aw a ee ES. ™ 7 v7 t i 1e y sy 4 Fete ig Fart wrerne Tiwece © hon. feiend s | The Colon PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND ADVERTISER. ‘al Herald, aa Vol. VI.J CHARLOTTETOWN, SATURDAY, MAY 6, 1843. J [No. 301. anes q LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL, Tuurspay, April 13. Pursuant . to motion, the House resolved itself into a Com- ‘mittee of the whole, to. take into consideration the Message fthe House of Assembly and the Address to Her Majesty ccompanying the same, on the State of the Colony, (this measure originated with the hon. Mr. Palmer, in the Committee wrthe Asseinbly.—(See the Colonial Herald, March 25th.) The Hon. Mr. Hensley took the Chair. The ATTORNEY GENERAL said that the object of the . Resolutions before the Committee should have his unqualified support. Asa native of this Colony, where he had spent the est part of his days, and where, in all suman probability, he would end them. no member of the Committee felt more sympa- ‘thy for the distressed situation of the Tenantry of the Island than she did. and none knew better than himself thatthe Resolutions sta- ted the truth, and nothing bu: the truth, in declaring the impossibi- ‘Jity that existed of the payment, by the tenantry, of their rents in ‘specie. He was rejoiced to find that the majority of the present “House of Assembly had the courage and honesty to disabuse “the minds ofthe Tenantry on the subject of that ignis fatuus wEscheat,” which the language used in these Resolutions would ‘most assaredly do—a subject. which had been artfully and wickedly made use of for so many years to serve the selfish ends and views of certain individuals, to the ruin of hundreds, ‘otherwise well disposed tenants, who by credulously believing (hese agitators had been induced to withhold the payment of “their tents, and now found themselves overwhelmed by an “amount of arrears which they could never liquidate, and which | it would be in vain for them to struggle against. He however hoped, that the Proprietors generally would cordially respond to the united opinion of both branches of the Legislature, conveyed J) as it could only ve conveyed, through the medium of the Impe- gy rial Government, and in language to which the most fastidious supporter of vested rights amongst them could not object, and rant the boons now, he trusted, about to be asked of them on be. half of thedistressed tenantry. The resolutions so forcibly and truly represented the inability of the tenaniry to meet the de- ‘mands of their landlords, that he considered 1 would only be respassing apon the time of the Committee further to expatiate “Jon this part of them ; but there were introduced into them some words un which, asa member of that Board,—as an ardent admirer of the constitation under which he had the privilege to live,— he felt bound to make a few remarks. The Committee would observe thai the Resolutions stated the arrears due by the tenan- ‘try had been increased by the costs of Warrants of Attorney ‘taken from them, and by the costs of judgments entered up on such Warrants of Attorney. This he did not believe to be true. aad imagined that the framersof the Resolutions had, inadver- tently, allowed this statement to appear, misled by the report uthat such was the fact. and which report. had been industrionsly ‘circulated with the view of blasting the character of his honour- able and learned friend the Solicitor General in this community, and on which report the House of Assembly had unconstitution- vdlily. ‘he mast say, appointed a Commitee to enquire into the con -duct. of kis hoa. frien | in his private capacity as aland agent. He asserted, without fear of contradiction, that in. granting ‘this ‘Committee for such a purpose. the Assembly had widely erred in ithe estimation of its powers. With as much right, it might have ygranted a Committee 10 enquire whether one or more of the Merchants of Charlotietown had dealt harshly with his or their (debiors in the collection of just debts. “He felt obliged to weprobate the proceedings as unjust. iNeegal and unconstitutional in its very inception; was it just th be anstitated for such a purpose, before which the aecused had | ne epportunity afforded him of being heard? was it right that his hould thus be held up to the world as a person ‘so unjust, so wickedly and avariciously grasping, that the Repre- | “sentatives of the people deemed the case one so flagrant as to warrant them in overstepping their powers and in granting this Committee of enquiry into his conduct as a land agent? Why the mere granting the Committee by sueha body must undoub- edly have iad the effect, at the very outset, of stamping an wourable impression apon the minds of the public against to say nothing of the risk he afterwards ran, ot having all ‘words and actions perverted by judges, some of whom, Wthere conid be ‘no doubt, had previously prejudged him Thus far he had endeavoured to confine his observations to the illegality f the proceedings adopted against his hon. friend, but as a gen- leman whoin he had known intimately from his first arrival in is Colony, and of whose worth, honor and integrity he had the ts the people, the truth, however et wishes an behalf of their suffering Tenantry. ers pee toe replete op! legal obligations, to with- those who, in an evil hovir 4 , ee = eer eee oad ~ ; P , had listened to their counsels and had sufferea themselves to be misled, were now encumbered with a load of debt which they found difficult to discharge—an inconve- nience not experienced by their advisers, who had always taken care of their own safety by keeping their own rents paid up By the active machinations of this band of impostors, by holding out hopes of free land to the people—hopes which those who raised them well knew to be delusive, and by making them believe that if they were returned to the Assembly, they would realize their promises.