No. 66
               
            
            
            
            
               I have had under my consideration your Despatch No. 64 of the 31st
                  of August and the correspondence by which it was accompanied relative to
               the claim of the late Attorney General to certain fees which you
               required him to refund into the Colonial Treasury.
               
            This 
            
            
               This correspondence raises the general question whether the
               Attorney General of 
Vancouver Island is entitled to receive fees for
               work done for the Colonial Government.
               
               Although I informed you in my Despatch No. 19 of the 
11th of July
               that a Colonial Attorney General is generally speaking not at liberty to
               charge the Government for his services, yet in the case of 
Vancouver
                  Island, as the Salary assigned to that Office is only Three hundred
               pounds [£300] a year, and as the Government work seems to be of some
               considerable amount, I
do
 do not think that he can be required to do it for
               that Salary.
               
               I therefore consider that the Attorney General must under present
               circumstances be paid for his services and that in the absence of any
               agreement to the contrary he is entitled to the usual fees.  If
               therefore in the present instance it is true in point of fact that 
Mr.
                  Cary's charges were the usual charges in such cases, which there can be
               no difficulty in ascertaining in the Colony, I am of opinion that he
               should receive them.
               
               If on the contrary the
assessment
 assessment of the taxing master is to be
               considered as a decision of this point (i.e. if it is a taxation not as
               between suitors, but as between Attorney and Client) then the Government
               should retain the money which 
Mr. Cary has refunded.