House Of Commons
Tuesday, 6th March, 1883.
MINUTES.]—PRIVATE BILLS ( by Order)— Second Reading—Alloa, Dunfermline, and Kirkcaldy Railway, debate further adjourned; Barry Dock and Railways, debate further adjourned; Exeter, Teign Valley, and Chagford Railway, debate further adjourned; Hull and Lincoln Railway, debate further adjourned; Oxford, Aylesbury, and Metropolitan Junction Railway, debate further adjourned; Seafield Dock and Railway, debate further adjourned; Windsor, Ascot, and Aldershot Railway, debate further adjourned.
Private Business
Alloa, Dunfermline, And Kirkcaldy Railway Bill (By Order)
Second Reading Adjourned Debate
Order read, for resuming Adjourned Debate on Amendment proposed to Question [27th February], "That the Bill be now read a second time."
And which Amendment was, to leave out the word "now," and at the end of the Question to add the words "upon this day six months."—( Mr. Chaplin.)
Question again proposed, "That the word 'now' stand part of the Question."
Debate resumed.
said, it would be in the recollection of the House that on the occasion when this and other Bills were last before the House the debate was adjourned for a week; and he was asked, on behalf of the Board of Trade, after the opinion which had been pretty generally expressed in the House, if he would see whether he could not make some proposal in the matter which should be satisfactory to the House. This was one of a class of Bills to which objection was taken on the ground that it increased the rates charged upon certain classes of agricultural manures. On the merits of that question a good deal might be said upon both sides; but he did not propose to discuss the matter now. Upon one point there appeared to be a general agreement—namely, that in future Bills of this kind, proposing an alteration of rates, should not, as in the past, per incuriam, be allowed to be passed without the special attention of the Committee to which they were referred being directed to them. He was now about to propose that all the Bills which dealt in this way with agricultural manures should be postponed for another week; and he did so in order that the House, in the meantime, might have an opportunity of discussing and disposing of the Motion which stood in the name of the right hon. Gentleman the Member for North Hants (Mr. Sclater-Booth) for a new Standing Order, which it seemed to him (Mr. Chamberlain) would, to a large extent, meet the desire generally expressed on the last occasion by the House—namely, that—
Of course, it would be impossible to make an alteration unless the attention of the Committee were specially directed to the matter. But he thought it convenient and desirable, while he accepted the principle of this proposal, that he should go a little further. On the last occasion, the hon. Member for East Sussex (Mr. Gregory) suggested that the Board of Trade should be instructed to make a Report. He (Mr. Chamberlain) pointed out that, at one time, that had been the practice; but it had been allowed to fall into desuetude, because so little attention was paid to the Reports when they were made. If the right hon. Gentleman (Mr. Sclater-Booth) would propose a new Standing Order in the terms in which he originally placed it on the Paper, and by which he provided that the Committee should make a Report to the House stating whether any Report relating to the Bill had been referred to the Committee, and, if so, in what way any alteration or recommendation contained in such Report had been dealt with by the Committee, he (Mr. Chamberlain) would undertake that the Board of Trade should make a Report in each case, and he thought that this would provide a satisfactory solution of the difficulty. It would be perfectly useless to provide that any Report furnished by the Board of Trade should be dealt with by the Committee, without insuring that after it had been dealt with there should be a special Report to the House. he should support the Standing Order of the right hon. Gentleman; and he hoped it would be accepted by the House, with this addition—"In the case of any Bill relating to a Railway, Canal, Dock, Harbour, Navigation, Pier, or Port, the Committee on the Bill shall consider and specially report on any Clauses giving power to levy tolls, rates, or duties in excess of those already authorized for that undertaking, or usually authorized for like undertakings."
If the House were pleased to accept the Standing Order with that addition, he thought they might then very well allow these Bills to go to a second reading, and be referred to a Committee upstairs, accompanied by that Instruction. In order that the matter might be properly discussed, he proposed to move now that the adjourned, debate upon these Bills be further adjourned until that day week."That no Bill by or under which power is sought to increase or vary tolls or rates already authorized, or to be authorized, higher than those sanctioned by previous legislation shall be read a second time until a Report from the Board of Trade has been laid upon the Table of the House."
Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the Debate be further adjourned till Tuesday next."—( Mr. Chamberlain.)
said, that he had put his name down upon the Paper in opposition to the second reading of that and other Bills for reasons which he had mentioned the other day. He trusted the House would therefore permit him to say that he was perfectly satisfied with the propositions of the right hon. Gentleman the President of the Board of Trade (Mr. Chamberlain); but he should hold himself permitted to retain his Notice of Opposition to these Bills upon the Paper until the question of the new Standing Order, about to be proposed by his right hon. Friend the Member for North Hants (Mr. Sclater-Booth), had been fully discussed by the House; because it might be that, after the House had discussed that question, the provisions of the Standing Order might not be altogether, although he hoped they would be, satisfactory to the agricultural community. He therefore wished to say that he was perfectly satisfied with the proposition of the right hon. Gentleman the President of the Board of Trade, that the discussion upon these Bills should be postponed for a week. He understood from the right hon. Gentleman that he did not propose that these Bills should now be read a second time, but that they should be deferred until a future date, pending the debate upon the Standing Order about to be proposed by his right hon. Friend the Member for North Hants.
said, he had listened with great satisfaction to the concluding remarks of the right hon. Gentleman the President of the Board of Trade (Mr. Chamberlain); but he wanted to know why the course now proposed was not adopted by the Board of Trade last year? The Board of Trade was supposed to be the guardians of the public interests, and not the guardians of the interests of the Railway Companies. No less than 11 Bills passed through the House last year, containing clauses of a similar objectionable character with those now proposed. The President of the Board of Trade stated, last week, that there was no precedent for opposing these Bills; but he failed to show the House that, although there might have been no precedent, there was no reason for opposing them; it was certainly not in the interests of the public that such Bills should be passed. There was no doubt that the Bills introduced last year slipped through the House without the agricultural interest being fully informed of their nature. There was, however, one Bill which was opposed, and that was the Great North of Scotland Railway Bill. He had taken it on himself to move the rejection of that measure, but he failed to carry the House with him on that occasion; and, as far as he was personally concerned, he was very thankful that the Bill had to be referred to the judgment of "another place." There could be no question that these objectionable clauses, when introduced by a new Company, were backed up by the big Railway Companies; otherwise, how was the fact to be accounted for that the Lobbies of the House of Commons were swarming last week with persons connected with the large Railway Companies, if they had no interest in that question? Certainly, if the House gave its consent to the enactment of these exceptional powers in the case of new Companies, he failed to see what arguments could be adduced for rejecting similar provisions when the old Companies came to the House and asked for increased powers.
said, he thought the House was greatly indebted to the right hon. Gentleman the President of the Board of Trade (Mr. Chamberlain) for the readiness he had displayed in meeting the feeling so generally expressed last week. He did not propose to enter upon the subject-matter of the debate, because he considered that hon. Members on both sides of the House were now agreed that something ought to be done to safeguard the public interests in relation to this important matter. But he thought that the hon. Member for Bedfordshire (Mr. J. Howard) had been a little too hard upon the Board of Trade, because the House itself must accept the blame and responsibility for not having hitherto directed its legislation in the channel in which it was now considered desirable to see it directed, Hitherto Private Bill Committees had been in want of special directions, and had been in the habit of taking account only of the cases submitted to them for decision by the promoters of a Bill on the one side, and by the opponents on the other. They had not been specially charged by the House, as he thought they ought to be, with the duty of having regard to the public interests apart from any case which might be submitted to them for their decision from any particular side. It was in order to cure that evil that he had proposed that the House should pass a Standing Order, on the analogy of the Standing Order passed at his instance last year, with respect to Bills and sanitary regulations. His right hon. Friend the President of the Board of Trade now proposed that the Bills standing on the Paper should be deferred for a week, in order that that Standing Order might be discussed; and his right hon. Friend had suggested some modification and enlargement of the Standing Order as he (Mr. Sclater-Booth) had placed it on the Paper. As he understood his right hon. Friend's Amendment, it would fit in better with the form of the Standing Order as he (Mr. Sclater-Booth) had originally proposed it. Personally, he preferred the Order as it was originally proposed, and he had modified it only on the advice of the Speaker's Counsel, who thought that a shorter and more condensed form of words would answer the purpose better. If his right hon. Friend would allow him, he would place the Standing Order on the Paper as he intended to move it on Thursday. He hoped it would meet the difficulty, and that no mischief or prejudice would happen to the promoters of these Bills. Nobody wanted to interfere with them, except in regard to this particular point. They would not be prejudiced by the delay, and when the question came on again upon that day week, it would be found that the matter had been settled by the new Standing Order.
said, that, whatever might be the result, they were all glad that a definite mode of dealing with this important matter had now been arrived at. There was, however, one objection to the course proposed, which he would point out to the House. The noble Viscount opposite (Viscount Folkestone) had assented to the proposed adjournment of the second reading of the Bill, in order that the question involved in the Standing Order might be discussed; but the noble Viscount intimated that he would not withdraw his opposition unless the mode to be decided upon on Thursday for dealing with the matter was satisfactory to himself. If it were satisfactory, then the noble Viscount would abstain from further opposition, and would allow these Bills to pass. He (Sir George Campbell) could only say that the Kirkcaldy Bill was an important Bill in the interests of agriculture in that part of the country, and he was sorry it was to be delayed for another week if the opposition were then to be renewed. Of course, if the right hon. Gentleman the President of the Board of Trade insisted upon a further adjournment, it would be futile to oppose him.
said, he wished to be allowed to explain. The hon. Gentleman the Member for Kirkcaldy (Sir George Campbell) had misunderstood his meaning. He had understood the right hon. Gentleman the President of the Board of Trade (Mr. Chamberlain) exactly as the hon. Member did himself; and all he (Viscount Folkestone) had stated was that he should not oppose these Bills, if the proposition of his right hon. Friend on the front Opposition Bench (Mr. Sclater-Booth) was satisfactory to the agricultural community. At the same time, he proposed to keep his Amendment upon the Paper, until he knew what course would be taken with regard to his right hon. Friend's proposal.
said, he thought the proposal of the right hon. Gentleman the President of the Board of Trade (Mr. Chamberlain) was a step in the right direction. It carried out, so far, the recommendation of the Committee on Railway Rates, &c, which sat last year, and which called the attention of the Board of Trade to the subject, suggesting that in respect of Bills of that nature the Government should make some Report to the House. He wished to remind, the House that the question was not only one of rates, but also of policy. Down to last year, the policy adopted in all Railway Bills was that all kinds of manures should be carried at the lowest rates. Now, the real essence of the proposal before the House in the Bills objected to was that certain kinds of artificial manure should be raised from the first to the third class, and charged accordingly. The effect of that would be to raise the rates for the carriage of manures very seriously; and it was, therefore, an important matter not only for the farmer, but to all who were interested in land. The question, as he had said, was not entirely one of rates, but of policy. He wished to know whether the Standing Order proposed by the right hon. Gentleman the Member for North Hants (Mr. Sclater-Booth) would apply to unopposed as well as to opposed Bills? Opposed Bills were fought out in a Committee upstairs; but when a Bill was unopposed it was not the duty of anyone to take cognizance of it. He thought the House ought to express a clear opinion on the matter of policy altogether independent of the Standing Order; and he should reserve to himself the right of opposing these Bills, when they came forward again, and of taking the opinion of the House on the question of policy. It was most important to know whether the policy was going to be reversed, which had hitherto been adopted, of charging the rates on all kinds of manures on the lowest scale. Farmers looked to the Members of that House to protect their interests. Practically, they had been giving power to the Railway Companies to make their own charges, and the Railway Companies were now showing a disposition to increase their rates. The Great North of Scotland Railway Company had, two years ago, made an attempt to increase their charges for manures, and that attempt had resulted in the question being brought before the House. It was afterwards referred to a Committee, and the Bill was subsequently thrown out by the House of Lords.
rose to Order. He wished to know whether the Question before the House was not the adjournment of the debate; and whether, in that case, it was competent for the hon. Member to discuss the merits of the Bill on that Question?
said, he apprehended that the Question before the House was the policy of the Bill.
