2. 
Governor Kennedy, in explaining the circumstances which had led
               to the enclosure of the public Park in 
Victoria, and vindicating

               himself from the complaints to which it had given rise, coupled the
               name of 
M Finlayson an officer of the 
Hudsons Bay C with that of
               
M Medana the principal complainant. The object of 
M Dallas'
               Memorandum is to repudiate all connection on his own part and that of
               
M Finlayson with 
M Medana. Nothing turns on the question whether
               there was any connection between Mess 
Finlayson and 
Medana in this
               matter, but I would recommend

 that a copy of 
M Dallas' Memorandum should
               be sent to the Governor.
               
 
            
            
               3. 
M Dallas goes on to state that the whole circumstances
               connected with the infringement on the Park were
               
               fully investigated by the Commissioners appointed by the Crown in
               
1862, and allowance was made for this and all other disputed matters
               in the compromize or indenture of Agreement then drawn up.
               
               I cannot acquiesce in this description of what took place on the
               occasion referred to. 
M Dallas no doubt mentioned that an error

               had been committed in laying down the line of the Park boundary, and
               explained that it had been discovered by himself—but we were not in
               a position, nor did we attempt, to enter into any investigation of
               the subject—nor were we aware at that time that any dispute had
               arisen between the Company and the Local Government respecting it.
               There was therefore no special "allowance" made on this account in
               the Agreement concluded by us—as
 M Dallas appears to
               assume—although the object of that Agreement being to confirm all
               Acts legally done by the Company in dealing with the land which they
               claimed at 
Victoria, it would determine the boundary of the Park in
               accordance with the view of the 
Hudsons Bay C, if it could be
               shown that the Company were legally entitled to deal with the
               portion of Land which had been unintentionally cut off by the error
               in drawing the boundary.