Die Veneris, 14 Maii 1830.
[415]
The Lord President in the Chair.
The following Papers are delivered in by Sir Thomas Strange,
and are read:
Extract of a Letter from The Right Honourable Lord Wynford
to Sir Thomas Strange, dated January 1830.
Do tell me what sort of Persons the Judges of the Native Courts
are; and whether it would not be well to provide a Supply of Men
regularly educated in Hindoo Law, and in the Principles of
Jurisprudence, to be appointed by The King, to preside in those
Courts; as the ultimate Appeal must be to The King in Council,
the Members of which cannot be expected to be Sanscrit
Scholars.
Extract of a Letter from Sir Thomas Strange to The Right
Honourable Lord Wynford, dated 19th January 1830.
At the Place from whence I write, I shall be able to give your
Lordship the Heads only of what I think on the Inquiries you are
pleased to make.
1. On the first Point; viz. "What sort of Persons are the
Judges of the Native Courts?" I have little Difficulty.
The Company's Servants throughout the whole of our Indian
Possessions are at the present Day, generally speaking, well
educated, well bred, and well principled. Your Lordship will
understand me to be alluding to the Civil Servants, about whom
your Inquiry is. They are a most respectable Body, from among
whom I believe the ablest are selected for the Judicial Duty. Still
these young Men are not Juris-periti. Jurisprudence has but
slightly entered into their Education before they go out, and they
have no Means of attaining Proficiency in it, or much Inducement
to attempt it, after they have reached their Destination. The
Languages are the principal Objects of their Study. By Attainments in these it is that they are chiefly distinguished. Possessing
these, more or less, they consider themselves as having got the Key
of all they want; prepared to solve every Difficulty, and to discharge
any Duty. With regard to that of a Judge, I do not say that it is
a Maxim with them, that ex quovis ligno fit Mercurius. On the
contrary, I do the Indian Governments the Justice to believe that
they are, according to their Means, careful whom they make
Judges. What I mean is, that the State of the Service does not
exact in the Candidates any appropriate Knowledge or Experience.
The Native Courts have no learned Bar, which helps to make a
learned Bench. They have nothing of the kind; and, in some
respects, so much the better perhaps for the poor Natives. Even
the Native Law which they have to administer is I apprehend but
scantily known among them, depending for the most part, as they
do, upon their Moolvies for the Mohamedan, and upon their
Pundits for the Hindoo Law; of which latter Persons your Lordship seems to have formed no very flattering Opinion. In all my
Time I resisted the Appointment of Pundits to our Court, thinking
we should do better without them.
2. Your Lordship proceeds at once to ask, "Whether it would
not be wise to provide a Supply of Men regularly educated in
Native Law, and in the Principles of Jurisprudence, to be
appointed by The King?"
This is a Question of some Delicacy, but with me not of more
Difficulty than the former one.
[416]
I have long thought it a Desideratum in our Indian Policy, that
The King should have something to do with the Administration of
Justice in the Provinces as well as at the Presidencies. It would
appear to me to be for the Efficiency as well as the Dignity of
Judicature that it should be so. I have already touched upon
Efficiency. His Majesty has not, with reference to the Interior, so
much as divisum imperium with the Company. He is, with His
Parliament, the controuling Power in the Government of India;
strange that he should have nothing to do in providing for the due
Administration of Justice among the Millions in the Interior! I am
far, very far, from wishing to see the Charter of the Company
discontinued, and all Power and Patronage transferred to The
King; but I ardently wish to see him in His Judicial Capacity,
more or less, among the great Mass of those His excellent Subjects;
by whom, in the Exercise of this His paternal Function, I know He
would be received with Reverence and Affection, as well as with
implicit Obedience. He sends His Soldiers among them; what
good Reason can be given why these should not be accompanied
with His Judges?
What of Delicacy there is in this Question regards the Patronage
of the Company, and the Jealousy of their Servants; Considerations fit to be attended to, but not in their Nature decisive.
The Difficulty of it concerns the Extent to which the Royal
Intromission in the Judicial Establishment of the Interior might
with Propriety be recommended.
I do not think that the Case requires an entire Supercession of
the Company's Judicial Function in the Provinces, such as has at
successive Periods obtained at the Presidencies; at least I would
not propose so great a Change in the first instance. Your Lordship may know, that for the Purpose of Judicature British India is
divided into Provinces and Districts called Zillahs. Without Book
or Papers here, I cannot say off hand how many there are of each
belonging to the respective Presidencies, or the Proportion they
respectively bear the one to the other. This Information will be
easily obtained from any Indian Register. In the Zillah Courts is
vested the original Jurisdiction of Causes; the Zillah Judges and
their Registrars sharing it in specified Proportions; the Registrars
acting as a sort of Assistants to the Judges in Matters of comparatively small Moment, with an Appeal from these Courts to the
Provincial, and from the latter to the Sudder Adawluts at the
Presidencies. The Provincial Judges (of which there are Three to
each Court) exercise Criminal Jurisdiction, going Circuits. I
should be for leaving the Zillah Courts as they are, for the present
at least; and the Provincial ones too, with the Exception of the
Chief of each, who I think should be appointed from Home by The
King. He, with his Two Company's Assessors, would do much to
keep all in order, to correct Practice, and diffuse right Principles.
The Delay and Expence of Justice in the Interior are I fear crying
Evils; the Accumulation of Causes in many Places, immense; and
the Difficulty of getting at the Courts at all, from the Distance,
often, of the Suitors and Witnesses, great; amounting almost to a
Denial of Justice. Able and upright Men, invested with the Royal
Character, at the Head of the Provincial Courts, might operate
sensibly upon these Evils; and the Innovation would not need to
be felt as excessive, either by the Company or their Servants. On
the contrary, I should hope that they would feel gratified by the
Association. It would have the Effect of removing in some degree
from the Company a great Responsibility; and this Advantage
would attend the leaving untouched the Appointment by the
Governments of the Two Provincial Assessors, and the Zillah
Judges, &c. &c. that the Study of the Native Laws and Customs
would continue to form the Duty of a Portion of the Civil Servants,
stimulated the rather to it by the Arrangement in contemplation.
To give due Effect to such an Arrangement, the Provincial Chiefs
should be such in Knowledge of the Laws and Languages, as well
as in Name and Authority. In what Way this might be provided
for I am not quite prepared to say. Something might no doubt be
done by the Means we possess through Study at Home; and some
Test might be devised to satisfy the Chancellor as to the Pretensions
of a Candidate. What occurs to me is, that a Judge appointed by
The King for India might be required to remain upon his Arrival
at his Presidency, his Commission and a Part of his Salary suspended 'till he should have accomplished himself in a competent
Knowledge of the Two Native Codes, particularly the Hindoo, as
well as in the Dialect spoken in the Part of the Country in which
he would have to officiate. This is what a competent Person from
Home would always be able to do in less than a Year, in the Course
of which he would be deriving many collateral Advantages from his
Intercourse with the Presidency. It would be fit, I think, that
whenever he might feel prepared to tender himself for the Purpose,
he should be liable to an Examination in the particular Language
or Languages, by Persons to be selected for that Duty; but not in
the Laws, his Attainments in which I would always leave to the
Honour of an English Barrister.
I come now to the Sudder Adawlut, the Court of Appeal from
the whole, and the dernier one in India; a most important
Tribunal, the President of which should also, I think, be a Person
to be appointed by The King. His Salary and Advantages
could not be less than those of the Puisne Judges of the Supreme
Court; to rank with them according to the relative Dates of their
respective Appointments.
Something of the sort of all this seems to me so obvious, that I
forbear expatiating upon it; but One or Two Things I must not
omit. The Company's Sudder is not attended by Counsel: The
King's should be open to them. By this Means, the Judge would
be always well informed, and the Appeal would stand a Chance of
being better determined. In the event of an ulterior Appeal, the
Judge of the Sudder should be instructed to transmit with it, in
detail, the Reasons of his Judgment, for the Information of The
King in Council. It is so I believe in all our Western Colonies,
where an Appeal is made from the Supreme Court to The Governor
and Council of the Colony; it was so at least I know at Halifax in
Nova Scotia, where I twice attended upon Writs of Error, and
delivered in person to The Governor in Council the Reasons of the
Judgment alleged to be erroneous.
[417]
Should the Suggestion offered in the above Letter of the 19th of
January be thought fit to be adopted, the Sudder Adawlut, attended
by Counsel, might be made a useful School of Law, and preparative for the Company's Judges; the young Servants of the Company
destined for the Judicial Department being required to add to
their Proficiency in the Languages a regular and constant Attendance in that Court, to qualify them for Judicial Office. It would
be well also if they were required to attend the Criminal Sessions
in the Supreme Court during the Year in which they might be
attending the Sudder.
