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We have had the report of the Committee on Finance, and the letter of Gov. Riley relative to the means of paying the expenses of this Convention, and he feels a delicacy in giving a decisive answer to the inquiries of the Committee. This does not at all astonish me. I am too well acquainted with the liberal policy and generosity of Gov. Riley, to suppose for one moment that he would hesitate to pay the expenses of this Convention, were his instructions sufficiently full from his Government.

No sir! The niggardly policy adopted by the Government of the United States towards Calornia, puts it out of her power to keep up such a civil government as this country should have, to say nothing about supporting the citizens of California in establishing a State Government after using the thousands they have collected from customs in California. I would ask, what has become of the revenue collected in California? although, sir, as we have not laws like our Territories at home, you may ask what right we have to make inquiries. It is an old saying, sir, "that he that dances must pay the fidler ;" and "it is a poor rule that will not work both ways." Have we not a right to make the fidler play that tune we like best? Has that revenue been appropriated in accordance with certain stipulations in the Constitution of the United States? Certainly, if they tax us, they should give us something in return. Sir, at this very time, there is an officer of the United States Navy surveying and bouying out the channels of San Pablo and Suisun Bays, and who pays for it? Sir, the people, by subscription. I handed a paper around among the citizens of Sacramento city for subscriptions: what did they say? We cannot pay out any more of our money for the Government until we get what they already owe us.

Still, sir, we must go on as we have done, paying the expenses of the Government ourselves, fighting on our own hook, for the honor of it! I beg pardon-for the honor of the Government of the United States.

Sir, in the Report of the Committee on Finance, in regard to the payment of the expenses of this Convention, the Governor refers to the very delicate situation in which he is placed. There is no person who sympathi-es with him more deeply than I do; and little do I care whether I receive one cent or not to defray my expenses.

Sir, there are now gentlemen in this Convention who have travelled many miles to get here; and many of these gentlemen, who are now serving their country gratuitously, (as they have done before,) have accounts against the Government for supplies furnished during the war, to troops of the United States Government.

I can point to a gentleman now present, who holds claims against the Government of the United States to the amount of from twelve to fifteen thousand dollars; and there are many more of similar character.

In this very town, sir, there is, to my certain knowledge, a large bundle of musty papers, claims against the Government of the United States to the amount of $100,000, which, in a few more years, will no doubt be interesting objects for antiquarian research.

All nations are reaping the benefits of the discovery of the gold; and first on the list stands out, in bold relief, the United States. To whom are they indebted for the discovery? To the pioneer veteran, Capt. J. A. Sutter, through whose generosity and benevolence, protection and assistance have been afforded to the travel worn emigrants who had toiled through many a weary day, and had passed many an anxious night upon the barren waste of a desolate country.

I need not say how they have been recompenseed for the toils and dangers they encountered in opening the road to the stores of wealth that are now drawn from the inexhaustible placers of California. Neglect, gross neglect, has been their reward.

What has been the sacrifice? Look upon the bleached bones of the starved emigrants which now lie scattered in the valley of the Sierra Nevada, where, hemmed in by mountains of impassable snow, they wasted from day to day, struggling with feeble hope against dark despair, until one by one, they drooped and died, leaving but few to tell the sad tale of their suffering.

O! let us draw a veil over the mournful picture, and hope, if nothing else, that a little sympathy may be created for the poor emigrant.

Sir, I hope the time is not far distant when the Government of the United States will cease to neglect a country from which her people, and all other nations, are draining such an immense amount of wealth.

Mr HALLECK said, as he offered the resolution, he supposed he was bound to defend it. The object of the resolution was to avoid the difficulties which gentlemen apprehended. If the expenses of this Convention were limited to a small amount, he had no doubt they would be paid; but it was necessary that the rate of salaries should be economical. If the expenses exceeded the proper bounds, he was certain they would not be paid, and the result would be, that it would have to be left to the next Legislature to provide for them. There would be great dif ficulty in obtaining the adjustment of back claims in this way. If the salaries of officers were to be fixed at twenty-two to twenty-eight dollars a day, what was the salary of the members to be fixed at? He had heard thirty dollars a day men.

