Despatch to London.
Minutes (6), Enclosures (untranscribed) (2), Other documents (1).
Kennedy forwards an Act respecting Barristers and Attorneys at Law which he supports but has withheld his assent, on advice of the Attorney General,
until Kennedy receives a higher opinion.Rogers minutes his observation that the Act may be the result of a controversy in which a Canadian attorney [and] a Scotch writer or both took part.Rogers muses that There is more than meets the eye in all this.Cardwell instructs the office to send the Act to the law officers for their review.
No. 46, Legislative
14th July 1864
Sir
I have the honor to submit an Act respecting Barristers and Attorneys
at Law passed by the Legislature of this Colony on which I have
reserved my Assent in consequence of the advice of the Attorney
General whose observations on this Act I enclose.
This Act passed both branches of the Legislature, and my individualopinion
opinion is in favour of its becoming Law.
I do not feel justified in setting aside the advice of the Attorney
General without a higher opinion which I have no means of obtaining
here.
I would therefore beg that I may be aided by the opinion of the Law
Officers of the Crown as to whether they think Mr Attorney General
Carey's objections are sufficiently weighty to justify me in
refusing assent to this Bill.
I
I would beg for this opinion at as early a period as possible.
I have the honor to be
Sir,
Your most obedient Servant A.E. Kennedy
Governor
There is more than meets the eye in all this. There has been an
unaccountable opposition to the free admission of lawyers to practice
at the V.C.I. Bar—and the minute of the AttyGenl suggests the
idea that he wishes to keep that practice to himself & a few friends.
I would answer that the Govr will do well to assent to this Act, if
it is still competent to him to do so. But that Mr C so far agrees
with the AttyGenl as to think that the Law ought to invest
the Supreme Court or some other authority with the power
[of] excluding barristers or solicitors from practice in case of any
disgraceful conduct.
Or shd it be referred (as the Govr suggests) to the Law Offrs of
the Crown?
Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
"An Act respecting Barristers and Attorneys at Law," passed by
the Legislative Assembly 2 November 1863 and by the Legislative
Council 6 April 1864 (seven pages).
Rogers to Attorney General and Solicitor General, 5 October 1864,
forwarding copies of the despatch and enclosures, and asking them to
give the matter their joint consideration and report their opinions.