A. to me that the words cover all property of which the Crown is
the formal owner-waste lands of the Crown, or lands which are the property of the Crown vested in some statutory corporation as trustee for the Crown. I think, therefore, that if the Governor in Council makes an order that such lands as these shall be vested WAILES.
in the Commissioners, the result is that they are vested in them just as much as if by an order of the Court the lands in question were vested in certain persons. That construction is confirmed by the subsequent words of the Act. Sec. 27 goes on to say that the Governor in Council may resume from the Commissioners such lands as may be found unnecessary for carrying out the provisions of the Act, and sec. 28 provides for withdrawing any lands from the Commissioners :- Upon the publication in the Gazette of a proclamation withdrawing any lands from the Commissioners under the provisions of the next preceding section, the lands SO described shall vest in the persons who would be entitled to the same and subject to the like limitations, powers, and authorities as if this Act had not passed. For the purposes of this section, the word 'persons' shall be deemed to include the Crown, or any person or corporation entitled to hold land on behalf of the Crown." In other words, the lands shall revest in their former owner. Now, it is true that sec. 28 says nothing about a proclamation vesting lands in the Commissioners, but it does, in fact, prescribe that if lands are to be divested from the Commissioners and revested in their former owners it is to be done by proclamation.
It is said that that suggests that the vesting was to be done by the same process as the divesting. There may be a weakness in that argument, but the argument is fortified by the fact that for many years it has been the practice to vest lands in public authorities such as these Commissioners, the Railway Commissioners, and the Minister for Public Works, by proclamation, or notification, as it is sometimes called. Therefore, it is not an unfamiliar mode of procedure.
The result is that the Governor in Council was authorized to vest the lands directly in the Commissioners by act of the Execu- tive Council without any further conveyance. It may be con- tended that the operative instrument is the Order in Council. As to that I think that the proclamation, which is the public notifica-