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COURT OF CHANCERY.-THE NEW

COURTS.

MOTION FOR A PAPER.

improvements in the courts, at any rate any such proposition would require great deliberation. He had some doubts as to the advisability of concentrating all the courts of law and equity in the neighbourhood of Lincoln's Inn and the Temple, as he thought that it was not wise thus to separate the profession of the law from all the rest of the community. It appeared to him that the location of the Courts of Law in close proximity to the Houses of Parliament was an advantageous arrangement. It must be remembered that the attendance of the Judges and of counsel is frequently called for in this House as the final Court of Appeal, and that consequently all the judicial work cannot be concentrated elsewhere, and he thought that it would be more desirable to seek the increased ac. commodation required at Westminster than to transfer the Courts now there to another part of the town. This might be done at a comparatively small expense by stopping the present way from Parliament Street, making the communication to Abingdon Street from Whitehall down King Street, by the Abbey into Old Palace Yard. The cost of widening King Street must be incurred for the Public Offices, which are to

LORD REDESDALE, in moving that there be laid before the House "Copy of the Plan of the Ground to be proposed to be appropriated by the Hon. Society of Lincoln's Inn to the Courts and other Buildings for the Transaction of the Business of the Court of Chancery under the provisions of the Court of Chancery Accommodation Bill now before the House, and Plans and Elevations of the said Courts and Buildings," said, he thought that the entire subject of the accommodation of the Courts of Law and Equity should be taken into general consideration. The accommodation for the courts at Westminster and elsewhere had become inadequate to the requirements of the country, and it was extremely desirable that something should be done to remedy the evil. But before the House assented to the Bill referred to in his Motion, it ought to have before it plans of the ground proposed to be appropriated for the enlargement of the Court of Chancery, and also of the buildings to be erected upon it, because without such plans it would be premature for their Lordships to sanc-front it, and the removal of St. Margaret's tion a measure involving a considerable expenditure of money, and permanently fixing the site of the Courts of Equity. The power sought to enable the Chancellor to appropriate to this purpose £4,000 a year for ninety-nine years from the Suitors' Fund, made this a matter of public interest and importance. He had observed that a petition had been presented to their Lordships from the Incorporated Law Society, directing attention to a very much larger scheme, by which it was proposed to bring together all the courts of law and equity on a space of ground now covered with buildings of a very objectionable description, situated between Carey Street and the Strand. The site contemplated for this scheme extended over seven acres of land, and when it was stated that the estimated cost of the ground alone would amount to no less than £600,000, it was evident the magnitude of the undertaking was sufficient to make the House pause before they gave it their sanction. It had been suggested that a portion of the accumulation called the Suitors' Fund should be appropriated to the purchase of the ground and the erection of the buildings. He would not now inquire how far it was just and proper to apply any portion of this fund to the purpose of any projected

Church would be the sole charge for obtaining the large space of ground he proposed to devote to the new Courts, namely, the site of the present Courts, of the street in front of them, and of the present enclosure in which Canning's Statue is placed, and, though not so large as that before mentioned to be got for £600,000 in Carey Street, he believed to be sufficient for the purpose. There should be ample accommodation in every Court for Judges, counsel, jury, and witnesses, but large Courts were not good for the transaction of business, and a large admission of the public, the expression of whose opinion has often too much influence with juries, is not good for justice. The several Courts should be brought as near together as is compatible with such accommodation, but if too large an area is given to the architect to play with, the long corridors and wide separation of each department from another which we complain of here, will be repeated in the new Courts. The new arrangement of streets which he proposed would be most ornamental to the town, by opening a view of the North Transept of Westminster Abbey from Whitehall, and the gateway into the Court of New Palace Yard would form a noble termination to Parliament

