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duty to the Company and the Publick; and the Court of Directors had also come to various severe resolutions of censure against the said Warren Hastings, and amongst others to a resolution to recall the said Warren Hastings, and remove him from his office of Governour-General, to answer for sundry great crimes and delinquencies by him committed in his said office.

And on these accounts it appears probable, that the said resignation was tendered and accepted as a consideration for some beneficial concessions made in consequence thereof to the said Warren Hastings in his said dangerous and desperate condition.

And the said refusal was also an act of great disrespect to the Court of Directors, and to His Majesty; and, by rendering abortive their said measures, solemnly and deliberately taken, and ratified and confirmed by His Majesty, tended to bring the authority of the Court of Directors, and of His Majesty, into contempt.

And the said refusal was an injury to General Clavering.

And was also, or might have been, a great injury to Edward Wheler, Esquire.

And was an act of signal treachery to Lauchlin Macleane, Esq. as also to Mr. Vansittart and Mr. Stewart, whose honours and veracity were thereby brought into question, doubt, and suspicion.

And

And the said refusal was prejudicial to the affairs of the servants of the Company in India by shaking the confidence to be placed in their agents by those persons, with whom it might be for their interest to negotiate on any matter of importance, and by thus subjecting the communication of persons abroad with those at home to difficulties not known before.

X. SURGEON-GENERAL's CONTRACT.

THAT the said Warren Hastings, in the year 1777, did grant to the Surgeon-General a Contract for three years, for defraying every kind of hospital and medicine expense-not only in breach of the general orders of the Court of Directors with respect to the duration of contracts, but in direct opposition to a particular order of the Court of Directors, of the 30th of March 1774, when they directed, "that the Surgeon should not be per"mitted to enjoy any emolument arising from his

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being concerned in dieting the patients; and "that the occupations of Surgeon and Contractor "should be forthwith separated."-That the said Contract was in itself highly improper, and inconsistent with the good of the service; as it afforded the greatest temptation to abuse, and established a pecuniary interest in the Surgeon-General, contrary to the duties of his station and profession.

XI. CONTRACTS FOR POOLBUNDY REPAIRS.

THAT the Governour-General and Council at Fort-William did, on the motion and recommendation of Warren Hastings, Esquire, enter into a Contract with Archibald Frazer, Esquire, on the 16th of April 1778, for the repairs of the pools and banks in the province of Burdwan, for two years, at the rate of 120,000 Sicca rupees for the first year, and 80,000 rupees for the second year.

That on the 19th of December 1778 the said Warren Hastings did further persuade the Supreme Council to prolong the term of the above Contract with Archibald Frazer for the space of three years more on the same conditions; namely, the payment of 80,000 Sicca rupees for each year. To which was added a permission to Mr. Frazer to make Dobunds, or special repairs, whenever he should judge them necessary, at the charge of Govern

ment.

That the said Contracts, both in the manner of their acceptance by the Supreme Council, without having previously advertised for proposals, and in the extent of their duration, were made in direct violation of the Special Orders of the Court of Directors.

That

That so far from any advantage having been obtained for the Company in the terms of these Contracts, in consideration of the length of time, for which they were to continue, the expense of Government upon this article was increased by these engagements to a very great amount.

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That it appears, that this Contract had been held for some years before by the Rajah of Burdwan, at the rate of 25,000 rupees per annum.

That the superintendent of Poolbundy repairs, after an accurate and diligent survey of the Bunds and Pools, and the provincial Council of Burdwan, upon the best information they could procure, had delivered it as their opinion to the GovernourGeneral and Council, before the said agreement was entered into, that after the heavy expense (stated in Mr. Kinlock's estimate, viz. 119,405 Sicca rupees) if disbursed as they recommended, the charge in future seasons would be greatly reduced, and after one thorough and effectual repair, they conceived a small annual expense would be sufficient to keep the Bunds up and prevent their going to decay.

That whatever extraordinary and unusual damages the Pools and Bunds might have sustained, either from the neglect of the Rajah's officers, or from the violence of the then late rains, and the torrents thereby occasioned, to justify the expense of the first year, yet as they were all considered and included

included in the estimate for that year, there could be no pretence for allowing and continuing so large and burthensome a payment as 80,000 rupees per annum for the four succeeding years.

That the said Warren Hastings did, in his Minutes of the 13th of February 1778, himself support that opinion, in the comparison to be made between Mr. Thomson's proposals of undertaking the same service for 60,000 rupees a year, for nine years, and the terms of Mr. Frazer's Contract; preferring the latter, because these were " to effect

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a complete repair, which could hardly be con"cluded in one season, and the subsequent expense "would be but trifling."

Notwithstanding which, the said Warren Hastings urged and prevailed upon the Council to allow in the first year the full amount proposed by Mr. Kinlock in his estimate of the necessary repairs, and did burthen the Company with what he must have deemed to be, for the greater part, an unnecessary expense of 80,000 rupees per annum for four years.

That the permission granted to Mr. Frazer to make Dobunds, or new and additional embankments in aid of the old ones, whenever he should judge them necessary, at the charge of Government (the said charge to be verified by the oath of the said, Frazer, without any voucher) was a power very much to be suspected, and very improper to be

intrusted

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