I have received your Despatch of the 18th of July No. 57
transmitting the Estimates of Revenue and Expenditure of Vancouver
Island for the present year, together with numerous documents in
elucidation of the same, and I have to express my thanks for the very
clearexposition exposition which, with the assistance of your late Colonial
Secretary Mr. Wakeford, you have laid before me upon this subject.
It is beyond the scope of my authority to comment upon the
discretion of the House of Assembly in not providing sufficient means to
meet the expenditure of the year. But I am at liberty to express my
fear that a policy of this nature will in the end be detrimental to the
interests and credit of the Colony. What I have chiefly to deal with in
the Despatch under consideration is the refusalof of the Assembly to repay
the share due from Vancouver Island for the erection of the Lighthouses,
and to replace the sum which was advanced last year from the Crown
Revenue for the payment of certain salaries which the local Treasury had
not at that time the means of discharging.
1. As to the Lighthouses.
I learn from a review of the correspondence that Sir James Douglas
earnestly represented to this Office the importance of establishing
Lighthouses upon some of the approachesto to the Harbours and Anchorages
of Vancouver Island and British Columbia, but that the infant state of
the two Colonies precluded them from undertaking this work themselves.
Her Majesty's Government desirous of promoting the interests of these
Colonies, and feeling that at that early stage of their career the
observation of the Governor as to their inability to help themselves was
just and reasonable, consented to send out the necessary Lighting
apparatus, and to contribute, from Imperial resources, one half of the
cost ofthe the work on condition that the remaining moiety should be repaid
by the Colonies jointly. Sir James Douglas expressed himself highly
gratified at this liberality, and assured the Secretary of State that he
would take the earliest
"opportunity of bringing to the notice of the Legislature the
necessity of providing for the repayment of the proportion of the
advance due from Vancouver Island."
Consideration for the circumstances of the Colonies in their early stage
seems to have induced Her Majesty's Government to deferinsisting insisting on the
repayment of the advance, but when at length you very properly brought
the subject under the notice of the House of Assembly, the appeal made
to that Body has been met with a decided refusal to fulfil the
condition on which this important public work was executed.
I have to express my deep regret at this resolution: and have only
to say that if the Assembly shall think proper to adhere to this
decision, the charge must be thrown upon the Crown Revenue and be
defrayed out of it wheneverthe the state of its funds will admit.
2. Refusal of the Assembly to indemnify you for having paid
certain salaries out of the Crown Revenue.
I observe that on the 2nd July 1864, the Assembly by a Resolution
of that date pledged itself
to indemnify His Excellency the Governor in case he shall take
the responsibility of paying the said salaries (i.e. the half years
salaries to the Chief Justice, the Attorney General, the Colonial
Treasurer, and the Surveyor General) out of the Crown Revenue while
awaiting furtherinstructions instructions from Her Majesty's Government,
In consequence of the exigency which had arisen as to want of funds in
the local Treasury, and acting upon the assurances you had received from
the Legislature, you paid the salaries to these Officers out of the
Crown Revenue. Understanding that the Assembly had undertaken to
replace this money out of ordinary revenue, if it should be necessary
for you under instructions from me to require them to do so, and having
been apprized by you that the greatest public inconveniencewould would have
resulted if you had refused to make the necessary advances I approved
the course you adopted of affording the desired assistance.
I do not understand that the Assembly have repudiated this manifest
obligation, and I do not doubt that they will discharge it, if it is
specifically brought before them.
It appears, however, from the Resolutions passed in Committee of
Supply that the "Committee do not consider the General Revenue liable
for the payment of the thirty-four thousand, andsixty sixty six dollars," which you had set down in the
Estimates of Expenditure as a claim against the Assembly; and which I
suppose includes the advances you had made to the public Officers under
pledge of reimbursement. The Committee support their conclusion by
referring to my Despatch of 1st August 1864. I have likewise referred to
that Despatch and I find that it applies exclusively to a question which
you had submitted to me respecting the Auditing of the public accounts.
I cannottherefore, therefore, regard that Despatch or anything which I have written
to you, as authorizing the view taken by the Assembly with regard to
this claim. It is possible that as no distinct instruction has been yet
addressed to you for obtaining reimbursement of the advances in
question, the Assembly have viewed the delay as an indication that the
claim would not be preferred. This, however, is not the construction
which can be put upon the transaction. The delay wasoccasioned occasioned solely
by the hope that an arrangement for a Civil List would have been
accomplished.
I have the honor to be
Sir,
Your most obedient
humble servant Edward Cardwell