I beg to apply to your Grace for the appointment of Judge to the
               Colony of 
Vancouver Island, now shortly to be vacant on the
               retirement of his Honor 
Mr Cameron the present Chief Justice.  I
               have had the honor to furnish to the Colonial Office testimonials in
               my favor on the occasion of my applying for a judgeship at Port Natal
               in the summer of 
1861 an appointment then erroneously supposed to be
               vacant copies of which I understand to have been taken, & to which I
               beg now to refer.
               
               I have practised my profession in this Colony

 for more than a year,
               and I believe I may challenge any enquiries you may be pleased to
               make that I have conducted myself with ability, & shewn myself
               possessed of professional knowledge fully adequate to the
               administration of Justice here or elsewhere in her Majesty's
               Colonies—and thus I have maintained to the utmost of my power the
               character & honor of my profession.  I left England to practice in
               the Colonies fully relying on what I understood to be the practice of
               the Colonial Office not to make appointments of Judges at home,
               unless convinced from the advice of the Governor of a Colony, that
               there was no one in that Colony qualified to occupy the position of
               Judge.
               
               I am aware that there is a resolution of the House of Assembly of
               this Colony to the effect that a retiring pension to the present
               Chief Justice of this Colony would not be given unless his successor
               be appointed from home thereby implying that in their judgment for
               some reason or another, no

 barrister in this Colony is eligible for
               the honor.  I believe I am entirely justified in saying that this
               resolution of the House of Assembly was not founded in any conviction
               of my own personal unfitness for the office, but upon a conviction of
               what was supposed to be advisable for the general interests of the
               Colony.
               
               I need hardly say that on general grounds, the passing over barristers
               of conduct and character without grave grounds of disqualification
               acts as a direct injury to the Colony, in depriving it of the
               adherence of an honorable & efficient bar, & tends to lower & degrade
               the tone of the profession, and I think your Grace will be convinced
               that there is no state of circumstances obtaining in this Colony,
               which should prevent a man of firmness & integrity, apart from
               questions of personal qualification, from doing his duty as a judge.
               
            
            
               I respectfully ask your Grace not lightly to consider the privilege
               of the Crown in appointing Judges in accordance with sound and
               established Colonial principle & practice, and I further

 entreat your
               Grace not to expose those now practicing at the bar of this Colony,
               to the humiliation which each and all of us must feel at the entire
               bar being passed over as unfit for the bench.  A slur which must
               pursue us in whatever Colony or place we may hereafter practice our
               profession.
               
To His Grace the Duke of 
Newcastle K.G.
               
               One of Her Majestys Principal Secretary of State
               
               for the Colonies &c
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  
                     Private Secy
                     
                  
                  See 4049.
                     
                  
                  
                     Whatever may be the fitness of the writer for the Office a general
                     ansr to his request is, at present, the only one, which ought, I
                     think, to be returned.
                     
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  Sir F. Rogers
                     I pass this through your hands.  I have little doubt that you will
                     think (as the Colonial Assembly does) that the next Chief Justice had
                     better be sent out from home.
                     
 
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                     Or at least not from the Colony itself.
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
               
               
                  
                  
                     Ansd 18 June that a record has been made of his application.
                     
                  
                  
                  
                   
                
            
            
               Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
               
                
                  
                  
                     W. Lindsay to 
Fortescue, 
31 May 1864, acknowledging his note and
                     promoting the application of 
Wood while questioning the policy which
                     would appoint a man from home
                     when past custom has been to promote someone from within the colony.
                     
 
                  
                  Minutes by CO staff
                  
                  
                     
                     
                        I did not, of course, state this in general terms.  I spoke of 
V. Id
                        itself.