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week later it was announced in Legislative Council. In my letter of

* 23rd. September I requested to be allowed to give my opinion on it

for on the face of it it seemed to me unworkable. I then found that **

the scheme had been approved at home without reference to me, and

therefore without any expert opinion as to its workableness having

given upon it.

Subsequently when the bill was drafted it was

sent to me for criticism; as I pointed out it was imperfect in many respects. On re-reading it another serious defect has revealed itself, as I pointed out in my letter of 1st. December, no arrangement had

been made with regard to the difficult point arising as to cases already heard. The fact that the Government could only bring forward an imperfect bill itself shows how complicated the scheme is, and how necessary it was to ask the Chief Justice's opinion. It is for giving that expert opinion, and criticising the details of this imperfect- -ly considered scheme that I am to be dismissed from the service.

In spite of these facts it would appear that the question has since that time been under discussion, and that it is now a chose jugce: and yet during that time no reference has ever been made to the Chief Justice or to the Law Society.

With reference to the general question there is one point to which I am bound to allude. I have always been and am still unwilling to believe that No. 1 of 1910 was passed in order to facilitate my compulsory retirement. But the fact remains that I am being proceeded against under that Ordinance, and I was at home when it was passed. The question of the Appeal Court was one of the subjects which, with the consent of the Secretary of State, I dis- -cussed with lir. Bertram Cox, Sir Francis Hopwood, and Lord Crewe himself; I drew the attention of these gentlemen to the fact that there would in all probability be a long appeal coming on with which it would be impossible for the new Court to deal, and pointed out that this showed how unpractical the scheme was; I protested also against what had been said both by the Foreign Office and Colonial Office with regard to myself, but not a word was said about the Ordinance which had at that time just been passed, or that my

legitimate

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