right,
wrong
ta
they all Stephone hast from ect.
conclusion as to where his
boundary lay. If the Count decided
wrong,
the
then it is by appout from judgment of the Court rather than
to the Govern
ment that ell? Stephens
should seek redress.
in pris letter
12.
of 19th Dececubor, 1885,
ell? Stephenw makes & renewed claim
a
for compervation, and lower it i
the
upon
ground that the Officers of the Crown put him in actical poesession of the piece of ground of which he has now
been
deprived, marking
-porgs and arousing редо
boundaries
دست یار
it out with
him that the
marked were correct,
and also upon the
ground of certain
Conversations which, he
says,
he had
"with the "Crown Officers" before and
during
388
during the progress of his suit, and he threatens legal proceedings against the Government to enforce this claim.
It is important to know what _
truth there is in these strelements and
it
1100
fack,
with a view of getting
at the
and accertaming particularly
as ellr Stephens says,
whether,
the
Crown Officers clid put him in actual povecssion of port of the land of which he how been deprived by judguent
of the
the Court, that I uuggested the reference to Surveyor General's
Departement in
rrry
iivinite on
C.S.O. 3216 on 7th Jan 1886. But
Mr Price's report
thereupon called
which
for gives
was
110
information whatever on that point. I think this is the first
thing
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