No. 44
I have had the honor to receive Your Lordship's despatch
Vancouver Island No. 21 of the
16th of November 1866
addressed to
Governor Kennedy. Your Lordship states that
you you
do not understand from the information before you how it is that
certain public Monies under the control of the Legislature have
been expended without the requisite Legislative sanction, and
further that if they have been so expended, it will have been
a grave irregularity on which you would desire a full report and
for which it will be necessary to seek a remedy at the hands of
the New Legislature of the Colony.
2.
2. I was in England at the time when these payments were made, and
I therefore referred for information to
Mr Young the late Colonial
Secretary of
Vancouver Island, whose report I have the honor to enclose.
3. It was my intention to introduce a Bill of Indemnity to the
Legislative Council. The fourth paragraph of my opening address is
as follows: "I place prominently on the list of the Measures I wish
you
you to pass, Bills of Indemnity to My predecessor in Office in
Vancouver Island and myself for money expended without an
appropriation act. The circumstances of the case are sufficiently
familiar to all and I have no doubt that you will legalize Acts of
supreme necessity." The Council replied: "The Acts of Indemnity
referred to by Your Excellency shall receive our most favorable
consideration."
4. I sent down the Auditor General to
Victoria. He found
that that
the Public Accounts of
Vancouver Island had not been Audited for a
considerable time and I am thus compelled to defer to another
Session the introduction of the Indemnity Bill. The Auditor's Report
will be found enclosed in my despatch No. 40 of the
8th Instant.
Minutes by CO staff
Sir F. Rogers
The Report of the late Colonial Secretary of
V.C. Island
explains how it happened that
Govr Kennedy was compelled by
the dead lock in the Legislature to incur a considerable
unauthorized expenditure. As however
V.C. Island no longer
exists as a separate Colony it could answer no useful purpose
to pursue the subject further—and I presume the Despatch
may be acknowledged with an expression of regret that the
state of the Audit of the Accounts has compelled
Govr Seymour
to defer the introduction of the Indemnity Bill? See 4394.
I do not see that there is anything else to be done.
Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
W.A.G. Young to
Seymour,
5 February, reporting on public
expenditures made by the Legislative Assembly "without the requisite
legislative sanction."
Other documents included in the file