DUTIABLE COMMODITIES.
No. 36 of 1931.
1957
measure or weigh such liquors in the presence of any customer who may require him to do so.
61. No person licensed under this Ordinance shall take or receive in payment or pledge for liquor or any entertainment supplied in or out of his house any article or thing whatever, except money.
62. No master or other person employing journeymen, workmen, servants or labourers, and not being the licensed keeper of a house in which any intoxicating liquor is sold or disposed of by retail, shall pay or cause any payment to be made to any such journeyman, workman, servant or labourer in or at any such house.
63. No person shall for or on behalf of any other person who is not the holder of a dealer's licence accept or receive orders for, or import on commission or act as agent for the import of, any intoxicating liquor in quantities exceeding two gallons at a time without an appropriate licence under which the licensee is permitted to sell such liquor as a dealer.
64. No person shall, except under and in accordance with the prescribed licence—
(1) knowingly keep or have in his possession any still or other utensil or apparatus suitable for making, distilling or rectifying spirits; or
(2) without lawful authority or excuse have in his possession, custody or control any fermenting or fermented material.
65.—(1) Every person who imports, distils, makes, sells, supplies or deals in any adulterated liquor shall be guilty of an offence and shall, if such adulterated liquor is proved to the satisfaction of a magistrate to be injurious to health, be liable on a second conviction to imprisonment for any term not exceeding six months, in addition to any other penalty to which he may be liable under this Ordinance.
(2) No person shall be convicted under this section if he shows to the satisfaction of the magistrate that the liquor in respect of which he is charged was not intended for sale or that he did not know or could not with reasonable diligence have known that the liquor was adulterated.