No. 50
               
            
            
               8 August 1861
               
            
            
               I have the honor to forward to you herewith correspondence and
               Documents, as described in an accompanying Schedule, in connection
               with a recent application made on behalf of this Government to the
               Supreme Court of Civil Justice of 
Vancouver's Island, for an
               injunction to restrain the Hudsons
Bay
 Bay Company from further dealing
               with the land claimed by them under a possessory title prior to the
               Charter of Grant.
               
               2.  The Documents very clearly exhibit the nature of the case but it
               may be desirable that I should glance at the different heads and
               explain the reasons which induced the application to the Local Court.
               
            
            
               3.  As your Grace is aware from previous correspondence the Hudsons
               Bay Company claim certain sections of land in 
Vancouver's Island,
               amounting in the whole to about 3084 Acres, as being their private
property
               property by occupation prior to the grant to them of the Island under
               the Charter of the 
13th January 1849.  Her Majesty's Government
               reject this claim, and do not recognize any title to land in
               
Vancouver's Island other than that conveyed under the Charter.  The
               case has been referred to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council
               for decision.
               
               4.  On the 
27th April last the Surveyor General addressed me a
               letter representing that notwithstanding [that] the claim of the
               Hudson's Bay Company to the land in question was admittedly in
               dispute, the Company were still dealing with the land

 in all respects
               as if it were indisputably their private property; and not only so,
               but that they were carrying these dealings to such an extent as to
               involve a breach of faith both towards former purchasers for value,
               and the Public, as well as towards the Government, inasmuch as the
               map under which they had originally laid out and sold the Town Site
               and which had become the Official Map of the Town, having been
               accepted and registered in the Land Office, was disregarded by the
               Company, portions of land laid off on that Map as Streets and Public
               Reserves, and even a
portion
 portion of the Government Reserve upon which
               stand the Government Offices, having been recently sold by private
               Contract; and further that the Company were daily disposing by
               private contract of the different unsold portions of the
               beforementioned land.
               
               5.  I forwarded the Surveyor Generals Letter for the opinion of the
               Attorney General.  That functionary reported that if the case were as
               represented, the necessary steps could at once be taken towards
               putting a stop to such proceedings.
               
            
            
               6.  Upon consultation with the Attorney General, and understanding
the
               the caution conveyed to me in Your Graces Despatch N
o 1 of the 
2nd
                  Jan. 1860, respecting the non-recognition by Her Majesty's Government
               of the claim made by the Company as intended to point out my course
               of action, did circumstances require it; and considering that these
               circumstances did require from this Government some interference to
               protect the best interests of the Colony, and to maintain the credit
               of the Government, by preventing the further private alienation of
               land, some of which was actually required by the Colony, and all of
               which was of exceeding value to the Colony, and by protecting the
               Public
in
 in what they understood was guaranteed to them upon the faith
               of the Government, the Town having been laid out and the Reserves
               made prior to the expiry of the Charter of Grant, and when the
               control of all land was exercised by the Company, and they were
               viewed by the general Public as identical with the Government, I
               caused a letter to be addressed to the Attorney General authorizing
               him to take such proceedings as the case I put before him might seem
               to call for and justify.
               
               7.  The Attorney General accordingly filed an information
praying
 praying for
               an injunction as before stated.  The information was supported by
               full and complete affidavits.  No evidence was filed on behalf of the
               Hudsons Bay Company.  The Court however held that it could not grant
               the injunction sought upon the ground that the subject matter of the
               suit was in litigation in another and Superior Court, and that any
               action of the Court here might be construed into an attempt
               to forestal the action of the Court above.
               
               8.  I have therefore to report these circumstances to Your Grace, and
               to forward to you
all
 all the Documents in connection therewith, in order
               that, should Your Grace think fit, the same may be laid before the
               Judicial Committee of the Privy Council.
               
               9.  It will be perceived that by the action of this Government no
               interference was attempted with any portion of the land forming the
               actual sites of the Company's Establishments at 
Victoria.  To this it
               was considered the Company could probably obtain a good title upon
               payment of the fixed price of £1 per Acre, Her Majesty's Government
               having declined
to
 to purchase such Establishments upon the expiry of
               the Grant.  The injunction was intended only to apply to the other
               portions of the 3084 Acres, to which no such equitable and consistent
               claim could be advanced.
               
               10.  I trust that what has been done herein may be in accordance with
               the views of Your Grace under the circumstances detailed, and
               requesting instructions as to any further steps which it may be
               considered advisable to take.
               
