Sir F. Rogers
                              By the Grant of 
VanC Island (
13 Jan 1849) it is
                              provided that the Crown shall have power at the expiration of the
                              H.B.Co.'s licence of exclusive trade with the Indians (
13 May 1859) "to
                              repurchase & take of & from the said 
Gov & C the said 
Vanc
                                 Island & premises
                              hereby granted, in consid of payment being made by us, our Heirs &
                              Succ[ess]ors to the said 
Gov & C of the sum or Sums of money
                              theretofore laid out and expended by them in and upon the said Island
                              & premises, and of the value of their establishments, property &
                              effects then being thereon".
                              
 
                           
                           
                              On 
20 Jan 1858 M Merivale by direction of the S. of S. gave
                              notice to the C of the intended 

resumption of 
Vanc I. & called on
                              them (1858) to furnish a statement of the sums of
                              which they 
w claim repayment under the condition of the grant above
                              quoted. In answer the C on 
24 Feb sent in accounts showing
                              claims, many of them indeterminate in nature & amount, to the extent
                              of £225.699.9.11. On a reference to this Board we pointed out
                              (19 Ap) that the first question to be decided was
                              whether the C were to be altogether removed from 
Vanc I. or to be
                              allowed, if willing, to retain their trading establishments—that in
                              the former case an amount probably not less than that claimed would,
                              subject to verification 

on the spot, be payable to them, but in the
                              latter case that they would be entitled to claim no more than ab
                              £34,000 the verification of which might probably be effected in this
                              Country.
                              
                              Upon receipt of this Report the C.O. referred the whole of the papers
                              to the L[aw] O[fficers] for their opinion whether the obligation on
                              H.M. 
Gov to compensate the C if the Crown repurchased 
the Island
                              extended to their establishments & property got together in
                              consequence of & in relation to their commercial operations as a C
                              carrying on Trade with the Indians, as well as to those erected & got
                              together in consequence of their territorial possession of the Soil &
                              to facilitate the settlement & government of 
the Island, or to the
                              latter only. The 

L.O. reported that the Crown was only bound to
                              compensate the C for sums laid out upon 
the Island & premises as
                              owners thereof & for the value of the establishments, property &
                              effects of the C being thereon & connected with such Ownership—but
                              not for the establishments or property got together in consequence of
                              their commercial operations. The substance of this opinion was
                              communicated to the C for their information & the principle
                              involved in it accepted by them
                              
                              
                              
                                 
                                    In acknowledging the letter of 
28 July M Berens says (
9 Aug)
                                    
                                    There is no wish on the part of the C to call upon the 
Gov to
                                    assume any responsibility which does not fall strictly within the
                                    terms of the grant. And as the 
Gov is legally advised that it is
                                    not under any obligation to assume any of the establishments or other
                                    property connected with our trading operations, we will raise no
                                    objection to the principle laid down by 
Lord Carnarvon with respect
                                    to any property of that class which may remain in 
the Island.
                                    
                                    
                                    
 
                              
                              & they were subsequently requested to furnish an amended account
                              drawn up in accordance with the principles thus laid down
                              (
28 July 1858 & 
4 Sept 1858). Accordingly on 
2 Nov they
                              sent in an account reduced to three items—viz 1 for public works &
                              establishments 

2 for the cost of sending out Settlers & 3 for
                              loss on searching for Coal at 
Fort Rupert. The whole claim amounted
                              to £46.524.12.6.
                              
                              To the two first items no objection was taken, but the third
                              amounting to £12.469.5.7 appeared to us to fall rather within the
                              Commercial than the Colonizing operations of the C and the C were
                              (on a suggestion from this Board, slightly modified at the Col
                              Office) informed that unless they c bring evidence that it was
                              intended to carry the proceeds of the 
Fort Rupert mine (if it
                              succeeded) to the public account their claim under this head could
                              not be admitted. In 

their reply (
21 April) the Directors advert to
                              the difficulty of bringing evidence of an intention which never could
                              have had any practical operation, but expressed an opinion that under
                              the circes the C "altho they may have no strictly legal
                              right" had nevertheless an equitable claim on the liberal consid of
                              H.M. 
Gov. The 
Colonial Office answered (
1 July) by proposing a
                              reference of the claim to 
Sir J. Coleridge.
                              
