I have the honor to forward to Your Lordship a communication
               from the Liquidators of the Queen Charlotte Island Coal Mining
               Company with its enclosures, relating to a claim which
they
 they
               prefer for a Premium, offered in what appears to me to have been
               a somewhat irregular manner,
               
               
               
               
               by the Government of the former Colony of 
British Columbia, for the
               first shipment of Two hundred Tons of Coal from the Colony.
               
               2. I have not regarded myself as at liberty to recognize the
               validity of this claim, nor felt that
I ought
 I ought to recommend it to
               the recognition of the present Legislature of the now United Colony.
               
               3. No provision of any fund for the payment of this Premium was
               ever made by the Legislative Council. At the time when it was
               offered the Mainland of 
British Columbia formed a government
               separate from 
Vancouver Island, which
already
 already possessed Coal
               mines in successful operation; and the object in view was to
               establish a rivalry. The Premium was not claimed before the
               Union of the two Colonies, nor until Six Years after the date of
               the Notice in the Gazette.
               
               
               
               
               The present Legislature is
               constituted differently from the Council by which it was authorized.
               
               
               
               
               And the Coal in respect of
which
 which the bonus is
               claimed, shipped in 
1870, does not now answer the description of
               "the first Coal shipped from the Colony."
               
               
               
                  
                     Qy is there anything in this?
                     
                  
                
               
               No fund had been specially provided,
               
               
               
                  
                     No occasion until required.
                     
                  
                
               
               and I regarded the offer of the Premium as having lapsed from
               efflux of time
               
               
               
               
               or being revoked by
               the subsequent change in the condition and circumstances of the
               Colony, and no longer as binding
upon
 upon the present government.
               
               4. I do not view with favor the principle involved in the
               payment of such Premiums.
               
               
               
                  
                     
                     Probably this is too large a condemnation of the previous system.
                     
                  
                
               
               They do not induce or sustain
               any enterprise which will not otherwise be found profitable.
               The history of this Coal Company which is now in liquidation is
               an example in illustration.
               
               5. In any case the amount could not now be
paid
 paid without a
               reference to the local Legislature for authority at the next
               Session after Union and this has been pointed out to the applicants.
               
               
               
                  
                     Where? He refuses (last par of enclosure K) to refer
                     the claim to the "next Legislative Council."
                     
                  
                
               
               
                  (There has been an intermediate Session since the date of
                     
                     that letter 23 Dec/70.)
                     
                  
                
               
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  
                     M Meade
                     In 
1864 the Legislative Council of 
B. Columbia (before the Union
                     with 
Vancouver) offered a premium of £500 for the 1
                     200 Tons of good Coal produced & shipped from the Colony.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     In April 1870 Queens Charlotte Coal C (at least the
                     liquidators on behalf of) ask what proof the Gov require to
                     enable them to submit their claim to the £500.
                     
                  
                  
                     The Governor meets this by

 saying that "the present Legislative
                     Council of the United Colony is not responsible, nor the 
Gov
                     nor are there any Funds from which the payment could be made."
                     & again "if there had ever been any legislative enactment the
                     engagement would undoubtedly have been binding—that the
                     difficulty is that there is no such enactment or legal provision
                     & His Excellency can only presume that the Legislature & the
                     
Gov regarded

 the offer as having lapsed from efflux of time &
                     that their was no doubt the circumstances of the Colony had
                     changed since the offer was made" & again "His Excl. has no
                     legislative Authority for making the payment & is expressly
                     forbidden by his instructions from making payments without such
                     authority."
                     
                     I do not feel that that is quite a fair way of meeting the
                     claim. The offer was a very
                     ill advised one probably, but still it was made & had never been

                     rescinded, & I should have thought it was just as binding on the
                     United Legislature, as it would have been on the Legislative
                     Council of 
B. Columbia before the Union.
                     
                     I think that the Gov ought to have told them to submit their
                     proof & that on being satisfied of its correctness to have
                     submitted the claim to be dealt with by the Legislative Council.
                     
                  
                  
                     But before any answer to this could reach the Colony the Union
                     with

 Canada will be fact so that it will remain with the new
                     local 
Gov to dispose of the claim, & with that 
Gov this
                     Office will have no communication.
                     
                     I take this opportunity of asking whether any further dispatches
                     should be addressed to & be sent to the Gov?
                     
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     A Vote for this £500 cannot now be got before Union with Canada,
                     and I presume therefore the claim will have to be addressed to
                     the Dominion 
Gov. On the broad
                     merits of the case I think that as no condition as to time was
                     made, the claimants are entitled to what they ask. The
                     proclamation
states
                     states finally that the Governor in Council is to
                     be sole judge whether the premium is to be paid.
                     
