M Merivale
In
9486
Col. Moody asks that the
usual advance of 120 days pay (Army and Colonial) may be
issued to the Royal Engineers. With this request we comply. (See
Minutes on 9486 which state the grounds on which the
Treasury were asked to advance the
Army Pay). In
9723
the Treasury inform us that £800 had been advanced on account of the
Pay—Colonial & Military—upon which we write to the
War Office to know
when the extra Military Pay ceased as from that date the Colonial pay
would commence, adding that 120 days pay (Regimental &
Colonial) had been advanced by
the Treasury. (See draft attached to
12529).
Hence the present letter from the
W.O. 13098 from which it would appear
that there had been a
double issue. But I find upon enquiry at
the
War Office that the meaning of their letter is this.
No money has been paid by that Dept, but the 120 days pay has been
advanced by the Army Agents as a matter of course under the Warrant.
So that
the Treasury having paid £800 to the Agents in repayment of the
advance it is only necessary for us to tell the
War Office of the amount
thus paid in order to guard against any mistake on double issue.
M Merivale
A letter was written to the War Department on the
10 of
November,
conveying the opinion of
Sir E. Lytton and the Chancellor of the
Exchequer that the army pay of the Royal Engineers should be paid by the
War Dept. and their Colonial Allowances by this office. The War Dept.
have not answered that letter, but I learn by private inquiry that they
acquiesce in the arrangement and have made provision for paying the
detachment accordingly. It may however be as well to obtain their
concurrence officially, and in writing to the War
D now about the
advance of pay, to ask whether
General Peel agrees in the arrangement
laid down in our letter of the
10 Nov.
There is nothing in this recent correspondence which will militate
against the distribution of the expenses between the
War Office &
Colonial Office. It has been
explained explained to the War
D that the
advance of 120 days Regimental pay was made by
the Treasury at
Sir E. Lytton's desire, because the question, by which Department it was
ultimately to be defrayed, was then pending, and the War Department have
obtained the sanction of
the Treasury for paying the detachment till the
next army Estimates are passed, in which the amount will be included,
and the addition to the force which the employment of this
detachment in
B. Columbia has rendered necessary will be inserted.
The practical steps to be taken are:
1. To write to the War Dept, inform them that the advance
made on account of the Engineer officers' pay, amounted to £800, that so
much of this sum as consists of regimental pay will have to be repaid by
the
War Office to
the Treasury under the arrangement for the distribution
of the expenses, in which
Sir E. Lytton presumes that
General Peel
concurs, and explain that the advance was only made in this way because
Col. Moody represented that the Officers
w otherwise
not not obtain it
before leaving England.
2. Write to
the Treasury, sending them the dates at which the
officers embarked, tell them that the Colonial allowances of the Officers
will commence from that date and that any claim which they may have for
these allowances between the dates at which they lost their working pay
& their embarkation must be left to be adjusted hereafter, (because
the War Dept cannot yet say what the former dates are) and
say that so much of the £800 advance as consisted of
army pay is to be defrayed from army funds.
3. Write to the Governor for
Colonel Moody's inf as to
the claim to Colonial allowances before embarkation.
Very well so far as this goes. But let one fact be borne in mind
& kept on record to prevent future misunderstandings—with the
W.O.
The
W.O. wished to saddle this Office with all the expenses &
pay, regimental & Col. of the Sappers & Miners with their Officers, on
the plea that this military force was employed for Civil Service,
& the
W.O. had taken no estimates for it.
On this I communicated both with Lord
D.
& the Ch. of the
Exch.
& they both approved my proposition vizt that the
W.O. should pay
all the military pay &c, & the Colonial pay
sh be met by Col. Funds.
I directed a letter to be sent to
W.O. on this head.
I suppose it was so but
I never remember to have seen the answer.
Let me know more on this head. Meanwhile on the matter of the
correspondence I can
only hope that nothing is here misconstrued which will
militate ag the distribution of expenses
I proposed & saddle C.O. with what belongs to
W.O.
M Blackwood knows all about the correspondence I refer to.