1. I think that if a Governor requires the Home
Govt to assist him
by submitting a case to the L. Off
rs of the Crown, he should assist
the H.G. by sending a clear statement of the
questions which he
desires to have asked, and of the facts on which the answer to those
questions depend. What he in fact does is to send us three columns
of a newspaper containing a variety of wide statements made by the
Ch. J. and then to tell us that the principle involved is so
important that he wants the opinion of the L. Off
rs.
2. However I have drafted a case and in sending out the answer, it
m
t, I think, be as well to send out the Boothly
Papers
These Papers have already been sent to the Govr. See 9762 & draft.
for instructions sake.
3.
And in sending out the opinion I
wd also observe that if the
Governor
shd at any time hereafter find it advisable to request the
opinion of the L Off
e in this country, the request should be
accompanied by a clear & specific statement of the questions to which
he required an answer and of the facts on which that answer depended,
with copies of all material documents (as in this instance of the
Corporation By Law) and that if in this case the information he
received was not exactly what he desired the defect will be due to
the imperfect mode of reference which he has adopted.
4. Add that altho'
Mr C. has obtained this [opinion?]
at his request,
the question does not appear to be really a question for the
Govt
but for the City Corporation with whom (as far as present appears)
it rests to consider in what manner they can
effectually establish
their own rights. Add that the
Govr will of course be aware that
the opinion of the L. Off
rs has no legal effect or authority in the
Supreme Court, and that the only mode of reversing in
V.C.I. a
decision given by the C.J. of that Colony is by bringing that decision
before the duly constituted Court of Appeal.