Duke of Newcastle
                     The sale from time to time of portions of their Reserves, and
                     
retention of the purchase money by the H.B.Co. proves at all
                     events that this claim of private property in the Reserves is not an
                     after-thought, but was believed in by the Co. during the period of
                     the Grant, and, I suppose, not disputed by the authorities.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     I confess—altho' I differ with great hesitation from 
M Merivale &
                     yourself—that I am disposed to think that the Co are right in this
                     matter—that the Lands referred to in 
Sir J. Pelly's letter of 
Feb.
                        4. 1852, and 
Lord Grey's answer of 
Feb. 13. must be now treated upon
                     the same 

footing as Lands bought by the Co. subsequently to the Grant
                     of the Island—with the condition laid down by 
Lord Grey as to the
                     actual occupation & use.
                     
                     If we maintain the contrary, observe the result. There will be three
                     classes of Land in the Island—1. The ordinary land, settled or
                     unsettled (the latter reverting to the Crown). 2. The Land bought
                     by the H.B.Co. wh. remains their private property. 3. The land now
                     in discussion, wh. if
                     not their private property, must revert to the Crown, upon
                     payment of the value of all improvements, stock &c upon it.
                     
                  
                  
                     I cannot see that such payment as this is consistent with the
                     principle, now acquiesced in on all sides that payment is to be made
                     to the Co, not as private traders & landlords, but only as owners &
                     Governors of the whole Country, and for expenditure of a public
                     nature.
                     
                  
                  
                     It is true that the whole island is by the Grant made re-purchasable
                     by the Crown. But that, it seems, is consistent with the Co
                     retaining lands acquired by purchase, and, remembering the
                     correspondence between 
Lord Grey & 
Sir J. Pelly, I do not see 

why it
                     sh. not be consistent with their retaining lands acquired by previous
                     occupation.
                     
                     As to their apparent admission in 
1858 (see 
M M's minute on 533) it
                     must be remembered that the statement of accts wh. contained it was
                     their
                     
first claim, wh. included private property—Farms, Mills &c—as
                     well as public. I may be wrong, but these points are, I think, worth
                     considering before a peremptory reply is given to 
M Berens.
                     
 
               
                
                  
                  
                     Duke of Newcastle
                     I have looked again into this matter, and cannot see it as 
M
                        Merivale does. Speaking with all humility, as one unlearned in the
                     law, I cannot but think that the C wd. make their title good. But
                     if there were every reason for thinking that such is not the case, in
                     point of law, I still think that we could not, after all that has
                     passed, fairly use our legal rights ag them—except for the
                     purpose of bringing them into terms for the protection of public
                     interests at 
Victoria, such as the setting apart of public parks, or
                     any object of that kind.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     It may assist you in coming to a decision on this case to have
                     before you in one view all the statements made to us by the Co. from
                     time to time as to these Reserves, and all the admissions we have
                     made to them as to their tenure, and I will therefore extract them
                     here from the Papers.
                     
                  
                  
                     Gov Blanshard writes on the 
28 April 1851 complaining of a
                     proposed expenditure by the HB Co. of £4000 on public buildings,
                     which, he says, "will then be surrounded by their reserves, wh.
                     they are neither prepared to use or sell. The large tract of land
                     called their reserves, of about 30 square miles 

in extent, includes
                     the only part of the Island, in the Straits of Fuca, in any way
                     adapted for the first settlement &c."
                     
 
                  
                  
                     This desp. was sent to the HB Co. for explanations, wh. 
Sir J. Pelly
                     furnishes in his letter to 
L Grey of the 
10 Sep 1857. He
                     says it had been thought that "the Fur Trade branch of the Co wd.
                     require a considerable quantity of land
                     
in addition to that wh. they possessed before the conclusion
                        of the Boundary Treaty of 1846 &c" that the Puget Sound Co. had also
                     intended to buy "a tract of land
                     
near the Fur Trade Reserve." But that it was found that "the
                     land occupied by the Fur Trade at 
Fort Victoria previous to 
1846" was
                     enough, and they wd. not buy any more then. Upon this there is a
                     minute of 
Sir B. Hawes, wh. is worth noticing. He writes
                     "As to the buildings being placed in the midst of
                     
the Co's reserves, I think it objectionable, unless very clear
                     provision be made for a
                     
free access to them 
in the event of the surrender of the
                        Charter," and again "I suppose therefore the proposed outlay is
                     wholly on the Co's land, which I think objectionable."
                     
