M Elliot
I thought it advisable to investigate this claim before we
proferred it to the Governor, and
M Pennell has been so obliging
as to supply me with a mem which I have gone over carefully.
The
result is that the claim may be reduced to a small compass.
£155.9.4 of said claim has been paid & the Adm
informed thereof on the 18 Jan last.
£14.13.4 has also been paid by the
Crown Agents; but as we have not
formally informed the Adm of this fact it remains that we should do
so: and we can make mention of it in the letter wh. will have to be
written in my division. Further we have told the C. Agents to pay
£69.18.2, & should now desire them to pay the percentage
money—£3.9.8—due on the supply to
the Colony of
B.C. together with £1.11.3 for supplies from the
Sutlej.
Therefore we have to explain to the Adm where
payments have been made & tell them that the C. Agents
have been directed to pay the residue amounting to
|
3. 9. 8 |
|
1.11 .3 |
£ |
5. 0.11 |
and instruct the Agents and the
Gov ac
c.
M Blackwood
This letter from the
Admiralty is incorrect and misleading—the facts
of the case are these. On the
4 of July 1865 the
Admiralty sent
in a claim for stores supplied to various Colonies amounting to
£243.10.6. This was composed of three sums as under
Items 1 & 2 have actually been paid to the
Admiralty, and of the
payment of the
larger of these two (£155.9.4) they have been informed.
(See letter to Adm
18 Jan/66 Gov/373/65 New Zealand). The
payment of the
Hong Kong item £14.13.4 has I learn from
M
Sargeaunt been made by the Agents but the
Admiralty have not been
informed of it's actual payment by this office—perhaps they should
now be told.
The history of the
British Columbia item to which the enclosure
to the present
Admiralty letter refers is
the claim of £73.7.10 made
as above was supposed here to belong to the
Foreign Office, it was
withdrawn by the
Admiralty accordingly—and was made on the Foreign
Office—but as a percentage is charged on Colonial Supplies which is
not in regard to those of other Departments—the percentage amounting
to £3.9.8 was deducted when the claim was made on the
F.O.—i.e. the
claim made on that Department was £69.18.2.
The
Foreign Office
repudiated it and it was renewed on this Department but the
Admiralty
made an omission in not then adding on the percentage again.
Consequently they made the claim £69.18.2 whereas it ought to have
been renewed as it originally stood £73.7.10.
The Agents have been told to pay £69.18.2 and the
Admiralty have
been informed that they have been desired to do so.
This is a mistake. We have not informed the
Admiralty.
It now remains to authorize the Agents to pay for the balance or
percentage
|
73. 7.10 |
|
69.18. 2 |
£ |
3. 9. 8 |
and the
Gov to pay
the the Agents.
By the foregoing it will be seen that the
Admiralty now make a
claim as outstanding of £243.10.6 which they had made in
July
/65—that they have already been informed of the actual payment of
£155.9.4—that £14.13.4 has also actually been paid, and that
instructions have been given of which the
Admiralty have been
informed for the payment of the £69.18.2. All that remains
now now
to be authorized to be paid to them is £3.9.8 on account of the
Bentinck Arm Expedition, together with the fresh claim which they make
for £1.11.3 for supplies from
H.M.S. Sutlej in
July 1864.