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ions, I have the honour to request your sanction to con-
tinue it.
>
3.
A case in point has recently arisen.
The owners of a lot desire to acquire an adjoining piece of
land sufficient to provide for future developments.
They
have already acquired a large area of land on which they
are erecting buildings, &c., and they do not propose to
build at present upon the further area which they desire
to acquire. The usual Conditions of Sale of a lot situated
as this is, are that the purchasers shall erect buildings
not less in value than a specified sum. The Director of
Public Works submits that if the land is put up to auction
without such a stipulation it would probably be bought by
VE
some person for speculatier purposes, and that at the same
time it would hardly be reasonable to require the parties
who desire to purchase it for a legitimate purpose to
erect buildings on it seeing that they are already develop-
ing the area acquired by them.
4
In these circumstances I have in this
case concurred in the adoption of the system which has
hitherto been in force, viz: to advertise the obligation to
build as one of the conditions of sale, but to waive it in
case
S.
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