Street, and great convenience to the public | money was asked for to erect the Vice would be obtained by separating the traffic Chancellors' Courts. It was true that from Whitehall over Westminster Bridge, power was applied for to appropriate from that to Abingdon and Victoria Streets, £5,000 of the Suitors' Fee Fund for the and other parts of Westminster. He made erection of those Courts, but so little was these suggestions because he desired the this considered to be public money that question to be fully considered, and thought a clause was introduced into that Bill, he would not be justified in expressing a providing that in case of there being a hope that the Courts should be kept at deficiency after the application of that Westminster, if he did not show the man- money, it should be considered as a priner in which it could be done. The noble vate debt, and repaid to the public. He Lord concluded by his Motion. had introduced the present Bill-not as connected with the Government, but from his position as the head of the Court of Chancery, and from the absolute necessity that existed for greater accommodation to be given to that Court. When two additional Vice Chancellors were appointed in 1841, the Society of Lincoln's Inn, at their own expense, built two Courts for the temporary accommodation of those Judges; but he believed that if those Courts were not soon pulled down they would fall down of their own accord. By the provisions of the Act of 1852 the Masters in Chancery were abolished, and a great portion of their business was now done by the Judges in the Court of Chancery, and by their chief clerks in chambers. Rooms had been hired for the purpose, but the accommodation was extremely inconvenient, and the efficiency of the Act of 1852 was seriously impaired for the want of proper accommodation. In order to carry out the purposes of that Act it was absolutely essential that the chief clerks should have their chambers close to the Courts, as they were required to be in constant communication with the Judges. Now, the Society of Lincoln's Inn proposed to give a site and to erect proper buildings for the Courts of Chancery, provided they were guaranteed 4 per cent on their

LORD ST. LEONARDS said, he did not intend to oppose the Motion. There were many reasons which made it desirable that the equity Courts should be retained at Lincoln's-inn. There was great misapprehension abroad both as to what was proposed, and the source from which the necessary funds were to be obtained. The Court of Chancery was at the present time greatly in need of commodious courts. When the Act of 1852 was passed it was intended that the chief clerks should be appointed to each Judge to carry on the business of the courts, and that for the more efficient discharge of these duties the chief clerks should be in direct communication with their respective Judges. In consequence of the present inadequacy of the courts the chief clerks were separate from the Judges, and the complete working of the new system was rendered impossible. Every year that elapsed rendered it more and more necessary to have more convenient and commodious courts.

THE LORD CHANCELLOR said, he had given way to his noble and learned Friend who had just sat down with the more satisfaction on account of his great experience in all matters connected with the Court of Chancery, as well as on account of the great improvements which had been effected by his noble and learn-outlay, and on the loss of rent they ed Friend's Act of 1852. It was to give full effect to the improvements introduced by that Act that he had proposed his present measure for the better accommodation of the Court of Chancery. With regard to the Motion before them for the plans and elevations of the proposed buildings, he must remind their Lordships that these plans were not theirs; they were as much the property of the Society of Lincoln's Inn as the plans for improving their Lordships' estates belonged to their Lordships; nor was there any public money applied for which would justify their Lordships in requiring them. Neither was his noble Friend correct in stating that public

would incur by the pulling down of the chambers it would be necessary to remove. By the Act of 1852 the Lord Chancellor had the power to apply a portion of the Suitors' Fee Fund to provide Courts and offices; but they could only apply that fund from year to year; and what the Society desired was, that they should be secured for their outlay by a term of years being guaranteed; and that was the only ground which rendered an application to Parliament necessary. thought that such was the urgent necessity for the measure that this proposal would be acceded to at once; and so it probably would, but for the suggestion of a larger

scheme, by which it was proposed to clear | 1852 arising from the want of accommo. a site of seven acres lying between Carey dation in the Court of Chancery and the Street and the Strand, and to concentrate inconvenience that arose from the Chief all the Courts of Law and Equity on that Clerks not being placed where they could spot. That might or might not be a fair be in constant communication with the project to consider; but the means by Judges. Whether or not it would be conwhich it was proposed to accomplish this venient to postpone all further discussion object it was his duty to oppose, because on this subject till the Commission had he understood that the Incorporated Law made its report, he had not had an opporSociety proposed to take £800,000 from tunity of considering; but, at any rate, the the Suitors' Fee Fund, and apply it to the plans asked for ought to be laid before purposes of that building. His noble Parliament; because, if for any reason the Friend at the head of the Government had Court of Chancery was obliged to come beconsented to grant a Commission to in- fore Parliament for money, even though it quire into the expediency of concentrat- was only to sanction the application of ing the Courts, and the means by which the money from other quarters, Parliait could be effected. But, independent of ment was entitled to say that the whole that inquiry, he believed it would be unjust matter should be laid before them before to take the Suitors' Fund for such a pur- they gave their decision. pose, because he believed it would be found Motion agreed to. that this Fund had to bear charges to such an extent that no surplus could exist to the extent contemplated. But even suppose such a plan were considered desirable, and that funds could be found for the purpose, either from the Suitors' Fund or from the Government, how many years must elapse before the plan could be carried out? and in the meantime the suitors in the Court of Chancery and the public generally would be suffering from the want of that accommodation which was at this moment so much required. He could not see, for his part, that this limited measure which he proposed could interfere prejudicially with the larger plan, because the Courts to be erected in Lin coln's Inn under this Bill would be scarce 200 yards from the site proposed in the large plan. He hoped, therefore, that his noble Friend would not persevere in asking for the production of these plans.