The hon. Member is not entitled, upon the Question of the adjournment of the debate, to go into the merits of the Bill.
said, he had not proposed to discuss the general merits of the Bill; but he was simply giving reasons why the House should consider the question of policy before adopting the Standing Order.
said, he must presume that the object of postponing the consideration of these Bills for a week was to enable the proposed Standing Order to be discussed in the meantime. He believed that, in some instances, the promoters had agreed to alter their rates, and the delay of a week might seriously inconvenience them. He would, therefore, appeal to the right hon. Gentleman the President of the Board of Trade (Mr. Chamberlain) to put the Bills down for an earlier day than that day week. He also wished to point out that the whole of these Bills did not hang together. Some of the schemes were opposed on a different ground altogether from that of an increase in the charges for the carriage of agricultural manures. He thought, therefore, that such Bills might be discussed, and that the House should not take the whole of them together. He might inform the House that, in some cases, the agents had already intimated their intention of altering the Schedules attached to the Bills; and he presumed that, in that case, the opposition would be withdrawn.
said, that, although he had already addressed the House, he hoped he would be allowed to answer the question which had been put to him. He did not think it would be possible to take these Bills on an earlier day than that day week, because the right hon. Gentleman the Member for North Hants (Mr. Sclater-Booth) would not propose the alteration of the Standing Order until Thursday; and, therefore, the adjourned debate on the postponed Bills could not be conveniently taken on an earlier day than Tuesday next. In regard to Bills which did not contain provision for increasing the rates, he saw no reason why they should not be taken earlier, as they were, practically, unopposed Bills.
said, he wished to point out that, in drawing up the new Standing Order, care should be taken that no words should be used which by any possibility could be construed into allowing the legislation of last year to be a precedent for the future. He saw in one of the Bills objected to that there was a provision enabling the Company, from time to time, to demand and claim for the railway authorized in the Act such tolls as were authorized in any Act passed in 1882. He thought they should take care, in framing this Standing Order, that the rates and classification to which the Standing Order referred should be those which had been in general use for a considerable time, and not those which might have been hurriedly allowed, and passed without observation or remark in that House, in the last year or two.
thought there ought to be a clear understanding on the matter; that the Report of the Board of Trade should not deal only with the proposed Bills. If that were done, it would only be a half cure. What was wanted was a Report from the Board of Trade upon the clauses of any Bill which would have the effect of imposing rates in excess of those previously scheduled. He was very glad that the right hon. Gentleman the Member for North Hants (Mr. Sclater-Booth) had accepted the proposition of the right hon. Gentleman the President of the Board of Trade (Mr. Chamberlain) in regard to the alteration of the Standing Order; because that Standing Order, as it was down on the Paper, would not, in his (Mr. R. H. Paget's) judgment, have boon sufficient to meet the circumstances of the case, and lie should himself have boon prepared to move an Amendment to it, very much in the sense he understood the President of the Board of Trade had now himself suggested to the House. There was one other question to which he wished to draw the attention of the right hon. Gentleman, and it was this—would he undertake, on behalf of the Board of Trade, not only that there should be a special Report laid before Committees on Railway Bills, but that there should be an officer of the Board of Trade ready to attend before such Committees, and give such information as might be desired? He laid particular stress on this for several reasons. Those who had had to deal with Railway Committees would he aware that the earlier clauses of a Bill were those which were chiefly fought out between the two opposing parties. They were scrutinized word for word, and there was very little chance of any- thing being allowed to creep into them unobserved; but the moment the Committee came to deal with the rating clauses of a Railway Bill all the opposition of rival lines ceased. All Railway Companies, however much they opposed one another upon other points, were only too ready to support each other in obtaining the biggest rates they could get in these Bills. If the object of amending the Standing Order was to protect the interests of the public from the imposition of new rates by Railway Companies, he maintained that, in order to afford the public full protection, there ought to be not only a Report of the Board of Trade, but that the Committees should have power to examine an officer of the Board of Trade, so as to obtain full information in regard to these rates.
I must interrupt the hon. Gentleman, and call his attention to the fact that the Question before the House is the adjournment of the debate. The observations of the hon. Gentleman will be more in Order when the proposition of the right hon. Gentleman the Member for North Hants (Mr. Selater-Booth) is before the House.
said, lie fully accepted the ruling of the Speaker. He had hoped, however, that his remarks would have been germane to the Question before the House, as showing whether it was not desirable that the postponement of these Bills should take place until such time as the President of the Board of Trade could consent to a step which he (Mr. Paget) thought necessary for the protection of the public interests.
said, he had no desire to continue the debate, because he thought they were nearly all agreed upon the course which ought to be pursued. But he wished to point out that it was not merely a question of tolls upon manures which was involved in the Standing Order of his right hon. Friend the Member for North Hants (Mr. Sclater-Booth), but a general revision of tolls in all Bills which might be introduced; and, therefore, the Standing Order would apply to other charges and tolls besides those upon manures, which might be equally as objectionable as any increased tolls upon manures. He therefore thought that other Bills on the Paper would have to be postponed in the same way as those which dealt with the question of agricultural manures, in order that the Standing Order might be applied to every Bill which contained a Schedule of Tolls. He thought that every Bill brought before the House, before it became an Act of Parliament, should undergo a thorough scrutiny at the hands of the Board of Trade, and of the House.
said, that the Select Committee which sat last year, and the year before, on the question of Railway Rates and Tolls, went fully into this matter, and recommended an alteration of the Standing Orders now in force, so as to give all parties interested, including the general public, a locus standi before a Committee upon a Railway Bill, wherever it was proposed to increase the rates and charges. It was found now that it was often an exceedingly difficult matter to get the locus standi of an intended opponent recognized. He thought it might be desirable that the right hon. Gentleman should consult the Officers of the House upon this question, and see whether any alteration was necessary, in order to enable a Committee to take into consideration points which it might be desirable to raise in the interests of the public.
said, there was one other matter which had not been referred to, and he did not know whether it could properly be brought within the Standing Order of the House. It was, however, an important matter which ought to be brought under the notice of Parliament. In the Report of the Committee on Railway Rates, they made recommendations not only in reference to new Railway Bills and to those which proposed an increase in the scale of rates already imposed, but they also recommended the consideration of the existing rates of existing Companies. It might not be known by every Member of the House, but it was a fact that the scale of rates often differed materially as between different parts of the undertaking of the same Railway Company. In 1878, a Report was presented to the House of Lords, showing the difference in these rates. In that Report, for instance, the various different rates and charges imposed by the Great Western Railway Company covered 20 pages.
The hon. Member is not in Order in going into these details.
accepted the correction of the Speaker. He had thought it desirable that, in considering the terms of the Standing Order, attention should be drawn to the existing rates of existing Companies.
Motion agreed to.
Debate further adjourned till Tuesday next.
Barry Dock And Railways Bill (By Order)
Second Reading Adjourned Debate
Order read, for resuming Adjourned Debate on Question [27th February], "That the Bill be now read a second time."
Question again proposed.
Debate resumed.
Motion made, and Question, "That the Debate be further adjourned till Tuesday next,"—( Mr. Chamberlain,)—put, and agreed to.
Exeter, Teign Valley, And Chagford Railway Bill (By Order)
Second Reading Adjourned Debate
Order read, for resuming Adjourned Debate on Question [27th February], "That the Bill be now read a second time."
Question again proposed.
Debate resumed.
Motion made, and Question, "That the Debate be further adjourned till Tuesday next,"—( Mr. Chamberlain,)—put, and agreed to.
Hull And Lincoln Railway Bill (By Order)
Second Reading Adjourned Debate
Order read, for resuming Adjourned Debate on Question [27th February], "That the Bill be now read a second time."
Question again proposed.
Debate resumed.
Amendment proposed, to leave out the word "now," and at the end of the Question to add the words, "upon this day six months."—( Mr. Creyke.)
Question proposed, "That the word 'now' stand part of the Question."
, in moving, as a further Amendment, "That the Debate be further adjourned until Tuesday next," said, he would suggest to his hon. Friend the Member for York (Mr. Creyke) that that would be the best course to take. He was aware that the Bill was opposed on another ground than that of an alteration of rates—namely, on the ground of interference with the navigation of the Humber; but as it was one of the Bills which contained a proposal for an alteration of rates on agricultural manures, it would be for the convenience of the House that the second reading should be postponed until that day week, when the objection raised to the Bill by his hon. Friend on the other point could be taken at the same time.
Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the Debate be further adjourned till Tuesday next."—( Mr. Chamberlain.)
said, he fully assented to the course proposed by the right hon. Gentleman, and would withdraw his Amendment.
Amendment, by leave, withdrawn.
Question put, and agreed to.
Debate further adjourned till Tuesday next.
Oxford, Aylesbury, And Metropolitan Junction Railway Bill (By Order)
Second Reading Adjourned Debate
Order read, for resuming Adjourned Debate on Question [27th February], "That the Bill be now read a second time."
Question again proposed.
Debate resumed.
Motion made, and Question, "That the Debate be further adjourned till Tuesday next,"—( Mr. Chamberlain,)—put, and agreed to.
Seafield Dock And Railway Bill (By Order)
Second Reading Adjourned Debate
Order read, for resuming Adjourned Debate on Question [27th February], "That the Bill be now read a second time."
Question again proposed.
Debate resumed.
Motion made, and Question, "That the Debate be further adjourned till Tuesday next,"—( Mr. Chamberlain,)—put, and agreed to.
Windsor, Ascot, And Aldershot Railway Bill (By Order)
Second Reading Adjourned Debate
Order read, for resuming Adjourned Debate on Question [27th February], "That the Bill be now read a second time."
Question again proposed.
Debate resumed.
Motion made, and Question, "That the Debate be further adjourned till Tuesday next,"—( Mr. Chamberlain,)—put, and agreed to.
Midland, Birmingham, Wolverhampton, And Milford Junction Railway Bill (By Order)
Second Reading
Order for Second Reading read.
Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the Bill be now read a second time."—( Mr. Dodds.)
urged that the Bill might be read a second time, as the opposition to it was on account of the Commons Preservation Society, in the name of the hon. Member for the Tower Hamlets.
asked if this was one of the Bills which contained provisions for an alteration of rates?
Yes.
Motion made, and Question, "That the Second Reading be deferred till Tuesday next,"—( Mr. Chamberlain,)—put, and agreed to.
