3. The letter of
M Berens is a fair narration of some of the
circumstances concurrent with the erection of the Buildings and the
appropriation of the land, and the facts stated are substantially
correct, but I do
notnot see that he throws any fresh light upon the
claim the Fur Trade branch of the Company have made, or that he in
any way strengthens their position. On the contrary I think his
letter contains clear evidence that the Fur Trade have neither a
legal nor an equitable title to the land in question. Had the
Company adopted my proposition in the first instance, made as their
Agent, of
leasing to the Colony the Buildings required by the
Government, the matter might wear a different complexion;
althoughalthough
even then I am not sure that such an arrangement could have been
confirmed under the Charter of grant of the
whole Island to the company, which expressly restricted the sale
of lands to such as were
not required for
public purposes—such public purposes I take
it to mean lands required for purposes in connection with the
Government of the Colony; but the company did
not approve of my suggeston and the cost of the buildings was in
consequence borne by the Colony, and the
LandLand appropriated to them
was retained and
set apart as a Government reserve up to the period of its sale
under the authority of the Despatch to
Governor Blanshard from the
Secretary of the Company dated
1 January 1851, which provides that
the Buildings required for Government purposes are to
"be near the Fort Victoria for convenience and protection"
and also that the
2
"lands which may be appropriated with the Buildings are to be
held by the Governor and Council as Trustees for the Colony."
These two points
whichwhich I brought forward in my Despatch of the
28
March, to my mind conclusively settle the question, and the more so
as I notice that they are not touched upon by
M Berens. To have
adopted the expedient alluded to by
M Berens
Vide Page 2 of
HBC letter 6405.
of the Fur Trade retaining the Buildings, and other Buildings being
erected upon a different site not claimed by the Fur Trade, would
have been simply absurd; for that would have necessitated the removal
of the Government Buildings from the Settlement altogether,
andand would
have placed them in the then almost untrodden wilderness. But in the
quotation used by
M BerensM from the letter of
Sir J.H. Pelly, it
would appear that in
all cases
of Reserves of land if
any part was required for public purposes, it might be resumed
upon
repaying the price and
any improvements that might have been
made upon it. For better information I enclose a copy of the whole
of that letter, which I should not have done from motives of
delicacydelicacy
the word
"private" being marked upon it, but as
M Berens has alluded to
it as an official document, which in point of fact it is—and as some
most material points can be gathered from it, I do not longer
hesitate to produce it. That letter, in my opinion, clearly
establishes the point that if
any portion of land
reserved for the
Fur Trade, or
Puget Sound Company,
were required for
public purposes, it might be
resumed upon two conditions,
first, repayment of its
original costcost, and secondly, compensation being made for any
improvements upon it; but in the case under discussion, no repayment
of the original price of the land was required, the Fur Trade having
paid nothing for it
then, (nor have they, I believe, up to this day, made any
payment for the 3084 Acres claimed by them), and no compensation was
necessary, no expenditure having been made in improvements.
6. There is however one further point which is somewhat material.
M Berens mentions in the last paragraph but one of his letter that
the Fur Trade claim of 3084 Acres was entered in the land Register as
belonging to the Company. I have referred to the Register, and I
find therein a Memorandum signed by the Secretary of the Hudsons Bay
Company and dated
7 January 1859, containing a copy of a minute of resolution made on the
26 September 1853 (nearly 3 years after the portion of land now claimed by the Fur Trade was
inin possession of the Government) that the 3084 Acres should be
entered as belonging
to the Company. A Form of Title Deed was also filled in and
sent home, but it would seem never to have been executed.
7. Considering that some legal points were involved in the question,
I placed the whole of the papers before the Attorney General, and I
forward herewith his opinion for Your Graces information.