I have to acknowledge your letter of 
2 instant, with further
               despatches from the Governor of 
Vancouver Island on the subject of
               the Land in the Town of 
Victoria supposed to have been ceded to the
               Crown by the Indenture of 
3 Febry 1862.
               
               2. 
Governor Douglas reports that he has been unable to obtain from
               the Companys Agent any statement of the land so ceded—that in order
               to expedite the matter he had submitted to the Agent sketch maps of
               the Land

 specified in the Agreement—but that in nearly every case
               the boundaries have been disputed, and in one case the site
               altogether changed. He requests to be furnished with a copy of the
               chart referred to in the Agreement as "the Company's plan" expressing
               his belief that no such plan existed at that date in the Colony—and
               he intimates that since the Agreement was received there, the Agent
               of the Company has been disposing of land which was previously
               supposed to have been unsold, and which would, therefore, have
               belonged to the Crown.
               
               3. The plan which we had before us when the Agreement

 was entered
               into was that drawn by 
M Pemberton and published in 
London in 
1861
               by 
Arrowsmith. I have applied to 
M Arrowsmith for a copy of it.
               We certainly understood from 
M Dallas that a considerable extent to
               the south west of 
James' Bay was at that time unsold, though 
M
                  Dallas did not profess to be able to state exactly how much. If
               
Governor Douglas is correct in supposing that the Company's Agent has
               been disposing of Land on account of the Company since 
1 Janry
                  1862, such a proceeding is clearly inconsistent with the terms of the
               Agreement and ought not to be

 allowed. Perhaps the best course will
               be to send a copy of 
Governor Douglas' despatch to the Governor of
               the Company and to call on him to cooperate with the Government in
               bringing this matter to an early and amicable settlement, by
               instructions to the Agent of the Company in the Colony to adhere
               strictly and in good faith to the conditions of the Agreement. Of
               course no grant by the Company within the 
Victoria Reserve dated
               after 
1 Janry 1862 could be recognized, unless it could be shown
               that the negociations for them had proceeded so far before that date

               as to make their completion a matter of right. And even in that case
               the price paid for the land if paid after 
1 Janry 1862, must, I
               think, be considered to belong to the Crown not to the Company.