It is with extreme reluctance that I venture to trespass
               upon your time with a matter of personal concern; as it is one,
               however, which involves a question of right, I think it only
               proper, that I should bring the subject fairly and frankly under
               your notice.
               
            
            
               The matter I allude to is connected with the appointment
               which I lately had the honour of holding as Governor of 
British
                  Columbia.  When the
offer
 offer of that appointment was made to me by
               the right 
Honble Sir Edward Lytton in his Despatch N
o 3 of
               the 
16th July 1858 it was accompanied by one imperative
               stipulation—which was, that I should relinquish the whole of
               my interests in the Hudsons Bay and 
Puget Sound Companies, and
               subject to that condition I was assured of the appointment, and
               that I should hold the office for "6 years at least," provided always,
               that my administration of the office continued to meet the approval
of
               of Her Majesty's Government.
               
               On these terms, involving I would observe, the sacrifice of
               many personal interests, I agreed to accept the appointment and,
               on my part, I have carefully, complied, in every particular, with
               the terms of that agreement.
               
            
            
               Her Majestys commission containing my appointment as Governor
               of 
British Columbia is dated, if my memory be not in fault, on
               the 
2d day of September 1858, and, strictly speaking is not
               terminable before the 
2d day of Septmember 1864.
               
 
  
            
            
               In consequence however of the appointment of my successor at
               an earlier date, I ceased, altogether, to draw my salary as Governor
               of the Colony, from the 12th day of April 1864.
               
            
            
               After the honours that Her Majesty has been pleased to confer
               upon me and the many kind and gratifying marks of approval which
               I have, from time to time, received from Her Majesty's Government,
               I cannot suppose that my premature removal from the office arose
               out
of
 of any feeling of dissatisfaction with my public administration,
               and I would appeal to the several Memorials, forwarded, since the
               middle of last year, through me, to His Grace the 
Duke of Newcastle,
               as a proof that there exists a very general impression, both among
               the people of 
Vancouver Island, and 
British Columbia, that my
               administration has been entirely successful, in maintaining the
               honour and dignity, of the Crown, and in furthering the best
               interests of these important Colonies.
               
 
            
            
               The Claim which I now
               submit, is simply what the justice of the case appears to call for,
               that is to say, that an allowance may be made to me equal to the sum
               that would accrue from my official salary, of £3000 per anm,
               for the interval (about 4 2/3 months) extending from the 12th
                  April, to the 2d of September 1864; being the unexpired term of
               the six years, for which I was originally appointed.
               
            
            
               I may add as a reason for pressing this claim that I have
               incurred very heavy expenses through
my
 my official position, and, the
               very unusual circumstance of my holding Her Majesty's Commission for
               two separate and distinct Governments, and having necessarily to
               entertain in two Colonies instead of one—expenses, I may observe,
               which are greatly in excess of my official Income.
               
To the Right Honble
               
               E. Cardwell
               
               &c   &c   &c
               
               Her Majesty's Principal
               
               Secretary of State
               
               for the Colonies
            
            
            
            
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  Mr Elliot
                     This is an unexpected claim.  The S.S. despatch of the
                     
16 July/58 (drafted by 
Mr Merivale) says "And it is the
                     desire of H.M
s Govt to appoint you at once to that
                     Office on the usual terms of a Governor's appointment, namely,
                     for 6 y
rs at least, your Administration of that Office
                     continuing to merit the approval of H.M. 
Govt."
                     
 
                  
                  
                     This desph construes wrongly our usual reading of the
                     tenure by a Govr of his Office.  I have always considered that
                     though the appointment of a Governor was limited to 6 years
                     it was not meant that the S.S. was precluded from removing him
                     before the 6 years were over.
                     
                  
                  
                     I fear that the precise terms of the S. States 
desph
                     leaves us no escape: nor 
wd special pleading be very
                     creditable to us, if employed against a man who has been Governor
                     for 13 years of the Colonies of 
V. Couver Isld & 
B. Columbia.
                     If the claim must be paid the money will have to come from 
B. Columbia.
                     