LORD CAMPBELL expressed his high satisfaction at the intimation that the noble Earl at the head of the Government had agreed to appoint a Commission to inquire into the expediency of concentrating all the Courts, for the subject was of the last importance to the Judges, the bar, and the public at large. As that Commission was to be appointed, and would, no doubt, report fully, he suggested whether it might not be better to postpone further discussion on the subject until their report was on the table? All further discussion ought to be suspended until the information sought for was forthcoming.

LORD CRANWORTH agreed in all that the Lord Chancellor had said as to the impediment to the working of the Act of

THE IRISH MAILS.
QUESTION.

LORD MONTEAGLE asked the First Lord of the Treasury in what mode, and under what authority, it was proposed to give effect to the contract respecting the acceleration of the Irish mails now on the table of the House? The noble Lord expressed the apprehension he felt at the extent of the present Admiralty expenditure on account of postal services. It had already reached a million a year, which was one-third of the whole of the Navy Estimates in 1793. This expenditure had in a great measure grown up without the cognizance of Parliament, for although the amount of a particular contract was ultimately brought before the House of Commons, that was not done till the public credit had virtually been pledged. In the case of the Irish mails there had moreover been a direct violation of the law. Formerly these contracts were made by the Post Office, and the payments were made out of the gross receipts of that department. But by an Act of the 17th and 18th of the present reign, which had been passed at the instance of the right hon. Member for Oxford University (Mr. Gladstone) it was provided that the gross revenue of each Department should be paid into the Treasury, and that the cost of collection and management should be voted by the House of Commons, and in order to bring the expense of this service immediately under the cognizance of the House of Commons, it had been provided that the contracts for the conveyance of the mails

by sea should be made with the Admiralty. | benefit of the shipping interest; but a But in this case the contract had been worse blow could not be struck at the prosmade directly with the Postmaster Gene- perity of that interest than for the Governral, and not through the Admiralty; and ment to adopt the artifice he might altherefore, beside the illegality of the act, most say the trick-of making contracts his noble Friend (Lord Colchester) would which were not open to the whole of the find that he had made a contract which it shipping interest, without exception, or was not in his power to perform. By this which were liable to imputations of favourcontract the noble Lord agreed that the itism of any kind. sum of £105,000 per annum should be paid for certain services, out of the gross revenues of the Post Office, for fourteen years. That seemed to him (Lord Monteagle) to be a wholly indefensible proceeding; and he dared say his noble Friend was quite unconscious of the undertaking he had entered into without the authority or consent of Parliament. It might be said that similar contracts had been entered into in former times; and he believed that that was the only explanation the Government would have to offer. He (Lord Monteagle) should be the last person in the world to object to the present contract; only he contended that it ought to have been made in a proper manner. There was a Treasury Minute extant declaring that all contracts should be open ones; and indeed it was manifest that the whole system of contracts would become a mere delusion and a mockery if any restriction were placed upon the freedom of competition. He hoped that the result of this conversation would be to draw the attention of the lower House to an engagement which the Government had entered into in defiance alike of their own rules and of an Act of Parliament. He trusted that the House of Commons would exercise its just privilege, and would interpose between the Government and a violation of the law. In the early part of the Session the noble Earl (the Earl of Derby) was asked a question respecting a certain telegraphic scheme; and the noble Earl replied that the proposed contract was still a matter of negotiation. He said that a reservation had been made by the Government for the purpose of inquiry into the solvency of the company, and the benefits likely to be derived from the adoption of the route which had been proposed, and also for the purpose of securing the performance of the service in a satisfactory manner. No one hearing that statement of the noble Earl could for one moment doubt that the noble Earl's attention was awake to the difficulty of the transaction, and the importance of free competition. It had been said that contracts of the present kind were for the VOL. CLIII. [THIRD SERIES.]