—the majority of the other House had for several years past been composed of those whose object and interest it was to promote measures not tending to ameliorate the condition of the people and advance the prosperity of the country, but wild, visionary and unconstitutional schemes which they well knew would never receive the assent of this House (the Council) nor of the Government at home, but which well answered the onject of those who framed them, which was, not that they might pass, but that their rejection might afford new elements for agitation. He was not unaware that the chque had lately received an accession of strength from another country, from a land whose recent his- tory. while it too fatally displayed the dreadful consequences of a people's listening to the Detnagogue with too ready an ear. pre- sented an instructive lesson of the way in which that demagogue, in the hour of need, will desert those whom, by his pernicious avice, he has misted—a country whose melancholy tale tuld how to find men base enough to stir up people to insur- rection, and then like the incendiary flying from work, lest the . flame which his torch had lighted up, should lead to his detection, vanish from the ranks which their secret devices had called together, very probably mingling with those of their opp nents, and by loud protestat voring to hide their treason. House, the majority of which antry, entered up ju He had heard all this. speeches, and had witness which they had endeavore remained passive. whom they emanated, that, to te concern about it. Some men would perhaps at once haye answer- i i ; F ed and exposed their falsehoods in a annie prints, but he th coal; ‘early otie-Bflh Ge Nelent ean ee : , one of those who heJd, that a man’s character dependet on the] aggrieved; but if both sides were heard, perhaps instances of kind- of his life and actions—that this formed the stand-| ness and lenity might also be brought tt d h neither the voice of the libeller nor the pen. of| ¢} ge ae. ery teslenate «Alen ter poeta tare h they might cast a temporaty shadow hd these, and to shew that, if, in some cases, an apparent severity was ths etfeciaatly tower hina? hae Se KR He acta AD 9 CO exercised, it arose not from a disposition to be severe, but because in resent instance, those charges had appeared to cone ae “ ' of Essar 5 Bo3 wee oe pig in bd pry is per a $ ed by whe inthority of id thet Brdbéh Ehime abe, His hon. and learned friend had so fully pointed out the impropriety — ‘ ; egis-| of a House of Assembly assuming a jurisdiction to enquire into the~ lature, he must own that he felt happy, that at last. an opportu: | conduct of private individuals, that he would not detain the House was accidentally afforded him, to make some observations | with many observations on that head ; he had no reason personally ; A Member of the other House had stated, | to regret that they had, in the present instance, assumed the right for that the meeting at New London arose trom his (the Scl. General) | the purpose of attacking him, but he must raise his voice and protest having recently issued 70 or 80 writs against the tenantry. He | against such proceedings, because they are unconstitutional and illegal that :his assertion was false, and he had gvod rea- | and because, if they were tolerated, it was evident that nialledant hat that individual knew it to be so atthe time | individuals might, under colour of their privilege , be able to “send he made it. Not one writ had been issue@—not one judgment enter- | abroad the most wanton aspersions of character, rendered ten-fold ed up—not one execution issued—and the only proceeding taken | more baneful by the apparent respectability: of the source from which against the tenants at New London, on the estates under his man-| they came, and perhaps supported by ex-parte testimony, which the sement, was six distraints !