No. 65
I have the honor to acknowledge your Despatch No. 66 of the
31st of
August, forwarding the claims made by
Mr. Pemberton the Surveyor
General, and by
Mr. Pearse his Assistant, to certain portions
of of the
Surveyor General's Salary during
Mr. Pemberton's last absence in
England.
Mr. Pemberton, it seems, has a short time before the present
occasion been absent on leave for a period of 15 months. He returned to
the Colony in
March 1861.
In
April 1863 he proposed to
Sir James Douglas that he should come
home on full pay, but defraying his own expenses, in order to
superintend the construction of certain machinery: and the Governor
accordingly gave him
leave leave on those terms, remarking in his Report to
the Secretary of State that
Mr. Pemberton had undertaken that his
absence from the Colony should not exceed six months.
The
Duke of Newcastle in a Despatch to the governor of the
8th of
June, acquiesced, but with the remark that
Mr. Pemberton could not be
allowed to draw full Salary for a greater period than six months. This
Despatch of course did not reach the Colony until long after
Mr.
Pemberton had left it.
Mr.
Mr. Pemberton afterwards obtained, from the Secretary of State an
addition to his leave of three months and then another of two months but
I do not find that on either occasion any mention was made in the
letters to him of the limitation of his full pay to the original term
of six months .
In
December 1863 he asked for a further extension.
The Duke of
Newcastle animadverted on these repeated requests, and upon
Mr.
Pemberton's having deferred the last until it
scarcely scarcely left the
Secretary of State an option: but
Mr. Pemberton declared that this was
not the case, and was allowed at his own wish to withdraw his
application. The correspondence is enclosed. His whole leave
therefore amounted to eleven months, and as he quitted the Colony on the
2nd or
3rd of April 1863, it expired on the
2nd or
3rd of March 1864.
It now appears however, that he did not in fact arrive until the
26th of
March, or more than three weeks after the expiration of
his his leave.
Governor Douglas ordered full salary to be issued to
Mr. Pemberton
for the first six months of his absence, but afterwards appropriated
half to him, and half to his Assistant
Mr. Pearse who was doing the
duty.
Mr. Pearse however wishes to obtain half of the Surveyor
General's Salary for the original six months of his absence, and
Mr.
Pemberton applies for the moiety which has been withheld from him after
that period, so far at least, he adds, as the vote of
the the House will
admit, since he has no wish to interfere with any arrangement made for
the benefit of
Mr. Pearse.
I regret that I cannot instruct you to accede to
Mr. Pearse's
application. Since
Mr. Pemberton was allowed by the Governor to come
home for six on full salary, it is impossible to issue half of the
Salary of the same office to
Mr. Pearse. On the other hand I cannot but
entirely approve of
Governor Douglas's having afterwards assigned half
the Salary to
Mr. Pearse. This was conformable
to to rule, was equitable
in itself, and was undoubtedly the course which the Secretary of State
intended to be followed. It is sufficiently apparent from the
correspondence that no great value was attached to
Mr. Pemberton's
presence in England during the completion of a dredging-machine, being
only one of the numerous kinds of supplies which the Crown Agents
are quite familiar with furnishing to the Colonies. Nevertheless as
Mr.
Pemberton, in asking for more leave, recapitulated the conditions on
which
he he had come away from the Colony, and as he may plead that he
remained in this Country under an erroneous expectation as to salary,
derived from the official letters which granted him his extended leave,
I should not feel myself at liberty to refuse my sanction to your
allowing him all or any part of the second moiety of his half salary for
the period for which he has as yet only drawn one moiety in case you
have it in your power to do so from any Colonial funds
that that can lawfully
be so appropriated.
I have the honor to be
Sir,
Your most obedient
humble servant
Edward Cardwell
Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
Copy,
Pemberton to the
Duke of Newcastle,
24 December 1864, clarifying that his marriage was not "contingent" on him being granted his leave
of absence and requesting that the "reluctant" leave of absence be withdrawn.