2. It appears that there are no records in the Light House Board
or
 or
               in the Colonial Secretary's Office of the Ownership of 
Fisguard
                  
                  Island, or of its purchase by the Government; but 
Mr Richards in his
               Letter states that previous to the transfer of 
Van Couvers Island
               from the 
Hudsons Bay Company to the Crown, the whole or nearly the
               whole of the shores of 
Esquimalt Harbor with the numerous small
               Islands in it were owned by the 
Puget Sound Company, or by private
               individuals—and that 
Fisgard Island (a rock in the Harbor of between
               100 and 200 yards in extent) formed part of a property called Belmont
               belonging to 
M Young before her marriage, or to her Father. From the
               other papers
it
 it appears that on the 
20 December 1829 the Surveyor
               General, by order of the Colonial Secretary 
Mr Young, paid to him 
Mr Young £150 as the purchase money of the Island, but that no deed of
               conveyance was then executed of the property. The attention of
               
Governor Kennedy having recently been drawn to the subject, enquiries
               were set on foot, but beyond the fact of payment of the purchase
               money, none of the Officers of the Government through whom such a
               transaction would in the ordinary course have passed, knew anything
               at all about it. Eventually however the purchase deed executed by Mr
               & 
M Young, before they left the Colony, to 
Mr Pemberton in his
               capacity of
Surveyor
 Surveyor General of the Colony was discovered in the
               hands of a Solicitor unconnected with the Government, who delivered
               it up to the Attorney General on the 
17 of June last. This deed
               is dated the 
14 of May last, and although purporting to be made
               between Mr & 
M Young on the one part, and 
Mr Pemberton as Surveyor
               General of the Colony on the other part, is executed by Mr & 
M
                  Young only. In consequence of the absence of 
Mr Pembertons
               signature the Governor raises a question as to the validity of the
               Deed. On this point 
Mr Cardwell is desirous of having our report, as
               well as whether any and what communication on the
subject
 subject should be
               made to 
Mr Young who is now in this Country.
               
               3. The mere circumstances that the Deed was not signed by the
               Grantee 
Mr Pemberton, would not affect its validity as regards the
               Grantors. Mr & 
M Young are equally bound by their execution of
               the Deed. If therefore no other question arose on the Instrument, it
               would not be necessary to call on them for a fresh conveyance.
               Another important question however does arise on the face of the
               Deed. It conveys the property to 
Mr Pemberton in his official
               capacity as Surveyor General
               "
and his successors in office." But as the office of Surveyor
               General is not a corporate one, the Conveyance does
not
 not I apprehend
               carry the legal estate in fee as is the intention—but by reason of
               the particular terms used, operates as a conveyance to 
Mr Pemberton
               for his life only. I think therefore that 
Mr Young and his wife
               should at once be called upon, under his covenant for further
               assurance, to execute a fresh conveyance so as to vest the fee simple
               of the Island in some official body in the Colony having a corporate
               capacity to be held in trust for the public—such for instance as
               the Lighthouse Board, if it be a corporation. As 
Mr Young is now in
               England, 
Mr Cardwell will I presume desire to have this Deed prepared
               by the Solicitor
of
 of 
the Treasury on behalf of the Crown.
               
               4. I would further submit that 
Mr Young should at the same time be
               afforded an opportunity of clearing up what appears to have been a
               great irregularity in the conduct of public business—and what,
               looking at the official position he held at the time, certainly needs
               explanation. The whole transaction seems to have centered in him.
               It does not appear how the purchase originated—who sanctioned it,
               what means were taken to ascertain that he and his wife had a good
               title to the property they sold—or who approved of the purchase deed
               on behalf of the Crown.
The