—the whole rent levied for under these | accused had no opportunity of examining or confronting. He pro- ly amounting to £18 17s.6d. These were made for |} tested against such proceedings, The House of Assembly went ‘far rents due for the last year,which he was determined to make them was convinced that no man who allowed them to How could there be a greater progtitution of its high duties thow ar wasreally their friend. Those people at New could the respect which ought tobe due to it be more effectually ard, from whic the scribbler, thoug upon that proceeding. ions of pretended loyalty, endea- They were well aware that from, Canada—recently pregnant with examples such as this—an indi- vidual bad come, who had joined the agitating band to which he bad alluded, an individual who, from his arrival here to the had set himself up against every constituted au- land—a man who breathed sedition, whose every whose every speech tended to incite He had no doubt he was dn instru. fitted for the task. He did not meat to say hehad joined rebels there; but looking at his conduct since from whence he came, and the ng a proficiency, who could hat he was well versed in the secret aris by which a be rendered discontented, and sedition successfully hem? but he hoped that for him, and such as him, He trusted that lace in the ocean on which, y but lighted in their way to some more rue spirit of the Bri. Let them pass on to amid the ever-agitated waves ey might find spirits d there let them float the ark of d; but let them not remain here and destroying the would only say son for believing | writing was pernicious, and to insurrection. the ranks of the he had been here, and the place es he had had of obtaini pay. because he get further in arre London, of all others had no reason to complain ; they caitle and produce taken for their back rents-that these, like every thing else, had been low, was a circumstance which in common with every person else he regretted ; but not one single cargo had ever realized what the tenants had been allowed for it—that they in arrear was not his fault. He had ta- from the tenantry for these. back sown among t this Island would prove but a. tempor it would be used cnly as the resting p like birds of passage, the southern clime. were unfortunately xen many bonds and warrants rents, and he would state the reason When he first came here, he was employed as an attorney, | ij .4j A 3 he toe astatebe apnich, RAEN justice 4 If they were, they were much mistaken. Nothing would He foand that Sra as peat the people had lately been pursuing. There was no doubt that these Ce AE ee ° i b ng disturbances had arisen from some of the agitators of the other “ty ay) E hig Cc: PE Spe Y | House, and the meetings were held and resolutions passed at their ih inne eta og instigation.» It was of a piece with all their proceedings, to try in fe io them - some way or other to urge the people into acts which would prevent ective balances, and the effect they saw that a measure founded on reason or justice was about to be the worst, and they to be sued, | proposed, and would therefore probably be.agreed to,they induced the ould be only three pounds: if people to get up those meetings (how much further they desired that He took their bonds and war- | they would go, was a secret jodged in their own hearts), for the pur- ; three, four and five years, with-| pose of exasperating the proprietors, and thereby induce them.to reject He was entitled toa fee on each of these bonds and | the proposal—while, however, he feared the consequences, he hoped fact which must have been known to | that they would look only at the secret instigators, and not visit their on he had not charged the tenants a farthing for them {sins upon those whom they deeeived by their counsels, and betrayed —that by giving them, they had got two, three, four and five years to | to serve their own selfish views. He concluded by moving, that that b might S09 been ae at. any monet Ang this ieulesore part of the Resolution which stated that the arrears of Rent were ot without one shilling of expense being put upon | em. He | larget increased by bonds aad judgments to th I hathe did not think “he had received upwards of £30 for} be eck out. 4 Beis pics eae a nese ¢ over his books he found that h shOie i ait vier dindtots of ately and The Hon. Mr. Hott said, it will be unnecessary for me to The air ha'lowed by thet tish Constitution was too pure for them, some southern republic, and there, of a stormy and ungovernable congenial with their own, an their regeneration if they woul shedding abroad the peace of the country, rection.. The people could nev such men their representatives, wersto advance their interests to sue several persons for ar under his management. assignments, the pleadings were judgment would be £8 or £10. H injurious to landlord and tenant. W his charge, he had to settle accounts ny hundreds of tenants. bonds and warrants for their resp would be, that, if the worst came to the costs of a judgment on the bond av sued without it, would be £8 or £10. by instalments, at two, ir noxious influences by endeavoring to incite the people to insur- er expect any good from having because they must see that thoxe must look on every st—every thing they attempted was hey ‘proposed impracticable. Time Council) teyected these Bulls, not Yi constitutional lengths to serve e such, as not only)could hinking men. but if assented ‘to, le of the tenantry, themselves. that the delusion had in part use had been formed, whose speak the truth, dst of popular clamor and ex- ad so long misled the country, heir leases could not be treated as void. atthey had no power to dic- hich they should part with as far as they could go, stopped, further would have been to have overstep- een right aud wrong. asure had been proposed to w who had the po thing they did with distra absurd. and every measure t afier time had that House (the that they were not willing to goa them, but because their measur not receive the assent of right t would absolutely destroy the ut He was glad to