I do not, on second thoughts, see that the
Duke of Buck
intention is material. The question is what
M Seymour was
entitled to expect or justified in understanding from the correspondence
taken as a whole.
It is quite clear that
Lord Carnarvon awarded to
Gov Seymour
5000£ a year, leaving it to him
to determine whether he should
or should not receive more than £4000.
M Seymour was entitled
to suppose that this was done with proper auth.
2.
Governor Seymour wrote a despatch, assuming himself to be
entitled to 5000£ admitting that the S. of S's sanction was
requisite in order to take the 1000£ in the only way in which it
could be got—from the Crown Fund and expressing his readiness
to give up the 1000£ on certain terms and asking for instructions.
He received an answer which gave no instructions, but merely
expressed concurrence in the opinion that the money c not
be got from the general Revenue.
Therefore he seems to have helped himself from the Crown Rev.
This was evidently irregular. He had no right to [forestal?]
the formal authority of the S. of State, which also should not
have been given with consulting
the Treasury.
If
M Seymour had lived it would have been a question what
notice ought to have been taken of this irregularity as a matter
of official discipline.
But assuming that
the Treasury concurrence
w have been given
if applied for by
L Carnarvon to the proposed rate of
Salary, the transaction was not in substance an improper one.
The sum appropriated by
M Seymour, was not greater than that
w
was pledged to him—subject only to the possibility that he m
himself
not chose to exact it.
I therefore should not require his representatives—probably his
widow, to refund it.
But it is a different case with
M Hankin. To him no
expectation has been held forth and he is merely entitled to one
half of the legal Salary of the Governor—i.e. 4000£ a year.
I would therefore write to
M Musgrave that
M Seymour had
never received any official authority to draw the 1000£ from
the Crown Fund, nor had that step been submitted either
officially or unofficially to the
Lords of the Treasury whose
concurrence was requisite for it.
That under these circumstances and in
the existing state of the finances of
B.C. that
Lord G cannot
sanction the payment of Salary at any greater rate than 2000£
per ann, to
M Hankin, and 4000£ to
Musgrave—but that he
is of opinion that any motion for reduction below that sum
may be met, by pointing out to the Council that the reduction has
practically been effected by discontinuing the payment of 1000£
hitherto made to
M Seymour from the Crown Fund.
Request to be informed what amount has been drawn from the Crown
Fund on this acc
and up to what period the accounts of that
Fund have been sent home for audit.
I would send the correspondence to
the Treasury, with a
statement of the reasons which led
L G. to consider that the
money should not be reclaimed from
M Seymour and stating
that, with anticipating their L decision on the
subject—
w m be delayed till
M M's reply was received
Lord G. w be glad to know whether their
L considered it requisite at the present moment to
make any communication to
M Seymour's repres.
If there is any serious intention of reclaiming the money, this
sh be done at once.