                              This proposal brought forth 
M Berens letter of 
16 July—in which
                              after recapitulating the previous correspondence he states that when
                              the C agreed to accept the construction put on the grant by the
                              L.O. they did so "under the 

full impression that the claim they had
                              sent in would be
                              admitted except in respect to those items which they agreed to take
                              out of it"—that according to their interpretation of the Grant the
                              
Gov are bound to repay them
                              
all the money they have laid out in 
the Island and premises & to
                              replace them exactly in the position in which they were before they
                              took possession of 
the Island—& therefore that if it is proposed to
                              except any portion of their property "as hav been unproductive"
                              they rely on the grant as entitling them to call on 
Gov to take
                              back all the possessions they have acquired since its date & to
                              reimburse them their whole expenditure. They state that they are
                              willing 

to leave the whole question of their rights under the grant
                              to 
Sir J. Coleridge, but not the isolated question proposed by the
                              C.O.—and they conclude with a demand for payment of the whole sum
                              embraced in the accounts sent in on 
24 Feb 1858, except the value
                              of the property held by them before the grant, amounting to
                              £27.959.—& the value of Inventories of Goods &c £112.889.8.2
                              (erroneously stated at £66.285.9.3) which will require to be
                              corrected to the date of the retransfer. The 
Colonial Office
                              declined this proposal to reopen the whole question, insisting on the
                              L.O. interpretation of 

the grant—and referred the C to their
                              previous acceptance of the proposed principle of settlement. The C
                              in reply (
15 Oct) point out that they cannot be bound by the
                              L.O.'s opinion on a case to which they were no party & propose a
                              reference of the whole case to the Judicial Comm of the P.C. To
                              this letter no answer has been given.
                              
                              The principal questions which appear to arise on this correspondence
                              are
                              
                           
                           
                              First. Can the 
Gov hold the C to their acceptance of the
                              principle of settlement admitted in 
M Berens' letter of 
28 July
                                 1858. I do not see how that could be done. 

The acceptance is not
                              expressed in any way that 
w be legally binding on the C & if they
                              now refuse to abide by it & it is attempted to enforce it the result
                              must be the reference of the whole matter to a Court of Law. But if
                              it is to come to this it 
w be better to accept at once their
                              proposal to refer the matter to the Judicial Comm & to get an
                              amicable instead of a hostile proceeding. At the same time it is
                              clear that the C have no ground for the assertion on which they
                              base their change of proceeding viz that they were under the
                              impression that the claim they sent in would be admitted, as in 
M
                                 Merivale's letter 

communicating the L.O. opinion he expressly says
                              "how far the principle above adverted to may affect the other items
                              of the account must be matter of separate consideration in each
                              case."
                              
                              Second. If they cannot be compelled to abide by their previous
                              decision can any compromize be effected? It is clear that if the
                              
Gov are compelled to take over the whole or any large portion of
                              the C expenditure (and the terms of the grant are so indefinite
                              that notwithstanding the L.O. opinion it is impossible not to
                              apprehend such a result) whatever has any relation to trading
                              establishments or Commercial enterprize will be simply wasted. The
                              only chance of reimbursement would be that 

the C should repurchase
                              from the Crown—but as they 
w have no competition they 
w of
                              course repurchase only the profitable portions at their own price.
                              In short they 
w be in a position to make a good bargain & the Crown
                              be compelled to accept a bad one. It would be worth some sacrifice
                              to avoid this.
                              
                              The compromize that occurred to me, as you know, is to revert to the
                              position of 
2 Nov 1858 and to divide the 
Fort Rupert Mine expenses.
                              This would give the C in round N £40,000—and the matter
                              might be settled at once. If they will not compromize & we are
                              driven to arbitration 

or litigation, then arises the question.
                              
                              Third, whether the C are entitled to retain their Farms &c which
                              they acquired before the grant of 1849. The words of the grant seem
                              wide enough even for this, but I cannot think that in justice such a
                              construction c be insisted on. The grant was evidently dealing
                              with operations to be undertaken & interests to be created under
                              itself & therefore subsequent to its date. It takes no notice of
                              interests actually then existing. And upon this point we cannot
                              ignore the correspondence which passed with Lord Grey before the
                              issue of the grant, the inference from which seems to be that the
                              C 

would have received special grants of the property they had
                              acquired if it had not been felt that such special grants were
                              included in the general grant which was then in preparation. The
                              minor question was apparently forgotten in the major but it would
                              not I think be worthy of the 
Gov to take advantage of such an
                              oversight. Nor is there any ground for adopting an illiberal policy
                              towards the C while such a policy 
w certainly damage
                              the 
Gov if hereafter the matter were to come into a Court of Law.
                              Upon the whole, therefore, I do not think the C c be fairly
                              required to surrender property wh: they held 

before the grant of 1849.
                              
                              It does not occur to me that there are any other questions connected
                              with the 
Vanc Island matter to be considered before we see 
M
                                 Berens & 
M Maynard—Except perhaps, if no compromize seems likely
                              to be effected, to propose the surrender of 
the Island, pending
                              the reference to arbitration by the Judicial Comm on some terms
                              that will leave the rights of each party in status quo.
                              
                              The nature & extent of the C claims are stated in my report of 
29
                                 Aug last, which is among these papers. It is clear, I think, that
                              if those claims were to 

be decided on their own merits alone the C
                              could put forward no legal title to any of the Land and the 
Gov w
                              be at liberty to deal with them on principles of justice & with equal
                              reference to the claims of the public as to theirs. But the matter is
                              complicated by the Oregon Treaty & by the interpretation put upon it
                              by the L.O.
                              
