No. 17
               
            
            
            
            
               I have had the honor to receive Your despatch No. 89 of
               the 
11th November 1865, forwarding Copies of Letters from
               the Board of Trade and the Lords Commissioners of Her
Majesty's
 Majesty's
               Treasury on the subject of the Customs Ordinance passed by the
               Legislature of this Colony during the Session of 
1865.  You
               inform me you cannot recommend the Ordinance to Her Majesty
               for confirmation as it is contrary to precedent and unadvisable
               in principle.
               
               2.  The work of the present Session is so far advanced that
               it is my intention to
prorogue
 prorogue the Legislative Council in a few
               days.  To attempt to alter the Customs Law without due and
               sufficient notice would, I am informed by the Collector of Customs
               be a serious disaster to commercial interests and would bring
               Bankruptcy on the few merchants now resident in this Colony, as
               all their arrangements have been made for the summer supplies
               under the existing Tariff.  I therefore
propose
 propose to leave the
               Ordinance in force until I have received instructions on the
               several points I wish to bring before you and if Her Majesty's
               Government are still of opinion that the principle of the
               enactment is undesirable I shall then have sufficient time to
               give due Notice of the alterations to be made.
               
               3.  The Lords Commissioners of the Treasury state
that
 that the
               valuation of Articles subject to ad valorem duties, being reckoned
               according to their value at the place of shipment, is so far as
               their Lordships are aware without precedent in the Customs Laws
               of British Possessions.  To tell the inhabitants of this Colony,
               where the Canadians form so considerable an element in our settled
               population, that Her Majesty's Government cannot allow the
               Ordinance to continue
in
 in force on this ground would be at once
               met by a reference to the Customs Law of Canada from which the
               principle of the present Ordinance was taken [marginal note:
               Consolidated Statute, Canada, 22 Vic. Cap: 17, Sec. 24].
               
               
               
                  
                     
                     Has this Act been referred to T-y & B. trade & is it in operation?
                     
                  
                
               
               
               4.  The circumstances of the Colony have altered materially
               since the discovery of the outlying Mines of the 
Kootenay District.
               Previous to that time little or no trade came by way of our
               Southern Boundary and 
New Westminster was the only declared
Port
 Port
               of Entry in the Colony.  Now however there are three Ports of
               Entry on our extensive Southern frontier—
Osoyoos, in the
               
Similkomeen Valley, 
Fort Shepherd on the 
Columbia, and 
St
                  Joseph's Prairie in the 
Kootenay District—in each instance 
               consisting of a log hut, inhabited by a Revenue Officer and
               Constable, with only an Indian Village within 80 or 100 miles.
               
               5.  Under the existing system
goods
 goods entering the Colony by
               these routes are charged duties on the value of the articles at
               the Towns of 
Walla-walla and 
Colville, situated in 
Washington 
                  Territory, the starting points whence supplies from the interior 
               of the neighbouring States are forwarded for the 
British Columbian
               Market.  To carry out the suggestion conveyed in the Treasury
               Letter and reckon the ad valorem duties at such Ports of Entry
               would be difficult, if not impracticable, in the
present
 present early
               stage of the Colony, while to take the average prices at 
New Westminster as the value to be charged on the frontier would give
               the American Trader an undue advantage
               
               
               
               
               over the Merchants resident in this and the neighbouring Colony.
               
               
               
                  
                     
                     In other words the consumer on the frontier is to pay the cost of
                     bringing in goods from 
N. Westminster, when he m
t get them
                     with
t that cost from the U.S.
                     