tioned. What would be said of members of this Convention when they went back to the people with a bill of seventy thousand dollars a month for making a Constitution? A hall is furnished, together with stationery, lights, and all the minor articles necessary for the use of the House. For the officers and pay of members alone, we demand seventy thousand dollars. He was very confident it could not be paid in any other way than by a tax fixed by the next Legislature. He did not know what General Riley would do. He had not heard a word from him on the subject. But he knew this much, that if General Riley sent a bill with these rates of pay to Washington, it would be sent back, and he would have to pay it out of his own pocket. He had had something to do with public accounts for some time, and he knew that it was very difficult to get vouchers through the Treasury of the United States. Within the last ten days, he had had offers from five or six competent persons to do similar work at the rates fixed in the resolution. He found no difficulty in getting competent persons at that salary. Again: if we fix the salaries of officers and members of this Convention at this price, can we fix the salaries of officers and members of the next Legislature at a less price? If we, with every thing furnished, expend seventy thousand dollars a month, what amount of money must be appropriated for the expenses of the Legislature? Can it be obtained in California by any system of taxation that may be adopted? No sir: we send the bill to the general Government, and ask Congress to make an appropriation for its payment. Congress will never grant such an expenditure. Let the expenses of this Convention, then, be fixed on moderate terms, so that they can be paid as we go along; let us set an example of economy to the Legis latures that may follow us. We are a new State; we have rich gold mines, and a growing commerce; we have abundant sources of wealth; but we have not facilities for collecting taxes. If an example of extravagance is to be followed by the next Legislature, there is no difficulty in predicting that the members of that Legislature will sit but one session. He (Mr. Halleck,) was of opinion that the salaries should be fixed now, and would therefore withdraw his resolution.

Mr. BOTTS referred to the report of the Committee as proving that instead of being an extravagant estimate, these gentlemen receive probably less than was ever paid in similar offices in the United States. Terms are altogether relative. When a Secretary receives $28 in one place, and $8 in another, we are to look at what can be purchased with these sums where they are paid. It should be borne in mind that, when his cook costs him $10 a month in the one place, and $100 in the other, the highest price is paid to the Secretary in the United States. As to the impossibility of collecting taxes-these taxes are to be paid by the farmers, shoemakers, carpenters, lawyers, and doctors. Now, a blacksmith at home, is very well content to make $2 a day. In this country he makes $20, and he is just as well able to pay a dollar tax here as twenty cents in the United States. The rates of pay fixed in the report are not out of proportion with the usual rate of wages. Gentlemen should not be alarmed at the high sound these amounts have. They should refer to the rate of wages here in other departments of labor. But he would say nothing more on that subject. He hoped it would be the pleasure of the House to determine the pay of the officers. He thought it proper, however, that the House should first take up that part of the report relating to the manner of obtaining the means. It is necessary to determine whether this fund with which General Riley proposed to pay the expenses of the Convention is tangible or not. By an examination of the official correspondence, it would be found that General Riley studiously reserves the right which he (Mr. Botts,) could not for one, accord to him, in effect to decide what are the necessary expenses of this Convention. In other words, if you apply to him to pay these expenses, he holds the right to veto the rate of salary which you may deem proper to adopt, by saying that is unnecessary. General Riley is an old soldier and a gallant one; and he (Mr. Botts,) would sever his right arm from his body before he would bring the blush of anger to his cheek. It was not to him personally he applied his remarks,