                              By the 3[rd] article of the treaty it is stipulated that "The
                              possessory rights of the H.B. C and of all British subjects who
                              may be already in the occupation of land or other property lawfully
                              acquired within the said territory shall be respected."
                              The L.O. say that the term "possessory rights" 

has a well understood
                              meaning in Treaties & that when used as in the above stipulation it
                              signifies that possession & absolute property shall be considered &
                              treated as identical. The C allege that the Land which they claim
                              is that wh: they possessed before the Oregon Treaty—that it stands
                              on exactly the same footing as the Land within the Territory ceded to
                              the U.S. by that Treaty, the property in which has been conceded to
                              the H. Bay C on the representations of the British 
Gov—and they
                              urge that the British 
Gov cannot maintain their rights as against
                              the United States and refuse them as against themselves under
                              precisely similar circumstances.
                              
 
                           
                           
                              The only possible answer to this argument as it seems to me is, what
                              you threw out in conversation, that G Britain being about to divest
                              herself by the Treaty of the power of hereafter dealing with the
                              C claims south of 49 and being unable to place them in exactly
                              the same relation to the U.S. as they had occupied towards herself
                              could not do otherwise than
                              stipulate for placing them on a solid footing—and to that extent
                              improving their position—but that it does not follow that she should
                              equally abandon the power of dealing with the claims which remained
                              within her own boundary. To this it may be answered that we must
                              assume that England intended to act fairly by 

the U.S. as well as
                              by the H.B.C and would not have demanded any thing of them which
                              when required of herself she refuses on grounds of public policy.
                              This answer, however, does not appear to me conclusive. The Oregon
                              Treaty was avowedly a compromize and it is not unreasonable to assume
                              that the U.S. 
Gov were willing to allow Br. subjects to obtain
                              better titles than they before possessed in the ceded territory
                              (which would be in consonance
                              moreover with the U.S. Laws in respect to Squatters) as one of the
                              concessions to G Britain, in return for Gr. Britain's surrender of
                              her claim to the whole right bank of the 
Columbia River. The Land in
                              question was of no value at the time of the Treaty, nor was there
                              then any reason 

to expect that it would for many years be required
                              for settlement. It might therefore be fairly asserted that in
                              granting the privileges demanded for Br. subjects no public interest
                              was sacrificed—but rather that the only probable resource for
                              opening the Country was protected & encouraged.
                              
                              The matter is different since the discovery of gold in 
Br. Columbia.
                              The claims of the C come there in direct opposition to public
                              interests & the 
Gov is therefore bound to construe them strictly.
                              If they were admitted the progress of the Colony might be seriously
                              interfered with & a large portion of the Revenue to be derived from
                              Sales of Land be diverted from the public Treasury to the C. The
                              
 Gov
Gov therefore while it is bound to do justice to the C is not at
                              liberty to do more and the question is what justice absolutely
                              requires. The C have themselves considerably reduced their claim
                              in their last communication. In the letter of 
12 Oct 1858 M
                                 Berens asked for a recognition of all their possessions "taking as a
                              basis the land occupied & pastured by the Cattle of the C before
                              the influx of Miners"
                              adding that the C proposed the same title to these lands as those
                              in 
Oregon. In the last letter dated 
6 Oct last M Berens
                              claims the benefits of the Oregon Treaty stipulation only for the
                              Lands acquired by the C before the date of that Treaty—accepting
                              

for the rest of their lands the principles laid down in the C.O.
                              letter of 
14 Sept viz the grant in Towns only of Land on which
                              buildings have been erected—the grant in Country Lands only of Lands
                              which have been cultivated—& Licence of occupation of Pasture Lands.
                              
                              It may probably appear on investigation that the Lands acquired by
                              the C before the Oregon Treaty are of no very great extent—for it
                              is stated in 
M Berens first letter that before that date their Trade
                              was sent by the route of the 
Columbia—& that it was only on the
                              Cession of the course of that River to the U. States that they opened
                              up the route thro 
Br. Columbia 
beginning at 
Fort Langley "which had
                              long previously been established." If by this is meant that the
                              claim which they now put forward at 
Fort Langley existed before the
                              Oregon Treaty it is clear that the 
Gov must resist it, for they
                              claim 10 acres in the Town & 6400 acres in its immediate
                              neighbourhood. But is is most likely that the greater portion of
                              this was acquired later & may therefore be treated as open to
                              arrangement.
                              
                              Under any circes it is evident that their claims cannot be
                              decided on without a searching enquiry on the spot—which, it
                              appears, is to be committed to 
Col Moody. All that 

could now be
                              done would be to settle the principles on which they were to be dealt
                              with. It appears to me that if the C are made to understand
                              clearly that the argument derived from the Oregon Treaty is not held
                              to be conclusive—and that irrespective of it they are not considered
                              to have any legal title they may be brought to consent
                              to some compromize which without being unfair to them will not be
                              injurious to the public.
                              
                              When you have made up your mind in the matter we had better ask 
M
                                 Berens to call here—as it has already stood over, from accidental
                              circes some time.