 
                  
                  
                     M Herbert
                     Suspension of 
M Humphreys from his Seat in the Legislative
                     Council for an abusive speech at a Public meeting ag the
                     Council—& the Comm of Lands.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     The offensive speech was in terms as follows—according to the
                     Minutes of the Council.
                     
                     
                  
                  
                     That as to the Lands & Works Office 
Duke Trutch or Lord Trutch
                     (Commis of Lands & Works)
                     had for the past 4 or 5 years control of the Office without the
                     slightest check upon him & that about $500,000 had passed thro'
                     his hands of which no account could be obtained & that when an
                     inquiry into the conduct of the said Officer & the disposal of
                     the monies was asked for in the Legislative Council it

 was
                     "burked" or choked off by the Officials with what object he
                     would leave it to the Public to say. That he felt degraded as a
                     man by taking his Seat in that infamous rascally rotten
                     arrangement across the Bay (The Legislative Council).
                     They call it an honor to be a member of that House—for
                     my part I can't see any honor in it whenever I go over I
                     feel degraded & ashamed.
                     
                     
                     To this language the Council expressed the readiness to accept
                     the following apology.
                     
                     
                     It was not my intention by any words said by me at a Public
                     Meeting to express anything derogatory to the dignity of the
                     Legislative Council or of any one of

 its Members, nor to cast
                     any imputation of dishonesty or improper conduct whatsoever on
                     the Chief Com of Lands & Works or any one connected with that
                     Dep—& if any words then spoken by me convey such an
                     impression I hereby retract them & express my regret at having
                     used them.
                     
                     
                     M Humphreys does not appear to have denied the language
                     imputed to him—but declined to make the apology as above—but
                     offered to make the following
                     
                     
 
                  
                  
                     If I used any language at a recent Public Meeting reflecting
                     upon the honesty of the Chief Com of L & W I sincerely
                     regret having used it as such was not my intention to do so by
                     any words that I then

 used.
                     
                     And if I used on the same occasion & at the same place any
                     language that has been interpreted as disrespectful to the
                     Council as such instead of being in denunciation of a
                     Non-Representative Council I regret it as my language was
                     directed ag the Non-Representative Constitution of the Council.
                     
                     
                  
                  
                     This was not deemed satisfactory by 15 to 1.
                     
                  
                  
                     The Council therefore passed a Resolution asking the 
Gov to
                     suspend 
M Humphreys, & this with the unanimous approval

 of the
                     Executive Council the Governor has done.
                     
                     The Governor's power of suspension is under Clause 14 of the
                     Order in Council of 
11 June
                        1863—to be conducted in accordance with Clause 22 of 
Gov.
                        Musgrave's Commission.
                     
                     M Humphreys from the language he used deserved no
                     consideration, tho' I hardly see how he could sign the apology
                     dictated by the Council—tho' his own was at the same [time]
                     insufficient, & he must as it appears to me be left to take

                     [the] consequence of his use of violent unjustifiable &
                     intemperate language.
                     
 
                  
                  
                   
                  
                  
                     I think it was altogether a mistake of the Council to take this
                     matter up so seriously, and to press it so far. 
M Humphreys
                     used language which was calculated to give offence, but he
                     offered what seems to me a sufficient apology, and 
M Trutch,
                     the Commissioner of Crown Lands, whose administration of his
                     office he had attacked, and who dictated the terms of the
                     apology which the Council would accept, was asking too much when
                     he required 
M Humphreys to say that he had not desired to
                     impute any improper conduct whatever to the Chief Commissioner
                     of Works, or any one connected with that Department. The
                     resolution was adopted by so large

 a majority of the Council
                     that it is difficult to refuse to confirm the suspension. I
                     think however that the case might be reviewed, and the Council
                     invited to rescind their resolution.
                     
                     A reply might be made to the effect that it is always much to be
                     regretted when language unnecessarily strong and liable to be
                     misconstrued is used at meetings with reference to the public
                     men or institutions of a colony, and 
M Humphreys cannot have
                     failed after reflection to perceive that he acted very
                     improperly in holding up the Chief Commissioner of Crown Lands,
                     and the Council of which he was a member, to the contempt of an
                     excited assemblage. 
Lord Granville is however on the whole
                     disposed to think that the apology tendered by 
M Humphreys,
                     explaining as it did that he intended no reflection upon the
                     honesty of the Chief Commissioner, nor any disrespect to the
                     Council itself, but merely dissatisfaction at its
                     non-representative constitution, was such as the Council might
                     have accepted without any derogation from its dignity. It
                     appears in fact to 
Lord Granville that there is no substantial
                     difference between the apology dictated by the Council, and that
                     tendered by 
M Humphreys, except that the former required 
M
                        Humphreys to declare that he had not intended to impute any
                     improper conduct whatever to the Chief Commissioner, or any one
                     connected with the Lands and Works Office. With regard to this
                     point it is unnecessary for Lord Granville to observe that if
                     
M Humphreys desired to express dissatisfaction with the manner
                     in which the business of that Department was conducted, the
                     proper course would have been for him to do so in his place in
                     the Council. As however he was ready to declare that he made no
                     charge

 against the character of the Chief Commissioner, it was
                     perhaps requiring more than an opponent of the Government could
                     concede, when he was asked to state that he had had no intention
                     of expressing dissatisfaction with the manner in which that
                     gentleman's department was administered. It is indeed obvious
                     that 
M Humphreys believed (
Lord Granville trusts quite
                     wrongly) that the administration of the Crown Lands office was
                     open to censure, and he could not therefore be expected to
                     express confidence in it.
                     
                     In making these observations 
Lord Granville does not desire to
                     be understood as justifying in any degree 
M Humphreys conduct
                     at the meeting, which he strongly reprobates, but looking to the
                     length of time during which 
M H. will have been under
                     suspension, and hoping that the Legislative Council may now be
                     prepared to accept an apology which in their first moments of
                     indignation they deemed inadequate, 
Lord Granville thinks that
                     the requirements of the case would be met if the Resolution of
                     the Council were rescinded, upon 
M Humphreys presenting
                     himself before the Council and making the apology
                     
                     
                     

                           
                           An apology of the nature of that….
                           
                        
                     
                     
                     which he had previously offered. It would be very satisfactory to 
Lord
                        Granville if both parties could agree in this course—but
                     otherwise he would not be prepared to withhold his confirmation
                     of a decision recommended by so large a majority of the Council.