but to a higher and greater authority. He found, upon glancing at the correspondence, that the President of the United States had dared to give orders for the disposal of the civil fund. Every feeling prompted him to repel any proposition founded upon this state of things. Could any man doubt the illegality of such an order? Is there not a clause in the Constitution of the United States providing that no monies shall be drawn out of the public treasury, except in consequence of appropriations made by law? With such a clause staring them in the face, were gentlemen willing to ask any individual to do an act so clearly illegal? He was told expressly that these are the civil funds of the United States. Every member of this House was well aware that Congress has made no appropriation by which this money can be paid out of the Treasury of the United States for this purpose. It was a violation of the Constitution on the part of the President of the United States to give such an order. Will you aid or abet in this act? Will you have any hand in receiving or disposing of this money, which you can only get by a violation of the Constitution? The alien and sedition law was nothing to this. In the whole history of our Government, there never has been such a flagrant violation of the Constution, as that which is brought to your knowledge in this correspondence. That fund is, and must of necessity be, in the Treasury of the United States; it cannot be otherwise. He hoped it would not be urged upon him that it had never been in the Treasury. From the moment that money belonging to the United States comes into the hands of a collecting officer, it is in the Treasury. Deny it, and the people's money is at the disposition of every receiving and disbursing officer in the country. There never comes a dollar but comes through their hands. General Riley does undoubtedly what he was ordered to do; but that order was illegal, and you are aiding and abetting in an illegal act when you consent, much more propose to receive any portion of this fund. In the first place, he (Mr. Botts,) could not admit for one moment, that this Convention should appear at the footstool of any individual, and humbly ask that he should dole out to them such expenses as he deemed necessary. In the next place, he considered this whole affair an unclean thing; that the Executive of the United States had violated every obligation he had given to support the Constitution, and that this Convention would be equally culpable in accepting any portion of this fund. He designed to take no part in the difficulties which had arisen between General Riley and General Smith upon this subject; he had not a word to say about it; but whether it came from General Riley, or General Smith, or the President of the United States, he could not consent to touch cne cent of this money. As to the pay of members of this House, it would be more decorous and consistent with the dignity of the Convention, in his opinion, to leave others to fix that matter. It was just and proper that the pay of the officers should be fixed; but with regard to the members, he proposed to introduce in the schedule a clause providing that the first Legislature shall fix the rate and provide for the pay of members of this House. He thought there was no other mode of paying the officers than that usually adopted by similar bodies in the States-to refer it to the first Legislature. If it was the opinion of the House that, in consequence of the delay and inconvenience to which they would necessaraily be subjected, their salaries should be increased, he was prepared to allow them more.

Mr. JONES remarked that such was the discursive character of this debate, that he apprehended the original resolution had been forgotten. There was one great objection he had to the course of the majority of this Committee in getting the money from the hands of the civil government here. He thought it a greater ob. jection than that argued by his friend from Monterey, (Mr. Botts.) The objection was this: that it does not appear to be known whether there is any money there or not. We are told that if you give the officers of this Convention about what they could dig with their picks at the mines, they may in all probability be paid. He (Mr. Jones) did not suppose that an officer representing the Government of the United States here-an officer high in command-and whose reputation was

above reproach, would attempt to hold the reins of government so far in his hands as to attempt to guide this Convention, by saying that he would regulate the pay of the officers himself, and thereby bring it within such bounds as he deemed proper.

Mr. BOTTS said he intended no reflection upon the officer high in command. He had simply opposed the principle giving the right to any officer, or any power in existence, to dictate to this Convention what should be its necessary expenses. Mr. JONES alluded to the general tendency of the gentleman's remarks. The great objection urged in other quarters of the House seemed to be that this was an enormous tariff of prices brought in by the Committee-that it could never be paid. In the estimate made by the Committee, some twenty dollars a day must have been allowed for the pay of members, besides travelling expenses. This he considered altogether too high. As one member of this Convention, he preferred that the Congressional price should be the utmost paid to members of this Convention. A Senator of the United States receives eight dollars a day and eight dollars for every twenty miles. He (Mr. Jones) thought that price amply sufficient for members of this Convention. It would greatly decrease the estimate of the Committee. The whole expense for the month would not probably exceed some thirty thousand dollars. When General Riley, acting as the civil head of this Territory, stated to the Committee that he could not say whether he would be able to pay it all, it was in reply to a communication from the Committee asking whether he would pay the expenses, and was evidently not intended to control the action of this Convention. In relation to the pay of officers, he (Mr. Jones) contended that this House was in honor bound to pay them as much as they could receive in other parts of this Territory; not at the rates they could obtain in the old States, where living is so much cheaper. Any one of these gentlemen, by pursuing his occupation in the mines, might readily have gained sixteen dollars a day; and great expense has been incurred by them in coming here. He considered it quite as hard work leaning over a desk, as wielding the pick and shovel in the mines. These officers must be paid. We cannot do without their services. We, as members, have all the honor and glory, and may possibly submit to serve without any pecuniary consideration; but there is no particular honor-no extraordinary glory attached to the office of a copying clerk. He (Mr. Jones) was willing not to demand one cent for his services, if this State objected to pay it; but it was altogether a different matter with officers of the Convention. There was one gentleman-the Sergeant-at-Arms—who had lost from his ordinary occu pation some fifteen days in coming here. The pay of that officer would not amount at the end of the session to what he would have earned at his pick and shovel. Here was a copying clerk who had travelled hundreds of miles, by land and water, to get here; his pay was eighteen dollars a day, without anything for his travelling expenses. It was the same case with all the officers. He would, therefore, most heartily support the estimate of the Committee; he thought it very reasonable. But another branch of the subject had been taken up by his friend from Monterey, (Mr. Botts.) Shall we touch this money at all, which we suppose to be in the hands of General Riley? Won't it burn our fingers, or soil them, or create some extraordinary sensation throughout the community? Would it be at all proper to pay those gentlemen out of a fund placed at the disposal of the civil Government, by the President of the United States, unless we can find authority in the Constitution of the United States to justify the President in adopting this course? Now he (Mr. Jones) contended that if the Government of the United States does legally possess this Territory it is legally bound to support it.