As to extending the Jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to the
Interior, or introducing its Machinery, with the necessary Appendage
of Barristers and Attornies, into the Courts there, there is nothing
that I should more deprecate. I speak with reference to Madras
alone.
Robert Richards Esquire is called in, and examined as follows:
In what Situation were you in India?
I was appointed a Writer on the Bombay Establishment in the
Year 1789, and after that filled several subordinate Situations in
the Revenue Line. I was afterwards Private Secretary to Mr. Duncan, when he was Governor of Bombay. After that I filled the
Appointments successively of Commissioner in Malabar; Chief
Secretary to the Government of Bombay; Principal Collector of
Malabar, for, I think, about Two Years; and, finally, a Member
of the Government of Bombay, which I left in 1811; and since
that I have not been in India.
The official Situations you have filled have afforded you an
Opportunity of being well acquainted with the Nature of the
Revenue Systems of India?
I had Occasion to inquire a good deal into the Revenue Systems
of India when I resided in the Country, and I have since perused
a great Number of Reports and official Documents on the same
Subject; I have consequently drawn my Opinions, as well from my
own Experience as from the Result of these official Papers.
Do you know whether Attempts have been frequently made to
ascertain the Produce of the Country by the Means of Surveys;
and whether those Surveys have been made with great Accuracy,
or not?
[418]
Surveys have been frequently attempted, for the Purpose of
equalizing the Land Tax of India, and reducing it to just and
moderate Principles; but I believe that all those Surveys, as far at
least as I am acquainted with them, may be considered to be
complete Failures. Perhaps it will be as well to explain to the
Committee what the Nature of the Land Tax is. When we
succeeded to the Mussulman Administration of India, we found
Principles adopted by the Mussulmans which of course it was
natural for the British Government at first to continue. These
Principles were founded upon the Mussulman Doctrine, of the
Rulers of the Country being also the sole Proprietors of the Soil,
and, as such, entitled to One Half of the Gross Produce of that
Soil, as a Revenue or Land Tax. We adopted this Principle
from the Mussulmans, upon succeeding to the Administration of
the Dewanny in Bengal; and this Principle has been not only
avowed by the Company's Government, but continued for a great
Number of Years to be acted upon by their Servants. It is obvious
that under the Operation of such a System there can be no such
thing as Net Rent, consequently no such Person as a Landlord,
properly so called. The Gross Produce of the Land would
necessarily come to be divided between the Government and the
Ryots employed in cultivating it. The whole Class of Landed
Proprietors came thus to be abolished, or reduced to Beggary,
throughout the whole of India where the Mussulmans had established complete Sway; but in order to the Realization of this
Right, and to ascertain what might be the Gross Produce of the
Land, Surveys have been attempted in different Parts of the
Territory subject to the British Government. Those Surveys have
been effected by Native Officers, followed by another Class of
Officers commonly called Assessors, to fix the Rate and Amount of
Taxation on the Land so surveyed. From the Result of some
Attempts made by myself, and from all the Attempts of which
I have seen Reports from other official Servants in India, I consider
these Surveys to have been complete Failures. The Consequence is,
that all the Revenue Accounts of Land and its Produce which have
been of late Years examined by the European Collectors of India
have been for the most part, indeed I may say generally, if not
universally, found to be mere Fabrications. When I was Principal
Collector of Malabar, a very remarkable Proof occurred to myself.
I succeeded to a Gentleman who had lately effected what was
called a Ryotwar Survey of the Province, founded upon the Principles which had been adopted by the late Sir Thomas Munro in
the Ceded Districts. This Survey was found to be extremely
incorrect. I reported its Inaccuracies to the Revenue Board at
Madras. The Revenue Board were rather displeased at the
Discovery, and required Proof of the Assertion, because this
Survey had been effected by One of their own favourite Collectors.
At this Time I had a Number of European Assistants whom I had
stationed in different Parts of the Province of Malabar, giving
them certain Circles to superintend. I accordingly instructed these
several Assistants to compare the Ryotwar Survey with particular
Spots of their respective Divisions; which they accordingly did,
and reported the Result to me, as Principal Collector. These
Reports contained the clearest Proof, upon personal Inspection by
the Assistants themselves, of the grossest Errors in regard to the
Assessment. Many of the Lands were found to be over-assessed
by more than the whole Amount of the Gross Produce; other
Lands were greatly under assessed; and others, that were properly
subject to the Assessment, were not assessed at all. But the most
remarkable Discovery made upon this Occasion was, that there
were several Spots of Land inserted in the Survey Accounts which
upon Examination by the Assistants in their several Divisions were
found to be actual Jungle, and never to have been cultivated within
the Memory of Man, although in the Survey Accounts they were
most minutely described as containing so much Rice Land, so many
Gardens, so many Plantations of taxable Trees, &c. All this I
reported to the Revenue Board at Madras. It may however be
added, since the Surveys that take place in India are even in the
present Day sometimes dwelt upon as being capable of producing
the beneficial Results which were anticipated from them by Sir
Thomas Munro, the great Patron and Advocate of the Ryotwar
System, that having had Occasion to express myself elsewhere upon
the Subject of those Surveys, after a critical Examination of their
Merits, the Opinion which I gave on summing up that Examination
will, I think, if I have the Committee's Permission to read it, give
a better Idea of the Nature of those Surveys, as well as the utter
Impracticability of their being carried into Effect with the least
Accuracy, than any thing I could here verbally adduce. In
reference to the main Object of these Surveys, which is to ascertain
the Gross Produce of a large Extent of Country, I expressed
myself as follows: "A Proprietor or Farmer of Land, or both
together, residing on the Spot, and knowing from Year to Year
the exact Produce of every Field occupied, may fix the Value
thereof with Accuracy between each other, in reference to Rent,
which the Officers of Government might find no great Difficulty in
afterwards ascertaining, and taking therefrom a fair Proportion as
Revenue or Tax. But for public Assessors to ascertain the real
Gross Produce of every Field of an extensive Empire, not only
without the Aid but in opposition to the Will, because opposed to
the Interest, of the Occupants of the Soil, is a Task of which some
Conception may be formed by those who will take the Trouble to
reflect on the following Circumstances:
[419]
"Let us suppose England to be divided into small Tenures not
much bigger than Irish Potato Gardens (fn. *) -the Produce of the Soil
a great Variety of Articles, of which some one or more come to
Maturity in almost every Month in the Year - the present Landlords forced to emigrate, or reduced to cultivate their own Lands,
or perhaps converted into Zemindars, with Power to exact, fine,
flog, and imprison, ad libitum-the Land Tax fixed at One Half
the Gross Produce, to be ascertained by Admeasurement of every
Acre, and by Valuation, or by weighing the Produce, or, in the
event of Difference of Opinion with the Cultivators of any Village
or District, by calling in the Farmers of a neighbouring District to
settle the Dispute-from the oppressive as well as vexatious
Nature of this Tax, let us also suppose that the Fears and
Jealousies of Government occasion the Appointment of Hosts of
Revenue Servants, armed and unarmed, some to make, others to
check the Collections-that Accounts and Check Accounts be also
multiplied to guard against Imposition-and that Servants required
for these various Purposes be authorized to collect additional Imposts
from the Cultivators, or to have Lands assigned to them as a
Remuneration for their own Services-and that, under colour of
these Privileges and Grants, excessive Exactions are enforced, leaving
but a bare Subsistence to the Farmers-that this System of
Taxation should be liable to Increase with every Increase of Cultivation-that the Defalcations of One Farmer or of One Village
should be made good from the surplus Produce of others-that
the Spirit of the People should be so broken by the Rigours of
despotic Power as to suffer the Government with Impunity to step
forward and declare itself sole Proprietor of all the Lands in the
Country-and that its Avarice and Cravings had so multiplied
Imposts as to inspire Cultivators with the utmost Alarm and Dread
whenever Changes or Reforms were projected in the Revenue
Administration, lest (as was generally the Case in India) further
Additions should be made to their almost intolerable Burthens-
let the Reader, I say, consider these Things, and then ask himself
whether a Government Assessor, with every Soul in the Country
thus opposed to his Research, is likely to attain the requisite Information for justly valuing every Acre of cultivated Land, including
every Variety of Soil and of Product; or, if it could be justly
valued, whether the Collectors of such a Government were likely to
be guided by any better Rule than to extract from the Contributors
all that could with Safety be drawn into their own and the public
Purse."
