SO made provide "-then follow a number of powers, and then
comes the last paragraph saying-" And generally for the abate- PRESIDENT,
ment and prevention of nuisances not hereinbefore specified, and for securing the healthfulness of the district and of its inhabitants." The section authorizes by-laws for three different groups, viz., (1) the old general group; (2) the new group of specifically divided powers; and (3) these last general purposes.
It is not necessary to say how far that power extends, but it is on its face a general power, and its scope is wide. It obviously has a twofold bearing on the present case. First, it rebuts the suggestion of any intention to confine the earlier words within a narrower compass than they naturally cover, and next it supplies sufficient to aid, even if it did not of itself afford enough to authorize this by-law, which I by no means deny.
The particular words which were specially under discussion, must, of course, be interpreted with reference to the Act in which they are found; but as something was said about their source it is not immaterial to observe that in 11 &12 Vict. c. 63, passed in 1848, it was provided by sec. 53 that in all cases where houses were newly built, or were rebuilt to a specified extent, the local Board of Health had to approve of "the situation and construction of the privies and cesspools to be built, constructed or used in connection with such house."
In 1875, by Act 38 &39 Vict. c. 55, which repealed the Act of 1848, power was given by sec. 15 to suburban authorities to make by-laws with reference to privies, &. in connection with all buildings. The provision in the Victorian Act of 1883, therefore, combined the system of general by-laws extending to all privies with the specific reference to the subject-matter, other require- ments as to privies, &., being already specifically provided for, or else covered by the final paragraph of the by-law section.
I would add that the various sections pointed to in the argu- ment as evidencing a specific treatment by the legislature of all necessary cases may be disposed of by the following considera- tions. First, many, and indeed, most of them, were in force either verbatim or in substance in earlier Acts previous to or contem- poraneously with the provisions in sec. 37 of No. 310. Next some of them give power to the Council alone, or the Board alone,