THE EARL OF DERBY said, he had failed to gather from the notice which his noble Friend had placed on the paper what was the precise ground of objection which he was likely to take to the contract. He understood now, however, that his noble Friend took a double ground. First, he complained that Parliament had not beforehand been put in possession of the nature and object of the contract-he ob. jected, in short, that Parliament had no knowledge of the intention to enter into it; and he stated, further, that the contract had been entered into in violation of an existing Act of Parliament. Now, in order to substantiate his case, his noble Friend had three times over inserted in the contract a word which did not appear in it, and which made all the difference in the argument whether there had been a violation of the law or not. His noble Friend had stated that under an Act of Parliament (the 17th and 18th of the Queen) it was provided that the "gross" revenue of all the different public Departments must be paid into the Treasury, and that an estimate must be laid before Parliament for the sums which were required for the collection and management of the revenue. He (the Earl of Derby) admitted that this charge was one which was covered by the terms of that Act; but his noble Friend had stated that the contract was to be paid out of the "gross" revenue of the Post Office department. Now he (the Earl of Derby) did not know where his noble Friend had found this. He had looked into the contract, and he certainly could not find it there. It turned out that the payments were to be made not out of the 'gross-revenues' but out of 'the revenues' of the Post Office. Then, with regard to the character of the contract, in the first place no contract whatever would be valid if entered into contrary to the express provisions of an Act of Parliament. The circumstances under which the contract had been entered into were these. Two years ago an Act of Parliament was passed, authorizing the London and North Western Railway Company, the Chester and Holy

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head Railway Company, and the Dublin Steam Packet Company to contract with Her Majesty's Government to perform cer tain duties, and the Government of Her Majesty to make certain payments. In pursuance of the provisions of that Act Her Majesty's Government, in September, 1857, entered into a contract verbatim et literatim, identical with that now on the table of the House, which contract was signed by Mr. James Wilson, Secretary of the Treasury under the late Administration, and a Minute of the Treasury then authorized the Postmaster General to carry into effect that contract. It was in pursuance of that Act of Parliament, of the contract in pursuance of that Act, and of the authority so given by the Treasury to the Postmaster General, that his noble Friend the present Postmaster General had put his name to the contract which had just been the subject of such strong comment from his noble Friend opposite. Parliament had authorized the Postmaster General to contract for making certain payments to railway companies for certain services; and he should like to know from what fund the Postmaster General was to make those payments except from the revenues of the Post Office? He had no other funds at his disposal than those belonging to the revenues of the Post Office; and he could assure the noble Lord that neither on the part of the late Government nor on the part of the present Government had there been a wish either to depart from the course laid down by the law, or to conceal the arrangements that had been made; on the contrary, although the arrangements which had been entered into were that the payments should be made by the Post Office, those payments could only be made in pursuance of an estimate to be submitted by the Treasury to Parliament, and of Parliament then voting such payments, and thus enabling the Post Office to perform their part of the contract. Parliament, then, had, in the first place, sanctioned the entering into the contract which was drawn up by the late Government, and signed by the present; it always had been, and still was, intended that the contract should be carried out by money to be voted by Parliament. The contract was to come into operation in June, 1860; and his noble Friend (Lord Monteagle) was now complaining that in 1859 the Government did not lay on the table the whole particulars of a contract entered into under the authority of Parliament, and for which

it would not be necessary to expend a far thing of the Post Office revenues till an estimate had been laid before Parliament and voted in 1860. That was the plain state of things; and he did not think that his noble Friend had any right to complain that there was in this arrangement any violation, in letter or spirit, of the Act to which reference had been made, either on the part of the late Government or the present, or that any attempt had been made by either to saddle a public Department with a responsibility which rested with Parliament itself.

THE DUKE OF ARGYLL said, the contract had undoubtedly received the sanction of the late Government, and he remembered questions having repeatedly been put to him by various Irish Members as to the degree of progress which the late Government was making with it. He did not remember what were the words of the instrument, but if they were at all contrary to the Act of Parliament, they could only have been used by mistake, and that there was not the slightest intention on the part of the Government to expend the sum in question without submitting an estimate to Parliament. At the same time, he must confess that while at the head of the Post Office Department he felt that the state of affairs with regard to contracts of this description was most unsatisfactory. It was true that these matters came before Parliament, but it was not until the public faith had been pledged; and it was consequently exceedingly difficult for Parliament to exercise any practical influence over them. In this particular service he thought Irish Members had a very strong claim to the support of Government to their wishes; but generally speaking he could say that the packet service was not altogether entered into with reference to the business or convenience of the public service. Undoubtedly the Irish Members had a strong case; for they often came over at great personal inconvenience; but if his noble Friend was as free to speak as he was, he would no doubt say that these services were considerably overpaid, so far as they merely related to the Post Office. He did not think that the Act of Parliament, which the noble Lord had referred to amounted quite to a Parliamentary sanction of the present contract. It was a private Act, and it gave the companies power to enter into a contract with the Government; but Parliament, in agreeing to that, by no means pledged itself to approve of this

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