PROVINCIAL LEGISLATURES.
45
Councils or the Legislative or General Assemblies of the
provinces respectively.
This clause was omitted in the revised instructions of
L878 in deference to the contention of the Dominion that the
Lieutenant-Governor of the provinces other than those ex-
pressly referred to in the Union Act had implied powers for
the above purposes.
“Any powers,” said Mr Blake, the Dominion Minister of mim
Justice, “ which may be thought necessary should have been of the
conferred upon the Lieutenant-Governor by the British North Dominion
America Act, and it appears to me they must be taken to
be expressly or impliedly so conferred. The provision giving
these powers to the Lieutenant-Governor by the Governor-
General’s Commission appears somewhat objectionable, and it
might perhaps be advisable to leave these matters to be dealt
with by those officers under the B. N. A. Act, the 82nd section
of which in terms confers on the Lieutenant-Governor of the
new provinces of Ontario and Quebec the power in the
Queen’s name to summon the local bodies, a power which
no doubt was assumed to be continued to the Governors of
the other provinces.”
The provincial legislatures are summoned by the Lieu- Form of
tenant-Governor, in some provinces, as for instance in British iii
Columbia in his own name, and in other provinces in the
name of the Queen. The following form is the one in use
in Quebec:
Canada
Province of Quebec
LS.
Victoria by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Ireland, Queen, Defender of the Faith,
&c. &e.
To our beloved and faithful the Legislature Councillors of
the Province of Quebec and the Members elected to serve in
1 Can. Sess. Paper, 1877, No. 13, p. 7.
L. BR. Masson