Sir F. Rogers
This is the first statement we have ever
recd of the Crown Revenue &
the expenses put upon that fund during any of the year's comprised in
Sir J. Douglas' period of
Govt at
V.C.I. The amounts confirm the
impression, always entertained by myself, that the Crown funds were
made to bear several charges for which provision ought properly to
have been made by the Legislature. For instance
Sir J. Douglas'
Salary—though appearing, as I remember in some of the Estimates laid
before the Assembly—has practically been paid out of the Crown
Revenue. It will be seen that the Crown fund has been in excess of
the exp
se and that the Estimate of this year, will, if realized,
leave a large balance in hand. The prospects, moreover, of still
further increments from the sale of Crown Lands, & the discovery of
gold, are by no means inconsiderable—the result of which will give
the
Govt a good vantage ground if ever the Assembly should enter the
negotiation about a Civil List. But from the way this Assembly is
going on I indulge the hope that we may be spared much further
trouble with them on this head and that a junction with
B. Columbia
by becoming an act of necessity, may solve that difficulty.
Strictly speaking I think that these accounts of a Crown fund should
be communicated to the Treasury. But that Dep
t—combined with the
Comm
rs of Audit—will pick holes in the past expenditure which it
wd be perfectly useless for us to make any remonstrance about to
the Colony. The fact is that in
Sir J. Douglas' time he paid all the
expenses of the public service of
V.C. Island out of the Crown Estate
there and the funds of
B.C., and
V.C. Isl. in great measure
escaped taxation.
Mr Ebden
1.What led to the demand for accounts?
2.Under what authority are the follg items levied
Harbour Dues 1859-1860
Postage 1859
Fees, Supreme Court 1863
Am I right in supposing that what has apparently happened is this.
The Crown Fund and General Rev
e have been expended indiscriminately.
Now the two are separated. An account is made of all that has been
recd wh ought to have been paid into the Cr. Fund, and of all that
has been paid out which ought to have
been paid out of the Crown Fund
and that the difference is assumed to have been advanced for matters
wh ought to have been paid for out of the
Genl Revenue.
If so I do not wonder at the Assembly's repudiating the charge.
It seems to me the total claim (thus calculated) is for
29.034 Balance to
Sir J Douglas
13.611
42,645 Say 8000£
But against this is possibly to be set as
Mr Blackwood
[said] a considerable part of the foll
g sums
Harbour Dues 1262
2127
3,389
Postage 245
51
194
Net fees of Sup. Court—several thousand pounds.
Per contra it is impossible to say how much of the Salaries are
really payable from the Cr. Fund.
The Assembly's vote for Salaries unless I am mistaken was contingent
upon the Land Fund being handed over? Was it treated as if it was
absolute? In whole or in part?
In
1864 Governor Kennedy wrote home that the public accounts had
never been audited in England and enquired whether this practice had
the Sanction of the Secretary of State.
He was told (
1st August 1864) that the General Revenue accounts did
not require to be audited in England but that the Crown Revenue
accounts ought to have been so audited, and he was instructed,
failing the absorption of the Crown Revenue into the General Revenue
by the House of Assemblys acceptance of the proposed civil list, to
send home from year to year, as to the Crown Revenue, estimates of
Revenue and Expenditure for approval and
accounts for audit, and
under any circumstances to send home a statement of past receipts &
expenditure.
1
9813/
65
He has now sent home a Statement of receipts & expenditure from 1859
to 1864, together with a brief estimate of the Revenue and Expenditure
for the current year.
The first recorded authority under which Harbour dues were raised
wd appear to be a local Act passed in
December 1860 fixing the dues and constituting the receipts from
them a separate fund by the name of the "Harbour Fund."
Question 1. On what authority are Harbour Dues wh to 1860 counted as
Crown Revenues. Ansr. No authority appears. When an Act was
passed on the subject, the Dues ceased to be treated as Crown
Revenue.
This Act was repealed in
1862 and in its place are now in force
"The
Victoria Harbour Dues Act
1862" and "the Ports of Entry Act
1863." Not one of these three Acts however has anything to do with
the Harbour Revenue of
1860 or previous years except perhaps to imply
that it was
not necessarily Crown Revenue.
No indication appears of the authority under which postage has been
levied, except that in the Blue Book
1863 the postage amounting to
£465 is stated to have been levied under the "Governors
instructions."
Your question answers as to passage. Why postage is continued as
Crown Reve in 1859 but not afterwards does not appear.
Blue Book 63 and bound Vol. 1857
Fees in the Inferior or Summary Court of Civil Justice are payable
under an order of the Supreme Court dated the 6th of April 1857.
Fees in the Supreme Court are payable under an order of the Court
dated the 3rd of April 1860 and subsequent orders.
(N.B. The fees under the Bankruptcy Act
1862 are appropriated to the
purposes of the Bankruptcy Court.)
9249/63 [and] 10019/63
Governor Douglas sent home accounts of Revenue & Expenditure from
1
Jany 1862 to 30 June 1863 which go to justify your conjecture as to
the indiscriminate appropriation of the Crown and General Revenues.