                     MB. Hawes evidently understood the Co's Reserves 

to be their
                     private property, wh. wd. remain so, after the surrender of the
                     Charter.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     M Merivale and 
Lord Grey say, in their minutes, that if the Co
                     reserve land for their private purposes, they ought to pay for it,
                     like other settlers.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     In 
July 1851 Admiral Moresby writes "Large tracts of land
                     
surrounding Victoria and 
Esquimalt are reserved by the Co &c."
                     This is referred to 
Sir J. Pelly, who writes, 
Nov 7. 1851
                     referring to his former letter and saying that "the land reserved for
                     the Fur Trade" is 6 square miles & not 20—that it was "in the Co's
                     possession" before the Boundary Treaty—and that "should any addition
                     to the quantity be required, the Co. will pay for it, as other
                     settlers do." Another letter follows from 
Sir J. Pelly—
Jan. 14.
                        1852—repeating more fully the same statement as to the Fur Trade
                     Reserves—wh. is quoted by 
M Berens in his recent letter.
                     
                     Lord Grey, by a letter of the 
2 Feb asks for "some further
                     explanation as to the distinction between the lands wh. the H.B.Co.
                     possessed before the Boundary Treaty and others" wh. 
Sir J. Pelly
                     
gives in a letter of the 
4 Feb. He says "These lands they
                     
claim as theirs without purchase and the possessory rights thus
                     acquired in the territory S. of the 49 parr. have been guaranteed
                     to them by the Boundary Treaty. Among the lands occupied by the Co.
                     N. of the 49 par. is that situated
                     
at Fort Victoria in 
V. Island where they formed an establishment
                     in 
1843 &c."
                     
 
                  
                  
                     "Its exact extent has not yet been ascertained by the Co's
                     Surveyor—but, whatever that may be, the Co. consider that they have a
                     right to hold that land without paying for it, while for any
                     additional quantity &c."
                     
                  
                  
                     M Merivale's minute on this—"of course
                     it could not be intended that land actually occupied by the
                     H.B.Co in 
Van. I at the date of their agreement with 
Gov sh. be
                     charged for & paid for like other land.
                     
The only question that can arise will be as to the amount of
                        such land."
                     
 
                  
                  
                     The words of 
Lord Grey's answer & decision (
13 Feb. 1852) are—"His
                     Lordship having considered this explanation directs me to state that
                     
he is not disposed to question the right of the Co. to land
                        actually occupied by them previously to the arrangement for
                     constituting 
Van. I a Colony."
                     
 
                  
                  
                     The letter calls for an accurate description of their lands & ends
                     thus "I am directed to add that his Lordship understands the claim you
                     prefer to be strictly confined to land actually occupied & made use
                     of, beyond which he conceives that it ought not on any account to be
                     extended."
                     
                  
                  
                     This correspondence was sent to 
Gov Douglas, with directions to
                     furnish any information in his power as to the extent & description
                     of the lands in question. This he does by his letter of 
25 June
                        1852, accompanied by a sketch map of the Co. reserves in the District
                     of 
Victoria. One remark of his is worth quoting—"With the
                     exception" he says "of the farm
                     
at Fort Victoria, wh. is advantageously 
situated on Victoria
                        Harbour, & will become valuable as the Colony improves, the Co's
                     farms possess no exclusive advantage."
                     
                     In 
July 1852 Sir J. Pakington asked the Co. for information as to the
                     progress of the Island—wh. was furnished by them on the 
24 Nov
                     in a letter stating the quantity of land sold &c—& containing the
                     following passage—"The
                     Fur-Trade branch of the H.B.Co. are in possession, under the
                     sanction of H.M.'s 
Gov of 3084 acres of land, wh. were 

occupied by
                     them previous to the date of the Boundary Treaty. They have
                     
sold portions of this land to some of their retired servants
                     who have settled themselves upon it."
                     