Spain—International Law—Surrender Of Cuban Refugees— The Papers
said, that the Government had promised to lay on the Table of the House some Papers relating to the Cuban refugees. They had not yet been furnished to the House, and unless they were in the hands of Members by Monday next, he would make a Motion on the subject.
Questions
Post Office—Contracts—The Mail Service Between London And Dublin
asked the Financial Secretary to the Treasury, "Whether, before taking the Contract for the carriage of the Irish Mails from an Irish Company, the Government provided that the London and North Western Railway Company would carry the Mails between Holyhead and Dublin in vessels equal to the existing Mail Packets in size, power, and draught of water; and, whether any and what provision was made with the London and North Western Hallway Company as to the size of the Mail Packets they would use in the service, and the convenience of passengers, so as to ensure that the accommodation would not be lessened, and the charges would not be increased?
Sir, in connection with this Question, I would like to ask the hon. Gentleman whether it is true that the smallest mail boat at present in use is 343 feet in length, and 1,467 tons register, while the Lily and the Violet, which are of the same class as those about to be substituted, are only 230 feet long and 1,031 tons register?
It is quite impossible for me to answer that Question without having Notice. I am not furnished with the dimensions of the particular ships about to be furnished. ["Oh, oh!"] I say it is impossible for me to know the exact size of the vessels. With respect to the Question of my right hon. and learned Friend, I have to say that the form of tender for the mail service referred to is in the usual terms, that a sufficient number of steam vessels of adequate power, and in all respects suited for the service, should be supplied; and that, before they are supplied under the contract, they should be submitted for approval to the Postmaster General. If I understand his Question rightly, my right hon. and learned Friend seems to think the contract should contain regulations for the passenger service. I must point out that that is not the primary object of the contract.
Was any provision whatever made for the accommodation of passengers?
The usual provision. The terms of the contract are that the vessels should be adequate in all respects for the service.
Has any arrangement whatever been made to prevent the London and North Western Railway giving inferior accommodation, and increasing their prices after they had obtained the contract?
Is not the hon. Gentleman aware that it is the intention of the London and North Western Railway, expressed with the assent of the Government, to change the port of entry from Kingstown to Dublin; and is he not also perfectly well aware that steamers of a sufficient tonnage and size, such as are required for the mail and passenger service, cannot be used in the river transit of Dublin, which is already subject to several collisions even at the present time?
I must say that it is not the fact that the vessels are intended to go to the North Wall. The contract requires that the vessels shall run to Kingstown or North Wall as the Government may direct; and I may say that, from the information in the hands of the Government at present, they think the North Wall is totally out of the question. In reply to my right hon. and learned Friend opposite (Mr. Gibson), I must repeat that the contract referred to the postal service, and required that the vessels should be of sufficient dimensions to meet the requirements of the service adequately, and that they should first of all be approved by the Postmaster General.
May I ask the hon. Gentleman whether it is the intention of the Department to insist that the vessels for the mail service shall be equal in size, tonnage, and seaworthy capacity to those which have been performing the service since 1859; or whether the Department intends to permit an inferior class of vessels to those which ran 23 years ago to be put on this important service?
I think the Question is already answered in the answer I have already given. The object of the Treasury and of the Post Office is to obtain the due carriage of the mails, and we have undertaken a contract for the Company to secure that the vessels shall be adequate and in all respects sufficient for the service. No vessels would be put on the service that are not previously approved by the Postmaster General. The carriage of passengers is not the primary part of the Government's duties. ["Oh, oh!"]
Is it any part, primary or secondary?
I do not think it is the duty of the Government to provide for the carriage of passengers. ["Oh, oh!"]
In consequence of the declaration of the Government that they do not intend to consult the convenience of Irish Members obliged to attend in this House, I beg to give Notice that I will raise this question when the salary of the hon. Gentleman the Secretary to the Treasury comes up for consideration, and also that legislation promoted by the London and North Western Railway Company will obtain the attention of Irish Members for the future.
Fac-Similes Of Irish Manuscripts
asked the Financial Secretary to the Treasury, How many plates have appeared in each of the volumes of the facsimiles of Irish MSS.; whether the preface and appendix in the last volume do not far exceed in length those which have appeared in previous volumes; whether this additional length of mere printed matter has largely tended to increase the price; and, whether the next volume will complete the series?
Sir, the number of volumes is four, and the numbers of the plates in the volumes published are 45, 49, 70, and 47; but mere numbers are no criterion of cost, as those in the last volume are in divers colours, and very much more elaborate than the others, some two or three of them involving, I am told, upwards of 20 printings. The preface and appendix to the new volume are much longer than in former cases; but the two together probably did not make 10s. difference in the price. The next volume will complete the series.
Post Office (Savings Bank Department)
asked the Postmaster General, Whether the Commission of Inquiry on the Post Office Savings Banks in 1875 condemned systematic extra work as prejudicial to the health of the clerks, and opposed to the true interests of the Department; whether the extra work performed in the office has steadily increased from 100,000 hours in 1874 to 190,000 hours in 1882; whether the office is still kept open from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.; and whether the Postmaster General will state his reasons for so long restricting the staff to a number far below the requirements of the Department; whether the building in Queen Victoria Street has proved totally inadequate in point of size, and whether portions of the male staff have been removed to other premises in order to make room for additional female clerks; whether more than 200 female clerks have been appointed to the Savings Banks Department since 1875, and whether the Postmaster General will restore the relative proportions of the upper and lower classes as recommended by the Commission of 1875, seeing that the neglect of this recommendation has destroyed all flow of promotion among the male staff; and, whether it is true that the Postmaster's Accounts for January 1882 were not checked by the books of the Department till August last; whether those of June last were only commenced to be checked in December last; whether they are yet completed; and whether, in consequence of this irregularity, a fraud of considerable magnitude might not have remained undiscovered for a lengthened period?
Sir, the hon. Member asks me ten Questions in one. I will endoavour to answer them as briefly as I can. Within the last two or three years the number of depositors in the Post Office Savings' Bank has increased by more than 400,000 a-year, and the annual addition to the aggregate deposits has increased by more than £3,000,000. I think it will be obvious to the House that it would have been impossible to have provided for so remarkable an increase of business without a considerable amount of overtime. It was necessary, for instance, to ascertain whether this large and sudden growth of business was only temporary, or whether it was likely to continue. Care will continue to be taken to prevent the amount of overtime from being unduly large, and with this object as many additional clerks were appointed as room could be found for. The new premises in Queen Victoria Street, although they have been opened little more than two years—and it was then thought they would provide ample accommodation—have been found too small. As my right hon. Friend the First Commissioner of Works (Mr. Shaw Lefevre) stated the other day, the difficulties which prevented the acquisition of fresh accommodation have now been removed, and the now premises will be ready for occupation next month. The number of superior appointments is regulated by the requirements of the service. Although I think the House would not wish me to trouble them with unnecessary details, I may state that in the last two years the number of principal clerks has been increased in the male branch from three to eight, and in the female branch by two. I believe that great advantage has resulted from the employment of female clerks, and the number employed in the Savings Bank has been increased within the last two years by 91. As the hon. Member suggests the possibility of fraud, I can, in conclusion, assure him that there has been no fraud, and that, in my opinion, the method of keeping the accounts of the Savings Bank is entirely satisfactory.
Navy—Case Of William Bowles And G Munden
asked the Secretary to the Admiralty, Whether any legislation will be undertaken to assure to William Bowles and G. Munden the pension to which they may be entitled, as suggested in letter F 4, page 141, of the Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General, or what other steps will be taken to prevent these men from suffering prospective injustice from no fault of their own?
Sir, the Correspondence appended to the Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General shows that, in the opinion of the Admiralty, the two men named by the right hon. and gallant Admiral are placed, through no fault of their own, in a most unfortunate position. There are very serious objections to legislation on behalf of individuals; but we have reason to believe that these men will not ultimately be made to suffer on account of the omission that has been made in their case.
Army—Establishment Of Military Railway Corps
asked the Secretary of State for War, Whether, after the recent experiences in Egypt, the Government intend to establish a Military Railway Corps?
Yes, Sir; arrangements are being made, and I hope will shortly be completed, for the formation and training of a Military Railway Corps.
Army—Vaccination Of Recruits
asked the Secretary of State for War, Whether every recruit on entering the Army is compelled to be vaccinated, without reference to any objection he may entertain to the operation, to the fact of his having been previously vaccinated, or to his having had the small-pox; and, if so, whether recruiting officers have orders to explain this fact before enlistment?
Sir, every recruit without exception is vaccinated on entering the Army. No orders are given to recruiting officers to explain the regulations as to vaccination before enlistment; but no case of objection has ever been brought to notice.
Egypt (Indian Contingent)— Expenses
asked the Secretary of State for War, If it is a fact that the men of the Anglo-Indian regiments, sent from India to Egypt last year, retained their Indian pay and allowances till October 10th 1882, whereas the officers were put on English pay, &c, on landing in Egypt?
Sir, it appears from the pay lists of British regiments sent from India to Egypt that both officers and men were put upon British rates from the day of landing in Egypt.
Poor Law—Vaccination Of Pauper Children
asked the President of the Local Government Board, Whether the Order of the Local Government Board of January 27th, addressed to Boards of Guardians, does not recite, with approval, that—
whether the Local Government Board place any and what limit of age before which a newly born child shall not be vaccinated; and, whether the Department is aware that its orders or directions form no defence in point, of Law to the vaccinating officer on a charge of manslaughter by reason of too early vaccination?"Some Boards of Guardians have passed a resolution requiring the medical officer, subject to the exercise of his judgment as to making exception in particular cases, to secure the vaccination of all children horn in the workhouse as soon as possible after birth;"
Sir, I presume the hon. Member refers to a Circular letter of January 27, 1882, as there is no Order under that date in the present year. The practice is as stated by the hon. Member in the first paragraph of the Question. The Local Government Board had never fixed any limit of age before which a newly-born child should not be vaccinated, and they are aware that its Orders form no defence in point of law to the vaccinating officer on a charge of manslaughter. There has never been any charge, except the one which recently occurred.
United Statesߞthe New Tariff
asked the President of the Board of Trade, If he can give to the House any exact information by way of a printed précis or other statement, in a form of which the public can avail themselves, of the effect of the new Tariff Law in the United States, comparing the old and present Duties on each class of goods?
Sir, I have not yet received any official information on this subject; but as soon as I get the Returns I will see in what way the object of the hon. Member can be attained.
Egypt—The New Egyptian Indemnity Loan
asked the Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Whether it is true, as stated in the "Standard" of the 5th instant, that funds for the New Egyptian Indemnity Loan are to to be provided by retrenching the amounts now available for the internal administration of this Country, a step which is said to be exciting the "liveliest indignation;" and, whether, under these circumstances, Her Majesty's Government will support the Egyptian Government in altering their decree known as "The Law of Liquidation," so as to provide for the indemnity from the revenues assigned for the payment of the bondholders?
Sir, it is the object of the Egyptian Government to introduce economy into the different Departments of the Public Service of that country, so as, if possible, to meet the demands upon it without imposing fresh taxation. The issues raised by the second portion of the Question are, I fear, of too great importance to be answered within the limits of an answer to a. Question.
Is the money to be taken from the unassigned revenue?
That is a fresh Question, of which I must have Notice.