perceive, however; and thatat length a Ho honesty enough to moral courage enovg citement, instigated by th to tell the people \t that their rents must tate to the proprietors the terms 0 their land—who, whil just when to proceed ihe boundaries betw that, at last, a me trusted, that. House, would give 1 The Resolition proposed to request the propr should this be consented to, It was a reasonable request, and he felt con- He had as guod an opportunity e-condition of the country, which 1s hers, overshadowed by that dark hich seems to overhang culating medium of the at this éz+parte tribunal should but the fact was—a his accusers—that costs on these bonds, but on lookin had been far beyond the mark. ich he had tak ly fi judg is had b te , i warrants which he had taxen, adil tie aaa wo yr eo concur in the observations made by the hon. the President; whoss f £30, would not exceed £10; if they ld not have been much, on so exten- he had been charged with put- sts. He would ask any one whether was not the one which, even if the t, would throw the least possible her his doing this without charge, did not thanks rather than their censures. The case of a Iso been brought forward by a certain indi- ( om mittee n riety in the other House, and it had been tyrannical, inquisitorial, and, I may add, uneonstitutional; and his man had been most cruel. If ever a this case had been. In 1840, he found of so monstrous and unprecedented a procedure, resembling as, it here he had been 6 or 7 years. He| does, on the part of the majority of that Committee, more the act of re—two years at 6d., one year at Qd., | the midnight assassin than that of an honorable and upright for the residue of the time; but he| member of a British Legislature. and though all his neighbors glad-| _ The Hon. Mr HENSLEY said, it is searcely possible to ha ly took theirs, he declined : it,could hardly be supposed that he would | }jstened to the observations of the bon. Prexident i He pe be allowed to keep the land commenced, and judgment 0 if he would pay the costs, b turned him out of possession. up, and two of these had been The costs on these, instead o had been £200 or £300, they cou Notwithstanding this, ting the tenantry to enormous co the course which he had pursued tenant had to be proceede expense upon him ; entitle him to their man named Haney had a vidual of escheating noto stated that his conduct to tl case had been wilfully perverted, Haney, a squatter, on Lot 45, w offered hin a lease fur 999 yea and then at.a shilling sterling, was a disciple of the escheat be paid, and th He was happy hich he, and, he ts unanimous concurrence,— ietors tu take their highest opinion, he had never doubted but that this ¢% parte ri it would be a great would redound to his credit; the event justified the opinion teriained of bime the character of his hon. friend shone ith increased lustre after undergoing the ordeal to which it had een subjected; most signally had the malice of his enemies been eaied, after hunting ap witnesses from all corners of the Colo- this uncenstitutional Committee made no report on the point re- red to them. thereby evidencing their inabitity to sustain one iate the slanderous charges made against his hon. friend, though at he same time, by such silence, evincing a total want of that can- dour and sense of justice which ought more especially to govern men filling the high and responsible stations of Representatives and which ought to have influenced them to declare repngnant that truth might have been to their d feelings, The majority of the Assembly ad however done his hon. friend justice in this respect, and illegal and unconstitutional as the proceeding in fact was, in one nse it would serve him ; it would. disabuse the minds ol those persons who not knowing his hon. friend as he did; may have cre- lulously believed any portion of the slanders propagated against him, slanders which be regretted to say had gone the rounds of e public press in this Colony. He felt that he had spoken armly on this occasion, be trusted not tov warmly, for, i his opini- n, the course adopted by the Assembly was one that called fora “Strong expression of opinion upon it, from all the members of Ap Committee, and should be honestly and firmly reprobated at ‘once, What, he Should like to know, was to prevent that board m constituting a Committee of Inquiry on the private conduct any member of \he Assembly, that might in any way make mself obnoxiwus to them? where was the line. to be drawn.— He had a high respect for the Assembly, respected its powers and “is privileges, and would he thought be one of the last: men in the Colony. to. wish to see . them curtailed, or. to wish to see it lowered.as a Body in the estimation of the public ; but he should have taken shame to himself, had he not raised his voice in Rents in produce : boon to the tenantry. vinced it would be acceded to. as most men of knowing tb now, in common with most ot cloud of commercial em and he did not think the cir heir rents in money. He tho d’to the good of both landlord and ten- produce for rents was introdu- by supposing that this: barrassment “W Island sufficient to pay t necessary, and would ten ant, if a general s ced; but let them would be a sort rents were reserved at a rate expected to was taken, they must