 
                  
                  M Fortescue
                     I have no design to ask you and 
M Cardwell to
                     take the trouble of considering whether we should enter
                     into a controversy with 
the Treasury on this subject.
                     We have not done so yet, although the contrary might
                     be imagined from the terms of their letter. I would
                     beg leave however very briefly indeed to recall the
                     leading facts of the case.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     Sir James Douglas drew Bills very heavily in excess
                     of the amount granted by Parliament for 
British Columbia.
                     Some of those Bills, amounting to about £11,300, were
                     for the pay and allowances of the Royal Engineers, others,
                     amounting to £10,700, were for works and buildings and
                     surveys on which they had been employed.
The
 The 
Duke of
                        Newcastle recommended 
the Treasury to obtain a Vote from
                     Parliament for the former, but to require repayment of
                     the latter. 
The Treasury assented; and it is perfectly
                     true therefore that this course was agreed upon by both
                     Departments in the year 
1862.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     But in the year 
1864, a new Governor having gone
                     out to the Colony, submitted new facts. He said that the
                     buildings for which he understood the repayment to be
                     chiefly claimable, were of little value, and he quoted
                     precedents of transferring better Barrack's to richer
                     Colonies gratuitously. We thought it only fair to
                     consider how far the new facts gave reason for a
new
 new
                     decision, and we sent them on with our impressions to
                     
the Treasury, but pointedly treating it as a matter for
                     their own judgement: "
M Cardwell would be very glad
                     
if their Lordships should feel at liberty to waive
                     &c &c." They refuse, and stand on the original intention.
                     As this is the case, our course is simple: we must
                     instruct the Agents to pay the money out of the first
                     proceeds of the Loan (or if instructed already, we
                     must remind them), we must apprize the Governor of the
                     failure of his appeal, and must tell 
the Treasury what we have done.
                     
                     There is no practical subject for controversy. But
on
                     on one point I must beg to let you and 
M Cardwell
                     have an explanation. 
The Treasury say that one statement
                     in our letter is incorrect; I will give it in our own
                     words—These fabrics "have long been built and their cost
                     defrayed, and the only question is whether the Colony
                     should be forced to repay the amount." This is what the
                     Treasury call incorrect. Now what are the facts? 
Governor
                        Douglas drew Bills in order to defray the alleged cost of the
                     several public Works, and obtained cash for those Bills
                     in 
British Columbia from the Treasury Chest, and his
                     Government has ever since been called upon for repayment
                     to 
the Treasury. No one ever
suggests
 suggests that he did not
                     make the original payments with the cash he obtained for
                     the purpose. What 
the Treasury must really mean is that
                     they themselves have not been paid, but this of course we
                     knew and admitted, since the very question put to them was
                     whether or not they would forego repayment. Whilst
                     therefore I do not a bit want to re-argue the merit of
                     that suggestion, I assert that our statement was perfectly
                     accurate, and that 
the Treasury contradiction of it is not
                     owing to a better knowledge of the facts, but to a
                     confusion of ideas.
                     
                  
                  
                     M Cardwell
                     M Elliot's meaning was, of course,

 clear enough. But
                     it is also true, as the Try. letter says, that the advance,
                     if not repaid by the Colony, must be repaid by a Vote of
                     Parl. The provoking part of 
the Treasury letter is
                     the way in wh. it treats 
Gov Seymour's representations
                     as deserving of no attention at all. To me they seem
                     very weighty on behalf of the Colony. They amount to this;
                     that a Colony wh. is now costing the Imp. 
Gov nothing
                     for its military defence, & has lately suppressed an
                     Indian insurrection at its own expense, is to be required
                     to repay the cost of temporary barracks, erected for the use
                     of troops wh. were sent out by the Imp. 
Gov and since
                     withdrawn. But you will judge whether it is worthwhile
                     to carry the controversy with the Try. any further.