Mr Elliot
                     The Attorney General objects, & very properly as it
                     appears to me, to giving a debtor in 
British Columbia a
                     privilege which he is especially debarred from by the law
                     of the Country where the debt was incurred, though at the
                     same time he is relying upon that very law as a defence
                     to an action to recover that debt.  The B. Columbian time
                     of limitation, after which a debt cannot be recovered, is
                     say 6 years.  The Californian is say 2 years, but then the
                     benefit of that limitat
n is only given to those who have
                     resided the two years in California. By this Ord
ce,
                     as it is now framed, the debtor who has incurred the debt
                     in California is to be allowed, fairly enough, to prove
                     as a defence, that the Californian time of limitation—say
                     2 years—has expired, but then by the latter part of Clause
                     5 he is to be allowed to do this though he has not resided
                     the 2 years in California.  Curiously enough the like clause
                     was allowed in the 
Vancouver Island Act of 
1861.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     I would not disallow this Act, as the only obnoxious part is the
                     last paragraph in sec. 5, but the Govr should be informed that an
                     amendment is required before the Act can be confirmed.  And
                     he shd be instructed to procure such amendment.