I would suggest that this time it might be of advantage to make some
such remark as follows:
In your present letter and in a former one from you to this
D on
the same subject, you affirm that the
H.B. Company, formed their
Establishment on
San Juan, not with a view to their own advantage,
but at the instigation of HM's
Gov. I am desired to remark to you
that not the slightest trace of any such instigation is recorded in
this Office. On the contrary, the subject is referred to in a letter
from this office to the Company dated the [blank], in the following
terms: "correspondence relating to the occupation
for the benefit of the Company of the
Island of San Juan." The
Duke of Newcastle is sure that you must perceive that when you
advance a pecuniary claim on
the Queen's Government upon the plea
that the Company had formed one of it's trading Establishments for
the benefit and at the request of the
Gov, it is incumbent on you
to produce some evidence of so material a fact. Neither is such a
fact one upon which indefinite allegations of supposed conversations
would suffice. In order to make good such a claim, it would be
necessary that the Company should produce some written and official
application to them to render the alleged service which they now
desire to make the ground of a demand on the public Treasury.