I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of a letter from Mr
Under Secretary Merivale of the 7th instant in reference to the land
claimed by this Company in Vancouver's Island, irrespective of what
they acquired by purchase under the Grant made to them by the Crown
of that Island.
I am surprised to learn from that communication that the claimclaim which
this Company make to the land acquired by them at a period antecedent
to the Grant should be considered by your Grace as new, inasmuch as
it has been the subject of frequent communications between this
Company and Her Majesty's Government, and their title to it has been
expressly recognized.
Indeed, as your Grace will not fail to observe the letter of the 7th
September 1846 from the then Governor of this Company to Earl Grey
referred to in Mr Merivale's letter distinctly brought under the
notice of HerHer Majesty's Government that this Company did then already
possess an Establishment on the Southern point of Vancouver's Island.
Not only is that fact distinctly stated, but it is further mentioned
that they were annually enlarging that Establishment and their
enquiry want merely to know whether they would be confirmed in the
possession of such lands as they might find it expedient
to add to those already possessed, it never having been supposed
for a moment that any doubt existed as to their right to hold what
they were then in possession of.
Indeed
Indeed they could not at that time have entertained any such doubts,
as it was only a few months before that Her Majesty's Government had
expressly protected them in the enjoyment of similar rights in that
part of the Oregon Territory which was found to belong to the United
States.
What they mean by "Express protection" is the so called recognition
in the Treaty.
The answer received from Mr Under Secretary Hawes merely raised the
question whether this Company could in point of law hold in their
Corporate capacity any lands within the Dominions of the British
CrownCrown Westward of the Rocky Mountains, the Under Secretary stating
that the answer to that enquiry might perhaps relieve his Lordship
from the difficulty which he then felt in returning a definitive
answer to the application made to him.
The opinion of the law Officers of the Crown was subsequently taken
upon that point, and terminated, as your Grace is no doubt aware in a
distinct opinion that the Company could legally hold such
possessions, and the Grant of the Island of Vancouver was the
consequence.
Yes—that they
could hold—not that they did hold a single acre.
The subject of the lands claimed by this Company was again brought
under the attention of the Colonial Office in a communication from
the Governor of Vancouver's Island to Earl Grey bearing date the
28th April 1851 and which was communicated to this Company by Mr
Under Secretary Merivale in a letter dated the 3rd September
1851. Governor Blanshard then called the attention of Her Majesty's
Government to what he termed "the large tract of land called their
Reserves of about 30 Square Miles in extent."
Under
Under date the 10th September 1851 the then Governor of this Company
in answer to this communication stated that at the period referred to
by Governor Blanshard it was thought that the Fur Trade branch of the
Company would require a considerable quantity of land in addition to
that which they possessed before the conclusion of the Boundary
Treaty in 1846 and he went on to state that when it was found that
the land occupied by the Fur Trade at Fort Victoria before 1846 was
considered by Mr Douglas to be sufficient for thethe Company's purposes
the Company had reduced the sum which it had been proposed to advance
for expenditure on Public Buildings to £2,000 instead of £4,000.
In a subsequent letter from the Governor of this Company to Earl Grey
dated the 7th November 1851 in reference to a communication
received by the Colonial Office from Rear Admiral Moresby on the
subject of the Hudson's Bay Company's Reserves of Land round Fort
Victoria he refers to the previous letter of the 10th September as
shewing that the quantity of Land reserved for the purposes of the Fur
TradeTrade instead of being 20 Square Miles was not likely to exceed 6,
and that this land was in the Company's possession before the
division of the Country by the Boundary Treaty with the United
States, and he adds that should any addition to the quantity be
required the Company would pay for it as other Settlers did.
The receipt of this letter was acknowledged by Mr Under Secretary
Peel under date the 20th December 1851 and, as from the terms of
this letter Lord Grey did not appear to have adverted to the
distinction between Lands which thethe Company might acquire after the
grant to them of the Island and those which they claimed to have been
previously possessed of, Sir John Pelly the Governor in replying to
it, under date the 14th January 1852 stated as follows
With respect to the Reserves of Land concerning which your Lordship
wishes for more particular information I have to state that by the
last Mail Mr Pemberton the Colonial Surveyor has sent home surveys
of the land which the Fur Trade of the Hudson's Bay Company propose
to take, but has omitted to distinguish that which they possessed
previously to thethe Boundary Treaty from the whole quantity. The
former will be made over to them without purchase, and for any
addition thereto they will have to pay 20/- per acre, as all other
Setters do.
On this subject it is hardly necessary to do more than refer your
Grace to a letter addressed by the Secretary of this Company to the
Secretary of the Government Emigration Board under date the 21st
January 1859 which goes in detail into the whole matter and as the
title of the Company to these lands is in the result clearly
recognized I have the honor to send herewithherewith a copy of that
communication which I trust will remove the doubts your Grace has
expressed as to the right of the Company to retain this land.