Have you been much in the Interior of India?
I have visited several of the Districts of India under the Madras
Government. I have been through Parts of the Concan and the
Deccan, and have also visited, I may say repeatedly, every Part of
the Province of Malabar.
Will you state the Effects which, according to your Observations,
seem to be produced upon the People by the Operation of the
Revenue System?
The Effect of the System I have thus alluded to is, in every Part
of India, universal Poverty and Ignorance, as regards the great
Mass of the People. It has been observed by all of our ablest
public Servants: it is a manifest Consequence of our Revenue
Systems, and most observable where those Systems prevail. The
Case is different in some of the great Commercial Towns or
Capitals, such as Calcutta, Madras and Bombay, where Commercial Enterprise is, generally speaking, much more lightly
taxed. In those Places we observe the Accumulation of Wealth,
accompanied by a considerable Progress in Civilization and in
Knowledge.
Can you state to the Committee any Mode by which you conceive
the State of Society in that Part of India subject to the British
Government could be improved?
I think it might be greatly improved by employing the Natives
more generally than we do in the Administration of the Country. I
take one great Cause of our Failure to be the little Regard that has
been paid to the Natives; the Distance at which we keep them.
We estimate their Experience and their Talents too lightly; the
whole of our Administration in India is consequently too much
founded upon European Notions and Doctrines; and if the
Natives were more generally employed in the Administration
of the Country, I think that we should succeed better in
adapting our Measures to their Rights, Usages and Comfort,
which it is obviously the Wish of the British Government to
do; but as long as we keep the Natives at such a Distance, and
think so meanly of their Capabilities, I fear that our Administration in that Country will neither be profitable to us, nor ultimately
secure.
Do you conceive that the Ryots have any Opportunity now of
accumulating Capital?
[420]
Under the System which I have described it is obviously impossible. They are kept in a State which gives them little more
than a bare Sufficiency to keep Body and Soul together. The
Poverty of the Ryots is extreme; the Cultivation of the Country is
consequently in a low State, and far less productive than it would
be if greater Capital could be employed to improve it; but in the
present State of the Ryots it appears to me quite impossible. The
System in India is in fact very like what has been described in
Europe under the Denomination of the Metayer System. It is a
Division of Produce between Cultivators and Proprietors; the only
Difference being, that in India the Proprietors are the Government
or ruling Power, whilst in Europe there are individual Proprietors deriving a net Rent; but the Cultivators under the
Metayer System being, like the Ryots of India, in a State of
the most destitute and wretched Poverty, the Condition of the
latter may be judged of by comparing it with that of the former;
as long as the System continues it is therefore quite impossible
that any Capital can be accumulated to promote internal Improvement.
Has not The East India Company made repeated and anxious
Exertions to improve the State of the Ryots?
The Governments of India have been most anxious upon that
Subject, as well as the Court of Directors in this Country. The
Orders of the Court of Directors abound with able and humane
Instructions to their Governments Abroad, for a just Administration
of their Territories committed to their Charge. Many of these
very able Letters are now in Print, and do great Credit to the
Directors of The East India Company. I particularly refer in this
Place to those which treat of "Protection to the Ryots." But the
Circumstances which I have mentioned -the oppressive Nature of
the Land Tax - the numerous Host of subordinate public Servants
necessarily employed to realize and collect it - the total Impossibility of controuling those Servants by the Authority of the
European Collector, and the Exactions and fraudulent Impositions
and Oppressions committed by those Persons on the Ryots, have
hitherto presented an insuperable Bar to the benevolent Wishes of
the Court of Directors and the local Authorities in this Country
being carried into Effect.
Do you conceive that the Judicial System that is now pursued in
India is susceptible of Improvement?
[421]
I think it is susceptible of very considerable Improvement; and
in any Attempt at Reform or Improvement in India I should
certainly recommend that we were to commence with the Judicial
Department. Our Judicial System in India was first introduced by
Lord Cornwallis, in the Year 1793. There were then Courts
established for the Administration of Justice, and altogether
separated from the Revenue Servants, in whose Hands the
Administration of Justice had been before. The Principle upon
which Lord Cornwallis acted on that Occasion was perfectly
unobjectionable; but the Courts which were established under the
System his Lordship then adopted were entirely founded upon
European Notions of Justice and European Forms of Practice.
The Consequence has been, that the Courts were soon overloaded
with Business, without effecting the Object the Government had in
view, of affording complete Protection to the Ryots. It appears
indeed, by several official Reports now in Print, upon the Subject
of the Judicial Proceedings in India, that the Ryots are to this
Hour, I believe, as little protected against the Artifices of designing
Men, and more especially of the Natives filling official Situations,
as they ever were. It may indeed be apprehended, that no System
will be efficient for affording complete Protection to the Native
Inhabitants until some important Changes take place, as well in the
Judicial as in the Revenue Department. In speaking of the
Revenue Department, I here allude to a gradual Reform in the
System of Taxation; because, as that Taxation employs such a
Host of Persons to collect it, whose Acts it is impossible to controul,
Oppressions and Enormities are constantly committed, which our
Courts of Justice, as now constituted, are very unequal to repress.
There is a very able Minute upon this Subject, by Lord Hastings,
then Lord Moira, dated the 21st of September 1815; and there
is also a Regulation, passed in 1821, the Preamble of which
contains a long and minute Detail of the Enormities that have
been committed by our Native Servants, both in the Revenue and
Judicial Lines of the Service. These Documents I would particularly
recommend to the Attention of the Committee, as tending to shew
what little Effect our Laws have had in protecting the Ryots
against acts of Fraud and Violence; in which it is lamentable to
observe, that Persons in official Employment are stated to be
the principal Aggressors. The Regulation is numbered One,
of 1821.
Do you think that Advantage would arise from the increased
Employment of the Natives in the Administration of Justice in
India?
It appears to me that what has been always wanting, and is still
wanting, in India, is a Code of Laws suited to the Habits and
Usages of the People, and to existing Institutions and Associations
among themselves, particularly such as have been long established,
and are well understood by the Community at large; and what I
would beg leave to recommend for this Purpose is-
First, The collecting into a written Code, or distinct Codes, all
that is useful from the Law Authorities of the several Castes in
India, adding thereto all such Native Usages and Customs as
would be classed in this Country under the Denomination of
Common Law, and reducing the whole into regular and appropriate Enactments applicable to the different Castes or Races of
the Population:
Secondly, Provision for giving due Efficacy and Effect to the
Laws when enacted, by the Establishment of such Courts under
European or Native Judges, as the Case may be, so that Justice
may be given to Applicants at a cheap Rate, and at, or as near as
possible to, their own Homes:
Thirdly, The Establishment of such a Course of Practice in the
several Courts as shall effectually prevent needless Delay, Expence
and Vexation; and,
Fourthly, What I consider of paramount Importance, the Appointment of a permanent Native Committee or Council, either
with or without an European President, to revise and amend, alter
or repeal, existing Laws, and to assist in the Formation of new
ones, and to watch with unceasing Vigilance such as may be consequently confirmed, so as to be enabled to report to Government,
as the superior Legislative Authority, such Amendments, Modifications or Repeals as Circumstances shall appear to render expedient
or necessary. The Power of originating Laws should also be
extended to this Committee or Council, who would submit the
same to Government for Confirmation; and no new Law should
be put in force that had not received the Approbation of the said
Committee.
[422]
It may perhaps be thought that this latter Suggestion is a bold
Measure. When I first suggested in 1813 a more extended
Employment of the Natives of India, the Proposition was then
thought visionary. Since that Period some of the ablest Servants
in India have been convinced of the indispensable Necessity of
employing the Natives in official Situations, more generally than
was formerly the Case; and I do feel convinced, that if such a
Committee or Council as I have now suggested were assembled at
the different Presidencies of India, and Men of known Ability and
Experience selected for the Purpose of composing it, the greatest
Good might be expected to result from it, as well in revising
existing Laws as in passing other Regulations both for the Judicial
and the Revenue Departments, such as would enable us to carry
on the general Administration of the Country much more successfully than it has ever been done hitherto. When I left India,
I knew several Natives who were well calculated to execute a Duty
of this kind. Since I left India, the Progress of Knowledge, and
the Acquirement of the English Language and Literature, has been
so great, that I feel no Difficulty in now saying there must be
numerous Natives in India still better qualified for so important
a Trust, and who would be highly gratified in being selected for
such distinguished Employment. I have been the more particular
in recommending this Native Council or Assembly to the Consideration of the Committee, from the Conviction of my own Mind,
that without it we shall still be wandering in the Dark in India.