No, no.
Post Office (Savings Bank Department)
asked the Postmaster General, Whether it is a fact that many male clerks in the Savings Bank of from ten to fourteen years' service are still on the lowest class of the establishment, with very remote prospects of promotion; whether any scheme for the amelioration of their condition is included in the "beneficial changes" said to have been determined upon; and, whether he will state the number of appointments respectively to the male and female establishments of the Post Office Savings Bank since the 1st day of January, 1876, together with the number of superior appointments created since that date in each case?
Sir, I am not in a position to state what will be the effect of the changes to which the hon. Member refers. It is the case that there are clerks in the third class of 10 to 14 years' service. Their chances of promotion in the future depend upon the requirements of the Department and their individual efficiency and conduct. The number of appointments made since the 1st of January, 1876, has been 158 on the male staff with 13 superior appointments, and 156 on the female staff with 15 superior appointments. I may add, however, that the salary allotted to a superior appointment on the female staff is about one-third of that allotted to an appointment of the same rank on the male staff.
asked, whether complaints had reached the right hon. Gentleman on the part of the female clerks, that they were required to do the work of male clerks for very much less than the remuneration of male clerks?
, in reply, said, he had no doubt that female clerks would be extremely glad to have an increase of salary; but he might say that the female establishment at the Post Office was in a very satisfactory position, and he had no difficulty in finding most eligible persons to fill the appointments.
Channel Tunnel Scheme
asked the President of the Board of Trade, with reference to a Notice of Motion on this subject standing in his name, Whether it would be brought on that night?
, in reply, said, he felt it would probably be inconvenient that a matter of so much importance should be left uncertain, and he would undertake that it should not be brought forward that night.
Crime And Outrage (Ireland)— Reported Murder Of Lord Ardilaun's Bailiff
asked Mr. Attorney General for Ireland, If he had any information as to the reported assault on Flynn, Lord Ardilaun's bailiff, one day last week, by which he received such injuries that he had since died?
, in reply, said, he was happy to state that, so far as the death of the man was concerned, the report was entirely devoid of foundation. There was an ordinary trivial assault committed upon Flynn some time ago; but he was informed by the Sub-Inspector of Police that he saw Flynn yesterday at a distance of 10 miles from his own residence in perfectly good health.
The Civil Service And Navy Estimates
In reply to Mr. W. H. SMITH,
said, that the Civil Service Estimates were in the hands of the printers, and he hoped a few copies would be ready on Thursday, though they could not be generally distributed till Monday. He could not say when the Navy Estimates would be ready.
said, he trusted the Government was aware that it was not reasonable even to ask for a Vote on Account until hon. Members had been afforded an opportunity of examining these Estimates.
Army Returns
asked the Secretary of State for War, Why the Report of the Inspector General of Recruiting, which had been promised for that day, and which, according to The Times of that morning, had just been issued, was not in the hands of Members; also, when the Tel-el-Kebir Return, ordered on the 6th of November, 1882, would be laid on the Table of the House?
, in reply, said, that he had been assured that the Report of the Inspector General of Recruiting would have been in the hands of Members that day; but he had not yet ascertained the cause of the delay. He could not reply as to the Tel-el-Kebir Return.
Army Estimates—The Militia Vote
In reply to Earl PERCY,
said, that he thought the Government could not hope to have more than one night for the Army Estimates before Easter, and he feared there was no possibility of taking the Militia Vote on that night.
Seed Advances (Scotland) (No 2) Bill
I wish to ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer, What is the course the Government intend to take with regard to the Seed Advances (Scotland) Bill, the debate on which was adjourned at an early hour this morning? Either that Bill is an urgent measure, or it is not. If it is urgent, I think the House will be curious to know—[Cries of "Order!"]—
The noble Lord can put a Question, but he cannot enter into debate.
My noble Friend has not given me any Notice on the subject, and I can only now repeat what I said last night. The Bill is proposed by the hon. Member for Glasgow (Dr. Cameron), and I concurred last night in the solicitation to adjourn it until it could be debated. When it is debated, I will state to the House the views of the Government upon it.
My Question to the right hon. Gentleman is, Whether the Government would give the House an opportunity of discussing the Bill on an early day?
No, Sir; the urgent Business of the Government is such that we could not possibly do that; but we certainly should wish to have the Bill discussed, and at a reasonable hour.
The Supplementary Estimates
In reply to Mr. GORST,
said, that it would be necessary to obtain the Supplementary Estimates on Thursday, so that the Appropriation Bill might be passed before the end of the financial year.
Motion
Parliament—Private Bill Legislation —Resolutions
, in rising to call attention to the system of Private Bill Legislation; and to move the following Resolutions:—
This costliness is due to the system which now exists. Great Companies, with boundless purses, come to this House and to the other House; and they are, perhaps unconsciously, not unwilling to expend enormous sums, and to protract discussion as long as they can with decency protract it, in order to drive off the smaller Companies, with smaller capital, who might wish to interfere with the monopoly of the greater Companies. It is the interest of those great Companies to lengthen the proceedings, and the system plays into their hands. Parliament sits only half the year, and the Committees sit only for a few hours in the week; and that fact, coupled with the fact that the professional men and agents engaged are not anxious to hurry the proceedings, causes great delay. I do not for a moment say that either the Parliamentary counsel or the solicitors desire to spin out those inquiries to an inordinate length. It would be unworthy of me to make such a suggestion. Neither do I suppose that the municipal officials—the town clerks and the great deputations of town councillors who come up to London—are not in a hurry to go home again, but wish to stay in London at the public expense longer than is absolutely necessary. I do not make those charges against any of these professional men and official gentlemen; but I do say that the professional gentlemen, knowing that their principals, the great and wealthy Companies, wish delay, it would hardly be in human nature for them to baulk their principals of their desire. Then, again, the hours are short. In one hearing of eight hours, you could do more than could be done in two days of four hours each; and, therefore, when the Session is so short, and the hours are so short, and the tribunal inexperienced, the difficulty which counsel feel is to know when to stop. Naturally, they think it advisable to go on calling evidence until the tribunal stops them, and so the matter lingers on needlessly in one House, to be followed by similar tactics, similar delay, and similar expense in the other House. This brings me to my second objection to the present system, and that is the uncertainty in the decisions at which the Committees in this House and the Committees in the other House arrive. I will not say one word in prejudice of the personnel of the present Committees. Members of Committees in both Houses have shown great industry, sometimes very great ability, always high honour, and they have rendered service in these difficult and delicate investigations, for which they have received inadequate credit, both from the House and from the public. But the system is one that will not bear investigation. In the first place, how is the tribunal constituted? Members of the present and leading Members of the late Administration rarely serve on Private Bill Committees. Hon. Gentlemen in large professional practice, and who have great businesses to conduct, are, as a rule, exempt; and you have also to exempt those who are connected with property through which the lines will pass, or who have pecuniary interests in the localities affected by the Private Bill. You have further to eliminate the Directors and Chairmen of other Railway Companies, and who number in this present House of Commons about 113. So that, by this process, you practically exclude from the service of these Committees the very pick of the business faculty in the House. The Committee of Selection have got to select the Chairmen, and their choice is always good; but each year, we are told, it is more and more difficult to man the Chairmen's Panel; and yet the whole system really turns on the selection of Chairmen, because, where only the inexperienced are left to fill the Committees, the whole burden really falls upon the shoulders of the Chairmen. If it was difficult to man those Committees properly before, it will be much more difficult now, for it will be remembered that it was decided last year that 160 picked Members of the House should be drafted off to serve on Standing Committees. I am aware it is supposed these will represent a microcosm of the House; but if these Standing Committees are to be successful—and it is believed they will be—more of them will be appointed, and it will come to be regarded as a considerable honour to serve on them, and an honour sought after by the best of the non-official Members of the House. If that be so, you will find it almost impossible to man your Private Bill Committees, except by those who have not the ambition to serve on the Standing Committees. The tribunal will become weaker and weaker; it will not be a question of abolishing the tribunal; but the difficulty will become so great that it will be impossible to continue the system. This difficulty of manning the Committees is not confined to the House of Commons. So long as 20 years ago, a similar difficulty was experienced in the House of Lords; and Lord Redesdale stated that he was not able to take more than a certain number of Private Bills for origination in the House of Lords. Mr. Massey, who was Chairman of Committees at that time, was examined before the Select Committee that sat in 1863 upon this very question. He was asked whether it was not his duty to meet the Chairman of the House of Lords' Committee, and to decide what Bills should originate with the House of Lords, and what with the House of Commons; and the answer to that was, that the Bills were selected by the Chairmen of the Committees of the two Houses. In answer to another question, he said there was considerable difficulty with respect to the selection of the Bills for Committee in each House, because the number of cases Lord Redesdale would undertake was very small in comparison with the number that must commence in the House of Commons. That year they had nearly 400 Private Bills, some of which went off; but of those Lord Redesdale would only consent to take 82. Well, Sir, has that difficulty been overcome? This year there are 276 Private Bills introduced into Parliament, the Chairmen have met, and Lord Redesdale has found it impossible to take more than 85. Last year, out of 320 Bills the House of Lords accepted only 96; and in 1881, out of 231 Bills the House of Lords accepted only 65. In both Houses, therefore, there is danger of a dead-lock, and this year there is greater danger than ever there has been in the history of Private Bill Legislation, owing to the appointment of Standing Committees. Such is the tribunal which this expensive system creates. It has been called—I am not using my own words—"a weak jury without a Judge to moderate between the jury and the Bar." The Parliamentary Bar is, perhaps, the strongest and most experienced of any Bar in this country; and what possible chance has the Committee, or the jury, as it has been called, against such a Bar as that? And it is not one jury, it is two juries, two Courts of original and co-ordinate jurisdiction, which is an anomaly in itself, and it is incumbent upon the parties to establish their case before these two Courts, to whom are entrusted some of the most difficult and delicate duties that can be entrusted to any tribunal. And what is the consequence? The consequence is that the decisions of those Committees come to be regarded almost as lotteries, in which the longest purse is apt to draw the prize, owing to its pertinacity. That is the opinion of a noble Lord whose experience is very great upon this question (Lord Redesdale), who, of all men, is not likely to underrate the excellence of those institutions to which he has been accustomed. He says—"I believe I am right in Baying that the various expenses accompanying the passing of Railway Bills in this country through Parliament before a sod was dug would amount to something very nearly like the cost of the whole Prussian system."
Mr. Hope Scott, a well-known Parliamentary barrister, says in reference to the same matter—"My opinion is that both the large Companies and the small Companies would equally gain by being brought before experienced tribunals, and one reason why there is such great expense is that there is a lottery about the decision of a Committee, which they rely upon, in a great degree, as inducing them to carry on an opposition. I think if they knew that the inquiry would be brought before persons who understood the whole question, all the little trumpery matters which they now bring in for the purpose of misleading the Committee would be left out, and they would not think it advisable to continue the opposition if it was not well founded."
