M Elliot
It may perhaps not be thought expedient to take any active measures on
the subject at present, but it devolves on me to call attention to
the fact that
M Cary, the Attorney General for
B. Columbia, has
as
well as
M Cooper, been elected a Member of the Ho: of Assembly of
VanCouver Island. The Sessions of the
V.C.I. Legislature will
doubtless be short, & no great deal of business transacted in them.
It is likewise advantageous to have an English Gentleman and a Lawyer
in the Lower, or the Upper House there. But those duties are not
consistent with his Office of Attorney
Gen of
B. Columbia to which
Colony all the Officials,
M Cary included, have been ordered to
betake themselves—nor can he very well escape going there since the
Judge was on the point (Governor's
desp 26 Jan/60) of taking up
his residence in the Colony. We have also to recollect that this
Country is paying for the services of an Att
Gen for
B. Columbia,
whilst there can be very little doubt that he is doing the work of a
Crown Law Officer in
V. Couver Island at our expense, when those
services
sh be paid for by the Legislature of this Latter place.
It seems to me that properly neither
M Cary, nor
M Cooper, ought
to hold seats in the Assembly of
V.C. Island, & that they
sh be
required to remove to
B. Columbia, but I also think that they are
probably rendering more service to the public in a general way where
they are, & that it would on the whole be better to take no notice of
the fact of their elections until some cogent reason, or emergency
exists for depriving them of their Seats, & enforcing residence in the
Colony to which they are accredited.