No. 62
               
            
            
               
               
                     Downing Street
                     
                  
               20 November 1860
               
               Sir,
                
            
            
               I transmit to you the copies of a despatch from 
Sir H. Ward, late
               Governor of Ceylon, and of it's enclosures reporting the discovery of
               defalcations in the Department of the Surveyor 
               
               General of that Island to
               the amount of £755-1-6 1/2, and of a robbery of the sum of £342-6-7,
               belonging to that Department, on the 
1st of July last.
               
 
            
            
               It is unnecessary to enter into a detailed statement of the 
mode
mode in
               which the frauds involved in the defalcations were committed, inasmuch
               as all the circumstances relative to this part of the subject and to the
               manner in which those frauds were ultimately detected exposed and
               punished will be found set forth with great clearness in 
Sir H. Ward's
               despatch.
               
 
            
            
               The defalcations in question, however, have been clearly traced to
               the fraudulent practices of a Clerk in the Department of the Surveyor
               General, named 
Bartholomensy to whom the financial transactions 
               
               
of
of the
               Department were entrusted; and it appears that the money misappropriated
               by him was abstracted from the money advanced on Impost from time to time
               by the Colonial Treasurer to the Surveyor General; that the sums so
               abstracted were fraudulently charged by 
Mr Bartholomensy in the
               Departmental accounts to the Surveyor General; that they figured in the
               balance of the statements of accounts sent quarterly to the Colonial
               Treasury and Audit Office, with the signature attached thereto either of
               the Surveyor General, or (in his absence) of some 
officer
officer acting on his
               behalf; and that the settlement which was required to be annually made
               with the Treasury in respect to the advance account was effected by
               paying into the Treasury the balance appearing 
               
               to be due on that
               account, out of advances made by the Treasurer for the ensuing year.
               
 
            
            
               The malpractices commenced in 
1856 and were continued until
               discovered by 
Captain Sim, the present Surveyor General in 
November
                  1859.  During that period 
the
the Department of the Surveyor General had
               been under the Superintendence of 
Captain Gosset from 
October 1856 to
               the 
26th of April 1858, of 
Mr Evatt from the 
27th of April
                  1858 to the 
12th of March 1859, and of
               
Captain Sim from the 
12th of March to 
November 1859.
               But as it appears from the Minutes of the Executive Council that 
Mr
                  Evatt merely officiated temporarily on the responsibility of 
Captain
                  Gosset, the responsibility of 
Captain Gosset must be taken to extend
               from 
October 1856 to the 
12th of March 1859.  The 
               
               amount of
               deficiency 
during
during that time was £598-0-4.
               
 
            
            
               You will be good enough to furnish 
Captain Gosset, at present the
               Colonial Treasurer of 
British Columbia, with copies of this despatch and
               of it's enclosures, and instruct him to furnish me through you with some
               explanation in regard to the omission on his part to verify the balances
               of the accounts of his Department sent quarterly to the Colonial Treasury
               and Audit Office with his signature attached thereto, and to shew cause
               why he should not 
be
be considered responsible for the amount of the
               defalcations that occurred during the period he held the office of
               Surveyor General, which period, for the reasons stated, must be
               considered 
               
               as extending from 
October 1856 to 
12th of March 1859.
               
 
            
            
               I have the honor to be
               Sir
               Your Obedient Servant
               
Newcastle