And it is in the experience of hon. Members that there is always that uncertainty about Parliamentary Committees. In the ordinary affairs of life, if you go to a lawyer, he tells you either that your case is a good one, or that it is a bad one. But if you go to your Parliamentary lawyer, he will be unable to say whether you have a winning case. He will give the answer that is always given on such occasions; he will tell you—I cannot tell you until I see how the Committee is constituted; when I see what the Committee is, I shall be able to give you some opinion." If a lawyer were to tell you, in an ordinary case, that he could not say whether your case was bad or good until he saw the Judge, the whole system of jurisprudence would be discredited, for such an answer would be unbearable. In 50 years of these contests, and after untold expense incurred therein, scarcely a single rule of practice or any principle as to the decisions given has been arrived at. The House does not know the principles that actuate Committees, and one Committee does not know the principles that rule the Committee in the adjoining room. The story of contrary decisions is well known; but it will bear repetition here. There was a question to be tried before four Committees in this House, sitting in adjoining rooms, the question being as to two lines of railway—which should be preferred, a short and direct line, or a long and more circuitous line, which passed through more villages, and gave promise of larger traffic. The Committees met to decide that important question. The first decided in favour of the short line; the second in favour of the circuitous line; the third decided that neither of the lines would do, and the fourth Committee decided in favour of both. That may be an exaggeration; but it illustrates the statement that it is impossible for Committees, however just individually they may be, to carry out any uniform principle of legislation. Viscount Sherbrooke, who sat upon the Committee of 1863 as Mr. Lowe, took the same objection, because he says—"It is a lottery, and whichever side comes before me, I say you may win, or you may lose; I cannot tell you which."
So much for the two principal objections that I have to urge. The third objection I have to the existing system relates to the unwarrantable and unprofitable waste of public time it involves. I shall not lay myself open to the charge of wasting time unprofitably by dwelling on this, because it is admitted that Parliament has too much to do, and that it is necessary for us to do something to economize our resources and the time and labour of public men. The labour of the last Autumn Session was a confession of that. The labour, the irksomeness of the work, and the hours spent by Members of this House on Pail-way and Private Bill Committees are as extravagant of Parliamentary energy as the expenses connected with these Bills are extravagant of public wealth. A scheme of local inquiries such as suggest would greatly economize the public time, and save the labour of Members of Parliament. Neither shall I dwell upon the objections in detail, such as the overwork of the Chairman of Committees, or the scanty scrutiny which is given to the unopposed clauses in Bills, or the hasty manner in which the clauses are considered, though, to my mind, the House had a curious illustration of this last night, when the hon. and gallant Member for Truro (Sir James M'Garel-Hogg) gave such a feeling account of the sufferings which the Metropolitan Board of Works experienced at the hands of the Metropolitan District Railway in the matter of the ventilators on the Embankment. These objections will, no doubt, be stated with more force by other Members who are more experienced than I am upon the subject. There is one short argument, however, which I may urge upon the House, and which, I think, will have great weight with it, in favour of the 1st Resolution; and that is, that 10 years ago—in 1872—upon the Motion of the right hon. Gentleman the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster (Mr. Dodson), this Resolution was carried in the identical terms in which it stands upon the Paper now. Nothing, however, has been done since 1872 to carry out that Resolution. The Session of 1873 was a troubled Session; the commencement of 1874 was not less troubled; and since then there have been six years during which the attention of Parliament and the country has been directed rather to external than to internal affairs, and the Resolution during that time has remained a dead letter. But now, Sir, we have come back home again. We have entered, it is said, upon an era of domestic legislation, and have already begun to set our house in order. Last year something was done in this direction; but there is still great room for more, and what is to be done must be done by delegation of the Business of the House to external tribunals. There is no novelty about this proposal. In 1845 Enclosure Bills were delegated to the Enclosure Commissioners; in 8486 Estate Bills were delegated to the Court of Chancery; in 1857 divorce cases were delegated to the Divorce Court; and in 1868 Election Petitions were delegated to the Election Judges. But I have now detained the House so long upon these matters that I must shorten as much as I can the few remarks I wish to make upon the remedies that I venture to propose to the House. Many proposals have been made in the direction of improvement of Private Bill Legislation. Lord Redesdale has proposed, to appoint a Committee, consisting of one Peer and two Members of Parliament, which should sit en permanence during the autumn and winter months, and inquire into the schemes which were to be brought into Parliament in the following Session; Earl Grey proposed the appointment of a tribunal in connection with the Board of Trade, whose decisions should be embodied in Provisional Orders; Colonel Wilson Patten proposed the appointment of an extra Parliamentary tribunal to inquire into the facts of each case; Sir Erskine May proposed, and has repeatedly proposed, that a permanent tribunal of high position and high repute should be appointed specially constituted to investigate the merits of Private Bills; and the right hon. Gentleman the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster proposed, as I before observed, in 1872, an extended system of Provisional Orders, and a permanent tribunal to take evidence. Another proposal which is influentially urged is the appointment of a Government Department in which the powers now possessed by different Departments with regard to Provisional Orders should be vested, and all matters dealt with by Private Bills should be dealt with by this Department. That proposal has many supporters, and, undoubtedly, there is much to be said in its favour, seeing that it would materially diminish the expense, invest the decisions of the tribunals with certainty, and save the time of the House. But there is one great objection to the proposal, which to many minds is almost fatal to it; and that is the jealousy which, whether rightly or wrongly, exists to some extent in this House and this country, and to an enormous extent in Scotland, against Government Departments. They say in Scotland, and I believe in great many parts of England there are many of us who consider, that centralization has gone to its utmost limits; the cry is now for decentralization, and the evoking of the work and the faculties of the localities. To my mind, the objection of increased centralization is insuperable against this proposal. Another proposal is made which goes in the opposite direction. It is said that a great deal of work in connection with this Private Bill Legislation might be done by local authorities, by municipal bodies, or by County Boards, when we have them, assisted by assessors sent down by a Government Department or appointed by Parliament. Personally, I incline to this view. These Municipal Councils and County Boards might do a great deal in the investigation of the smaller matters of Private Bills; but the scheme which, in conjunction with my lion, and learned Friend the Member for Christchurch (Mr. Horace Davey) and others, I have attempted to present goes half-way between the scheme of centralization and the scheme of decentralization. We do not propose to give the management of evidence now taken by Private Bill Committees exclusively to Government Departments, nor exclusively to local authorities. I should be glad if the whole system of Private Bills could be delegated to permanent tribunals, Parliament retaining nothing more than powers of confirmation. I believe the work would be better done, and Parliament would be greatly relieved; but I am well aware that Parliament would never listen to such a proposal coming from a private Member; therefore I should be only too glad if even the limited scheme I am going to mention could be approved. The scheme we propose would work in this way. Private Bills would go through all the preliminary stages, just as at present, and the first and the second reading; would be taken as at present. After that they would go before Commissions for investigation—English Bills before an English Commission, Scotch Bills before a Scotch Commission, and Irish Bills before an Irish Commission. The constitution of these Commissions should be on a largo and liberal scale, so that the services of the best men could be secured. It would be necessary that the Commissioners should be remunerated on such a scale as would raise them above all suspicion. They should consist of, perhaps, three Members for each Commission; and upon these Commissions the Parliamentary element, the legal element, and the lay element would be represented. I should not have Members of Parliament, but ex-Members of Parliament. There is no lack of funds to remunerate such Commissioners handsomely. The amount of fees paid in 1882 to this House amounted to £45,000, and the amount of fees paid to the other House of Parliament was £38,000, and out of that fund ample means could be secured to remunerate these Commissioners. These Commissioners should go on Circuit, and take evidence in open Court, which should be taken down by official shorthand writers; the counsel should appear who are wanted, and there should be all the formalities attending a High Court of Justice, and they might sit either singly or in twos or threes according to the importance of the measure brought before them. So that there might be as many as nine Commissioners sitting at the same time for the Three Kingdoms, which is above the average of Private Bill Committees that sit in this House, and they would sit all the year round. If their decision were acquiesced in, the Bill would return to the House, and would go through the remaining stages as at present. If it were not acquiesced in, there should be an appeal to a Parliamentary tribunal, composed of leading Members of both Houses, upon the system suggested by the Committee of 1869, and this tribunal should have power to inflict costs upon the losing parties to the appeal. This Parliamentary tribunal would, take the place of the Committees of the House. Their decisions would be final, and no fresh evidence would be allowed to be taken before them. This is the scheme which I venture, with some diffi- dence, to suggest to the House. I am well aware—no man is better aware—that there must be many imperfections in this scheme. It may be that it will not be difficult for hon. Members of experience in these matters to pick holes in the scheme, or even to say that it is unworkable. I fain hope it will be otherwise. I believe and hope that the imperfections will turn out to be imperfections of detail, rather than of principle; and I shall await the criticisms of experienced Members with much interest and attention. Neither I nor my hon. Friend who seconds these Resolutions is wedded to the details of the scheme; but we do attach importance to the two principles contained in it—the principles, namely, of local inquiry, and of an appeal to Parliament; and our reason for having produced this scheme is a simple one. It is that we know that the House does not like abstract Resolutions; and we have formulated a scheme, and laid it before the House, because we think it due to the House that when we have attempted to destroy some portion of the existing system, we should at least try to build up something in the place of it. Before I sit down I hope the House will bear with me while I say a few sentences upon the advantages which I expect from this scheme. In the first place, there would be a great saving of expense. The sources of expense are the professional charges, the expense of witnesses, and the double inquiry before this House and the House of Lords. With regard to professional charges. If these Commissioners were to go on Circuit, no human being would think of taking leading Parliamentary counsel over to Dublin and Belfast, or to various places in Scotland, when they could employ the Irish or Scotch Bar; and in small cases the local solicitors could be employed. The expense under that head would be largely diminished. In the next place, the witnesses and deputations coming to London would cease; there would no longer be reason for the whole of a Town Council to come up to London in May, and wait for months. In the next place, the double inquiry would be done away with. There is, I am aware, the question of appeal to the Parliamentary tribunal, which might be said to introduce an element of expense. But there are several considerations to be laid before the House on that head. In the first place, I suppose there might be, for the first year or two, frequent appeals; but if confidence were once established in the local tribunal, and if the local tribunal were constituted of able, conscientious men, whose decisions were well received, the appeals would become infrequent, and acquiescence would be the rule and appeals the exception. Then there is always the fact that this Parliamentary tribunal has power to inflict costs, which, to a certain extent, would be a deterrent to prevent Companies who had not a good case from appealing to the tribunal. In the third place, the element of uncertainty in the decisions would be eliminated, as you would have a tribunal going on systematized rules of procedure in taking evidence, and in other matters of that kind. It would diminish the uncertainty, and do away with the haphazard decisions which are given at present. The tribunal would, of course, be a tribunal of the most experienced men in the House—men who would, under the present system, be selected to the Chairmen's Panel—and it is material to remember that no fresh evidence would be taken before this tribunal. On these grounds, I feel certain that the expenses would be greatly diminished. But there is also this important consideration. The local inquiry would elicit the truth much more accurately and simply than at present before Parliamentary Committees, and it would also enable many to give evidence who could not go to London. In the debate on the transference of the jurisdiction, in the case of Election Petitions, from the House of Commons, Sir Robert Collier stated that local inquiry was the most potent agent to elicit truth. And more than that, there was a Select Committee in 1846 to consider the value of local inquiries. And what did that Committee say? It stated that local inquiry would be of incalculable advantage in diminishing the great expenses incurred by parties for the attendance of agents and witnesses in London, and in saving a large portion of the time of Members of the House, and in supplying to the Committees on Bills the local and trustworthy information which, under the present system, appears to be so much wanted. But it is not on the ground of saving expense or eliciting the truth only that I would urge this matter. I would urge it on the ground that only by local inquiries could justice be done to small places and to poor men. There are many small places in Ireland which are anxious to have tramway schemes, or gas works, or water works, or harbour works, and who are unable to carry out these useful undertakings, owing to the enormous expense which would fall upon them if they were to come to Parliament. In Scotland I know of many instances where small towns and burghs are prevented from having such appliances and undertakings; and I know others which have been almost ruined by being brought up to Parliament, in order to secure the passing or to defeat the provisions of some Private Bill. One of the burghs which I have the honour to represent was dragged up to Parliament in 1863 to defend itself against unjust assessments which were proposed to be levied upon it by the county, owing to some Road Bill. They came up, and had the objectionable clauses modified in their interest; but at what a cost? It cost them 77 per cent of their income. I know of another small burgh in Scotland represented by the hon. Member for the Ayr Burghs (Mr. E. F. P. Campbell), with an income of £3,500 a-year, and two years ago it had to spend no less than £2,500 in securing the passing of a Bill to provide it with pure drinking water. The expenses in these two cases, and in many others which could be mentioned, would be trifling, if the inquiry had been conducted in the locality. I am sure there are many of my Colleagues from Scotland who, in their own experience, can give similar instances. But if this is true of small places, how much more important is it when it affects poor men? I urge the importance of these local inquiries on the ground of the injustice often inflicted on those who are unable, from poverty, to defend themselves. I urge it not in my own words, but in the words of a man whose utterances were always heard with attention, with satisfaction, and with respect in this House—the words of the late Duke of Newcastle, who, as Lord Lincoln, in introducing the Enclosure Bill in 1845, said that—"The result is an uncertainty, which is not only cruel to those who undertake these enter-prizes, hut tends to an increase of litigation. No one's case is so good that he can have confidence in it, and no one's is so bad that he need despair. No one can say who is right or who is wrong, for right and wrong pre-suppose a standard; and although £30,000,000 or £40,000,000 have been spent in railway litigation, that standard has never been established."
