land legislature in respect of sec. 22 as well, and the knowledge
that the private intervener would have to bear his own costs was
no doubt regarded as an effective deterrent to precipitate or
dishonest entrance into the quarrel. I regard it then as the only
probable conclusion that the legislature here, like the Imperial
Parliament, have not shown any intention that a person coming
before the tribunal to prove fraud on the part of the petitioner,
or on the part of both petitioner and respondent, should be
regarded as a party to the suit in such a sense as to be entitled
to receive or to be subject to pay costs. The question follows,
whether, this being so, the Attorney-General, intervening as a
high and responsible officer for the protection, not of the Crown's
revenue or property but of the pure administration of justice, is
to be either penalized in costs or entitled to reap them. Is there
any more reason to hold him a party in this broad sense than
there is in the case of the subject opposing or showing cause? I
think not. Had the Imperial Parliament passed the Act of 1860,
omitting only the concluding part of sec. 7 as to the costs of the
Crown, I cannot suppose that any English Court, paying full
regard to the 51st sec. of the Act of 1857, would have held the
Queen's Proctor either entitled or liable to costs on an interven-
tion. Here the case is, if anything, stronger, because the legisla-
ture finds in the English law a provision entitling the Crown to
costs in a certain event; it omits that provision, and leaves the
Crown, so far as express words are concerned, in no better posi-
tion than a subject who in a similar event has no claim to costs.
Is it to be said that, despite this deliberate alteration, the Crown
is to be held liable to costs where, if it had succeeded, it was the
evident intention of the legislature that it should have no claim
to them? The Attorney-General was here an intervener alleging
material facts under sec. 7 of the Act of 1875; but I do not think
there would have been any material difference if he had opposed
under sec. 22 of the Act of 1864, for I do not conclude that the
former section repeals the latter, which is very wide. If, as is
clear, the subject who comes into Court under sec. 7 - or, for that
matter, under sec. 22 - is not to have costs or to pay them, it is
equally true that the Crown is not put by those sections in a
position differing from that of the subject exercising the right