Full text: Responsible government in the Dominions (Vol. 2)

CHAP, 1] THE DOMINION OF CANADA 731 
advice.! Though in that case the Secretary of State told 
certain petitioners that the matter was one for the Governor- 
General, in answering a petition in 1875 regarding a second 
Act he merely said that the Secretary of State had not felt 
at liberty to interfere with the course taken by the Governor- 
General? In the matter of the complaints of the Presby- 
terians against the Ontario legislation as to the union of 
the churches and the college at Kingston the Secretary of 
State took no action,® but in the case of the complaint of 
Mr, Butt, M.P., in 1878, regarding the Act of New Brunswick 
regarding Orangemen, the Secretary of State? still used 
language which indicated that Her Majesty’s Government 
might interfere in a very exceptional case. And probably 
the view still then was that the Governor-General had some 
personal discretion, though of course it might be that the 
Secretary of State only meant that a matter might be so 
grave that the Governor-General might change his ministers 
rather than allow an Act which was obviously wrong or 
disallow an Act obviously justifiable. 
At any rate, the modern practice which has grown up is 
perfectly satisfactory so far as Imperial interests are con- 
cerned : the Dominion Government have at the request of 
the Imperial Government disallowed a whole series of British 
Columbia Acts dealing in a hostile spirit with the Japanese 
and other Asiatic races, while the Lieutenant-Governor 
disallowed, an amusing Act passed in 1907 wherein the 
Omission of a ‘not’ rendered the Act of precisely no use, 
while the Act passed in 1908 had the ‘not’ restored, but 
Was ultimately disallowed after being held wlira vires by 
the Courts of the province.’ Again, in deference to the 
* Parl Pap. C. 1351, pp. 42, 54-61. 
> Canada, Sess, Pap., 1877, No. 89, pp. 435-47. . 
' Parl. P, ap., H. C. 389, 1878. Lord Stanley referred home for instrue- 
tions as to whether he could legally allow the Jesuit Estates Act of Quebec 
in 1888 to remain in force; see Hopkins, Sir John Thompson. v. 143; 
Provincial Legislation, 1867-95, pp. 395 seq. 
* See British Columbia Sess. Pap 1908, D. 15,43; G. 59; 13B.C. 370; 
Canadian Annual Review, 1907, pp. 882 seq. : 1908. pp. 540 seq. ; above, 
P.680. nn © 
2 Thid., pp. 50. 62-4
	        
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