On these grounds, Sir, I urge the necessity—I urge the justice—of establishing tribunals, whose duty it shall be to institute inquiries with a view to Private Bill Legislation in the localities affected by the Bills. I beg to thank the House for the attention I have received."In nineteen cases out of twenty, Committees of this House, sitting on Private Bills, neglected the rights of the poor. I do not say that they wilfully neglected those rights: far from it; but this I affirm, that they were neglected in consequence of the Committees being permitted to remain in ignorance of the claims of the poor man, because by reason of his very poverty he is unable to come up to London to fee counsel, to produce witnesses, and to urge his claims before a Committee of this House. A Commission, I think, may, therefore, be so constituted as to afford to the poor man, by examination on the spot and at his own door, more certain security than any system of private legislation."—(3 Hansard, [80] 25.)
, in seconding the Resolution, said, he thought the House would be inclined to congratulate his hon. Friend upon the industry and ability which he had shown in bringing forward this subject. He felt sure that nobody would question the value of the services which were rendered by Members of the House who served on Private Bill Committees. There were many Members who did not take a very active part in the debates of the House, but who yet rendered very valuable service to the country; and he could not help admiring the patient industry and intelligence of the men who, although not brought up with legal training, yet showed great aptitude for legal and other business in the Private Bill Committees. But, although he should be sorry to lose the services of such men, it was well known that every Session brought more Public Business before the House; that the debates were longer than they used to be; and that there was a greater strain put upon the strength of hon. Members than used to be the case formerly. In addition to this the House determined last autumn to try the experiment of having Standing Committees to deal with certain classes of Bills. He hoped the experiment, if successful, would be extended, and that every Member would find a place on one or more of the Standing Committees; but it should be remembered that these Standing Committees comprised about 160 or more Members, and caused a greater demand upon the time and strength of Members of Parliament; therefore, this was an additional reason for considering the question whether they should any longer continue the present system of Private Bill Legislation? In the present Session there were 221 Private Bills, of which 151 were Railway, 35 Tramway, 14 Gas, and 21 Water Bills, the capital involved amounting to about £95,000,000. These were interests of considerable magnitude, and deserved careful consideration. Out of that number of Bills probably 50 were opposed, which would occupy the attention of about 200 Members. In these Committees the most important element was the choice of a Chairman; and those Gentlemen whose ability and experience qualified them to serve as Chairmen of the Committees were just the sort of men whom it was desirable to place on the Standing Committees proposed to be introduced. Under these circumstances, there was, he thought, a feeling that the question of Private Bill Legislation deserved the immediate or early consideration of the Government. What was the remedy for the existing state of things and the inconveniences of which his hon. Friend had called attention? Down from 1845 to the present time Parliament had delegated functions which used to be performed by Private Bill Committees to other bodies. In 1845 the Enclosure Act was passed, which was the first Act which dealt with the subject of Private Bills by Provisional Orders, and that system was continued in the Public Health Act of 1848, and in subsequent Acts, ending with the Electric Lighting Act of last Session. There were several bodies which dealt with legislation by means of Provisional Orders. For instance, there were the Land Commission, the Local Government Board, the Board of Trade, and the Home Office, which were empowered to issue Provisional Orders or certificates. In his opinion, it would not be satisfactory to the House or the country that questions of the magnitude and importance which were usually dealt with in the class of Private Bills which now come before Parliament should be dealt with in the way of a Provisional Order. Nothing could be more important than that the best possible mode should be devised for dealing with questions of that character. Considerable jealousy would be felt at the entrusting interests of magnitude and importance to a Department such as the Board of Trade, which was one of the great Departments of the Government, and was presided I over by a Member of the Cabinet, who was necessarily a Member of one of the great political Parties. In his opinion, the remedy was to be found in the creation of an impartial tribunal or Commission, which should report to the House. he considered it of the greatest possible importance that the House should retain its control over these questions, and he, for his part, would be sorry to see the House part with its control over Private Bills; but he should like to see the House delegate its functions of inquiry into facts, and into the Preambles of Bills and the settlement of clauses, to a tribunal independent of the House. If they had a Commission sitting permanently throughout the greater part of the year, and taking their cases in order, they would get that consistency of decision and continuity of policy, the want of which was now so much complained of. Having quoted the opinions of Lord Sherbrooke, Sir Erskine May, and Lord Salisbury in support of his argument, the hon. and learned Member went on to point out how, by means of a Commission sitting the greater part of the year, those defects might be corrected. Another advantage of such a Commission, he urged, would be that it would be capable of sitting either in the locality to take evidence that could be best obtained there or in London when that was most advisable, and they would thus gain greater elasticity of procedure than was possible in the case of Parliamentary Committees. But he would like the Commission to report to the House simply. It should not exercise the functions which were exorcised by the Board of Trade, or the Home Office, or any other public Department which made Provisional Orders; but it should simply report to the House, and on the Report hon. Members would have the same power of calling attention to the points of the Bill brought forward which they now exercised; in fact, the House would have the most free and absolute control over Private Bills. Another important consideration was the degree in which the public interests were sometimes overlooked in the clash of the mighty warriors who crossed swords before the Committee on Private Bills. The questions there raised were often raised more as between two litigants than as concerned the general interests, and there was nobody there whose business it was to protect the public. It would, therefore, be wise to give directions to any Commission that they should go through the Bill and draw the attention of the Honse in their Report to any clause that affected the public—whether it had been brought under their notice by the litigant parties or not. Sometimes a clause in a Private Bill exempted a Corporation or a Railway Company from the operation of some general law; and it was clear that some more efficient check upon the promoters was necessary in regard to such matters. It should be part of the duty of the Commissioners who might be appointed under his hon. Friend's scheme to protect the public interests in those cases. They were told there was a danger of such Commissions becoming judicial bodies, and of their decisions crystallizing into precedents, and that the elasticity and flexibility attaching to Parliamentary Committees would be lost. No doubt it would be a misfortune if their policy as to the great Railway Bills, for example, were not capable of being adapted, from time to time, to the wants and requirements of public opinion. But that could be secured in two ways—first, by retaining the control of Parliament as efficiently as was done at present over the Bills when they came back from the Commission; secondly, by giving an appeal, as suggested by his hon. Friend, to a Joint Committee of both Houses of Parliament from any part of the Report which should affect any of the parties appearing before the Commissioners. With regard to the expense of the proposed system, he found it stated that the fees which were paid by promoters of Private Bills ranged from about £40,000 to £130,000 a-year, leaving an ample margin within which to provide the expense of such a Commission as his hon. Friend had suggested. Some scheme might be devised by which, when the Petition for a Private Bill was presented, and when a Private Bill was lodged, it should immediately, by the order of the Chairman of Ways and Means, be sent for inquiry to such a Commission as that proposed to be established by his hon. Friend. He had much pleasure in seconding the Motion.
Motion made, and Question proposed,
"That, in the opinion of this House, the system of Private Bill Legislation calls for the attention of Parliament, and of Her Majesty's Government, and requires reform."—(Mr. Sellar.)
