Sir F. Rogers
No doubt it is unfortunate that in a Colony like
B. Columbia
there should be 2 Courts & 2 Chief Justices, and it would be a
very good thing if
M Needham or
M Begbie could be removed to
some other Colony. But until that is done, or until the Colony
can make provision for the retirement upon pension of one of the
Judges, no better course can be adopted than that marked out by
the Ordinance which has just been, & which was settled by the
Law Officers here.
See 5583 & last enclosure to this Despatch.
Acknowledge petition, & state that it has been laid before H.M.
Could not
Needham be offered a puisne Judgeship
in
Jamaica, if
M Ker is promoted? The Salary is the same, but it was stated
some time ago that
M Needham would be glad to be removed from
Vancouver Island. He is a good sound lawyer & I believe has
done well in
V. Island.
The state of this controversy is roughly as follows,
according to my view of it.
The consolidation of
V.C.I. with
B.C. found the two Colonies of
course with separate C. Justices, and no adequate opportunity
has offered of getting rid of either of them.
M Seymour raised all sorts of
difficulties about working the
existing system, and the C.O. shewed him generally the way out
of them.
This was not what he or the Colony wanted (i.e. they wanted to
magnify the difficulty so as to force the removal of
M
Needham) & so they went on making more difficulties—and passed
an Ordinance to remove them by providing not for two but for one
C. Justice. This of course was not meeting the difficulty at
all; & so they were told. And a draft Ordinance was sent out
w was capable of disposing
the peculiar difficulty
w was raised,
w, I think, they
were invited to modify in detail as to meet any other
difficulties
w the state of things in
B.C. m involve.
They were told afterwards when the Gov stated
that objections & difficulties had been raised by the Judges &
AG that a draft law framed in England w
necessarily require alteration in detail. 6295 BC/68.
It was pointed out to them (truly) that this m easily be done;
but like naughty children they now adopt wholesale
the draft
sent out to them for modification and make a grievance of the
defects of detail,
w if real, they ought to have removed.
The question is whether the Ord should be simply sanctioned
or whether any effort should be made to "put the saddle on the
right horse"—by observing that if the Ordinance is really
likely to cause the inconveniences apprehended by the L.C. it is
unfortunate that the Council did not (act on the invitation of
the S. of S. to)
modify the draft sent out [so] as to remove or
mitigate those inconveniences.
I think the facts justify the words within bet—if not they
sh be omitted.
The Ordinance was sent out with Despatch of 13 Nov/67—and
hope expressed that it w "receive careful consideration & approval
of the Legislature" (8561/67).
In reply the Gov sent back the objections made to it by the
Judges & Attorney General & he was told by Despatch of 26 June
1868 (6295/68) that the Draft was sent out "to
guide & assist the Legislature" & that a draft Law "framed in
England must of course require alterations & additions in
matters of details, & that it was hoped that imperfections of
this class would have been removed by the introduction of
clauses into the Ordinance before or during its progress through
the Legislature, & that many of the suggested difficulties could
have been so met."
I think this justifies the words in brackets but to make the
allusion quite clear I would observe
That if the ordinance is likely to cause some of the
inconveniences apprehended by the Legislative Council it is
unfortunate that the Council did not act upon the invitation
made by the S of State in his Despatch N 40 of the 26 June
1868, & modify the Draft so as to remove or mitigate these
inconveniences.