Confidential
Downing Street
14 November 1868
Sir,
I have to acknowledge your Despatch of the 3rd of August 1868,
respecting the reservation of laws for the signification of Her
Majesty's pleasure.
A misapprehension has evidently existed in consequence of the use
in the rule of Council No. 43 of the term reserve which was
sanctioned by the Secretary of State by Despatch of the 3rd of July
1865, No. 37.
In no Colony can laws be made except by the authority which is
legally empowered to make them.
The sole instrument which in
British Columbia gives the power to
make laws is the Order in Council of
11th June 1863, and the only
authority to which such power is given is the Governor with the advice
and consent of the Council. No share in that power is given to
the
Queen who can only disallow Laws but is not under any circumstances
enabled to take part in making them.
In
British Honduras the Instrument which gives power to make Laws
is the Local Act 16
Vict: Cap 4. It gives that power to the Governor
and the Legislative Body, i.e. in
British Honduras the Assembly, and is
so far like the
British Columbia Order in Council. But like the laws of
Australia and Canada, it adds a qualification not contained in the Order
in Council of
June 11th 1863. For it authorizes the Governor under
certain circumstances to do what is technically described as "reserving
a Bill for the signification of Her Majesty's pleasure."
The effect of thus reserving a bill, as you doubtless remember and
will see by reference to the Act, is to enable the Governor instead of
assenting himself to a Bill to transfer the power of assenting to her
Majesty in person.
Thus you see that the power of transferring to Her Majesty the
power of taking a part in Legislation is unequivocally given to the
governor in one Colony and unequivocally withheld from him in the other.
I now come to the consideration of the 10th clause of the Order in
Council of
1863, and the 43rd Rule of Council cited erroneously as 42nd
Clause in Confidential Despatch of
3rd August made under Authority of
that Clause and to which you refer as giving what the Order in Council
itself does not give. On this I first observe that the power given to
the Council of making rules for their own proceedings in
British
Columbia does not include the power of investing Her Majesty with the
power not otherwise given her of assenting to Bills in England. The
assent of
the Queen in England forms no part of the proceedings of the
Legislative Council in
British Columbia.
You will further see on reading the 43rd Rule that the Council have
not in fact attempted thus to exceed their powers.
It is true that they have used the word "reserve" in the sense of
deferring or referring, but they had not used the technical phrase
"reserve for the signification at Her Majesty's pleasure." The rule
does not therefore like the
British Honduras Loco, empower you to
transfer to Her Majesty the function of assenting to a Bill, but only
established or recognized your right to consult the Home government
before assenting to the Bill yourself. This of course you can do and
could have done whether the Council had authorized you to do it or not.
You have therefore two courses open to you in case a Bill of
doubtful propriety is presented to you.
1. To require the insertion of a suspending Clause and to assent
to it on the insertion of that Clause.
2. To refer the Bill home for Her Majesty's consideration and to
postpone your own assent to the Bill till you have received
instructions.
There is one point to which it may be well I should draw your
attention and which is suggested by the language of the 5th paragraph of
your Despatch viz. the extreme danger of supposing that any power and
especially any technical power is "inherent" in you as Governor which
you cannot shew to be expressly or implicitly given by your Commission
and Instructions or by Imperial or local laws.
I have no doubt that this explanation will prevent any future
misapprehension.
But as it is evident that the word reserve has received a different
interpretation in the Colony from that which was here understood to be
evidently its real meaning I think it would be advisable to take any
convenient opportunity to substitute the word "refer" for the somewhat
misleading word "reserve" in the 43rd Rule of Council.