said, that the proposal of these Resolutions had occasioned him some surprise, which he thought must be shared, by other Members—first, because it had recalled to his recollection the fact that Her Majesty's Government had not themselves taken up this question, as they might, not unreasonably, have been expected to do after the course taken by them in recommending the institution of Standing Committees; and, secondly, that it should have fallen to an hon. Member who had not been, he thought, a month in the House, to bring forward this particular Resolution. But having heard the speech of the hon. Member, he was bound to say that he had acquitted himself in a manner which would entitle him hereafter to speak with authority on the subject; and the House would, therefore, be not too hasty to take note that he should have brought the matter forward at the outset of his Parliamentary career. He gathered from what had fallen from the Mover and Seconder that they did not wish to bind the House to the precise terms of the Motion; but that they believed it to be their duty to formulate some proposal as an alternative to the existing practice. Those who had sat in that House 10 or 12 years would remember that the present Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster (Mr. Dodson), who was then Chairman of Ways and Means, had made a very similar proposal, and that it would probably have been accepted had it not been that the right hon. Gentleman sought to put on the Government the responsibility of taking the matter up, while the Government wished to divide that responsibility between themselves and the House. The hon. Member, not being aware of this probably, had fallen into a trap, and allowed the very words which frustrated the Motion at that time, for the reason he had stated, to stand now in his Resolution. For his own part, he should have thought it better if the hon. Gentleman had proposed to make it incumbent on the Government to find a remedy for the evil of the present system of Private Bill Legislation. He agreed with almost all the Mover of the Resolution had said with regard to the evils of the present system. Such experience as he had had of the difficulties attending Private Bill Legislation in the House, had entirely confirmed him in the opinion entertained by the Chancellor of the Duchy in 1872. There could be no doubt that the present practice was dilatory, costly, and uncertain; and he feared—though he was unwilling to believe it—that it was rather losing that prestige which used to attach to it in the eyes of the public. He did not mean to say that the Committees of the House did their duty with loss earnestness, honour, and devotion than in former times; but, as Public Business continued to make greater inroads upon the time of Members, it became increasingly difficult to get Members of the most useful type to serve upon these Committees. His right hon. Friend the Chairman of the Committee of Selection might well regard the prospect before him with terror. Indeed, he (Mr. Raikes) did not see where the men were to come from. The new institution of Standing Committees had enormously increased his difficulties. He did not mean that Members would on that account be excused from Private Bill Committees; but if they happened to be among the 160 Gentlemen selected for the Standing Committees, it was obviously impossible for them to be engaged in the discussion of both Public and Private Business at the same time. To those 160 they must add 30 or 40 official and ex-official Members, bringing up the total to 200. From the remainder must also be subtracted practising barristers, and busy merchants, and the residue only, the non-official Gentlemen, and Gentlemen not busily employed and distinguished in any occupation would be left. Thus, something like half of the House of Commons would have some very good reason for not serving upon Private Bill Committees, and they would be left with the half which, he feared, the public might cease to regard with the admiration which in past years was supposed to have been felt for the proceedings of the Committees of that House; indeed, it would be impossible for them to feel the same confidence in the success of their deliberations. He did not think the hon. Member had said quite as much as he might have done in praise of that very distinguished, meritorious, and able body of men—the Parliamentary agents—to whom the House owed so much with regard to the transaction of its Business, and of whom the public out-of-doors knew but little. The principal objection to the proposed change would lie in the fact—if it were a fact—that in future the Private Business of the House would have to be carried on without the assistance of these Gentlemen; but he hoped that such might not be the case, and that in any scheme which might take the place of the present system they should endeavour, as far as possible, so to adapt it to existing necessities as to secure the continued assistance of these valuable public servants. The present Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster (Mr. Dodson), in the proposal which he made to the House in 1872, was in favour of a system of Provisional Orders; while the hon. Member advocated a scheme by which a Bill was to go through some of the present stages in the House, but that the most important stage should be taken outside the control of Parliament and referred to those Commissioners whom it was proposed to send about the country who, again, should refer the Bills back to the House for Report and third reading. He did not consider that the most convenient method of reforming the procedure; but expressed his preference for the scheme which the Chancellor of the Duchy proposed in the first instance, observing that the Provisional Order system was the one to which they must look in the future for the conduct of Private Bill Legislation. One great defect in the proposal of the hon. Member for the Haddington Burghs was that it would fail to obtain public confidence. Some years ago, when he himself was the Chairman of the Committee of Ways and Means, he had drafted a measure which the pressure of Public Business prevented his bringing before the attention of the House, but in which he followed the lines laid down by his right hon. Friend. That scheme comprised the following points:—If the work was to be done satisfactorily they ought to create a really important tribunal, whose authority should be, if not equal to that of Parliament, at least equal to that of a Court of Law. For this purpose he was anxious to institute a Com- mission or Court, which should consist of five Commissioners. These Commissioners should be assisted by, say, from five to ten Assistant Commissioners, one of whom should act as Registrar. As soon as a Petition was presented to the Commissioners by the promoters of any scheme, the Petition should be referred to an Assistant Commissioner, who should proceed to hold an inquiry in the neighbourhood of the locality to be affected, or, if it were thought desirable, in London. He should find the facts of the case, and upon those facts there should be no appeal. The Commissioners should then draft an Order, and should communicate its terms to the parties who had appeared in the local inquiry, and should intimate to them that if there was no appeal made against it, it should after a certain time become final. When any appeal was lodged against it the parties should be entitled to be heard by counsel; but only argument, and not evidence, should be heard upon the case as stated. When the Commissioners had heard the appeal, they would consider whether they would modify or quash the draft Order. Having finally settled the Order it would then be laid before Parliament, and would, if it was not challenged, become law within 40 days. If the Order was challenged in the House it would be referred to a Standing Committee for consideration. That was the outline of his scheme; and to his mind it would be preferable to have a really important tribunal for promoting the necessary inquiry to having that inquiry conducted by a body going round the country, such as that suggested by the hon. Member for the Haddington Burghs. It might be said that his scheme would be more expensive than that of the Mover of this Resolution. He did not deny that; but he believed that the suitors already contributed in fees much more than would be sufficient to meet the expense of his proposal. He hoped his right hon. Friend (Mr. Dodson), on the part of the Government, would communicate some interesting facts to the House; but the evening would be mis-spent unless they obtained from Government some positive assurance that they would take the lead in any change that was made. Now, he thought, was the time for the Government to take an initiative for some reform in our Private Bill Legislation, as a special and peculiar difficulty had been created in this matter by the institution of Standing Committees. The Government might say—"Wait until another year and see how the Standing Committees will work." He did not think that they could afford to wait for the experience of Standing Committees. It was a question of how they were to provide arrangements alongside of Standing Committees for the duo and proper performance of those duties which fell upon the House. The House would do better, for its own credit, if it did not allow itself to be deterred by its reluctance to recognize difficulties of its own creation from parting with a jurisdiction which it could no longer exercise with advantage to the State.
thanked his hon. Friend for the manner in which he had introduced an important subject to the House; but the very fact that he had before him the Reports of so much evidence and so much investigation must have shown to him, as to the House, that it was a matter of very great difficulty, and one that had puzzled a great many clever men. He feared that the first difficulty that must occur to his hon. Friend in his proposal was that in his proposed Commission he delegated the authority which the House was bound to keep to itself, and that he would not retain that public confidence in the Commission which the public placed in the decisions of the House. It had been his lot to be on both sides of the Table at one time or another in that House, and, during an experience of 30 years or so, he had seen a good deal of the promotion and opposition of Private Bills in Parliament; and he had come to the conclusion that, with certain modifications of the present tribunal, they could have a tribunal which would accomplish that which was wanted with less dilatoriness, less expensiveness, and more uniformity of action than if the House delegated its authority. It had been alleged by the right hon. Member for the University of Cambridge (Mr. Raikes) that the delegation of authority to Commissioners would prevent the working Members of the House being taken away. He did not think it could make any difference in a House of upwards of 500 working Members. He did not see how being Members of large Standing Committees was to exclude Members altogether from serving on Private Bill Committees. He thought the Resolution before the House would, if carried, cause a great deal more expense than the present system. Promoters would not be satisfied with local counsel, or local engineers, or borough surveyors, and counsel and engineers would have to go from London to Aberdeen or Cork with very large fees. The expense of promotion was not in bringing up the witnesses—that was a small expense. It might be true that Corporations of towns were very likely to come to town about the end of May, especially about Derby time. It had been said that the larger and richer Companies endeavoured to starve out the smaller Companies; but the smaller Companies were often the aggressors. The hon. Member the Mover of the Resolution had said that many Chairmen of Committees allowed counsel to run rampant. Now, he had seen a good many Chairmen, and he did not think they came within that charge. There was, no doubt, a great want of uniformity in the decisions of Committees of that House; but this want of uniformity was almost necessary, and in nine cases out of ten was almost right. He had often heard that the decisions of Committees, however disagreeable to one party or the other, were based upon sound common sense, and had given great satisfaction to the districts to which they were applied. Another point was that there were often eight or ten Private Bill Committees sitting at once; but how was the right hon. Gentleman (Mr. Raikes) going to support eight or ten Committees with 30 Commissioners. A far better and less expensive plan would be to create in London one tribunal, composed of the Lords and Commons, sitting together on all Railway Bills. That would have a much more beneficial effect in the way of keeping down expense than any Commission or Committee which could be appointed. The right hon. Gentleman had said that if the House delegated its authority it must have ample controlling power in the House. This meant that the party dissatisfied would go behind the decision and say that the whole question must be raised in the House again, so that, instead of saving time, they would have all these questions debated over and over again.
said, it would be well to remember that Parliament had been engaged on this question for more than 40 years, that from time to time proposals had been made, and that the difficulties in the way of making a change had been found to be insuperable. He congratulated the hon. Member who had introduced the Motion on the interesting speech he had made, and the reception it had met in the House was a full justification to him for bringing the question forward. The subject was, doubtless, one of great importance; the interests involved were enormous, and the jurisdiction was so peculiar that the House was bound to look into it from time to time, so as to ascertain whether they were doing what was best for the country in retaining it. The fees now taken amounted, he believed, to no less than £140,000, and out of this sum the entire expenses of the House were paid. The present debate had proceeded on the lines of that introduced 11 years ago, for then the system was stigmatized as lengthy, costly, uncertain, and unsatisfactory. On the other hand, they had the statement of the late Mr. Leeman, a great authority in railway matters, that the system had, in the long run, worked out justice; and figures showed that for 10 or 15 years the average sum invested under that system was £20,000,000 annually. Whatever the decisions were, the cost, where so much was at stake, would be large; and as the question was one of policy, there would always be uncertainty. The length of time occupied in cases, no doubt, must be great when the tribunal sat only three full days a-week; but this tribunal did not, he thought, bear unfavourable comparison with other Courts in this respect. Those objections, however, were not new. As long ago as 1846 Parliament passed an Act that a preliminary inquiry should be held, and with the result that the expenses were increased two-fold. In 1851 that Act was repealed, and Parliament had retained the jurisdiction ever since. Much had been said about the dissatisfaction that existed among the public with the present system; but on what evidence was the statement based? Board of Trade Returns showed that upwards of £94,342,000 was now proposed to be raised under that system for different Companies, and that fact cer- tainly did not go to prove that dissatisfaction existed to the extent stated with the tribunal to which the cases of those Companies were to be referred. It must be borne in mind that the objection to the transfer of jurisdiction was based on Constitutional principles. To confer exceptional powers beyond the law was the attribute of the Supreme Legislature; and where power was sought by promoters which could not be otherwise exercised, there was required a union of legislative and judicial functions which no other tribunal but that of Parliament could afford—and that especially the case where property was interfered with, and Parliament in such cases must remain the supreme jurisdiction. As to the Commission of experts, to whom it was suggested that the power should be transferred, he would ask whether such a body was likely to command confidence and support? What he thought was wanted in the matter was a changing body, who were conversant with public opinion, who would not give stereotyped decisions, and would adapt themselves to the conditions under which they were placed with regard to the questions brought before them—in fact, a High Court of Arbitration with widest powers. They must not be afraid to delegate their authority if they could not be found to use it properly, or in accordance with the wishes of the country; but too much must not be made of the fact that they delegated their jurisdiction in regard to Election Petitions, because these stood on a totally different footing, the issue in them being one of law bearing on fact. He thought relief might be found in the extension of Provisional Orders, which had already conferred so much benefit in a number of cases where provision had been made by the general law for parties who used to have to apply-to Parliament for special powers in each case, or it might be that they would be able to delegate some powers to local bodies which were not at present constituted—in the way of holding a preliminary inquiry to inquire into the facts, leaving the decision to a Parliamentary Committee. The whole question, however, was one that must be taken up by the responsible Government.
