Licensing Act 1964 (repealed)

199 Exemptions and savings.E+W

Nothing in this Act shall—

(a)affect any privilege enjoyed by the University of Cambridge or by any person to whom any such privilege has been transferred in pursuance of any Act;

(b)affect the exemption from the requirement to take out a justices’ licence enjoyed by the Company of the master, warden and commonalty of Vintners of the City of London;

[F1(c)make unlawful the sale or exposure for sale by retail without a justices’ licence of any intoxicating liquor at any premises in respect of which a licence under the M1Theatres Act 1968 is for the time being in force, or which by virtue of any letters patent of the Crown may lawfully be used for the public performance of plays without a licence under that Act being held in respect thereof, if the proprietor of those premises has given to the clerk to the licensing justices notice in writing of the intention to sell such liquor by retail at those premises and that notice has not been withdrawn;]

[F2(d)make unlawful the sale or exposure for sale by retail without a justices’ licence to passengers in an aircraft, vessel or railway passenger vehicle of intoxicating liquor for consumption on board the aircraft, vessel or vehicle if the aircraft or vessel is employed for the carriage of passengers and is being flown or navigated from a place in the United Kingdom to another such place or from and to the same place in the United Kingdom on the same day or, as the case may be, if the vehicle is a vehicle in which passengers can be supplied with food;]

(e)prohibit the sale of medicated or methylated spirits;

(f)prohibit the sale by registered medical practitioners or registered pharmacists of spirits made up in medicine;

(g)prohibit the sale of intoxicating liquor by wholesale;

(h)affect any penalties recoverable by or on behalf of the Commissioners, or, except where the context requires it, any laws relating to excise; or

(i)apply to the sale or consumption of intoxicating liquor in canteens.