M Elliot
                     I find some difficulty in expressing an opinion
                     on this subject, being but imperfectly informed on the
                     subject of the rights of the 
Hudson's Bay Company, &
                     conflicting claims of these parties, in the vast territory
                     covered by this Supplement Charter. But as I understand
                     the subject, it stands as follows:
                     
 
                  
                  
                     The existing Charter of this Bank (which I have procurred from
                     
the Treasury & is annexed), authorises it "to establish
                     Banks of issue & deposit" & "to carry on the general
                     business of banking," within the "Colonies of 
Vancouver's
                        Island & 
B. Columbia" & not beyond them. This proposed
                     Supplemental Charter (see top of page 6) extends these
                     banking powers to "any city, town, or place in North
                     America to the westward of 95 W. Longitude, "being
                     within any of our Colonies possessions or settlements,"
                     that it is to say it extends them to a large portion
                     of the territories of the 
Hudson's Bay Company, & to
                     various other territories not yet comprised, I believe,
                     in any Colony, but not to any portion of Canada, (if the
                     map annexed to the Parliamentary Papers of 1850,
                     Ho. of Commons Paper No 542 of 1850, herewith, is tolerably correct).
                     
 
                  
                  
                     This extension of power, so far as it applies to the Hudsons Bay
                     Territory is,

 I apprehend, at variance with the
                     
                     
                     
                        
                           These privileges are declared valid by the 
Att
                           & 
Sol Gen Jervis & 
Romilly, PP. 
12 July 1850, p. 7—but
                           are declared invalid by 
Att & Sol. 
Gen
                           Bethick & Keating, PP. 224-260 of 
31 July and 
11 Aug 1857.
                           
 
                        
                      
                     
                     exclusive privileges of trade &c conferred by the Charter of
                     Charles 2. This Charter (see House of Commons' Paper N
                     547 of 1842 herewith) contains an injunction to British Subjects
                     
                     that none of them directly or indirectly do visit, haunt, frequent or
                     trade traffic or adventure by way of merchandize into or from any of
                     the said territories &c &c other than the said Governor & Company &c &c
                     unless it be by the license & agreement of the said Governor & Company
                     in writing first had & obtained under their common seal
                     
                     & the Crown undertakes in the same Charter that
                     
                     we our heirs & successors will not grant liberty, license
                     or power to any person, or persons whatever, contrary
                     to the tenor of these letters patent to trade traffic
                     or inhabit into or upon any of the territories &c &c without the
                     consent of the said Governor and Company or the most part of them.
                     
                     
 
                  
 
                  
                  
                     As regards the other territories—I am aware of
                     no objection to the powers being extended to them, but
                     it might be
                     
                     
                     
                        
                           I do not like a
                           new requirement. I w be satisfied with the old one, viz—that
                           their operation sh be subject to Local Law.
                           
                        
                      
                     
                     advisable to require the consent of the
                     Governor, or chief authority of the Colony—if any,
                     as regards places beyond the Hudson's Bay
                     Territories; (in case future Colonial Governments may be created).
                     
 
                  
                  
                     If I am right in the above; 
the Treasury might
                     be informed (as there appears no question of the
                     propriety of the other provisions of the Supplementary
                     Charter) that 
M Cardwell is prepared to concur
                     in the Draft, if amended by the insertion of clauses
                     at page 6, to make the operations of the Bank in the new territory
                     
                     subject to its obtaining the consent in writing of
                     the Governor or chief authority of any Colony,
                     within which such city, town or place may be
                     situated, and subject also to its obtaining any
                     consent

 or license required by the rights and
                     privileges of the 
Hudson's Bay Company.
                     
                     
 
                  
                  
                     I presume 
Sir F. Rogers, who is familiar with the
                     question of rights in these territories, should be asked
                     to say whether I am right or wrong in the above view.
                     
 
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  Sir F. Rogers
                     This requires your inspection. I confess that at first
                     sight this Banking Company appears to be rather stealing a
                     march. I can hardly think that the 
Gov is called upon
                     to give Banking powers over districts in which there exists
                     no Colony or settled form of Government, and it's doing so
                     might lead to inconveniences which cannot be foreseen. As
                     to 
San Francisco, California, I do not properly understand
                     how the British 
Gov is to be concerned
                     in conferring powers of trading and banking in a foreign Country.
                     
 
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                     M Fortescue
                     I approach the question from rather a different point
                     of view from 
M Elliot. I should be disposed to assume
                     that the existence of a Bank in a new country was prima facie
                     an advantage—and that if the Bank of 
B.C. was prepared
                     to extend their operations to the center of N America
                     (under what the Tr consider proper precautions) it was
                     true wisdom to meet them halfway. It seems to me (prima facie)
                     that the extension of their business is a natural consequence
                     of success, 
w success is (prima facie) evidence that
                     their operations are of public benefit.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     I should be disposed to ans that 
M C saw no reason
                     for objecting to the proposed Charter but 1. that it
                     
sh be clearly laid down that their banking privileges
                     in any present or future British Colony within the
                     extended limits (as e.g. in 
Red River) included in the
                     Supplemental Charter 
sh be subject to Colonial
                     Legislation as provided in page 5 of the original Charter, and
                     
 
                  
                  
                     2. after referring to the clauses in the H.B.C.
                     Charter quoted by 
M Strachey—that

                     
                     without pronouncing on the
                     validity of these provisions which validity had been
                     admitted and denied by successive 
Law Officers of the Crown,
                     it would be undesirable to assume the power of granting to
                     the 
British Columbia Bank any powers which would involve
                     Her Majesty's Government in the Charge, even though
                     unfounded, of infringing the privileges already granted
                     to the 
Hudson's Bay Company.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     That it might therefore be advisable either to require
                     the Bank to produce the written consent of the Governor
                     and Company to the establishment of a Bank within the
                     Hudsons Bay Territory, or to provide that

 the privileges
                     granted to them are subject to the necessity of obtaining that consent.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     The boundary of the 95 meridian would include a trifling
                     corner of country which it might hereafter be convenient
                     to include in Canada—but the tract is so small and the
                     chance so problematical that it is scarcely worth considering.
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                     Would not the reference to Local Laws [cure?]
                     
                     this? Practically no doubt it w—but I am not
                     quite sure how far it has been the practice of the
                     Home Gov to grant Banking privileges exercisable in Canada,
                     even subject to Local Laws?