            
            
               I have the honor to be
               My Lord Duke,
               Your Grace's most obedient
               and humble Servant
               
James Douglas
               
               Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
               
                
                  
                  
                     Schedule of enclosures transmitted with the despatch.
                     
                   
                  
                  
                     Surveyor General 
J.D. Pemberton to 
Douglas, 
27 April 1861,
                     asking to be empowered to apply for an injunction to stop further sales
                     of town land by the Hudson's Bay Company.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     Acting Attorney General 
George Hunter Cary to Acting Colonial
                     Secretary 
W.A.G. Young, 
27 April 1861, advising that the application
                     could at once be complied with, provided the title to the lands in
                     question was indeed "at issue in the Privy Council."
                     
 
                  
                  
                     Young to 
J. Despard Pemberton, 
30 April 1861, inquiring whether he had taken
                     steps in 
1858 to reserve land containing the source of 
Victoria's
                     water supply, the springs having recently been sold by the Hudson's
                     Bay Company to a private individual.
                     
 
                   
                  
                  
                     Pemberton to 
Young, 
2 May 1861, stating that he had reserved the
                     springs as instructed, and further complaining
                     of the company's disregard for reserved lands.
                     
 
                   
                  
                  
                     Series of sketch maps showing disputed lots in the vicinity of
                     James Bay, no dates.
                     
                   
                  
                  
                     Three copies of the official map of 
Victoria, 
1861, by 
J.D. Pemberton, one of which bears the notation "Colored to correspond with District Map. See note
                     written upon it."
                     
 
                  
                  
                     Copies of information, affidavits and judgment relative to the
                     injunction, pp. 322-387 on microfilm, as follows: Folio 1
                     Information; 17 Subpoena; 21 Affidavit of 
W.A.G. Young and exhibits
                     therein referred to; 45 Affidavit of 
W.A.G. Young and exhibits
                     therein referred to; 65 Affidavit of 
J.D. Pemberton and exhibits
                     therein referred to; 93 Affidavit of 
B.W. Pearse and exhibits therein
                     referred to; 97 Affidavit of 
H. Tiedemann and exhibits therein
                     referred to; 101 Affidavit of 
J.J. Cochrane and exhibits therein
                     referred to; 117 Judgment of 
Chief Justice David Cameron.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     Three drafts of indentures made between the Hudson's Bay Company and the Fur Trade
                     Reserve, no dates, including three maps (five pages).
                     
                   
                  
                  
                     Young to 
Cary, 
9 May 1861, enclosing documents to verify that title to the land was in dispute and requesting
                     that he proceed with the injunction (six pages).
                     
 
                   
                  
                  
                     Pemberton to 
Cary, 
9 May 1861, giving examples of the company's activities in respect to lands of disputed title.
                     
 
                   
                  
                  
                     Cary to 
Young, 
25 June 1861, advising that the Chief Justice had decided "that he would not grant any injunction,"
                     and requesting that 
Douglas forward copies of the proceedings and related documents for the information of the
                     Secretary of State.
                     
                     
 
                   
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
                
                  
                  
                     Rogers to Emigration Commissioners, 
5 October 1861, forwarding
                     copy of the despatch and the enclosures in original for their
                     observations.
                     
 
                   
            
            
               Documents enclosed with the main document (transcribed)
 
               
               
                  
                        Government Emigration Board
                        
                     
                        Park St, Westminister
                        
                     
                  18 Jany 1862
                  
                  Dear Sir
                  
 
               
               
                  Would you be kind enough to lend me the Papers relating to the
                  Injunction Suit instituted in 
Vancouver's Island against the Hudson's
                  Bay Company.  They were sent home in the Governor's Despatch of the
                  
8th August last, and reported on by me on the 
18th of October last.
                  
 
            
            
               
                  People in this document
                  
                        Blackwood, Arthur Johnstone
                  
                        Cameron, David
                  Cary, Attorney General George Hunter
                  
                        Cochrane, J. J.
                  
                        Douglas, Sir James
                  
                        Pearse,  Benjamin W.
                        
                  Pelham-Clinton, 5th Duke of Newcastle Henry Pelham Fiennes
                  Pemberton, Joseph Despard
                  Rogers, Baron Blachford Frederic
                  
                        Tiedemann, H.
                  Walcott, Stephen
                  Young, William Alexander George
                
               
                  Places in this document
                  Vancouver Island
                  Victoria