But I would also employ the Natives in other important Situations.
I think many of them well qualified to be Judges in the different
Courts. Of late Years, they have been more extensively employed
than formerly, in inferior Situations, such as District Munsiffs-
Village Munsiffs; that is, local Judges or Justices, with limited
Authority, in small Divisions of a Collectorship or Zillah. Latterly,
their Powers have been somewhat enlarged, in consequence of its
being experienced that they executed their Duties in many Instances
with great Ability and Integrity. There are, no doubt, on the
other Hand, Instances of corrupt and vicious Conduct among the
Natives so employed; but Lapses of this Nature are, in many
Instances at least, fairly to be accounted for from the present State
of Indian Society. When Moral Improvement is more generally
introduced among them, their Manners as well as their Principles
will assume a higher Scale. Such indeed is my Opinion of Native
Indians, that I think they might be trusted with greater Judicial
Authority, and employed in higher Offices, than are now conferred
on them. I think, for example, that it would be found of great
Use, in every Court in which an European Judge presides, to have
One or Two Native Judges, as the Case may be, sitting on the
same Bench, with adequate Salaries, suited to the Dignity and
Respectability of the Situation. Those Judges would be of infinite
Use in the Examination of Witnesses, in facilitating Decisions in all
Cases, more especially of Caste, and Disputes regarding Property,
Inheritance, Adoption and other local Usages peculiar to the
Natives of the Country. In respect to Criminal Trials, their
Experience and Co-operation would also be of essential Service.
They might likewise relieve the European Judges and Registers
from much of the present official Details of their respective Courts,
which are in many Instances quite overwhelming. In these various
Ways therefore I think that the Aid of Native Judges, both in
the Civil and Criminal Courts, would be attended with the greatest
Advantage. I could mention an Instance in this respect that might
perhaps be considered in point. I once presided myself in a Criminal
Court in India where Numbers of Prisoners were brought before me
for Trial, and some for Capital Offences; the Witnesses upon these
Trials were necessarily examined through the Medium of Interpreters; and so difficult did I find it to ascertain the real Merits of
the Case, in several of those Trials, that I could not in my
Conscience venture to recommend a Sentence of Death, even where
Prisoners acknowledged, as they often would do, the Commission
of the imputed Crime. The Sentence of Death in those Cases
happily did not rest with me, neither would I singly have undertaken the Responsibility of its Execution.
Are you of Opinion that the Natives might be employed as
Jurors with great Advantage?
[423]
I have no doubt that the Natives would be highly gratified with
being employed as Jurymen generally. I have seen many Letters
and Representations from Natives upon the Subject of the Introduction of Jury Trial in India, in which their Objections, even where
they did object, have mostly rested upon the Circumstance of their
being only allowed to serve as Petit Jurymen; but if the Privilege
was extended to them of sitting on Grand Juries and Special
Juries, I am confident it would be very generally adopted by the
Natives, in as far as it would tend to raise them in the Estimation
of the Society in which they dwelt. I am also of Opinion it
would be of great Use in the Administration both of Civil and
Criminal Justice in India; for I am sure that Natives are far
more competent to examine Witnesses of their own Caste, or the
Inhabitants of their own Country, than Europeans are; they
would thus be of the greatest Use in eliciting Truth in all Cases
of Importance. But it is a curious Coincidence, that on this
Subject I received, only a few Days ago, a Letter from a Native
of great Respectability and Rank in Bombay, touching particularly
upon the Subject of Jury Trial. The Writer of the Letter, as is
generally the Case in Countries where the Inhabitants live under
an arbitrary Government, is exceedingly desirous that his Name
should not be known, and he has begged of me to suppress it; but
knowing the Individual personally, I can vouch, not only for his
high Respectability, but for his Rank and Consequence in Native
Society. The Letter, of which this is an Extract, touches, not
only upon the Subject alluded to, but upon some others which
have been discussed in the Course of this Examination; and if it
be acceptable to the Committee that I should read it, I shall do
so with Pleasure. The Language, being English, is not quite so
grammatical as some other Letters I have seen from Natives of
India; but I give it precisely in the Terms in which I received
it. It is dated the 12th of December 1829, and addressed to
myself. "Perceiving," he says, "that you are anxious to be
acquainted with Occurrences from this Part of the Globe, relative
to the Natives under British Government, I, though inadequate to
the Task, yet undertake to give you some Accounts, and I trust
when this meets your Eyes it may be useful.
"Athough there are Accounts all over India, pretending to shew
that the Natives living under British Government are quietly and
peaceably enjoying themselves happily, I have no Hesitation in
asserting, when their concealed Sufferings from the several present
Systems of Government are unfolded," (I beg to say, that when he
speaks of the present System of Government, he alludes to the System
of Revenue which I have mentioned,) "that there cannot be any
impartial and reflecting Mind to fail to be convinced of the Hardships
on the Part of Government which the Natives are unfortunately subjected to, which in Justice require the Attention of the British Parliament for Reform or Modification. The Impositions are numerous;
and if I were to detail all of them singly it would fill up a Volume.
I shall therefore give you a few, which plunge the Natives (especially
poor Class of People) more immediately into extreme Poverty and
Wretchedness. Cultivators tilling the Lands for Subsistence, to
whom all other Means of Employment being wanting, from the
Rigour of the English Revenue Institutions, and the exorbitant
Rate of Land Tax still existing, derive from Cultivation of their
Lands a scanty Maintenance for themselves and their Families,
after a hard Labour of Twelve Months, leaving little, or some of
them rather no, surplus Produce to answer the Demands of Government for Revenue, and to supply all Expences of Cultivation and
Implements of Culture, and to save Seed for the ensuing Year;
consequently are compelled to borrow Money at heavy Interest
upon Mortgage of their coming Crop; and are, from these Circumstances, doomed not only to a miserable but a confirmed State of
Poverty. These Revenue Institutions and high Taxation, therefore, if not removed, ought to be modified, to relieve the great
Number of Ryots of India, and the Landed Proprietors in general,
from the present Distress.
"The Government here are well aware that the Hackery and
Cart Drivers live solely upon the Hire they daily get. The former
may, with whole Day's Labour, bring scarcely One Rupee, and the
other Half or Three Quarters of a Rupee; notwithstanding, the
Wheel Tax is raised to such an Extent, as Thirty to Forty per
Cent. on Average upon the first established Tax, that these poor
People can scarcely reserve a Trifle to maintain themselves and
Family, the most Part of their Earning washing away by paying
the Company's Tax and feeding the Cattle; and when they become
in Arrears of Payment to Government, the Hackery and Cattle
are liable to Seizure, and Sale by public Auction, for its Payment;
by which they not only lose their Property, but also the Means of
acquiring the Necessaries of Life. It is not only ruinous to the
poor Class of People, but to the Community in general, as the
Wheel Tax of Chariots, Buggy and Coaches are also increased to
the above Extent. The Wheel Tax is moreover leased, since last
Year, to the highest Bidder, which is no less detrimental to poor
People. Unless a Change of these Oppressions and Hardships is
adopted, the Population must lead a deplorable and miserable Life.
"The Tax exacted from the poor Bhaudary, or Toddy Drawers,
upon each Cocoa Nut, Brab and Date Tree, is too heavy, in proportion to its Produce, and the monthly Rent paid to its Proprietors. There leaves a Trifle to the Bhaudary, after paying the
Owner of the Tree and Government, which can scarcely suffice to
maintain himself and Family; consequently the Proprietors Payment is always left in arrear for Five or Six Months, owing to their
being forced to pay first the Government's unproportionate Demand,
which is claimed as its own Share, besides the Imposts when Toddy
is distilled in Spirits. From so many Payments upon each Tree,
you will no doubt be able to judge what remains to afford Subsistence to these poor People; or whether they are reduced to extreme
Poverty or Advancement; and if it is called Justice to the poor
Inhabitants, by Government taking a large Proportion of Produce,
and thereby leave the unfortunate People entirely destitute of the
Articles of Life. The System of Taxations, in general so highrated, as collected here, is too obviously inconsistent with all sound
Principle. If the British Government wish the Prosperity of India,
how should they think it possible for any to prosper under the
Pressure of so heavy an Imposition. Unless they remedy the
Evils resulting therefrom, the Natives, it appears, will be rather
deprived of their Lands and hereditary Possessions in a very short
Time, and its Families reduced, from a State of Influence and
Respectability, to heavy Distress and Ruin; and it is hoped that
you may be able to put this to the Feelings of those Gentlemen of
the highest Authority who may hear you, on the Expiration of the
Charter.
