This act alters the rules surronding the granting of patents allowing those residing in New Brunswick for less than a year to apply for them, and only allowing them to have force as long as foreign ones do.
This act prohibits fishing at certain times and certain methods of fishing, and establishes a system of fines and imprisonment for those who violate them, as well as regulations regarding licences and fishing stations.
This act repeals exisiting legislation concerning the government of the city of Fredericton, and creates a new system for how the city of Fredericton will be bordered and governed, and what legal and constituional rights it will enjoy
This act allows for the incorporation of the Northumberland Straits Fishing Company and establishes what its authority will be and how it will be governed.
This is a continuation of an act first passed in 1841, which set standards by which inspectors are to grade fish set to be exported out of the province.
This act updates the fees to be paid by innkeepers and tavern owners for licenses based on what types of liquors they sell to their patrons. The conditions for holding a license are stated within the act, as well as the regulations license-holders must adhere to. A penalty of twelve pounds is imposed on anybody who should sell any liquor without a proper license.
This this an amendment to an 1849 act which makes numerous modifications to the original act incorporating Trinity House at Montreal, which had broad powers over the regulation of trade and mercantile issues including powers of justice in mercantile complaints.
This act regulates the documents to be accepted as proof in actions wherein foreign corporations or bodies politic or corporate doing business in New Brunswick are parties.