not expec h country dealers who paid in s all they must expect—again, 1€, polato was too expel- and too uncertain in its The time of receiving them too were anged much more benefi- it was now generally ta- enient to get it ready and iid be much More con- ystem of taking not deceive themselves, of getting rid/of their ren be received in cash, t to be allowed the and if produce trade would give. high rates whic The cash price wa grain that could be sive to transport, too liable price to be depended upon. a general system adopied, might be arr cially for the tenants than it now was; ken in the autumn, when it was inconv the roads were bad. Instead of this, it wot venient to say to the tenants—yo afier that none wi delivered possession, on behalf of th in again and remain till the Spring, generally taken; tt did not arrange for the place; but rent, and judgment obtain Solicitor General) had gone placed an execution agains? but as he did not wish to be more severe instructed the Sheriff to intimate to him, that if he would go andj : a ee , he would not ‘seize his things. The Sheriff did so, tion from the foulimputations attempted to be cast upon his repu- e that alternative, and left of his own accord. He s he was acting as leniently as he could— ith so extensive a property, it would not do e man to compel the owners to incur heavy costs, his possession. Their doing so would be a good but ruinous to the owners of the estate, , é Had he wished to act hardly with Haney, | 2d consolation, under troubles such as these, in the conscious tion to take its legal course. If his rectitude of its purposes, and the firm mind ever disregards both ficient to pay it, he might have put him in the smiles and the frowns of the world, and is content rather to and after all ejected him. All he could then deserve, than to expect its favour. . that he was like hundreds of others, the victim of| ‘The Hon. CHARLES YOUNG then rose, and said something and that his obstinaey deserved the punish-| 9 the following effect :— ived. There was another charge, but it was almost too] Mr, Chairman—Although | am the last to rise and address d been said, that at New London, while | your honors on the subject matter of the proposed amendment robtasied setts on his ome to the Resolution, yet [am not the less anxious to express my a. and ove ey ph a rhea opinion in its favor, because it is founded on fact, and also to pt. tney, were $3 2, AS WAS ih mpted to be| evince my satisfaction at the clear and lucid manner in which ; hich he ry? “om ips ot Aig Saree my hon. and learned friend, the Solicitor General, has excul- tre fa ieee = ge nat bir i pated himself from the calumnies that have been industriously xs prejudices ree tees rch ono harm here ; but its-| (+ ulated against him : his statement to us this day has been so by making them believe (if they could,) that his | 7)’ foreible and dispassionate manner, that its truth is stamped leave the place, and the man chos conceived that in doing thi every one must see, to allow an obstinat and. after all, allow him to retain would try the same exper thing for him as a lawyer, and those who lived on it. he would have allowed th things did not rea jail for the balance, have said, would be, the escheater’s doctrines, pay in grain until the ll be received, and he who bas ey. As io giving he Resolution, because he under- hould be generally given up, bat d circumstances of a us mao might be held to entitle him to that like a general system of giving up the hecause it tended, to make “hose d. They at. once say, and with with, because the man who han those who did; besides, rears were occasioned, not because but because they had listened to and they would get their lands would be a direct premium whose all would not pay e side of leniency than emitting some, would be Should the proprietors din the resolutions, afy the agitators ; th had the majority in t e Resolution fix first of Mareh; not then paid, must pay in mon rents, he went with that part of t stood it did not ask only in eases whe oor but industrio ood conduct an back rents wou who have paid up dis reason, that they are no did not pay is put on a bett the greater portion of the ar ople were not able to pay; who told them not to pay, d—the giving up therefore, sull' there are many, better to err on th ust discrimination in r lord and tenant. “Warning on.this occasion, The introduction of the assertion in sthe-resolutions,that the embarrassments ofthe Tenaatry had been 4 sed by the exaction of warrants of Attorney from them, and “by the costs of entering up judgments thereon, had afforded him ‘the opportunity of making these remarks; the assertion however, “was in fact unfounded; he believed that his hon. friend had mMever exacted one farthing frown the Tenantry on the estates in on Scharge for drawing warrants of Attorney or bonds, and that ‘not more than four-or five judgments had been entered up on those y. “by -him---and of that number he believed two had been “entered up, in his absenee from the Colony. He entertained no ddoubt thatthe Assembly would agree to strike out this part of ‘the. resolutions, for it only tended to weaken’ a good cause; when ssertions were made which could novbe borne out by.proof, and With this alteration, he hoped the Committee would