[425]
"Sir Edward West, our late Learned Judge, did the Honour
of permitting the Natives into the Petit Jury; on which Occasions
the Europeans evinced their utmost Displeasure of setting with
them; but the Learned Judge supported the Natives, and on
several Occasions expressed in a very handsome Manner a Satisfaction from the Verdict they had returned upon Cases tried before
them, as will be found on Reference to the Bombay Papers. Notwithstanding, it is grievous to observe the Opposition for admitting
Natives to the Functions of Grand Juries, upon a Pretence that
they are not eligible to act as such. There is no doubt that in
former Times they were not sufficiently acquainted with the English
Language; but at present there has been a great Improvement
acquired, and still further Improvement in young ones is expected,
from the Institution of Schools; and if a proper Selection is made,
there will be found, it is presumed, a sufficient Number of worthy
Natives, - Portuguese, Parsees, Hindoos and Mohamedans, at
present, of very ancient respectable Family, intelligent, and worthy
to discharge the Functions of Grand Jurors equally as the Europeans, more especially as they are acquainted with the Languages
of the Country, and Customs. To this Effect the Natives of this
Place have made a Petition; and it is hoped it will obtain the
desired Object if the Parliament will take this important Point into
Consideration; and it is also in Contemplation of petitioning as to
their being admitted in Special Juries; and further it is deplored
that Distinction exists between Europeans and Natives on all
Occasions, being at the same Time as much entitled to Consideration and Respect as the Englishmen are. Besides, the Natives
have a just Claim to participate at least in some Share of Civil
Offices, as well as in the Magistracy and in the Justice of the Peace;
and regret their being excluded entirely therefrom. In the Second
Office, they will be better Judge than Europeans, being well
acquainted with the Race of Natives, their different Languages,
Habits, Conduct, Means of their Living, and Customs of the
Country; and it is not to be doubted that they want (fn. *)
for a good Administration of Justice, and that there is no Honesty
of Dealings in them. The Natives who are the principal Inhabitants of this Place are descended from Families of Respectability
and good Blood, but in the Sight of Europeans are absurdly considered as lowest of the Nations, for which they are generally downhearted and vexed. Both in the Police Line and in the Justice of
the Peace, here, Europeans are only admitted. Some of them are
so young, inexperienced and unacquainted with the Manners and
Customs of the People of the Country, that they decide Causes as
they like, founding only upon the Regulation, without making any
particular Inquiry into the Spirit of the Transaction before them,
and as to the Condition of the People brought before them for
Trial. It is because they cannot have proper Knowledge of the
Country. But if the Natives should be admitted, and if any thing
should appear striking their Minds for Alteration of the Regulations, and from the better Notice they possess of their own Country
than Europeans, they would of course appeal to the highest Authority for Amendment of Facts and Regulations, thereby rendering a
better Administration of Justice in their own Country, and at same
Time satisfactory to the Population. About this important Point
the Europeans never think of, but they go upon the Laws and
Regulations of England; be it right or wrong, or inconsistent with
the Custom of the Country, Decisions are passed. Unless the
Natives be admitted as Magistrates, Justices of the Peace, Grand
Jurors and Special Jurors, the Measures to be adopted for the
future good Government of their own Country cannot take effect.
Further, it is a Matter not to be disputed, the Natives being
born under the British Colours, and thus continued for nearly
Three or Four Generations, why should they not be entitled
to the same Liberty and Privilege in their own Country as
the Europeans. Thieves are introduced into the Country in
numerous and unresistable Gangs, incorporated with Sepoys of the
Battalions, and others, committing Murders and Depredations
even in Daytime, by which Inhabitants are from Time to Time
robbed of all their Property; but we do not see any Arrangement
on the Part of Police so as to lead to the Detection of these
Freebooters, or to afford any Assistance to the People when they
are attacked by Thieves; but every one are obliged to get their
Property and their Lives secured to themselves at their own
Expence, by keeping Guard to watch during the Night, notwithstanding Government collect Assessments and several high Rates
of Taxes from them for defraying the Charges of Police Establishment. The Natives dare not to come forward to make
Representation to the highest Authority in England against the
Government, being afraid that such Attempt might produce against
them serious Effects, the Government having Power to do all they
wish; wherefore these Inconveniences and Prejudices are suffered.
In this deplorable Condition are the Inhabitants placed under the
British Government, without having any body to take their Part;
on which Subject you will have heard several Publications."
What special Juries have they now in the Courts?
Only in the King's Courts in India established at the several
Presidencies.
Would you recommend the Extension of the Trial by Native
Juries to Civil as well as to Criminal Cases?
In the Provincial Courts I would, certainly; for there several
Cases occur, (adverted to in a former Answer,) of Caste, Inheritance and Adoption, on which the Natives are much better
calculated to pronounce than Europeans.
In what Relation in point of Authority to the European
Judge would you propose to place the Native Judge who you
think should be nominated as Assessor to him in the Supreme
Courts?
I would place him upon the Bench of the Adawlut Courts, to
which my Proposition refers, in the same Way that Puisne Judges
are placed on the Benches of the King's Courts. The European
Judge of course should be the Chief Judge of the Court; but I
would give the Native the Authority as well as the Distinction and
Title of a Judge, when he sits in either of the Courts which I have
recommended.
Would you propose then that the Decision should be by a
Majority of the Judges?
Certainly.
Have you Reason to think that the Natives would be as well
satisfied with the Decisions of such Judges as they are now with
the Decisions of European Judges?
I should think that on the whole they would be better satisfied;
and for this Reason, that Decisions might be much more expeditiously passed, and in many Cases more conformable with the
Usages and the Comprehension of the Natives themselves; one
of the great Inconveniences now complained of in the Administration of Justice in the Zillah Courts being the great Delay
which necessarily takes place there in the Investigation of Causes.
Do you think that an equal degree of Confidence would be
placed by the Natives in the Integrity of Native Judges as of
European?
I think there would; for where an European Judge presided it
would have the same Effect as at present, of obviating all Doubt on
the Score of Integrity.
Are there any other Modes besides those you have stated, in
which you think the Natives might be employed with Advantage in
the general Administration of India?
[426]
They might be employed with equal Advantage both in the
Revenue and in the Police Departments. At present, I would
say that our Systems of Police exhibit perhaps the strongest Proofs
of Failure as regards our Indian Administration; and this I think
arises in a great Measure from Two Causes. The Police of India
was formerly entrusted to the Collectors of Districts. Upon
Lord Cornwallis's new Regulations being introduced, in 1793, the
Police was transferred to the Magistrates of the different Zillahs;
but after a long Course of Experience, being found to be inefficient in their Hands, the Superintendence of the Police has been
again transferred to the Revenue Department, giving at the same
Time to the Collectors Authority as Judges in Revenue Cases, and
as Magistrates in their respective Divisions. But in all these
Changes the Parties to whom the Duties of Police have been
entrusted have been so overloaded with other Business, that their
Police Avocations have only been with them a secondary Object.
I think that both the Collectors and the Zillah Judges, as Matters
now stand, have a great deal too much to do in their respective
Departments ever to be able to give that Attention with is indispensably necessary to the Duties of Police, to render that Establishment effective for the Protection of the Persons and Property
of the People. This I think is one Cause of Failure. Another
arises in a great measure out of our Revenue Systems, which are
universally so oppressive to the Natives as to occasion, on the Part
of all those who are in local Authority or who have local Influence
in the Country, either an Indifference to the Success of our Measures, or else a Spirit of direct Hostility. As long as this State of
Things exists -as long as there is no Congeniality of Feeling on
the Part of the Natives of India with the ruling Authority - it
will be impossible, in my Opinion, for an efficient Police ever to
be established in India. This therefore I take to be another Cause
of our Failure. But if the Native Committee or Council which
I have recommended in a former Answer was established in India,
and if Natives were raised to the other high Situations, both in the
Judicial and Revenue Departments, which I have also suggested,
it would be a Means of attaching the Native Population so very
much to the British Government, that then the local Influence
of the Natives themselves, so indispensably necessary to the
general Success of our Measures, might confidently be expected
to be exerted in our Favour; and when that was the Case we
should feel the Advantages of it, not only in the Police Department, but in all the other Branches of the Administration of our
Government.
Do you think the Natives are now sufficiently educated to
enable them to fill with Safety and Advantage the Situations which
you have mentioned as being such as might be hereafter filled with
Benefit by them?