Your Grace will I think be satisfied that not only is the claim now
under discussion not a new one but that attention was called to it so
long ago as in the year 1846 and that after a very full discussion
and examination of the subject—the title of this Company has been
fully recognized. Indeed attention was also called to it when under
date the 24th February 1858 the then Governor of this Company
furnished toto Mr Labouchere the then Colonial Secretary a statement
of the sums for which they claimed repayment as expended upon
Vancouver's Island and as the value of their Establishments property
and effects thereon. In that statement an item of land (3084 acres)
for the Reserves in question was introduced and attention was
specifically called to it by a note at the bottom to the following
effect—
The Land comprising 3084 Acres having been possessed by the Hudson's
Bay Company as Fur Trade Reserves previous to the Grant of the IslandIsland
in 1849 it will have to be considered whether the price to be paid
shall not be the Current Value of the Land instead of the fixed price
of £1 per acre.
This seems an admission
the other way—vizt that Govthad right to
repurchase it.
Under these circumstances I entertain a very confident hope your
Grace will be of opinion that no attempt should be now made to
disturb this Company in the possession of property which they have so
long enjoyed with the full knowledge and sanction of the Government
for the time being.
Duke of Newcastle
1. As to the transactions at the time of the grant of Vanc. I. to
the Company, I do not think this answer meets our case to the
slightest extent. No doubt the Company did set up at that time a
claim to land "possessed" by them in Vanc. I. No doubt they asked
for a Crown grant of this land, being quite aware, as we must infer,
that they had no good title to it without. No doubt the
Crown declined making any such grant, but offered, instead, a
temporary and determinable grant of the whole island. And no doubt
the Company accepted this in lieu of their claim. From that
acceptance, all legal distinction between land "possessed" by them
anteriorly, and the rest of the island—if there ever was any such
distinction—ceased altogether.
2. But the Company are right when they say that their claim to this
land was again brought before the notice of this department in 1851-2
and formed the subject of a correspondence. I am sorry that this
correspondence had escaped my recollection when I minuted the late
answer to the Company. But on reading it over, I do not think it
affects the case. No doubt even an admission of Lord Grey's, hastily
made, could not affect the law of the case as between Crown &
Company, and could only afford ground for complaint & possibly
compensation. But it does not appear to me that Ld Grey made such
admission. The Company talked of this land as
theirs—their "possession" and so forth—but they nowhere that I
can find claimed to hold it
in perpetuity as property of their own independent of the
Crown's right to repurchase. Which is the real point. Ld Grey
merely said "he did not feel disposed to question their claim" such
as they made it—which was, simply, to hold this land without paying
for it—and there the correspondence dropped. I observe that in a
Minute of my own I called his Lordship's attention to the
circumstance that some awkward question of right might arise: but he
did not apparently think it worth while to carry the matter farther.
Very probably he thought a question of 3000 acres more or less not
worth pursuing, in the neglected state in which Vancouver's Island
then lay.
As to the later correspondence referred to, I observe that in 1858
they expressly admitted the Crown's right to repurchase this very
land—& only raised a question as to terms—which is in absolute
contradiction to their present claim of absolute property, as I
understand it.
The question as it seems to me for your consideration is, whether we
shall continue to negative
this claim altogether & insist on the Crown's right to repurchase,
which for my own part I cannot but believe undesirable, or whether we
shall add this Vanc. I. question, to the similar reference to the
Judl Com. now pending, about British Columbia.
I do not entertain any doubts of the invalidity of this claim & I am
afraid the Compy has rather thrown it in at the last moment as a
make-weight. I do not however see any objection to offering to add
it to the reference—it will be better than a long contention either
at Law or on paper.
Draft,
Merivale to Berens, 7 February 1860, further discussing the question
of land claimed by the company in Vancouver Island, and offering to
refer the matter to the judicial committee.
Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
I am directed by the Governor and Committee of the Hudson's Bay Company to acknowledge
the receipt of your letter of the 8th January in which you refer to a Despatch recently received from Mr Douglas, the Governor of British Columbia and Vancouver's Island making allusion to a tract of land of about 1,200 acres in the neighbourhood of Victoria said to belong to the Hudson's Bay Company, and requesting to be informed by what
Instrument the Company hold it; what
what is its exact situation and extent, and what is the difference between the tenure
of this and their other lands in Vancouver's Island—
In answer to these questions I am directed by the Governor and Committee to state
that the Lands in Vancouver's Island belonging to the Hudson's Bay Company are of two kinds; 1st the lands which they held previous to the boundary treaty between the United States
and Great Britain of the 15th June 1846, and 2ndly those which they have since acquired by purchase.—
The Tenure of the Sounds held by the Hudson's Bay Company previous to the Boundary
treaty of 1846isis clearly explained in a correspondence which took place between the Secretary of
State for the Colonial Department and Sir J.H. Pelly then Governor of this Company in 1851/52. On the 14th January 1852Sir J.H. Pelly writing in reference to the reserves of land belonging to the Company, with respect
to which further information was asked, says: By the last mail Mr Pemberton, the Colonial Surveyor, has sent home surveys of the Land which the Fur Trade of
the Hudson's Bay Company propose to take, but has omitted to distinguish that which
they possessed previous to the Boundary Treaty— from the whole quantity; the former
will be mademade over to them (the Hudson's Bay Company) without purchase, and for any addition
thereto, they will have to pay 20 pounds acre as all other Settlers do —
In acknowledging this letter Mr Peel in a letter dated 2nd February 1852, says, — His Lordship would be glad of some further information respecting the circumstances stated in the 4th paragraph of that letter. He does not sufficiently know the facts to understand the
distinction drawn between the Lands which the Hudson's Bay Company possessed before
the Boundary Treaty and others; or the meaning of the expression Lands which the Fur Trade of the Hudson's BayBay Company propose to take—
In answer to this letter Sir J.H. Pelly wrote under date the 4th February 1852 giving the following as the required explanation— During the period that elapsed between the original connection of the Hudson's Bay Company with the Country West of the Rocky Mountains, and the division of the Territory by the Boundary Treaty of June 1846, while in fact the sovereignty was in abeyance, the Company reclaimed from the wilderness,
and occupied portions of Land wherever their trading establishments were planted.