unanimously Agree to them; and report to the House in favour of acceding to Ae request of the Assembiy, .1o join with them in the address to ridiculous to allude to ; it ha settling with the tenantry, he kept a pail That he had his pistols was quite true, was prokably also true; represented, on the tabl other part of the room, that could only be laug' upon agitation ; otherwise, and a J beneficial both to tand accede to the requests aware, it would not satl agitation, Had they Id have passed .th ld be taken; not:that the t to beth parties wo ave been rejecte ; The majority of tin dissipating d raised, and if their n, have accomp neir game was to keep he other House, he price at which ld have thought that ald have been assented to, din that shape, and there- ihe present House the delusive hopes t were granted, hed more good for the deluded them had done e was, however, one to deal, against him, wards them were most hostile. : if he had, he would not so often go among them ; he had a civility and, respect. The people Depart qoutes tebe making a public explanation of the conduct he has pursued, 3lin his capacity of land agent; conduct’ which, in my opinion, on by these impostors, who were to . hei. the debt which now troubled | most clearly refutes all the calumnies that have been uttered 1d not have existed, and any real evil would long since have But in all countries, bad men might be uld tempt to commit ‘crime. To protect and for this ‘alone, like every traveller, he | $' always been treated by them with were, in general, as honest and we’ found in any country, an and had they not been imposed free land but had not any thing so unjus but because it would bh fore answered their purpose had shewn. themse thet former houses hai they would, in one sessio. tenaniry of this Island than or ever, would hav the Resolutions, w were materially increased by b this statement was untrue. 13 standing for ren t it be struck out ; observations on. asu a Committee 0 Attorney General, d unconstitutional ler Majesty for ber gracious mediation with the Proprietors.on been remedied. the prospect of plunder wo himself from such as these, Two young men, in whose house he was a guest, had, med, been examined in the other House, on the table, without saying wh jt be believed that they were on the table at which he sat. | Myseé that any savage in the wilderness, if he re-|bolding a seat at this honourable. Board, did I not now say, that The SOLICITOR GENERAL rising, said that after the kind ‘sand handsome manner rin whieh he had been alluded to by his _ vhonorable and learned friend, the Attorney General, he could not stemain longer silent; but the subject they were:upon, «t the State _ @f the Colony,” was one of such importance, that it claimed his vation before any thing of a personal nature. The very name ef the Committee—a Committee on the State of the Colony— ~-Raturally led them fo take a retrospective view of the political events of the’last few years ; and indeed, it was no pleasing re- _,, Mospect which they had to contemplate. They beheld a Jarge Portion of the people, the dupes of a few artful, designing and 4 ling men, who, to serve their own base ends, had endeavored effected Ther hich stated th {gments to secure the not think there were twenty jndgmen d role Island, and he ishould move tha and in doing S°, Jed him to make some himself,—on a cer All he would say was, ceived a man into his tent, would not be gui y as to endeavor to give an appearance of criminality to Lam convinced he is guiltless of the charges of cruelty oppression fhis guest, which he knew to tain proceeding of d learned friend, the ‘a most arbiwary an! had righily designated as It was well known that a Committee of the other |The committee to which he alluded, after sitting for two or three ) 1 com.) was composed of the agi-| weeks, after sending for witnessses from the East and from the tating band to which he had alluded, had: sat for the Jast two or West, the North and the South, after conducting all their examina- three weeks, for the purpose of accusing and convicting him ; it, tions behind his back, were unable to find a peg on which to hang a was necessary for these gentry to screen themselves, by alleging | charge ; but even then, their majority had not the honesty to say: 0, some plausible pretext for the seditious. movement which. they | but virtually rose without reporting. After sending abroad the calum- had set a-goinginthe country. The grossest falsehoods, coupled | nies they had uttered against him, they wished to smother the fact with the most absurd charges, bad been freely Jaunched against that they had not told the truth ; but the House could not be a party him by certain members of the other House, and bruiied abroad to such an iniquitous proceeding, and instead of the majority of the through the press, as reports of their speeches, for that express purpose, of injuring his reputation and blasting his character. He had been held up as a man of the most heartless cruelty —as a grinding avaricious man—who, for the purpose of putting fees in his own pocket, had taken bonds and warrants from the ten- dgment and saddled them with enormous He had read the reports of their ed the wide-spreading calumnies by dto overwhelm him, and yet he had ) great a contempt