3* 



86 



confequeiice of an in- 

 ternal duty on any fuch 

 article of its own con- 

 fumption. 



IV) Refolved, That 

 in all cafes where the 

 duties on articles of the 

 growth, product, or 

 manufadure, of either 

 country are different 

 on the importation in- 

 to the other, it would 

 be expedient that they 

 fhould be reduced in 

 the kingdom, where 

 they are the higheft, 

 to the amount payable 

 in the other ; and that 

 all fuch articles fhould 

 be exportable from the 

 kingdom into which 

 they fliall be imported, 

 as free from duty as 

 the fimilar commodi- 

 ties or home manufac- 

 tures of the fame king- 

 dom. 



V) Refolved, That 

 for the fame purpofe it 

 is alfo proper, that in 

 all cafes where either 



-kingdom {hall charge 

 articles of its own con- 

 fumption with an in- 

 ternal duty on the ma- 

 nufacture, or a duty on 



ithe material, the fame 

 n"ianuf\dure,when im- 

 ported from the other, 

 may be charged with a 

 farther duty on im- 

 portation to the fame 

 amount as the internal 

 duty on the manufac- 



A. D. 1785. 



gulations, as the like goods are, or from time 

 to time fliall be, fubjecl to upon importation 

 into Great Britain ; or, if prohibited from be- 

 ing imported into Great Britain, fliall in like 

 manner be prohibited from being imported in- 

 to Ireland. 



VI) That in order to prevent illicit pradlces, 

 injurious to the revenue and commerce of both 

 kingdoms, it is expedient, that all goods, whe- 

 ther of the growth, produce, or manufadlure, 

 of Great Britain or Ireland, or of any foreign 

 country, which fliall hereafter be imported into 

 Great Britain from Ireland, or into Ireland 

 from Great Britatn, fliould be put, by laws to 

 be paffed in the parliaments of the two king- 

 doms, under the fime regulations with refped: 

 to bonds, cockets, and other inftrtmients, to 

 which the hke goods are now fubjed in pafllng 

 from one port of Great Britain to another. 



VII) That for the like purpofe it is alfo ex- 

 pedient, that when any goods, the growth, pro- 

 duce, or manufadure, of the Britifli Wefl:- 

 India iflands, or any other of the Britiih colon- 

 ies or plantations, fhall be fliippedfrom Ireland 

 for Great Britain, they fhould be accompanied 

 with fuch original certificates of the revenue 

 officers of the faid colonies as fliall be required 

 by the law on importation into Great Britain ; 

 and that when the whole quantity included in 

 one certificate fliall not be fliipped at any one 

 time, the original certificate, properly indorfed 

 as to quantity, ftiould be fent with the firft 

 parcel; and to identify the remainder, if fliip- 

 ped at any future period, new certificates fhould 

 be granted by the principal officers of the ports 

 in Ireland, extraded from a regifter of the ori- 

 ginal documents, fpecifying the quantities be- 

 fore ffiipped from thence, by what vefl^els, and 

 to what ports. 



VIII) That it is eflential for carrying into ef- 

 fed the prefent fertlement, that all goods ex- 

 ported from Ireland to the Britifli colonies in 

 the Wefl:-Indies or in America, or to the Britifli 

 fettlements on the coaft of Africa, fnould from 