 
                  
                  Sir F. Rogers
                     I cannot help observing that this claim of 
Sir J. Douglas's appears
                     to me highly discreditable to him, and such a one as could hardly be
                     expected from a gentleman who has just been selected for the rank of
                     Knight Commander of the Honorable Order of the Bath.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     No doubt 
Mr Merivale's draft was incautiously worded: the
                     meaning was that the ordinary term of a Governor's service is six
                     years; but that a man retiring with honors within a few months of
                     completing that period should spring a sudden pecuniary claim on the
                     Government
                     
under the letter of the bond, and should demand to be paid
                     salary for a period during which he renders no service, is really
                     astonishing.  It is like a sharp Attorney's taking advantage of a
                     flaw in a deed.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     Annexed is a useful Memo: in which 
Mr Ebden has collected for
                     me all the leading particulars that our records will supply.
                     
                     I would advise that in the first instance a letter be written to
                     
Sir James Douglas, pointing out to him that the real meaning of the
                     despatch was that six years was the ordinary term of employment, but
                     that it never could have been intended to imply that whether or not
                     he were rendering any service to the Public, he was equally to draw
                     salary for his private benefit, and that any such demand from a
                     Governor is wholly unprecedented; and I should request to be informed
                     whether under these circumstances, he still desires to urge the claim
                     which he has submitted.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     If he should answer in the affirmative, I should then proceed to
                     construe in the strictest manner a claim which is founded on the
                     letter and not on the spirit of his engagement.  In the first place I
                     would observe that the despatch on which he relies only announced to
                     him a salary of "at least" £1000 a year, and therefore if he really
                     must be allowed to put into his pocket unearned money as the penalty
                     of not having sufficiently fenced that particular despatch, I should
                     certainly not permit him to reckon the salary at any other higher
                     rate than the one which it expressly named.
                     
                  
                  
                     In the next place he seems to have drawn at the rate of £1800
                     from the beginning of his service.  I should look to the despatch
                     cited by 
Mr Ebden(Parl
 (Parl
y Paper, Part 2, page 73,) and unless
                     that were most distinctly retrospective, I should surcharge him with
                     the excess in the rate of salary which he had drawn in the interval
                     from his first appointment to that date.
                     
                     In short where a claim is next thing to dishonest, I think that
                     it would be our duty to take on behalf of the Public, the benefit of
                     the letter of the documents just as the claimant rests upon the
                     letter and upon that alone.
                     
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     N.B.  Private letter to 
Mr Engleheart July 27 adds inf
n as
                     to date & manner of supersession.
                     
 
               
               
                  
                  
                     I have thought it best to obtain from 
Mr Engleheart copies of
                     the correspondence bet
n the 
D. of N. & 
Sir J.D. wh resulted in
                     his premature relief.  It will be seen that on 
16 March H.G. informed
                     
Sir J. (then Mr) Douglas
 that the Colonies of 
V.C.I. & 
B.C. must
                     be divided—that he could not conveniently be left a Governor of one,
                     & that he must therefore be relieved of both.
                     
                     Mr Douglas replies on the 
13h of May not by stating that
                     his office, or at least its emoluments were guaranteed to him for 6
                     years but that he did not see how his
                     "premature removal from office one year previous to the term for 
wh
                     I was originally appointed can be managed with
t leaving an
                     impression derogatory to the character of my administration.  It was
                     my intention" he added
                     "to apply for relief at the close of the present year 
1863" (in fact
                     he continued in office till 
12h of April 1864). "... I
                     however leave the matter entirely in YG's hands.  I only ask
                     to be permitted to retire with honour, & that the officers" who had
                     acted under him 
shd be suitably rewarded.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     On the 31st July 1863 the Duke answered this letter informing
                     him of his KCB.
                     
                  
                  
                     On 
8 Dec Sir J.D. offers his "sincere & hearty thanks for the
                     extreme kindness

 of your private letter of 
31 July" & particularly
                     for the K.C.B.
                     
                     I think I should answer as follows.  First (as stated by 
Mr
                        Elliot) that 
Mr Cardwell apprehends the dph of [blank] to have
                     been intended to treat 
Sir J.D. on the same footing as other
                     Governors that is to say to offer him a tenure of at least six years
                     subject to removal not only for absolute misconduct, but in case of
                     any politicial necessity like that 
wh actually arose—that it must
                     be admitted that it was not unnatural for a person not conversant
                     with the practise of the Public Service to place a stricter
                     construction on the words actually used and to infer that a
                     six years' tenure of office was guaranteed to him subject only to
                     removal for misbehavior or incapacity.  But that the proper occasion
                     for alleging this guarantee was when on the 
16 March 1863 the 
D of N
                     Acting

 upon his own construction of the dph of [blank] announced his
                     intentions to relieve 
Sir J.D. before the expiration of his six
                     years.  If the guarantee had been so alleged it 
wd have been for
                     H.G. to consider what course should be taken respecting it.  But far
                     from putting forward any such claim for pecuniary compensation 
Sir
                        J.D. replied on 
31 July ascertaining incidently that it had been his
                     intention to apply for relief at the close of the then current year
                     (3 1/4 months before the period at 
wh Sir JD was actually
                     relieved) adverting indeed to his premature removal, but leaving the
                     matter entirely in the 
D of N's hands and only asking to be permitted
                     to retire with honour.
                     
