Public Offices document.
Minutes (2), Other documents (1), Marginalia (1).
Murdoch sends Elliot a review of the problems caused in
British Columbia by flaws in the Regulations for the preemption of unsurveyed Land,
along with his approval of the steps Douglas has taken to resolve the issue.
I have to acknowledge your letter of 12th instant,
with a despatch from the Governor of British Columbia, reporting
a misapprehension which had arisen in the Crown Land Office
of that Colony in respect to the Regulations for the preemption
of unsurveyed Land, and the confusion to which it was calculated
to give rise.
2. By a Proclamation bearing date 14th Febry 1859
it is provided that unsurveyed Land in British Columbia shall
be sold by auction—or, after having been once put up to auction,
by private contract. By a subsequent Proclamation of 4th
Jany 1860, it is provided that unsurveyed Land may be "preempted" to the extent of 160 acres and that as soon as the
Survey shall come up to it the preemptor or his assigns shall
be entitled to purchase the Land at the established price of
Crown Land, provided he or they shall have been in continuous
occupation. A later section of the Proclamation (section 7)
is in the following words:
Any person authorized to acquire Land under the
provisions of this Proclamation may purchase, in addition
to the Land preempted in manner aforesaid, any number of
Acres not otherwise appropriated, at such rate as may be
fixed by the Government at the time when such Land shall
come to be surveyed, not to exceed 10s/- per acre—5s/- to
be paid down and the residue at the time of Survey.
3. Governor Douglas points out that the obligation of
Residence and improvement which attaches to the "preempted"
Land described in the first part of the Proclamation applies
also of necessity to the additional land "purchased" under
this section—otherwise he says it would be impossible to
identify the Land so "purchased," or consequently to secure
the purchasers in the safe enjoyment of it. The Commissioner
of Crown Lands, having overlooked this necessity, has issued
to purchasers a document called a "Certificate of Title," which
the Governor states is mere waste paper.
4. To remedy the confusion which might thus be created the
Governor addressed a Circular to the District Magistrates
explaining the exact effect of the Proclamation of4 Jany 1860
in regard to unsurveyed Land, and furnishing them with Forms of
the documents to be issued under that Proclamation. He also
addressed a letter to the Commissioners of Lands announcing
his intention to issue a further Proclamation to declare that
all unsurveyed Land taken under the preemption Act is to be held
on conditions of continuous residence, & prohibiting him from
issuing in future any conveyance or Certificate of Title for
preempted Land.
5. These measures will probably have the effect desired,
as it is not likely that any, considerable extent of unsurveyed
Land can have been disposed of by the Commissioner of Lands under
"Certificates of Title." At the same time it is just to the
Commissioner to state that the terms of the 7th Section of
the Proclamation of 4th Jany 1860 would certainly bear
the interpretation he put on them,
I agree. The section is very ill worded & I cannot be surprised
at the misapprehension.
and that the implied condition which Governor Douglas says necessarily attached to Land so purchased is by no means self evident. It is,
however, clearly desirable that Land disposed of before Survey should be subject to
the condition of continuous occupation until the survey comes up to it.
Sir F. Rogers
Answer the Govr's despatch 36/6743 approving the instructions which he
had issued to avoid for the future the error which had occurred in the
grant of unsurveyed Land in the Colony.
Draft reply, Newcastle to Douglas, No. 86, 21 August 1861,
approving the instructionsDouglas sent to Colonel Moody and to the District Magistrates,
designed to eliminate problems with the regulations regarding the granting of unsurveyed
land in British Columbia.