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lettet I wrote on the subject, I pointed out that business had xìxnxÈx largely increased: Sir M. Nathan said that he was advised it had not. I supplied figures showing the accuracy of my statement, but nothing happened. It will be in your recollection that the figures I supplied in connexion with the proposed now Appeal Court more than bore out the forecast I had made that it could not possibly grapple with the work: but nothing has happened.

2.

The fact is that the lay mind cannot appreciate the working of a judicial system, and it seems im- -possible for the legal mind to convey its meaning to the lay- -man. But as I am now making a final effort, may I beg you on your side to discard figures, and to accept the fact that the statements I make are made with the fullest souse of the responsibility of my position as chief Justice of the Colony. For quite apart from what I have said above as to the xxxixi- uselessness of figures they only show the work done, and cannot show what work is left undone.

3.

First then, this summer has been very full of work; what was actually done was only got through in confort owing to a few cases being settled at the last moment. But there was much left undone as I explained in my recent letter. The deadlock has been postponed till next term, and it will be a very serious one: no new cases can possibly come on for trial till well into the spring of next yearl

4.

As you remarked during our conversation, this is in great measure due to the fact that there was a 54- -day case heard in the spring, and that this is coming on ber -fore the Full Court in the autumn. That is the exceptional cause which has created this deadlock. But there is something

which causes the deadlock every year: not always the same cause, but always the same deadlock. In 1907 it was three heavy cases coming on one after the other. In other years it has been

something else.

5.

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