TheseThese Lands they claim as theirs without purchase and the possessory rights thus acquired
in that portion of the Territory which is South of the 49th parallel of North Latitude, have been guaranteed to them by the boundary Treaty;
Among the lands occupied by the Company North of the 49th parallel is that situate at Fort Victoria in Vancouver's Island, where they formed an establishment in the year 1843, and this is the land alluded to in the 4th paragraph of my letter of the 14th December— Its exact extent has not been yet ascertained by the Company's Surveyor, but whatever that may be thethe Company consider they have a right to hold it, while for any additional quantity
that may be required to be taken by the Fur Trade, (which is merely a subordinate
branch of the Hudson's Bay Company) the same price will be paid as is paid by other
purchasers of Land
The explanation was considered perfectly satisfactory by Earl Grey, and accordingly Mr Frederick Peel was directed, under date the 14th February 1852, to write, — His Lordship having considered this explanation, directs me to state that he is not
disposed to question the right of the Company to land actually occupiedoccupied by them previously to the arrangement for constituting Vancouver's Island a Colony, but that he wishes to be furnished, as soon as possible, with a statement
of the extent and description of the lands so claimed by the Company and he adds that His Lordship understands the claim preferred to be strictly confined to be strictly
confined to Land actually occupied and made use of, beyond which he conceives it ought
not on any account to be extended —
Shortly after this period the land in question was surveyed by the Colonial Surveyor
and found toto amount to 3084 acres, and I may state that on the 24th of November that year the then Governor of this Company, in a letter addressed to
Sir John Pakington informs him that The Fur Trade of the Hudson's Bay Company are in possession, under the sanction of
Her Majesty's Government of 3084 acres of Land which were occupied by them previously
to the date of the Boundary Treaty. They have sold portions of this land to some of
their retired servants who have settled upon it—
In sending home the survey of these Lands the Colonial Surveyor sentsent also the usual Land Deeds given to the purchasers of Land in the Island for the
purpose of their being executed by the Company in this Country— that being supposed
by him to be the correct mode of completing the Company's Title— But the Company having
been advised that as the whole of the Land, by the Grant from the Crown, was already
vested in them the grand of Land by the Company to themselves would be an anomaly,
and that all ^^that was necessary was an entry of the facts upon their Books, the following Resolution and Order were passed under these respective dates.—
— 26th September 1853. —
ResolvedResolved - - That the Registrar of Deeds in Vancouver's Island be directed to enter in the register in the name of the Governor and Company of Adventurers
of England trading into Hudson's Bay, the Land amounting to 3084 acres, situated in
the Victoria District which was occupied by the Company prior to the Treaty between Great Britain and the
United States of America dated June 15th 1846, the detailed particulars of which will be transmitted to the Registrar with a Copy
of this Resolution —
— January 30th 1854—
Ordered— That Lot 24 containing 1212 acres, Lot 31 containing 1130 acresacres and Lot 33 amounting to 710 acres, being land occupied by the Company prior
to the Boundary Treaty of 1846, be entered in the Land Register of Vancouver's Island as directed by the Minutes of the 26th September last—
The Land referred to by Governor Douglas as containing about 1200 acres in the neighbourhood of Victoria is Lot 24 of the reserves— The other two Lots Nor 31 and 32 though also in Victoria District are at some distance. The three Lots will be found distinctly set forth under their
respective numbers in a map of the Districts of Victoria and Esquimalt, published by Arrowsmith of which I herewithherewith forward a Copy for the information of the Government Emigration Commissioners—
The only land acquired by the Hudson's Bay Company since 1846 is a tract of 6193 acres in the Nanaimo Coal District, for which they have paid like other settlers — A return of that purchase
was made to the Colonial Office on the 9th of June 1855 in a letter addressed by Mr Colvile the then Governor of the Company to Lord John Russell