
1 
A certificate granted to a bailiff by 
                      a judge of the county court
                     under the Law of Distress Amendment Act 1888, may at any time be cancelled or declared void by a judge of the county court
                    , . . . 
2 
If any person not holding a certificate for the time being in force under the Law of Distress Amendment Act 1888, levies a distress contrary to the provisions of that Act, he shall without prejudice to any civil liability be liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 1 on the standard scale.
3 
The power to make rules under the Law of Distress Amendment Act 1888 shall extend to making provision for fixing the duration of certificates granted, or to be hereafter granted, to bailiffs.
4 
A court of summary jurisdiction, on complaint that goods or chattels exempt under section four of the Law of Distress Amendment Act 1888 from distress for rent, have been taken under such distress, may, by summary order, direct that the goods and chattels so taken, if not sold, be restored; or, if they have been sold, that such sum as the court may determine to be the value thereof shall be paid to the complainant by the person who levied the distress or directed it to be levied.
5 

6 
This Act may be cited as the Law of Distress Amendment Act 1895.