M Merivale
I have been unable to find copies of any very recent
Charters in the office, & am therefore unable to say how far
the present statement of
the Treasury is correct that the provision
objected to by this dep by the letter of
Oct 28/58 objected to by this
d by the letter of
Oct 28/58
"
has been inserted in all the Colonial Bank Charters of
recent years." You will see that it was
not inserted in
the annexed printed Charter of the
Bank of Australia which
simply vests a power of revocation in the Crown, without the
questionable addition practically placing the power in the
hands of 2
Lords of the Treasury. I understand the
Sec
of State might claim the right of advising the Crown—or at least
of jointly advising. I think the answer to this letter might
be that
Sir E.B. Lytton still thinks it objectionable in point
of principle that the
Lords of the Treasury should be empowered
to address the Crown independently of this department, in a
matter of such great importance to a Colony, as the revocation
of a Charter, but as their Lordships object to an express
provision for the
concurrenceconcurrence of the
Sec of State
Sir
E.B. Lytton w suggest that the form of provision as to
revocation, in the annexed Charter of the
Bank of Australia,
should be reverted to, under which the power of revocation
should be simply vested in the Sovereign without any
mention of a representation from 2
Lords of the Treasury.
On a recent occasion—viz in the case of the Oriental
Bank,
the Treasury acting on a similar Charter power vested in
2
Lords of the Treasury—gave the Bank authority to issue
notes in Mauritius with the concurrence of the Governor,
in the month of
June or
July, and did not inform the Secretary
of State that they had done so till
September. There have
been other instances in which the
Treasury have caused us much
perplexity
from not acquainting us sufficiently with
their proceedings in regard to Colonial matters. It
is certainly undesirable to raise a controversy between the
departments and therefore if any allusion is made to our
past experience of the use by
the Treasury of powers vested
in them independently of this department, it should be of a
general & inoffensive character.