I do not intend to address the House at any great length upon the merits of this question, which has been so fully entered into, more es- pecially by the Mover and Seconder of the Resolution. I congratulate my lion. Friend, the Mover of the Resolution, on the great care and thought he has bestowed upon the subject, and the clear and interesting manner in which he submitted it to the House. It is 50 years or more since Bentham inveighed against the system of Private Bill Legislation in Parliament, and declared that an impartial spectator would think that—
Since then, as the hon. Gentleman who has just sat down has reminded the House, a' good deal has been done in the direction which Bentham recommended—namely, relieving the House of some functions for which it was ill adapted. Some of these instances have been mentioned—Enclosures, Divorce, Naturalization, and Election Petitions. In no case, I believe, has the House repented the step that it has taken in relieving itself of inquiry into these subjects, and referring them in whole or in part to external tribunals. The defects of the existing system of Private Bill Legislation have been so forcibly pointed out to-night that I need not go over them again. It will hardly be denied that the system of Private Bill Legislation is attended with evils; that it is somewhat haphazard in its nature, and that it is expensive. It is haphazard in its nature, not from any want of industry or even of ability on the part of the tribunals, but from the fluctuating elements of which these tribunals are composed, their lack of experience and training, and the want of one uniform spirit and soul running through them. It is expensive, for this reason—that all the inquiries are crowded into one short part of the year; and, moreover, from the nature of the functions of Members, the daily sittings of the Committee must be very short. Nominally it meets at 12 o'clock, and sits till a quarter to 4, when Mr. Speaker takes the Chair. Virtually it does not sit more than 3½ hours a-day. It is obvious that these short sittings and frequent adjournments must add very much to the expenses of witnesses and of counsel, and of all parties attending before the tribunal. I think that few persons will be inclined to disagree with the proposition which is contained in the 1st Resolution of the hon. Member for Haddington—"The maxim of the governing body was the minimization of the time employed in the performance of its appropriate duties, and to maximize the waste of it."
Even those who have most objected to the suggestion of external tribunals have not been slow to admit that the system requires reform, and some have pointed to a Joint Committee of the two Houses as a Court which might be judiciously substituted for the two Courts, which now give the opportunities for a double trial in the case of each particular Bill. The House will not be surprised to hear that, so far as I am concerned, I am quite disposed to agree with the 1st Resolution, for it is a Resolution which I myself submitted to the House 12 years ago, with an Amendment suggested by my noble Friend the Lord Privy Seal, which I willingly accepted, and which was agreed to by the House unanimously in 1872. As regards the 2nd Resolution, I am not prepared to give my assent to it, and for this reason—that it does not go, according to my opinion of what is needed, far enough. It retains the system of Private Bills. They are to be read a second time in the House before they go to the new tribunal, and, therefore, whatever disadvantage attaches to solicitations for the second reading of Private Bills, to taking up the time of Members by discussions on Private Business, and to such Business being confined to the period of the Sitting of Parliament will still continue. Again, while establishing an external tribunal, it would not get rid of the expense attending the maintenance of Examiners of Private Bills. Then, again, so far as it deals with Provisional Orders, it would retain what appears to me to be a very cumbrous system—namely, the passing of Provisional Orders by embodying them in Bills which would have to go through all stages in both Houses. Then the hon. Member for Haddington proposes to establish Commissions for England, Scotland, and Ireland. He would be establishing an unnecessarily great and extensive machinery. No doubt, of late years, owing to bad trade and the distressed state of agriculture, private legislation has been somewhat less than in the days when people were wealthier and making money faster. But, still, there have been of late years some 30 Committees of this House, on the average, to consider Private Bills; and if you reckon Hybrid Committees, and Committees upon Provisional Orders, there have probably been about 40 Committees. Therefore, some 120 or 150 Members had annually sat on these Bills between 300 and 400 days. But a tribunal consisting of experienced men, versed in controlling discursive counsel and checking redundant or irrelevant evidence, and sitting not three and a-half hours, but six hours a-day, would get through, on the most modest calculation, in one day, the work that occupies a Committee two days. The result is that one body of Commissioners, sitting seven or eight months in the year, would do the whole work of Private Bill Committees. Then I come to the proposal to have a separate Commission for Scotland as well as for England and Ireland. I find that last Session there were four Committees on Scotch Bills, who sat together 36 days. That would have occupied a Commission 18 days. There were two or three Committees on Irish Bills, and they only sat nine days. The Commission would have disposed of that work in four or five days. Therefore, it is obvious that there is not work enough for a permanent Commission in the case of Scotland or Ireland. If you are not to appoint a Commission on purpose to perform this work, but simply to employ annually a certain number of barristers or other gentlemen to do this work, then it appears to me that you will be landed in the same evil of tribunals, consisting of fluctuating elements, and I do not think much advantage will be gained. The 3rd Resolution, providing for an appeal, is good for that purpose, but it is, of course, dependent upon the 2nd; and, therefore, if the 2nd is not adopted, the question of the 3rd will not arise. The hon. Baronet who has just sat down said that we had experience of external inquiries in regard to Private Bills, and that they had been a failure under the Preliminary Inquiry Act. That is true; but that Act provided for a local inquiry, which was to be held by an Inspector, who went down and made an inquiry in the locality; and I quite agree that, though such an inquiry may suffice where the object affects a definite locality, or where the interests at stake are comparatively small, no parties would rest satisfied with it in important railway contests or other great cases. But this is to be a a tribunal which is to hoar witnesses and counsel in open Court, and, therefore, it will be one which should carry at least the same weight, in my opinion, as a Committee of the House, and, at all events, the proceedings before it would be conducted in the same way. On behalf of the Government, I am prepared to accept the 1st Resolution of my hon. Friend. But I would say that the House must not expect that the Government will be able to take any action upon it in the present Session. We have got before us a programme of work which is quite sufficient. I would like to point out to the House that the changes which will have to be made in order to give effect to this 1st Resolution, in whatever way it may be carried out in detail, must be a matter for considerable discussion, and would take up a large amount of time. I said just now that the Government cannot be expected to take action upon this subject in the present Session, in view of the programme which we have already presented to the House, unless the House should be so desirous to proceed with it that they would be prepared to repeat what was done last year, and have an Autumn Sitting for the purpose. If the House should show any extraordinary desire for that, Her Majesty's Government would be prepared to give respectful consideration to the wish. I will conclude by making this one suggestion to my hon. Friend and to the House, which, I think, would be an improvement on his proposal. The Resolution he proposes to the House is in exactly the same words as that agreed to nem con. in 1872. I think it is not very desirable that the House should simply repeat the Resolution it then recorded, and I venture to suggest to my hon. Friend that he would strengthen his position by a reference to what was done in 1872. I therefore propose to amend his Resolution by leaving out all the words after "that," and add these words—"That the system of Private Bill Legislation calls for the attention of Parliament, and of Her Majesty's Government, and requires reform."
"This House adheres to the Resolution upon Private Legislation, agreed to on the 22nd of March 1872."
Amendment proposed,
To leave out from the word "That" to the end of the Question, in order to add the words "this House adheres to the Resolution upon Private Legislation, agreed to on the 22nd of March 1872,"—(Mr. Dodson,)
—instead thereof.
Question proposed, "That the words proposed to be left out stand part of the Question."
expressed his thanks to the House for the extremely kind manner in which hon. Members had received his Resolution. The right hon. Gentleman the Chancellor of the Duchy (Mr. Dodson) had stated in his speech that there would not be work enough for separate Commissions. He (Mr. Sellar) confined his remarks to the work that would be done by the Commission appointed for Scotland. In 1881 the Committees sat upon opposed Scotch Bills for 59 days, and in 1882 they sat for 64 days on opposed cases; and when they looked into the number of Scotch Bills which came to the House from year to year, though the number was not very great, it was a gradually increasing number. The actual amount of money proposed to be raised by these Scotch Bills was very considerable, amounting for a period of four years to £19,000,000. The amount for Ireland was smaller; but he felt that sufficient work would be found for a Scotch Commission if it were to be appointed. He should gladly accept the proposed Amendment on the part of the Government, and withdraw his 2nd and 3rd Resolutions.
condemned the present system of Private Bill Legislation; and, speaking from an ample experience, said, that the great cause of the dissatisfaction given by the decisions of Committees of Parliament was not their personnel, nor their expense, but the uncertainty which always prevailed as to the reasons which led to the success or to the failure of Bills. All they knew was that their Preambles had or had not been proved. He would suggest, as being all that was really necessary, the amendment of the Standing Orders, so as to require Committees to report to the House not only their decisions, but the reasons for them.
said, his experience of Private Legislation dated from 1840. During the time that had since elapsed, he had seen great changes in the practice of the House, and very great improve- ments in the constitution of the Committees. But from what he had seen in the past, and what went on now, he very greatly doubted whether any striking change could be advantageously introduced. It would be a very doubtful policy to delegate to any tribunal outside of Parliament the power of over-riding existing Acts, and in many cases the Common Law, as was often proposed in Private Bills. No doubt, the constitution of the Committees, many years ago, was anything but satisfactory; but the new constitution introduced since then had, according to his experience, worked very well, and the result was that they had now very competent and careful tribunals. The element of certainty was embodied into their proceedings by the practice of consulting the reference. Moreover, the Bills were examined by the Chairman of Committees in the House of Lords, and the Chairman of Ways and Means in that House, who were both assisted by counsel. In this way, all Bills were subjected to a very careful scrutiny. The counsels had a full knowledge of the previous course of Private Bill Legislation. They had a distinct recollection of the various arrangements made between parties to Bills, and the connection between those Bills. This knowledge of the past, and its relation to the present, was most useful in dealing with Private Bills; but it would be wholly wanting in that new scheme proposed by the Mover of the Resolution. Besides having this knowledge, these officials were well acquainted with Parliamentary drafting. One reason urged for removing Private Bills from the present excellent tribunals and handing them over to some external body was that thereby expense would be saved. He doubted very much whether this would be the case. Where promoters had large interests at stake, and were possessed of heavy purses, there was bound to be a large expenditure in the promotion or defence of the interests at stake. This remark did not apply merely to proceedings before Committees of this House; it applied to Courts of Law, arbitrations, and references of every kind. It must be borne in mind that the expensive personages in connection with the inquiries were resident in the Metropolis. It was the counsel and the experts who were the expensive part of the machinery of Pri- vate Bill Legislation. It would cost the parties to a Private Bill a very much larger sum if these gentlemen had to be taken down to the country in order that local inquiries might be held. Again, it was said that in the localities the inquiries might be conducted longer each day; but he did not anticipate that much greater progress would be made than was at present the case.
Notice taken, that 40 Members were not present; House counted, and 40 Members being found present,
resumed: With a strong Chairman, he had seen cases dealt with as speedily as they could have been in any Court of Law. Extraneous evidence was thrown aside, and attention was centred on the real facts of the case, with the result of a great saving of expense. He was old enough to recollect Lord Dalhousie's Commission in 1845, which sat upon the many railway schemes of that period. The Reports of the Commission did not receive much attention from Parliament. The Committees acted for themselves. He fancied that something like this would be the result if Commissions were now appointed.
said, he fully agreed with the Mover of the Resolution that the main objections to the present system of Private Bill Legislation lay in the expense and uncertainty attending it. If the expense were a serious thing for England and Scotland, how much more must it operate against Ireland? He did not approve of the remedy suggested by the hon. Member for Haddington, as it was merely a compromise, and the power of appeal he proposed to give to the House would greatly increase the cost attending the promotion of Private Bills. Railway and Tramway Bills ought to be delegated in Ireland to County Boards or Provincial Councils, with the right of appeal to the Local Government Board or the Board of Works. The present S3'stem was fatal to the development of the industrial resources of Ireland.
Notice taken, that 40 Members were not present; House counted, and 40 Members not being present,
House adjourned at half after Eight o'clock.