 
               
               
               6.  It is not unnatural for the people of this Colony to
               look to the Laws of Canada as a guide to their own Legislation
               when the position of the two Colonies is so similar and their
               future relations in all probability so intimate.  I would therefore
               beg
leave
 leave to suggest that the principle of the Ordinance should be
               allowed to continue but be so far amended as to give power to the
               Executive, as in the Canadian Act, to provide that "goods bonâ
               fide exported to this Province from any Country but passing in
               transitu through another Country, shall be valued for duty as
               if they were imported directly from such first mentioned Country."
               This alteration would, I believe meet the objections raised last
               spring to the enactment in 
Victoria, but I must add that any Change
               in the system now in force of collecting Customs
Duties
 Duties will be met
               by the unanimous opposition of the unofficial Members of the
               Legislative Council, and it would require distinct instructions
               from me to prevent the Official Members from opposing an alteration
               in a Law which has been found to work with advantage to the Colony.
               
               7.  Since writing the above I have received a Report from the
               Attorney General copy of which I beg to forward.
               
            
            
               I have the honor to be,
               Sir,
               Your most obedient humble Servant
               
Arthur N. Birch
               
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
               
                  
                  
                     Prepare draft to Treasy, but see a separate minute by me.
                     I had not seen this paper before.
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                     This must be sent to the Treasury.  Doubtless M
r
                     Elliot is right in supposing this Ordinance was directed
                     ag
s V.I. but if we effect the Union 
this year it may be
                     better not to moot the subject until after that time when
                     there will be no motive for the United Leg
re to continue the anomaly.
                     
 
               
                
                  
                  Mr Blackwood
                     The Treasury objected to the 
B.C. Ordinance N
o 3 of
                     
1865 on the ground that by that Act the value of articles
                     subjected to ad valorem duties is to be reckoned according
                     to their value at the place of shipment, instead of being
                     estimated as usual on their value at the port of entry.
                     They stated that they knew no other Colonial Customs Act
                     in which this regulation exists.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     Mr Birch in the present despatch refers them to the
                     24
th Section of the Canadian Customs Act, 22 Vic: Cap
                     17, from which

 Act the principle of the 
B.C. Ord
ce has, he
                     states, been adopted.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     Sec: 24 of Canada, 22 Vic: Cap
                     17 in the Consolidated Statutes is founded on an older
                     Customs Act 16 Vic: Cap: 85, Sec: 3 
wh Act was submitted
                     to the Board of Trade and Treasury previously to its
                     confirmation.  No objection was raised by either of those
                     departments to the clause asserting the principle adopted
                     by the 
B.C. Ord
ce.
                     
                     That principle is, as stated by 
Mr Birch the same
                     in both Ord
ces, but in the Canadian Act there is a
                     further clause empowering the Government to charge by order
                     on goods bonâ fide exported

 to the Province from one Country,
                     but passing in transition through a second, duty on their
                     value in the first country.
                     
 
                  
                  Memo:
                     I would just record the following note in passing.
                     The 
B. Columbia Govt has no doubt found a precedent in
                     the Canadian Customs Laws, but these are not generally
                     considered bright examples of that class of legislation.
                     The real point is that the clause was obviously directed
                     against 
Vancouver; and to say that British goods carried
                     in a large vessel to 
Vancouver and introduced from thence
                     into 
New Westminster were to pay duty on the enormous value
                     they would bear at 
Vancouver instead of their
natural
 natural
                     English price, was contrary to all reason and could have
                     no other motive than the desire to compel British Merchants
                     to send their goods in ships sailing direct to the inferior
                     Port of 
New Westminster.  This ought in my opinion decidedly
                     to be prevented.  Whether it will be sufficiently prevented
                     by a mere permission to the Governor of 
British Columbia to
                     take the duties on the 
British instead of the 
Vancouver value
                     will be a subject for consideration when the Treasury answer.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                   
            
            
               Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
               
                
                  
                  
                     H.P.P. Crease, Attorney General, to Officer Administering
                     the Government, 
22 March 1866, responding to objections by the
                     imperial government towards the customs ordinance.
                     
                     
 
                   
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
                
                  
                  
                     Elliot to Secretary to the Treasury, 
6 June 1866, forwarding
                     copy of the despatch for consideration.