Mr. BoTTs asked the gentleman to distinguish between the Government and the President.

Mr. JONES resumed. The only right we can have is the incidental right of the treaty-making power. We are the conquering power, and make the treaty. If we acquire territory by cession, we do it under the treaty-making power, and not

by express grant of the Constitution. He acknowledged this was a nice question, requiring deep reflection. It had come suddenly before the House, and he was altogether unprepared to discuss it; but he would endeavor to give some idea of the principles which he thought should be recognized by his friend from Monterey as thoroughly democratic. That theory is, that we govern this country not by the Constitution of the United States, but by virtue of the treaty-making power, and by the right of sovereignty. If by virtue of the treaty-making power we (the Government of the United States) came into possession of this territory, and it is left without support, we are bound to provide for it. We cannot, under the law of nations conquer a country, or become the possessor of an entire territory, without providing some sort of government for it. We cannot deprive that territory of its legitimate government, and not establish another in its place. Suppose General Riley had received no authority to expend a cent for the support of this territory, what would have been its situation? It would have been a commu. nity without law-without government-without the right to receive a single cent to support a government. Such a policy would have been a high crime against the law of nations. It would have merited the reproach of all mankind. The Congress of the United States failed to perform its duty; the executive branch of the Government, under the treaty-making power, was therefore bound to supply this absolute necessity of a conquered country.

Mr. Borrs asked if the gentleman meant to say that a clear and plain clause of the Constitution could be violated by the Executive, or by any other branch of the General Government.

Mr. JONES. A clear and plain clause of the Constitution, and the whole spirit of the Constitution, and the whole spirit of the Government of the United States, were violated when Texas was acquired, and when this country was conquered. He did not think there was a single gentleman in this House who really and candidly believed that the Constitution of the United States gave the slightest color of authority to the acquisition of any foreign territory whatever to the United States. He did not believe the framers of the Constitution ever contemplated such a thing. But he had no disposition to go into that question. This country was now in possession of the United States. It must be provided with law-with a government. It is necessary to establish some system of government, to prevent the inhabitants from reverting to an absolute state of barbarism. If, therefore, the General Government is bound to furnish us with the protection of laws, it is bound to furnish us with the means to pay for the establishment of a Government. He had endeavored to answer the arguments of the gentleman from Monterey, merely to show that this was at least a doubtful question, and that it was unwise to bring it up on this floor. It does not pertain to the business of this Convention. It is a question between the Government of the United States and its Executive head; and between that Executive head and the civil officer who has charge of the Government of California. If it is not plainly a question of receiving stolen money, he had no objection to receive this money. Where it is a matter of doubt, and where the instructions of the Government will sustain its officer here, he did not see that this Convention was called upon to interfere, one way or the other. He did not believe the people required that they should settle the question here, as to whether the Executive was justifiable in giving certain instructions to General Riley. Will the gentleman from Monterey propose a better mode of paying the officers of the Convention? Shall we pay them by subscription, or taxation, or in the schedule? As to the proposition of the gentleman to provide in the schedule that a tax shall be levied at some future time to pay these gentlemen, it is unjust as well as impracticable. The officers are here under heavy expenses, and with. out means. They must be paid. They are working for this Convention, and are entitled to their wages as they perform their work; and if members were all as well satisfied as he was that the payment of this money by General Riley would be legal and proper, it would be paid.

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