8
in so immediately troubling the Commissioner,
on at all moving the subject, unless fresh matter
to
arge.
you
"bey however to remark as regards
Memoranda
have
been
by your
Accountant, at foot of the account furnished by the Colonial Treasurer, that the amount due by you for Income Tax up to the 30th of June 1864, was £59. 17.0 and not £40.1.8%, and further with reference to the Statement furnished by the Dy. Commissioner General
Mr -Miller (which exactly corresponds with the Treasurer's account) that the sum of £21.9 is the only amount of which there is no
information in
required to be
any of the papers, and is now accounted for by the Commissioner for auditing the Public Accounts.__
1
2
The sums
which appear to have been received from you, viz:
are placed at your credit as follows_
For a refund.
Revenue. Jun
leaving at your Credit
£640 7.6-
#1
#
61410 8 7 £12517 7
64′′ 7.0
"
59 n 1 9 4 0 4
£ 124, 6 a 0¾/4
"
which deducted
from
for by your letter the sum of
£214 1—, unaccounted
£21494-1
leaves the sum of £19. 17.6, actual amount due by you to Her Majesty's Government
With reference to the amount
Martin's
of 111 =
receipt, in which you suppose £24.9– to be included as a refund, that gentleman must have been under a mistake, the whole amount less only that stated as shewn, at the time due for Stamp Duty. Of this informal document there is no
register in
and I should imagine the Treasurer's Office, and I should think
that
your proper course is to communicate with Mr Martin on this subject, with which
he must be well acquainted, and which from its informality
rather assumes the
appearance
of a private than a Public transaction and therefore not, legitimately, recognizable officially. -
I return herewith the various
documents forwarded with your communication
of the 4th instant, and should
still
you