The Natives of India have of late Years made such Progress
in Education, particularly in the Acquirement of the English
Language, as well as the Knowledge and Literature of this
Country, that I think there can be no doubt of a sufficient Number
of them being found, even now, to fill all the Situations which
I have recommended; but if those Situations were open to the
legitimate Ambition and Hopes of the Natives, it would afford
them an additional Stimulus to qualify themselves for such Situations. There are now ample Means for doing it in India, in the
numerous Schools and literary Institutions which have been established in various Parts of the Country, and to which I understand
the Natives flock with great Avidity, for the Purpose of learning
all that is therein taught; but if those public Offices before mentioned were also open to them, it would induce a far greater
Number to take Advantage of those Seminaries, to qualify themselves for Employment in Situations so well calculated to raise
them to high Respectability and Distinction amongst their own
Associates. It is also in the Power of the Government very
materially to advance this Object, by encouraging the Establishment of Seminaries for Education more generally, and by granting
Prizes or honorary Distinctions in them upon public Examinations,
or establishing something similar to Professorships and honorary
Degrees, such as exist in the Colleges of this Country; and it
may be for Government to consider whether, with such Means of
securing the Attachment and Allegiance of their Native Subjects,
it would not be its wisest Policy to grant this Encouragement to
Native Expectations and Hopes; since, from what we have seen
of late Years of India, such a Degree of literary Improvement has
taken place there that it will be impossible to check its further
Progress. With due Encouragement, therefore, and Reward, on
the Part of the British Government, it will assuredly prove its
greatest Security; but if thwarted or disappointed may be fatal to
its Existence.
[427]
Do you conceive that Benefits in the Way of Moral Improvement would result to the Natives from a free Settlement of
Europeans in India?
There has been a great deal said upon the Subject of free
Settlement, or Colonization, as it is generally called in India.
My Opinion upon that Subject is, that if the Natives of India
were adequately protected in their Persons and Property, very
considerable Advantage would result from the Admixture amongst
them of Europeans of Respectability. I do not conceive that any
Europeans, except Persons of Capital or of good Education, would
ever resort to the Interior of India; for the lower Classes of People
could hardly find Employment in that Climate; they could not
labour in the open Fields, neither do I think they could labour
with Advantage even under Cover, owing to the great Heat of the
Climate, and its usual Effects on European Constitutions. There
appears to me therefore very little probability that the lower
Classes of Europeans would ever have sufficient Inducement to
settle in the Interior. It has been thought necessary hitherto to
guard the Natives of India against Violence and Oppression on the
Part of Europeans, by prohibiting their going into the Interior;
and perhaps, as Matters now stand, that Prohibition is necessary.
This in fact is one of the Reasons which induced me to suggest in
a former Answer, that the Business of Reform or Improvement in
India should begin with the Judicial Department; for if efficient
Laws were once put in force for the Protection of the Inhabitants,
I then conceive there could be no Danger or Difficulty in allowing
Europeans of Capital to settle in the Interior of the Country; and
I think that by the Admixture of Persons of that Description with
the Natives great Advantages would result to the latter, not only
from the Expenditure of Capital among them in the Support of
Industry, but also from the Example of the greater Skill of
Europeans in various Arts and Branches of Manufacture. It would
likewise have a Tendency to diffuse European Literature and
Knowledge among the Natives of India, which would unquestionably very much conduce, in my Opinion, both to their Moral and
probably to their Religious Improvement.
Were you acquainted with any Englishmen resident in the
Interior?
I was; I knew several; Three or Four who resided at different
Times in the Province of Malabar, and in Travancore; but One
in particular, Mr. -, who resided in the Interior of Malabar
for a great many Years; I believe Forty Years altogether. He
latterly possessed a Landed Estate in the District of Randaterra,
and resided on that Estate until the Period of his Death, about Two
Years ago.
Did you observe that the Residence of that Gentleman in
Malabar tended to the Moral and Religious Improvement of the
People in his Vicinity?
He was but a single Individual; and much of the Effect which I
should anticipate from the general Introduction of European Residents could not be expected from a single Person. This Gentleman, I know, communicated freely with the Natives; and being a
very able Person himself, and talking the Language fluently, I have
no doubt he communicated much of his own Knowledge to several
of those who resided in his Neighbourhood, and held Intercourse
with him.
Are you aware that it is on Oath before the Committee, that that
very Person was accused of stealing Women and Children from
Travancore, and making Slaves of them?
I never heard of it while I was in India; and from my Knowledge of that Gentleman during the Time I resided in Malabar I
cannot conceive him capable of such a Transaction, or of having
been in any degree accessary to it.
[428]
Were you acquainted with his History before he went to India?
Not particularly. I knew him for many Years in India, and had
frequent Intercourse with him there. I had never Reason to
suppose him other than a perfectly honourable, well-disposed
and highly-talented Man, and always partial to the Natives of
India. I would beg leave to add, in Justice to the Gentleman in
Question, that if the Accusation against him on the Record of this
Committee has merely reference to Agents whom he had occasionally employed in Travancore, for other, probably, Commercial
Purposes, such Acts on the Part of the Agents might have
occurred, and be easily accounted for, altogether independent of
any Sanction, Controul or even Connivance on the Part of their
Principal, since the most Criminal Acts are frequently committed
by Native Agents acting in subordinate Capacities, under both
Zillah Judges and Collectors, in almost every Part of India, of
which such Judges and Collectors being altogether ignorant as well
as innocent, it would be hard on them to be accused of Participation
in the Crime. This Gentleman, during the Time I knew him,
was so much respected by the Bengal Commissioners, when they
were sent round to Malabar for the Settlement of the Country, as
to be employed in confidential Situations by them. He was afterwards appointed to a Situation by the Government of Madras;
and I believe obtained from that Government a Grant of the
Estate which he held in Malabar, partly at least in consideration
of the Sense which they entertained of the Services he had
rendered.
Do you apprehend that any improved System of Controul on the
Part of Collectors and Magistrates would have the Effect of preventing those improper and tyrannical Acts on the Part of the
Agents acting under them?
I very much fear it will be impossible, without some important
Change or Reform of our present Systems. The Result of our
Experience, ever since we have been in possession of the Dewanny
in Bengal, and in every District we have subsequently acquired,
confirms me in that Opinion.
Do you not apprehend that the Agents of Europeans might,
under the Idea of obtaining their Protection, be more disposed to
commit tyrannical Acts than the Agents of Natives in similar
Situations?
I believe that the Agents of Europeans in Authority never
commit any Acts of Oppression towards the Natives in the Hope of
gaining the Favour or Protection of their Superiors; on the contrary, those Acts are almost always committed unknown to the
European Authorities, or to the European Persons by whom such
Agents are employed. There is always, from the little Intercourse
that subsists between us and the Natives of India, the greatest
Difficulty in detecting such Acts of Oppression, and bringing the
Perpetrators to Justice; and this is the Cause why they are so
often committed with Impunity.
Do you think it would be expedient to promote a more general
Residence of Europeans in the Interior of India, without making
them amenable to the same Courts before which the Natives must
prosecute their Civil Suits, and appear in the event of their being
accused of Criminal Acts?
That is exactly what I should propose. It is with that view that
I recommended Improvement in the first instance in the Judicial
Department; for if the Natives could be adequately protected, I
think every Difficulty would be removed in the Way of admitting
respectable Europeans into the Interior of India; but those
Europeans I would unquestionably subject to the same Laws and
to the same Courts of Justice as the Natives themselves; and upon
that Condition alone do I think they ought to be suffered to reside
in the Interior. Perhaps it may be right to make some Exception
as to Capital Offences.
In what Manner would you so alter the Law as to make it
equally consistent with the Prejudices of the Natives, and with that
of the European Resident?
I have already stated that I think it would be impossible, or
almost impossible, for any European to suggest the Laws that ought
to be enacted for this Purpose; we have hitherto tried it for
upwards of Half a Century, and tried it in vain; and it is upon
these Grounds that I have taken the Liberty of so strongly recommending to the Consideration of the Committee the Appointment
of a Native Council at each of the Presidencies, for the Purpose of
assisting in revising the Laws now in force, and enacting fresh ones,
such as may be more consonant with Native Usages and Habits,
and more efficient to guard the Rights and the Interests of the
Native Community.
[429]
Would you subject the Rights and Interests of European Residents to a System of Law formed by a Native Council?
Certainly I would, if they chose to go and reside amongst the
Natives. Every one who resides in a Foreign Country necessarily
subjects himself to the Laws of that Country; and I see no Reason
why Europeans in India should not be subject to the Laws of India,
if those Laws were passed with due Consideration to the Rights
and Interests of those intended to be governed by them, and
finally scrutinized and confirmed by the Legislature of this
Country.
