability.
Seizure, detention and search of ships.
Procedure in forfeiture of ships.
Disposal of forfeit.
Special proof of relevant facts.
Penalties for proceeding to sea after seizure.
Power to enter dock-yards, etc.
Courts by which and conditions subject to which offences may be tried.
Indemnity.
THE SCHEDULE.—[Repealed.].
#THE INDIAN NAVAL ARMAMENT ACT, 1923
##ACT NO. 7 OF 1923
[5th March 1923.]
AN ACT to give effect to the Treaty for the Limitation of Naval Armament.
WHEREAS it is expedient to give effect to the Treaty for the Limitation of Naval Armament and for the Exchange of Information concerning Naval Construction signed in London on behalf of His Majesty on the twenty-fifth day of March, 1936; It is hereby enacted as follows:-
(2) It extends to the whole of India except the territories which, immediately before the 1st November, 1956, were comprised in Part B States.
(3) It shall come into force on such date[^5] as the Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette appoint.
(a) “competent Court” means the High Court or such other Court having unlimited original civil jurisdiction as the Central Government may declare to be a competent Court for the purposes of this Act;
(b) “ship” means any boat, vessel, battery or craft, whether wholly or partly constructed, which is intended to float or is capable of floating, on water, and includes all equipment belonging to any ship;
(bb) “States” denotes all the territories to which this Act extends; and
(c) “the Treaty” means the Treaty for the Limitation of Naval Armament and for the Exchange of Information concerning Naval Construction signed in London on behalf of His Majesty on the twenty-fifth day of March, 1936.
(a) build any vessel of war, or alter, arm or equip any ship so as to adapt her for use as a vessel of war; or
(b) despatch or deliver, or allow to be despatched or delivered, from any place in the States any ship which has been, either wholly or partly, built, altered, armed or equipped as a vessel of war in any part of His Majesty’s Dominions or of India otherwise than under and in accordance with any law for the time being in force in that part.
(2) An application for a licence under this section shall be in such form and shall be accompanied by such designs and particulars as the Central Government may, by general or special order, require.
(3) Any person who, in pursuance of a licence granted under sub-section (1) before the commencement of the Indian Naval Armament (Amendment) Act, 1937 (2 of 1937), is engaged in building any vessel of war or in altering, arming or equipping any ship so as to adapt her for use as a vessel of war, or is about to despatch or deliver, or allow to be despatched or delivered, from any place within the States any ship which has been so built, altered, armed or equipped, either entirely or partly within the States, shall, upon written demand, furnish to the Central Government such designs and particulars as may be required by the Central Government for the purpose of securing the observance of the obligations imposed by the Treaty.
(2) Where an offence punishable under sub-section (1) has been committed by a company or corporation, every director and manager of such company or corporation shall be punishable thereunder unless he proves that the act constituting the offence took place without his knowledge and consent.
(3) Nothing contained in section 517 or section 518 or section 520 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (5 of 1898), shall be deemed to authorise the destruction or confiscation under the order of any criminal court of any ship which is liable to forfeiture under this Act or of any part of such ship.
Liability of ships to forfeiture.— Any ship which has been, either wholly or partly, built,
altered, armed or equipped as a vessel of war in the States in contravention of section 3, or in any
part of His Majesty’s Dominions or of India in contravention of any like provision of law in force
in that part, shall, if found in the States, be liable to forfeiture under this Act.
Seizure, detention and search of ships.—(1) Where a ship is liable to forfeiture under this Act,—
(a) any Presidency Magistrate or Magistrate of the first class, or
(a) any commissioned officer on full pay in the Armed Forces of the Union, or
(b) any officer of customs or police officer not below such rank as may be designated in this
behalf by the Central Government,
may seize such ship and detain it, and, if the ship is found at sea within the territorial waters of the States, may bring it to any convenient port in the States.
(2) Any officer taking any action under sub-section (1) shall forthwith report the same through his official superiors to the Central Government.
(3) The Central Government shall, within thirty days of the seizure, either cause the ship to be released or make or cause to be made, in the manner hereinafter provided, an application for the forfeiture thereof, and may make such orders for the temporary disposal of the ship as it thinks suitable.
(2) On receipt of any such application, the Court shall cause notice thereof and of the date fixed for the hearing of the application to be served upon all persons appearing to it to have an interest in the ship, and may give such directions for the temporary disposal of the ship as it thinks fit.
(3) For the purpose of disposing of an application under this section, the Court shall have the same powers and follow, as nearly as may be, the same procedure as it respectively has and follows for the purpose of the trial of suits under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), and any order made by the Court under this section shall be deemed to be a decree, and the provisions of the said Code in regard to the execution of decrees shall, as far as they are applicable, apply accordingly.
(4) Where the Court is satisfied that the ship is liable to forfeiture under this Act, it shall pass an order forfeiting the ship to Government:
Provided that, where any person having an interest in the ship proves to the satisfaction of the Court that he has not abetted, or connived at, or by his negligence facilitated, in any way, a contravention of section 3 in respect of the ship, and such ship has not been built as a vessel of war, it may pass such other order as it thinks fit in respect of the ship or, if it be sold, of the sale proceeds thereof:
Provided further that in no case shall any ship which has been altered, armed or equipped as a vessel of war be released until it has been restored, to the satisfaction of the Central Government, to such condition as not to render it liable to forfeiture under this Act.
(5) The Central Government or any person aggrieved by any order of a Court, other than a High Court, under this section may, within three months of the date of such order, appeal to the High Court.
Provided that, where the ship is sold under this section, due regard shall be had to the obligations imposed by the Treaty.
Special proof of relevant facts.— If, in any trial, appeal or other proceeding under the foregoing provisions of this Act, any question arises as to whether a ship is a vessel of war or whether any alteration, arming or equipping of a ship is such as to adapt it for use as a vessel of war, the question shall be referred to and determined by the Central Government, whose decision shall be final and shall not be questioned in any court.
Penalties for proceeding to sea after seizure.— (1) Where a ship which has been seized or detained under section 7 or section 8 and has not been released by competent authority under this Act proceeds to sea, the master of the ship shall be punishable with fine which may extend to one thousand rupees, and the owner and any person who sends the ship to sea shall be likewise so punishable unless such owner or person proves that the offence was committed without his knowledge and consent.
(2) Where any ship so proceeding to sea takes to sea, when on board thereof in the execution of his duty, any officer empowered by this Act to seize and detain the ship, the owner and master shall further each be liable, on the order of the Court trying an offence punishable under sub-section (1), to pay all the expenses of and incidental to such officer being taken to sea, and shall further be punishable with fine which may extend to one hundred rupees for every day until such officer returns or until such time as would enable him after leaving the ship to return to the port from which he was taken.
(3) Any expenses ordered to be paid under sub-section (2) may be recovered in the manner provided in the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (5 of 1898) for the recovery of a fine.
(2) The provisions of sections 101, 102 and 103 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (5 of 1898), shall apply in the case of all searches made under this section.
Courts by which and conditions subject to which offences may be tried.— No Court inferior to that of a Presidency Magistrate or Magistrate of the first class shall proceed to the trial of any offence punishable under this Act, and no Court shall proceed to the trial of any such offence except on complaint made by, or under authority from, the 3[Central Government].
Indemnity.— No prosecution, suit or other legal proceeding shall lie against any person for anything in good faith done or intended to be done under this Act.
THE SCHEDULE.—Rep. by the Indian Naval Armament (Amendment) Act, 1937 (2 of 1937), s. 6.