for those from i the truth, he felt very little Committee, procuring, as they had hoped, a censure upon him, like those who fell into a pit of their own digging, they actually got cen- sured themselves. The House censured the Committee, and said that from the evidence, there was no ground for their interference; even the court of the much dreaded inquisitor did not judge or hear witnesses behind the backs of the accused. Let it be remembered, that in the inquisitorial! committee which had sat in secret judgment upon him every thing was done behind his back, and no witnesses were called, save those who, it was hoped, would bring an accusing voice ; and though goaded on by personal malignity and the necessity of fixing some charge’ ugon him to screen their own sedition, they could not even pass a cenSure. He had very large estates under his many hundreds he had to deal with, but that some might feel themselves beyond their duty and jurisdiction, in attempting to assume the right. had bad | lowered, than by permitting itself to be made the vehicle of private calumny or the enquirer into alleged private delinquency? It was the arbitrary assumption of a most inquisitorial right which ought to be put down. He had said, he hoped the proprietors would consent to the request contained in’ the resolutions. The only thing wiih be feared would prevent this was the disturbances and inflammatory reso- a which had taken get and have been passed in the Country. Spray : ere the people so foolish as to suppose that they would grant to fi which induced him to do or caeatisiion that which they ead not aime oon a poasteon tend so much to prevent concessions being made, as the course which they must give him their | any thing terding to their good being done. Therefore the moment occupy the time of your honors further, than to state, that I fully conduet, on the present occasion, does equal credit to his heart and understanding. It must be perfectly clear to every unpreju- diced mind, after the very full and satisfactory explanation of the Solicior General, that all the charges which have been so industrionsly cireulated to his injury, as a land Agent, are false and unfounded; and we have further presumptive evidence from the silence observed by the select Committee of the House of Assembly, appointed to enquire into his conduct---the proceedings of which Committee may, with propriety, be denounced as I trust that messures will be adopted to prevent the recurrence An action of ejectment was | pating the feelings he has so justly expressed, and I trast your Vtained. He was offered his lease again, | honors will excuse my leaving the Chair, that I may state to you ut he would not, and in 1841, the Sheriff jhe sentiments I ciediale upon this painful subject. 1 find it yn. Haney had no place to go to; and a} indeed, difficult to express all the contempt J feel for the utterers man by the name of Maeguire, the Woodranger, to whom the Sheriff and propagators of the slanders which have been so industri- e pidge na allowed him 3 $°| ously spread abroad with respect 10 His Honor the Solicitor = en + sag So oe . General, There is no language befitting this place which can too e e would not, neither did he quit. | trongiy express the detestation which I conceive to be due to In the Summer of 1842, an action was commenced against him for the the authors of such calumnies Happily, as.is often the case a r OK ‘ , ss als 208, pees ayia Ronge She Fe (ihe the eagerness of malevolence has only hastened its own defeat hy’ poodd ag ts hands of tHe’ Wher « aid confusion. His honor has cause to thank his enemies for § 3| the course they thought fit to take in this matter; for certainly th ecessary with hi i : aah y im, he) \ result must be received as a complete acquittal and absolu- tation. I rejoice, and every friend of justice ought and will rejoice, in this termination to so strange a proceeding, Not that I believe his honor permitted these unjust aspersions to disturb the compo- sure of his mind, but the calmness an equanimity of his If he did, many | demeanor under them had its proper effect in rendering them comparatively harmless. “Such conduct we cannot but admire. And it is ever thus—integrity has always sufficient sustainment tenantry, with whom be had open, candid and impressive, and has been delivered in sucha io\ bad: nev RpprctenenD myfmind, and must carry conviction to the heart of every one who has heard him. IT must congratulate him, Sir, upon the opportunity that has thus unexpectedly been’ afforded him, of against him. I confess, Sir, thatI, too, have heard these false- found, whom hoods reiterated over and over again, not only in n -profession- ; al eapacity as a lawyer, but also in the capacity of a private entleman, of this community, and although 1 did not believe the whole of them, yet they had the effect of making certain impres- and said they | sions upon my mind against the learned Solicitor General. Al- at table. They bad, in fact, tried though he and I differ widely in our politics, yet I would deem myself unworthy of the name of a man, and utterly unworthy of \ty of such a breach of | these impressions are fully eradicated from my besom, and that be harmless and innocent.!and tyranny, that have been alleged against him. I think, Sir,