                     That to this letter the 
D. of N replied by informing him that he
                     had been recommended for &c (K.C.B.).  I trust he added that you will
                     consider &c ... as "approval."
                     
                     That with this announcement 
Sir JD manifested no
                     dissatisfaction but on the contrary offered his services & hearty
                     thanks for its extreme kindness.
                     
 
 
                  
                  
                     That it is only in 
July 1864 [blank] months after the 
D of N's
                     relinquishment of office that he advances this unexpected claim.
                     
                     State that as the claim to compensation was not advanced by him
                     but on the contrary appears implicitly waived in the correspondence
                     between himself & the 
D of N and as his removal did not in fact take
                     place till after the period at 
wh he states in that correspondence
                     he had himself intended to apply for it 
Mr Cardwell wd not feel
                     justified in applying either to Parl
t or to the Leg
re of 
B.C.
                     to grant 
Sir JD salary as Governor for 4 1/2 months after he ceased
                     to perform the duties of that office.
                     
 
               
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     He was offered the 
govt of 
B. Columbia "to be held for the
                     present in conjunction with that of 
Vancouver I" on the 
16th of
                        July 1858 with a salary of at least £1000 a year from Home (PP Part I
                     p. 43) in respect of B Columbia.
                     
                     He accepted the office but objected to the salary, which was
                     changed for £1800 a year from home for
                     
B. Columbia and Vancouver I (PP Part II p. 73).
                     
                     He did not draw any salary before 1860 when he drew for £2395 or
                     at the rate of £1800 a year from the 2nd of Septr 1858 the date of
                     his commission to the 31st of Decr/59.  The Bill was accepted
                     (3210/1860).
                     
                   
                  
                  
                     In the meantime he had represented his salary as still too
                     small.  Its insufficiency was acknowledged and he was permitted to
                     draw £1200 additional from 
B Columbia provided the revenue reached
                     £50000 (PP Part II p. 92).
                     
                     He objected to this proviso (12573/1860) and he was specially
                     authorised to draw £1200 for the year 1859 in which the Revenue was
                     less than £50000.  Since 1859 the revenue has exceeded £50000 (See
                     Blue Books).
                     
                  
                  
                     With respect to the £800 voted by 
Vancouver I we have returns
                     only from 
1 January 1862 to 30 June 1863 during which period he did
                     not draw any of it.  There is no entry of the recall of 
Governor Douglas or of the appointment of his successor but inasmuch as the
                     result was known in the Colony before the 
18th of September, it
                     must have been sent not later than the 
1st of August 1863.
                     
                  
                  
                     P.S.

  £1800 a year for 
Governor Douglas was not provided in the
                     Parliamentary Estimates up to the 
31st of March 1863.  He does not
                     however appear to have drawn upon it after the 
31st of December
                        1862.  In fact In the Colonial (
B.C.) Estimates for the year
                     ending 
31 December
                        1863, £3000 (viz £1800 + 1200) was inserted for the Governors
                     Salary.
                     
                     
                     
 
                
            
            
            
               Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
               
               
               
               
               
                
            
            
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
                
                  
                  
                     Rogers to 
Douglas, 
9 August 1864, refusing his claim for
                     salary with extended explanation.
                     
 
                   
            
            
               
                  People in this document
                  
                        Blackwood, Arthur Johnstone
                  
                        Cardwell, Edward
                  
                        Douglas, Sir James
                  
                        Ebden,  Richard
                  
                        Elliot, Thomas Frederick
                  
                        Engleheart, Sir John Gardner Dillman 
                  Lytton, Sir Edward George Earle Bulwer
                  Merivale, Herman
                  Pelham-Clinton, 5th Duke of Newcastle Henry Pelham Fiennes
                  Rogers, Baron Blachford Frederic
                
               
                  Places in this document
                  British Columbia
                  London
                  Puget Sound
                  Vancouver Island