You think it just that an European who has elected to live in
India rather than under the Law of England should be subject to
the Law which was most consistent with the Habits and Prejudices
of the great Body of the People among whom he lived?
It will be optional with the European to reside in that Country,
and carry his Capital there, or not. If he chooses to reside there,
I think he should be subject to the Laws enacted for the Benefit of
the People at large.
You conceive then that every adequate Security which a Native
of England would require would be insured to him by such Laws
being sanctioned by the British Legislature?
By the Governments of India in the first instance, and by the
British Legislature ultimately.
Were the other Europeans whom you knew resident in the
Interior Persons who carried Capital to India?
Two of them that I recollect were Persons living in the Kingdom
of Travancore. One of them was a very industrious Man, who
gained his Livelihood by building Ships and Boats; the other was
a Person of no Capital, for he had failed in Business at Bombay,
and retired into Travancore, where he passed, I believe, the
Remainder of his Days, carrying on the Business of a Merchant in
a small Way.
As he had no Capital, in what Way was he enabled to carry on
Business in Travancore?
Merely his own Industry, and probably by means of small
Advances acquired from his Friends in Bombay. He was respectably connected in Bombay, and in all probability supported in
Business by them.
You have spoken of the Difficulties you found in administering
Justice, in consequence of the Questions being put to the Witnesses
through the Medium of an Interpreter; were you acquainted with
the Language of those Witnesses yourself?
I was not; and thence arose a great Part of the Difficulty. I
could not in Conscience pass Sentence upon Prisoners where I felt
Uncertainty as to the Nature and the Accuracy of the Evidence
which had been adduced on the Trial.
Would that Difficulty in which you stood have been in any
Degree diminished if you had been sitting between Two Native
Judges?
It would be very much diminished; more especially if those
Natives were acquainted with the English Language as well as
with the Language and Habits of the Parties under Examination
and Trial.
Would it not be easier to find one Englishman acquainted with
the Language of the Country, than Two Native Judges acquainted
with the English Language?
The English Language is becoming so general among the Natives
of India, that I conceive there would be no Difficulty in finding
Individuals perfectly well qualified from their Knowledge of the
Language to sit as Judges. The Languages of India are on the
other Hand so numerous, that though a European may be well
acquainted with One or Two of them, yet in a great Extent of
Country over which his Jurisdiction extends it will often happen
that other Languages or other Dialects exist in which he is not
conversant.
Have you ever considered in what Manner the Judicial Establishments of the British Government in India might be improved,
with relation to the Qualifications of European Judges themselves,
in the Acquisition of Languages, and in the Knowledge of the
Law?
[430]
The European Judges in India are for the most part selected
from amongst the ablest and most distinguished of the Company's
Servants. Their Education is not that of an English Lawyer in
this Country, but I believe they are for the most part well acquainted
with the common Principles of Law, and with the most common
Language of India, videlicet, Hindostanee, and sometimes with the
Persian; but the Persian Language is of little Use in the Administration of Justice in our Courts. If a Code of Laws such as I have
recommended were compiled in India, the Gentlemen who were
appointed to the Situation of Judges in the Provincial Courts could
have no Difficulty in making themselves Masters of that Code;
and it might be made a sine qua non of their Appointment to Office,
to prove upon public Examination that they were qualified to fill
the Situation.
Have they at present any Means of acquiring that Knowledge of
the Law, or any Time to devote themselves to the Acquisition of
it, before they are placed in Judicial Situations?
In the Way in which the Courts are now constituted in India,
and Proceedings conducted, Judges, whether before or after their
Appointment to the higher Situations, have generally no Time upon
their Hands for Study, and therefore cannot be expected to be
possessed of any Legal Knowledge which had not been previously
acquired. This I take to be one also of the great Defects of our
present System. I think it would be very desirable, and is one
Reason why I recommended the Appointment of Native Judges to
our Provincial Courts, that it would shortly, if not immediately,
prove the Means of relieving European Judges and Registers from
a great deal of the detail Business with which they are now overloaded. It might materially conduce to a faithful Execution of
official Duty by the Natives employed in their respective Districts,
if the Judges and Registers alternately had sufficient Time or
Leisure upon their Hands to make constant Circuits through their
respective Districts, for the Purpose of superintending and controuling the Acts of the Native Officers in Authority. If a Judge,
for example, was relieved of the Duties of Detail in which he is
now engaged, he might either himself, or by deputing the Register
of his Court, make frequent Excursions to the Districts or Subdivisions in which Native Judges preside; and by keeping a constant
Watch and Vigilance over the Conduct of those Native Judges, as
well as of the Persons employed in the Revenue Department, it is
more than probable that it would operate as a very effectual Check
upon their Conduct, by restraining the evil Propensities of the bad,
and encouraging the well-disposed to a faithful Execution of their
public Duties.
If the European Judge has no Time to acquire a Knowledge of
Law after his Appointment into a Judicial Situation, is he not
equally without Time to acquire a Knowledge of the Law, and
likewise without any Inducement to acquire it, before his Appointment to those Situations, being fully occupied in whatever Situation
he has been originally placed in, and not knowing he ever shall be
a Judge?
If it were made the Condition of his Appointment to a higher
Situation, he would of course devote himself to the Acquirement of
that necessary Knowledge.
Do you think it advisable that the Two Lines, the Revenue
and Judicial Lines of Service, should be kept distinct throughout?
I think decidedly so, on Principle.
Would you keep them distinct from the first, so that an Individual who entered into one Line should not afterwards pass into
the other?
It has been the Custom to promote Gentlemen from the Revenue
to the Judicial Line, and I think some Advantage results from
follwing up that System, for it gives a Gentleman who has been
in the Revenue Line an Opportunity of acquiring a great deal of
Knowledge with regard to Cases which will certainly come before
him in his Judicial Capacity. If thoroughly qualified on Examination to fill a Judicial Office, I should think it of little Consequence
in which Line he had previously served.
Do you think it would be advisable, when a Gentleman has
once entered the Judicial Line of the Service, that he should remain
there?
[431]
I do not think it at all necessary for a young Man appointed
Assistant to a Judge in one of the Zillah Courts to be exclusively
confined to that Line in all Time to come, nor do I see any Reason
why he should not be transferred to the Revenue Line, and so
changed from one to the other; provided always he shall
prove himself to be qualified for the Offices he may be appointed
to fill.
Would not that Interruption of his Judicial Practice and Studies
make him less fit to exercise the higher Functions than he would if
he devoted himself entirely to one Line?
I doubt very much whether it would; much however in this
respect would depend on the Disposition and Attainments of the
Party. If he knew that the higher Judicial Offices were open to
him, he might, if relieved from the numerous Details to which he
is now exposed, equally qualify himself to fill them as if he had
remained in the Judicial Line altogether.
You have represented the Mischief which had arisen out of the
present System of Land Revenue in India; can you suggest to
the Committee any Improvement in that System?
There is One Question, as regards the Revenue System of India,
which is certainly of paramount Consideration, and that is the
indispensable Necessity of a certain Quantum of Revenue to pay
the present heavy Expences of the Company's Government. It
would therefore be quite impossible to reduce the aggregate
Amount of Land Taxation in India abruptly. It must be done
gradually, as other Sources of Supply present themselves; and I
know no Means by which that Object is so likely to be accomplished as through the Medium of the Native Committee which I
have recommended to be established at the different Presidencies.
Such a Native Council or Committee, with efficient Officers,
European and Native, in the Provinces, might I think materially
aid us in doing that which we have hitherto always failed to accomplish, and that is, equalizing the present Revenue Assessment of
the Country, thereby rendering it more tolerable to the Inhabitants.
With the Aid of such a Committee, and the Employment of
Natives in the other Ways and under the Checks which I have
recommended, we might be enabled to convince the Inhabitants of
what I am sure they cannot be convinced now, that the Assessment thus settled would never be increased, but on the contrary
gradually diminished. Under the Influence of such Arrangements,
and the Confidence of the Inhabitants well secured, it may not be
too much to expect, as a natural Consequence, that Accumulations
of Capital and Property will take place in various Parts of the
Country; and in such Case there can be no doubt that other
Sources of Taxation would present themselves, so as to enable
Government gradually to reduce the Rate and Amount of the
present Land Tax, than which nothing, as it now stands, can more
effectually bar the Progress of Improvement. In these respects, a
Native Committee may be of essential Service; whilst the Reform
of the Revenue Systems of India is, as I think, a Point of the
greatest Importance to be taken into immediate Consideration.
Does not this Expectation of yours proceed on the Supposition,
that, in the first instance, by assessing with greater Equality the
Land 'Revenue, the same Amount of Revenue might still be
received?
