Duke of Newcastle
See now 10392, annexed, covering the missing opinion.
I have marked, in pencil, the important part of that opinion.
The point is a curious one, and
The Company have made
the best of it, as I thought they would.
The case stands shortly thus.
The Company claims to
be regarded as
proprietors of such lands, in
Brit.
Columbia, as they may be fairly shewn to
occupy. We
say, You shew no title to these lands: they are Crowns:
you are squatters only, tenants at will, entitled it may
be to equitable consideration, but not landowners. They
say, But by the Ashburton Treaty we were recognised as
proprietors of all we occupied in American
Oregon: our
title there was neither better, nor worse, than in
British
Columbia: Government cannot with justice term us squatters
as against themselves, land owner as against the Americans.
The opinion now sent elucidates this claim. The words
of the Treaty secure to
The Company their "possessory rights."
The Law Advisers say, these words, in international language,
mean those of possession: "possession and absolute
property are identical."
It is plain enough that in law this argument of
The Company
would amount to nothing, it is, in fact, a fallacy.
The Company succeeded in getting words put into
a treaty which, when construed by lawyers, made them
landowners: and the Americans acquiesced: what then?
The Americans might for the sake of peace have thought better
so to treat them: it does not follow that HM
Gov are to
treat them in the same way when no purpose is to be gained thereby.
Suppose that, when the [debatable?]
land was divided some years ago between
the State of Maine & Colony of
New Brunswick, each side had agreed (I do not know how
the fact was) to recognize squatters as land owners. Would
it follow that all squatters in Maine; and all squatters in
New Brunswick, became land owners by the avowal of
the respective governments? Yet this would be only
pushing a little further the argument used by
The Company.
Nevertheless there is so much of plausibility in it as
will require very cautious dealing, if we persist in our
resolution to refuse the land claims.