                     In 
1853 the Co. caused these lands to be registered in the office of
                     the Registrar of Deeds in 
Van. I—in their name—as land occupied
                     by them previous to the Treaty of 
1846—Lot 24—being "in the
                     neighbourhood of 
Victoria."
                     
                     In 
Feb. 1858, at the request of 
M Labouchere, the Co. sent in their
                     Claim No. 1. comprising a statement of the value of their property
                     
of every kind. This contained an item "Land £3084" explained
                     then by a note—"This Land, comprising 3084 acres having been possessed
                     by the H.B.Co. as Fur Trade Reserves previous to the Grant of the
                     Island 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."
                     
                     
                     
                     
                        
                           
                           [Truly?] therefore, [telling?] in my [view?] that government had [a]
                           right to take [it] back—only [three words illegible].
                           
                        
                      
                     
                     
                        [One word off file] private property—under first claim?
                        
                      
                     
                     
                     In 
Aug 1858 the Co. accepted the decison of the 
Gov, founded on
                     the opinion of the 
Law Officers, that the 
Gov was only bound to
                     compensate them 

for the value of the property
                     
connected with their ownership of the Island under the Grant
                     and on the 
2 Nov they sent in an amended account, "drawn up in
                     strict conformity with the principle laid down by Lord Carnarvon &c"
                     from which the "Fur Trade Reserves" were of course omitted, as
                     private property.
                     
                     The question of the true character of these lands has since arisen,
                     out of the correspondence as to the sale of the old 
Gov buildings at
                     
Victoria, and the advance of a sum of money by 
M Dallas, the Co's
                     Agent to 
Gov Douglas, in consequence of such sale. In the course
                     of these proceedings the 
Gov informed the Assembly that those
                     buildings were "the property of the H.B.Co." and 
M Pemberton, the
                     Surveyor General, told them that he & the 
Gov "had at first
                     believed them (buildings & site) to belong to the 
Gov—but upon
                     the return of the Agent of the Fur Trade Co, they had been convinced,
                     
after taking legal advice upon the matter, that the Fur
                        Traders were the rightful  owners of the aforesaid property
owners of the aforesaid property" (in
                     12465). As a matter of fact, the Co. has treated these lands all
                     along as their private property—and since the site acquired, by the
                     Gold discovery, a greater & earlier value than 
M Douglas could have
                     anticipated, when he wrote his letter of June 1852, they have sold
                     portions of it as building ground in the Town of 
Victoria, to the
                     amount, as 
M Pemberton told 
M M. & myself, of some £30,000.
                     Sales wh. of course were notorious, but the proceeds of wh. they did
                     not carry, nor were ever asked, nor, as far as appears, expected to
                     carry, to the public acct. of the Island.
                     
                     
                     
                        
                           
                           But 
M Pemberton said [cut off file] he had expressed his
                           opinion that the balance was [cut off file]
                           
either [one word off file]—Clearly [showing?] that in
                           [the?] island the right was regarded as doubtful.
                           
 
                     
                     
                     After all this—can we now interpret 
Lord Grey's concession as
                     meaning nothing but a permission to
                     
use these lands during the continuance of the Grant, with an
                     implied condition that on its termination they sh. revert to the
                     Crown, without purchase or Compensation? It is true that the
                     language of the Co. in stating 

its claims to this office was not as
                     plain & straightforward as it ought to have been. Still it amounted,
                     I think, to much more than a mere claim of usufruct during the
                     continuance of the Grant—and must have been so understood here & in
                     
Van. I. The fact of the Co. turning out, by good luck, to be the
                     "ground landlords of the whole City of 
Victoria," naturally startles
                     one, & has roused 
M Merivale to battle in behalf of the Public. I
                     fear myself it is too late at all events, before we insist on our
                     rights so far as to require the Co. to go before the Judicial
                     Committee. I would suggest that the case sh. be laid before a fresh
                     mind—and a legal one. Indeed I would consult the 
Law Officers upon
                     the point.