Within a few months of the first county constabularies being formed, a number of problems with the legislation became apparent. Accordingly, the Hon.
Fox Maule introduced a bill to the
House of Commons in February 1840. Maule outlined the problems: "...difficulties had arisen from the mode of payment provided for carrying into effect the regulations of the act, by levying it out of the county rates; a difficulty as to that provision had arisen in various counties, in which certain districts only had adopted the act. In counties, also, in which there were isolated portions of other counties, it was difficult to say how those isolated portions were to be dealt with, because they were incorporated in the police districts of another county than that in which they were rated for the payment..." The bill was enacted as the ''''
(3 & 4 Vict. c. 88). It provided inter alia'' for the voluntary merging of
borough police forces with county constabularies and the levying of a new "police rate". The main provisions of the act were: • Justices of the peace were permitted to transfer areas from one county to another for police purposes. • A special police rate was to be levied to finance the county constabulary, instead of the cost being part of the general county rate. • Where parts of one county were policed by the constabulary of another county, the rate payers were to pay the police rate to the county providing the constables. • Boroughs were permitted to consolidate their police force with that of the county in which they were situate, and a single chief constable could be appointed for a consolidated force. • The chief constable of a consolidated force could dismiss borough constables, but new constables for the area were to be appointed by the
Watch Committee of the borough corporation. • Justices were empowered to divide the county into districts, each with a population of not less than 25,000. Separate police rates could be levied on ratepayers of each division. However, constables were liable to serve throughout the county, regardless of which district they were assigned to. • The act repeated the definition of a county as in the 1839 Act, and noted that the
Isle of Ely should be considered a county for constabulary purposes. • Permission was given to the justices to acquire land and buildings, and borrow money for the construction of police stations and to build strong rooms for the temporary confinement of prisoners. • If, in the opinion of the justices in quarter sessions, the constables provided under the 1839 Act were no longer needed, they could disband them, having given six months notice to the Home Secretary. No county forces were dis-established, and a resolution in 1843 to dissolve the Worcestershire Constabulary as "the benefit derived from the employment of the rural police in the County of Worcester has not been equal to the expense it has occasioned to the ratepayers" was soundly defeated. ==List of forces established under the County Police Acts==