Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

RESTRICTION OF RENT.

BILL BEFORE COUNCIL* LEADER URGES ITS PASSAGE. SECOND READING CARRIED. £BI TELEGRAPH.—-SPECIAL KEPOETEE.] WELLINGTON! Friday The Rent Restriction Continuance Bill, which was rejected by the Legislative Council by 15 votes to 14 on July 29, was re-introduced and. read a second time to-day. The Leader Of tho Council, Sir Francis Bell, eaid tho Government contended that in no year could it have been so unsafe to remove rent restriction as the present, owing to the widespread distress created by unemployment. . Amendments to tho bill recommended by the Labour Bills Committee will be moved when the measure is in committee on Tuesday. They provide for the extension of rent restriction until January 1, 1929. Special provision is made With respect to the recovery of possession of a dwelling house by a landlord, as follows: "Where a landlord has entered into a binding contract for the sale of the freehold of a dwelling house (whether alone or together with other lands), he shall bo entitled to apply to a stipendiary magistrate for an order for possession of the dwelling house, and if the magistrate, upon the hearing of such application! is satisfied that such contract effects a real and genuine sale, the landlord shall be entitled to an order for the recovery of possession of the house at such date (being a date not later than three months from tho date of the hearing), as tho magistrate, under all the circumstances of the case, deems it just to appoint." Meeting a Grievance. Moving the second reading of the bill Sir Francis Bell said it was largely his fault that the position, as the Government understood it, and the reasons why it thought it necessary that rent restriction should continue, were not placed before the Council on the occasion when it rejected the «bill. The Labour Bills Committee had heard the evidence of officials of the Labour Department, members of Parliament representing congested districts in Wellington and Auckland, and two capable witnesses who presented the case for the landlords. The committee had reported that if rent restriction was to continue it should be continued subject to the main grievance of landlords, as understood by the committee, namely, that the existence of the restriction prevented the sale of the freehold. A proposed amendment met that grievance. Conditions in Dominion. The Government contended, in view of its investigation of present conditions and the evidence submitted to the committee supported that contention —that in no year could it have been so unsafe to remove rent restriction as in the present. The Under-Secretary of Labour had reported that conditions had not been so bad in respect of unemployment and poverty for 30 years. No one was unaware that never was the condition of the poorer classes in danger of greater charges on their present slender incomes than at present. No real hardship was being inflicted upon any landlord by a c6ntinuance of what was ensured to him in rent under the present law. Tn addition to the reasons already given, there was the unanimous request of charitable aid boards, who feared, and knew that the burden of the payment of the rent of a large class, now cast upon their shoulders, would be increased to an extent impossible to bear. The Government could not complain if the Council decided not to pass the bill, but that would be the responsibility of the Council. Sir Francis Bell added: "I hesitate to speak from my own knowledge or even that of the Minister of Labour of what the Dosition is among the class of poor tenants affected Th<" despair that exists at present among tne poorer classes is to me appalling To treat the matter entirely as one of political when faced with tjie knowledge of the circumstances of the poor year is, I believe, quite impossible." The bill was read a second time.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19271119.2.122

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIV, Issue 19798, 19 November 1927, Page 13

Word Count
648

RESTRICTION OF RENT. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIV, Issue 19798, 19 November 1927, Page 13

RESTRICTION OF RENT. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIV, Issue 19798, 19 November 1927, Page 13