GOVERNMENT BY COMMISSIONS ILLEGAL AND PERNICIOUS. THE NATURE AND EFFECTS OF ALL COMMISSIONS OF INQUIRY AND OTHER CROWN-APPOINTED COMMISSIONS. THE CONSTITUTIONAL PRINCIPLES OF TAXATION ; AND THE RIGHTS, DUTIES, AND IMPORTANCE OF Joshua By J. TOULMINESMITH, ESQ., OF LINCOLN'S INN, BARRISTER-AT-LAW. DONJUN 1876 "It is not almost credible to foresee, when any maxim or FUNDAMENTAL LAW of this "New things which have fair pretences are most commonly hurtful to the Common- LONDON: S. SWEET, 1, CHANCERY LANE. 1849. J PREFACE. THE present work gives the result of no sudden impulse. The rapid strides which CENTRALIZATION has been making in this country for the last few years can have been viewed by no one who has carefully studied the history of the growth and development of the national energies, and who indulges any generous feelings, without profound anxiety. The deep impressions thus derived have led me, on some recent occasions, to make what efforts an individual, unaided and at his own expense, was able, to oppose certain measures having this centralizing tendency. The circumstance of my having thus sacrificed no trifling amount of time and money, without the slightest prospect or probability of any personal remuneration, will at least be evidence of the earnestness of those endeavours, and of the present one. It was impossible for me, in the course of those efforts, to shut my eyes to the fact, that, though the instinctive sense of the iniquity of a course which is |