                     I presume we must continue to address despatches to the Governor
                     until we hear by Telegraph or otherwise that the new machinery
                     of Gov is in actual operation?
                     
                  
                  
                     The Gov may find other claims made upon them on account of the
                     premiums offered for gold, silver & for shipbuilding.
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                     This is a very unsatisfactory case, & to my mind the Governor
                     has dealt wrongly with it. When the premium was originally
                     offered it should have been subject to conditions as to time &c,
                     and the necessary vote for the amount should have been placed on
                     the estimates & included in the appropriation Act. The question
                     should have been brought from time to time before the
                     Legislature & the public as to the withdrawal or renewal of the
                     offer,
though
                     though I apprehend there would have been difficulty in
                     receding at any time from the terms of the Proclamation once issued
                     as parties could, if the withdrawal of it were mooted, protest
                     that they had been expending time & money for years in the
                     attempt to earn the premium, and were on the point of succeeding, &c.
                     
                     But as the matter stands it seems to me that 
Gov Musgrave's
                     act is distinctly one of repudiation. I do not exactly know to
                     what he refers when he says (inclosure I last par) that "he is
                     expressly forbidden by his instructions from making a payment
                     without legislative authority." The printed Instructions issued
                     to him as Governor say nothing on the subject, and I presume he
                     must refer to the generally established rule that except in
                     emergency money must be appropriated by law before paid. As
                     between the Government and the public, it would appear quite
                     clear that, the Legislative Council having adopted the
                     resolution nem. con.
                     & the Governor having in pursuance of that
                     resolution formally proclaimed the terms under which the premium
                     would be payable, the acts of the former Council and former
                     Governor are fully binding upon the present (as also upon the
                     future) Government & Legislatures, & that there is no
                     justification for the plea that circumstances have changed, 

 and
                     still less is it admissible to say that the acts of a former
                     Government do not bind that which succeeds it. The good faith
                     of the Government is, I think, as thoroughly pledged to this
                     probably foolish expenditure as if it had been secured by
                     enactment; & is at least bound to propose a vote or urge the new
                     local government to do so.
                     
                     I may observe that in Australia a resolution of the Assembly is
                     the sole guarantee upon which bonuses of this kind are
                     frequently secured—& no one dreams of questioning the security.
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  Mr Holland
                     I presume that of course we cannot instruct the Governor to pay
                     or make provision for the payment of the money, but can the
                     Company if their claim is good recover it in a Court of Law?
                     Do you think there is anything in the point that the Colonies
                     having been united this is not the first coal shipped from
                     what is now the Colony?
                     
 
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                     M Herbert
                     I am inclined to think that the 
C could not recover
                     this money in a Court of Law, but I think they have a very
                     strong equitable
                     claim to the premium, if they can prove to the satisfaction of
                     the 
Gov in Council that they have performed the conditions.
                     And further it appears to me that as the offers of premiums were
                     not withdrawn upon the Union

 of 
V. Island with 
B. Columbia, the
                     
C should not be affected by that Union, & they should
                     only be called upon to prove performance of conditions with
                     respect to the Colony of 
B Columbia as it existed in 
1864.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     I consider that the good faith of the 
Gov for the time being
                     of the Colony is pledged to this expenditure; & I should suppose
                     that an intimation of 
Lord Kimberley's opinion upon this point
                     coupled with an expression of his desire that the matter should
                     be brought under the notice of the Legislature for their
                     favorable consideration would probably ensure the payment.
                     
                     I apprehend that this will not be a matter for the decision of
                     the Dominion 
Gov but of the 
B Columbia, or Provincial, Legislature.
                     
 
               
               
                  
                  
                     I think the Gov should have referred the matter to his
                     Legislative Council—he might be told this & reminded of the
                     importance to a Government of avoiding even the suspicion of
                     repudiating engagements entered into with the sanction &
                     authority of a previous Gov & Legislature.
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                     I agree with 
Mr Herbert and 
Mr Holland. Write accordingly to
                     Governor. It might be as well to ask 
Lord Lisgar to let us know
                     when the Dominion 
Gov actually take over the B. Columbian
                     business.
                     
 
               
               
                  
                  
                     (Done by telegraph 26 June Monday.)
                     
                  
                  
                  
                   
               
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     Q telegraph as follows to 
Lord Lisgar.
                     
                     "Report time when the Dominion 
Gov will actually take over
                     Columbian business."
                     
                     
                  
                  
                     Sent 6:20 P.M. June 26.71.
                     
                  
                  Recorded N 454—26 June 71 L. A/3.