 
                  
                  Sir F. Rogers
                     Medical Practitioners Ordinance. A registration fee is
                     imposed on persons who have been qualified in the U Kingdom,
                     before they can practise in 
B. Columbia. The Ordinance excludes
                     present practitioners; but though the object aimed at is proper
                     enough, the Ordinance is repugnant to the provisions of sec 31
                     of the Imperial Medical Act (21 & 22 
Vict c. 90) and cannot

 be
                     allowed. It becomes a serious question whether the Imperial Act
                     should not be modified, as we had to disallow (I think) a similar
                     Act in Canada on the same ground of repugnancy.
                     
 
                  
                  
                   
                  
                  
                     I think the object of the act is a good one & should be
                     supported—as it appears to me to have been passed however in ignorance
                     of the provisions of Imperial Medical Act—a law compelling a person
                     before commencing practice in a colony to prove his qualifications
                     & register himself before a competent officer—& to pay a reasonable
                     fee for the registry—acknowledging legislation under the Imperial
                     Act as a qualification and imposing a penalty for non compliance does
                     not appear to me repugnant to Imperial Act & if so it would be
                     simpler to obtain necessary modifications in Colonial probably
                     than in imperial acts. If I am correct in this view as the form
                     necessary sh be sent out to Gov—and an intimation that such
                     an act would be sanctioned—although this could not, in consequence
                     of the conflicts with the Imp. Act.
                     
                  
                  
                   
                  
                  
                     Duke of Buckingham
                     The point is not free from doubt, but I am disposed to think
                     that an enactment of the kind you propose would still be repugnant
                     to the Imperial Act, though a most reasonable & proper enactment
                     in itself.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     The Imperial Act declares that every person registered
                     under the Act shall be "entitled" to practise. I think this means
                     that such person shall be unconditionally entitled to practise without
                     any limitations or restriction, just the same as he would be entitled
                     in England. A person can hardly be said to be entitled to practise if
                     he cannot do so in the Colony without, in a certain event subjecting
                     himself to a penalty. In truth the effect of the Colonial Act (as
                     suggested) would be, that a person would not be entitled to practise
                     without let or hindrance, as he would be entitled in England, until
                     he has done something more than the Imperial Act requires.
                     
                  
                  
                     I may mention that the Canadian Act was neither confirmed or
                     disallowed because to have disallowed it would have had the effect
                     of reviving an older & more stringent act which it repealed, & to
                     have confirmed it would have been to confirm an act repugnant to
                     the Imperial Act. The Canadian Act cap. 34 of 1865 was similar to
                     the present B Columbian Act.
                     
                  
                  
                     If Your Grace is inclined to suggest the amendment of the 
B
                        Col. ordinance it might be well to take the opinion of the L Officers
                     at once, as to whether such an amended Ordinance would be repugnant to
                     the Imperial Act.