Printed enc. 8114/64
I do not know what has guided
Captain Kennedy in the determination of
what is Crown Revenue and I believe that there has been no rule for
its appropriation except that (
30th April 1864) the Governor was
instructed to pay out of it his own Salary (£3000) and the Colonial
Secretarys (£600) and (?) Surveyor General's quite recently.
1
9813/
65
All that can safely be said appears to me to be that a statement has
been furnished of items of Revenue which are assumed to have been
Crown Revenue, together with a Statement of items of expenditure
which are assumed to have been defrayed (justifiably or not) from
that Revenue, leaving a balance on
31 Decr 1864 of $26550.70
i.e. there ought to have been, and was virtually, that balance, but
the money had been expended under note of indemnity of 30 June 64.
which has been actually expended under the promise of indemnity in
the 2
nd clause of the Resolution of Assembly of
30th June 1864.
9074/65, see estimates (sup) enc. No 8 and
Governor's message No 11—enc. 9
9813/64, see also Govrs message enc. 10 in 9074
The Governor inserted in the Supplementary estimates
1865 $34,066.20
instead of $26550.70
to which he now reports that the claim has been
reduced by audit.
1
6971/
64
Report from Committee enc. 10 in 9074
The difference however though great has nothing to do with the
Assembly's repudiation of the claim which proceeded upon the argument
that, by laying down on the
1st August 1864 that the audit of the
Crown Revenue should be placed on a proper footing prospectively,
Mr
Cardwell endorsed all previous expenditure of Crown Revenue. The
Assembly therefore repudiated the claim their vote of indemnity
notwithstanding.
Mr Cardwells instructions of
1 August 1864 were however quite remote
from the question now at issue.
The Salaries Act of
1860 voted certain salaries
Govr Col
Secy C Justice
Atty Gen. Treasurer Surveyor Gen. There
may have been [other?] justification for paying these Salaries out of
the Crown fund however—that otherwise the officers
wd have been
without legal Salary except the
Govr who had £3000 from
B. Columbia
& [the] Col.
Secy who at that time was also Col.
Secy of
B.C. &
had £700 or £800 as such.
out of the General Revenue but provided that they should not be paid
out of that Revenue until the surrender of the Crown Revenue. This
Act has been left unnoticed. The Salaries Act is a permanent Act,
but the sum necessary to pay
the salaries under it has since been
voted in separate Acts from year to year on the same condition.
9249/63 [and] 10019/63
The officers concerned, with the exception of the Governor,
wd appear
by the accounts received from
Sir Jas. Douglas to have drawn their
Salaries, the condition in the Salaries Act or Acts notwithstanding.
1
9813/
65
By the accounts received from
Governor Kennedy Sir Jas. Douglas wd
appear to have now drawn his arrears (if they can be called so) of
salary under the Acts of
1860 & since $13611 = £2835 nearly, or about
3 1/2 years salary at £800 a year—vir[tually] from
autumn of 1860 to
spring of 1864.
Captain Kennedy's intention is evidently to include it in the
expenditure defrayable from Crown Revenue and not to add it to the
$26,550.70.
This question of audit of Crown Revenue is so much mixed up with the
general administration of the Colony that I leave it in your hands,
merely stating what occurs to me.
My impression is that in all the
VCI financial questions the great
object to be arrived at is to get a fresh & firm start.
It is impossible to do more than conjecture from the papers sent home
why many of the different items of receipt & expenditure are classed
in Crown rather than General Revenue or why they are so classed in
one year rather than another.
I should anticipate no good from ripping up these accounts and I
should be disposed to treat the
Local Audit as final (if possible) up
to the end of
1863—unless
Govr Kennedy thinks that there is any
fraud or gross negligence
wh requires to be investigated and could
be investigated with profit.
After that period that is to say for 1864 and 1865 I wd require the
Crown accounts to be strictly separated from the General Revenue and
sent home for Audit as in Crown Colonies.
But, I suppose, Treasury concurrence would be necessary for this
species of amnesty.
I propose it because I imagine the financial affairs of
V.C.I. to
have been so conducted under
Gov. Douglas that by endeavouring to
audit the former
distinctly from General Revenues, we shall embark on
a task
wh we cannot effect, & shall have our attention carried away
from what we can effect—viz prospective separation of the accounts &
prospective regularity.
This waiver of audit previous to 1864 must not be considered as
affecting the claims of the Crown Revenue upon the General Revenue in
respect of past years: in respect to wh vide 9074/1865. The two
things have evidently no connexion.
At the same time I would in fact consent to a very liberal settlement
of these claims, if by such a settlement regularity was secured for
the future.
Practically the next step appears to me to write to the Treasury to
request that these papers
may be referred to the Audit Office, in
order that the Comm
s may advise this department as to the steps
wh
shd be taken & the instructions
wh should be given in order to
secure a proper audit of these accounts and suggesting that the
object should be to secure at once a complete audit for the future,
beginning from some comparatively recent date—as the
1st Jan. 1864
leaving the previous accounts about
wh much difficulty m
t be
expected to be treated separately as may be found practicable.