No. 36
               
            
            
            
            
               I have lately had occasion to devote my closest attention
               to a highly important subject;  the method adopted by the Chief
               Commissioner of Lands and Works for the conveyance of public land
               in this Colony, which was obviously leading to error and confusion.
               
            
            
               2. The sale and conveyance of public land in 
British Columbia
               is regulated by the Proclamation of the 
14th February 1859.
               The provisions of the Act, so far as they respect the
alienation
 alienation of land, are clear and simple:  all public land having after survey
               to be put up for sale by public auction, and whatever remains at
               such auction unsold, is afterwards disposable by private contract
               at the upset price.  The rule applies to all surveyed land, which
               cannot otherwise be legally conveyed.
               
               3. The circumstances of the Colony rendering it expedient, as
               I have fully explained in my despatches to Your Grace, to open the
               whole country to immediate settlement, the Proclamation of the 
4th
                  Jany 1860 known as the Pre-emption Act was issued, for the purpose of throwing open the unsurveyed
Districts
 Districts of the Colony for settlement, and of enabling bonâ fide settlers and improvers
               to
               acquire land and to make homesteads for themselves without waiting
               for the Official survey to be completed, which it will take years
               to accomplish.
               
               4. The only two methods therefore of acquiring public land in
               
British Columbia, as by law established, are as follows:
               
               
               1. The absolute purchase for cash of land included in the
               official survey, under the Proclamation of the 14th Feby
                  1859 without conditions of settlement.
               
            
            
               2. The acquisition, without purchase, of land not included
               in the official survey, on condition of continuous residence
               and improvement and payment at
the
 the upset price, after the
               official survey, under the Proclamation of 
4th Jany 1860.
               
               
               5. Title deeds are in all cases issued to the purchaser, for
               lands sold under the first of those Proclamations there being no
               difficulty in describing and identifying the land by the Official plans.
               
            
            
               6. On the other hand, lands held under the Pre-emption Act,
               which deals exclusively with unsurveyed land, cannot be identified
               otherwise than by actual occupation, and the residence of the
               persons desirous of acquiring them, therefore continuous residence
               and occupancy are made conditions of the tenure, and being complied
               with, constitute, with the Certificate
of
 of Record and Deposit from
               the local Magistrate, the foundation of a perfect Title till the
               Official survey is made.
               
               7. This necessary distinction in the conditions of surveyed
               and unsurveyed land, has been overlooked by the Chief Commissioner
               of Lands and Works;  who moreover appears to have entirely
               misunderstood the object of the 7th section of the Pre-emption
               Act, which is intended to enable settlers on the same condition of
               residence and by payment of a deposit of 5/s per acre, to acquire
               larger tracts of unsurveyed land than 160 acres, the deposit in
               such cases being regarded as a proper security against speculation
               and a proof that the land is wanted for actual settlement.
               
            
            
               8. I find that in consequence
of
 of that misunderstanding, the
               Commissioner of Lands and Works has sold several tracts of
               unsurveyed land at the upset price without stipulations as to
               residence and improvement, and has issued to the purchaser a
               document termed a "Certificate of Title", which is really
               however nothing better than so much waste paper, and has thereby
               placed the Government in the false position of having made sales
               of land which cannot be identified, nor without residence can
               the purchaser be protected in his proper rights.
               
               9. I lost no time in taking measures to put an end to a
               system so fraught with evil,
which
 which would have plunged the affairs of the Land Department into a state of irretrievable
               confusion,
               and led to endless conflicts about the ownership of land.
               
               10. A copy of my instructions on this subject to the
               Commissioner of Lands and Works and also to the District
               Magistrates is herewith transmitted for Your Grace's information,
               and I shall see that those instructions are fully understood
               and strictly carried into effect in the course of my progress
               through the Colony.
               
            
            
               I have the honor to be
               My Lord Duke,
               Your Grace's most obedient
               humble Servant
               
James Douglas
               
               Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
               
                
                  
                  
                     Charles Good, Acting Private Secretary, to Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works, 
27 May 1861, clarifying the rules with regard to pre-emption and the general conveyance of crown
                     lands.
                     
 
                   
                  
                  
                     Circular, 
Good to District Magistrates, 
27 May 1861, providing information on land regulations as noted above, including examples of
                     forms to be used in recording land sales.
                     
                     
 
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
                
                  
                  
                     Draft, 
Elliot to Emigration Commissioners, 
12 August 1861, forwarding copy of the despatch and enclosures for observations and suggestions.