1100 [ 2 (F 1889. ] EVIDENCE CONSOLIDATION .
[ *without] made either with or with * summoning the bank or any other
party, and shall be served on the bank three clear days before
ihe same is to be obeyed, unless such Court or Judge otherwise
directs. Provided always that the cost of any application to
such Court or Judge under or for the purposes of this section ,
and the cost of anything done or to be done under an order of
*
[ * this] such Court or Judge made under or for the purposes of * section
shall be in the discretion of such Court or Judge, who may
order the same or any part thereof to be paid to any party by
the bank, where the same have been occasioned by any default
or delay on the part of the bank. Any such order against a
bank may be enforced as if the bank was a party to the pro
ceeding
Certain days 24. Sunday, Chistmas Day, Good Friday, and any bank
excluded from
Computation holiday shall be excluded from the computation of time under
of time. sections 22 and 23 .
| No.3 of 1885,
s. 9. ]
Foreign and 25. All proclamations, treaties and other acts of state of any
colonial acts Foreign State or of any other British Colony and all judgments,
judgments,
&c ., provable
decrees, orders, and other judicial proceedings of any Court of
be certified Justice or any Consulate in any Foreign State orin any other
copieswithout British Colony, and all affidavits, pleadings , and other legal
proof of seal
or signature documents filed or deposited in any such Court or Consulate
or judicial
character may be proved in the Court either by examined copies or by
of person
signing the
copies authenticated as hereinafter mentioned ; that is to say ,
same . if the document sought to be proved be a proclamation treaty,
[ No. 3 of1852, or other act of State, the authenticated copy to be admissible
8,V.5,c. 14,andJi
99 , s. 6. ] in evidence must purport to be sealed with the seal of the Foreign
State or British Colony to which the original document belongs ,
and if the document sought to be proved be a judgment,decree,
order, or other judicial proceeding of any Foreign or Colonial
Court, or an affidavit, pleading, or other legal document filed
or deposited in any such Court the authenticated copy to be
admissible in evidence must purport either to be sealed with
the seal of the Foreign or Colonial Court or in the event of such
Court having no seal, to be signed by the Judge or if there be
more than one Judge, by any one of the Judges of the said
Court; and such Judge shall attach to his signature a statement
in writing on the said copy that the Court whereof he is a Judge
has no seal; but if any of the aforesaid authenticated copies shall
purport to be sealed or signed as hereinbefore respectively
directed, the same shall respectively be admitted in evidence in
every case in which the original document could have been
received in evidence, without any proof of the seal where a seal
is necessary or of the signature, or of the truth of the statement
attached thereto, where such signature and statement are
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