It does; but the Revenue as now collected is I believe very
unequally assessed. I am confident that in many Districts of India
there are Lands now altogether exempted from Revenue, which
would under a better System be liable to a regular Assessment; on
the other Hand, there are many Lands over-taxed, from which the
Revenue is oppressively levied, and some not taxed at all. If even
a tolerable Equalization of this Land Tax could be effected with
the Aid of Native Co-operation, it would be a Blessing to the
Inhabitants, and relieve them from a Load of Oppression to which
they are now subject.
In what Way would you proceed to make that equal Assessment
of Revenue?
I think the Means of proceeding should be left entirely to the
Native Committee and the Local Authorities. Unless they can
suggest Means by which this Object can be accomplished, I should
despair of Success. I doubt whether it can ever be accomplished
through European Agency alone.
[432]
Would you found this new Assessment upon a Survey?
I have before explained, that I have not the smallest Confidence
in Surveys.
You have expressed an Opinion that the Surveys which have
been hitherto made have failed, but you give your Opinion of their
Failure on a Comparison between the Result of those Surveys and
the Result of a Survey made by your own Agents; in what
Manner did they proceed to take your Survey on which you did
rely?
My Assistants proceeded merely to inspect certain Spots of a
District pointed out to them; and they found, upon personal Inspection of those Spots, the Inconsistencies which I have detailed
in a former Answer; but I believe it to be quite impossible for
Government Surveyors to assess a large Extent of Country equably;
and if the almost infinite Varieties which arise from Difference of
Seasons and of Soil, as well from Locality as Fertility, together
with the greater or lesser Skill, Industry or Capital employed in
its Cultivation, Change of Products from Year to Year, Proximity
or Distance of Markets, and other Causes, are considered, the
Impossibility of attaining the desired Object by means of Government Surveyors and Assessors - that is, of ascertaining the Gross
Produce of any Country, with a view to equal Taxation - must,
I think, be obvious. It is on these Grounds, therefore, that I am
of Opinion that Surveys will never be of Use to us.
In what Manner would you assess the Revenue without the
Assistance of a Survey?
We must necessarily proceed, for the present, on the Systems
which are in force in the different Districts of India, subject to
such Modifications and Amendments as may be afforded through
the Means I have before recommended.
Are you aware that in many Cases that which was called a
Survey proceeded upon Principles different from those that would
have regulated what is called a Survey in this Country; and that
the Survey was made on a Comparison of the Amount of Tax
actually paid by the Country surveyed in the Course of the last
Ten or Twelve Years?
The most laborious, and perhaps the most accurate Survey,
that has been accomplished in India, was effected under the Superintendence and Direction of the late Sir Thomas Munro, in the
Ceded Districts, who was certainly one of the ablest and the most
zealous of the Company's Servants in India; but from his own
Reports it is manifest that the Result of that Survey was a
complete Failure. The Assessment laid upon the Lands in pursuance of that Survey has, as far as the public Records go, never
been realized. It has been found, on the contrary, necessary in
each succeeding Year, or at certain Periods, to reduce the Amount
of Sir Thomas Munro's Assessment; so that the Revenue realized
from those Districts is, I believe, considerably less than that which
he reported to be the Capability of the Country, and that would in
fact be realized from it in all Times to come.
You are aware that the Assessment of Sir Thomas Munro fixed
the largest Amount of Revenue which in his Opinion it would,
under any Circumstances, be just to draw from the Country; but
that he himself recommended, in the first instance, a very large
Reduction, to the Amount of Twenty-five to Thirty-three per
Cent, and that his Suggestion to that Effect was not adopted?
Sir Thomas Munro's Proposition for a Reduction of the Assessment had reference only to the Experiment of a permanent Ryotwarry System. It was this permanent Ryotwarry Settlement which
the Revenue Board rejected; consequently the former Assessment,
or that of the Ryotwarry Survey, was continued. On his quitting
the Ceded Districts, he reported to Government, that Eighteen
Lacs of Pagodas might be collected from that District in all Time
to come, without the Aid of a single Sepoy to enforce the Collections. I believe however that Eighteen Lacs of Pagodas never
have been realized; and that the Revenue now derivable from
that District is very considerably below the Estimate given in by
Sir Thomas Munro.
[433]
You are aware however that the Assessment fixed in the first
instance on the District surveyed by Sir Thomas Munro was much
higher than he thought the Government could in Prudence or in
Justice exact?
After a laborious Investigation for Three or Four Years of the
Resources of the District, Sir Thomas Munro fixed the Assessment,
not on the Grounds of the Survey, but on an Estimate of the
Resources of the Country, after consulting with the principal
Native Inhabitants, compared with the Realizations of Revenue
from the District for a certain Number of Years previously. I
should conclude, from the repeated Perusal of Sir Thomas Munro's
Reports, that he must himself have placed but little Reliance on
the Result of his own Survey, since both he and his Successors
would seem to have proceeded on other Grounds, as well in
regard to the Assessment of the Country as to the Collection of
the Amount.
Supposing it were determined immediately to make a large
Reduction of the Land Revenue, can you suggest any Mode of
supplying the Deficiency in the Receipts which would be so created
by the Imposition of any other Taxes?
Certainly not immediately; and therefore it is I say that it
should be done with great Caution, and gradually; neither would
I think it safe or wise to attempt further Modifications or Ameliorations of the System, where so many able Heads have already
decidedly failed, until the best informed and most experienced
of the Natives of the Country shall have been consulted upon
the Subject.
You do not therefore suggest yourself any Improvement of the
present System, but you think that such Suggestions might be
obtained from a Native Council?
I really feel too diffident to offer any other Suggestions as to
Improvement of the System than those which I have taken the
Liberty of submitting in the Course of this Examination. I think
it is out of the Power of Europeans to do it as it ought to be done;
they have decidedly failed. The Schemes and Attempts of the
ablest and most zealous of the Public Servants in India have been
tried in vain; and it is upon this Account that I so earnestly
recommend the next Attempt being made with the Aid of Native
Co-operation and Experience.
Had you any Opportunity of observing the State of Property
in India under the Controul of the Proprietary Zemindars, and
comparing it with those under the Management of the Company?
[434]
In the Province of Malabar we found a Class of Hindoo Landed
Proprietors that had been established in the Country from Time
immemorial, the Country never having been overrun by the Mussulman Power until the Invasion of Hyder Ally in 1763. We had
here therefore a regular and even titled Aristocracy of ancient
Descent; and though these Proprietors had materially suffered,
and were almost entirely driven out of the Country, by the forcible
Introduction of the Mussulman System of Finance, yet upon our
acquiring the Province great Numbers of them returned to resume
Possession of their Landed Estates. These Estates were generally
let to Farmers, and for the most part mortgaged to them. The
latter having thus an Interest in the Lands, they were accordingly
cultivated with great Care, and the Produce thereof proportionally
abundant; but the Proprietors themselves were generally poor,
from having mortgaged their Estates, in almost all Instances
to a considerable Amount, and in many to nearly the full Extent
of the Net Rent. It often happened indeed, that the Farmers,
being also Mortgagees in Possession, were better off than the
actual Proprietors; their Condition therefore was greatly superior
to that of the Ryots or Farmers of Lands immediately under the
Management of the Company and their Officers, who invariably
exact from Lands so circumstanced One Half of the Gross Produce
of the Soil, or endeavour to exact it, and the Consequence to
the Inhabitant Cultivators is, as before explained, universal and
wretched Poverty. The Cultivators of Estates in Malabar, being
thus more comfortably off, were also much attached to their superior Lord, who exercised great Influence over them. It must
however be remarked, that these Proprietors were a different Class
of Persons to the Zemindars in Bengal, who had been placed in
Possession of Estates, with Proprietary Rights, under the System
adopted by Lord Cornwallis. The Connection between the
Zemindar and Ryot of Bengal was widely different from that of
the Proprietor and Farmer of Malabar. The excessive Amount
of the Public Revenue only leaving to the Bengal Zemindar One
Eleventh of the Net Rent of his Estate, his Necessities obliged him
to trench on the equally insufficient Portion of the Ryots, and both
were accordingly reduced to great Misery.
Upon the whole, you consider the Farmers and Cultivators
of the independent Estates to which you have alluded as liable
to less Oppression than those under the Ryotwar and other
Settlements?
Far less; and this I think would be universally the Case, if the
Land Revenue would admit of adequate Reduction.
The Witness is directed to withdraw.
Ordered, That this Committee be adjourned to Tuesday next,
One o'Clock.