Fort William; that the said Charles Croftes offered
the said Richard Johnson as one of his securities
for the performance of the said contract, who was
accepted as such by the said Warren Hastings; and
that, at the request of the said contractor, the contract
for victualling the Europeans serving at the Presidency
was added to and united with that for furnishing bullocks,
and fixed for the same period. That this extension
of the periods of the said contracts was not compensated
by a diminution in the charge to be incurred by the
Company on that account, as it ought to have been,
but, on the contrary, the charge was immoderately
increased by the new contracts, insomuch that it was
proved by statements and computations produced at the
board, that the increase on the victualling contract
would in five years amount to 40,000_l._, and that
the increase on the bullock contract in the same period
would amount to above 400,000_l._ That, when this and
many other weighty objections against the terms of
the said contracts were urged in Council to the said
Warren Hastings, he declared that he should deliver
a reply thereto; but it does not appear that he
did ever deliver such reply, or ever enter into a
justification of any part of his conduct in this transaction.—That
the act of Parliament of 1773, by which the first
Governor-General and Council were appointed, did expressly
limit the duration of their office to the term of
five years, which expired in October, 1779, and that
the several contracts hereinbefore mentioned were
granted in September, 1779, and were made to continue
five years after the expiration of the government
by which they were granted. That by this anticipation
the discretion and judgment of the succeeding government
respecting the subject-matter of such contracts was
taken away, and any correction or improvement therein
rendered impracticable. That the said Warren
Hastings might have been justified by the rules and
practice or by the necessity of the public service
in binding the government by engagements to endure
one year after the expiration of his own office; but
on no principles could he be justified in extending
such engagements beyond the term of one year, much
less on the principles he has avowed, namely, “that
it was only an act of common justice in him to secure
every man connected with him, as far as he legally
could, from the apprehension of future oppression.”
That the oppression to which such apprehension, if
real, must allude, could only consist in and arise
out of the obedience which he feared a future government
might pay to the orders of the Court of Directors,
by making all contracts annual, and advertising
for proposals publicly and indifferently from all
persons whatever, by which it might happen that such
beneficial contracts would not be constantly held
by men connected with him, the said Warren
Hastings. That this declaration, made by the said
Warren Hastings, combined with all the circumstances
belonging to these transactions, leaves no room to
doubt, that, in disobeying the Company’s orders,
and betraying the trust reposed in him as guardian
of the Company’s property, his object was to
purchase the attachment of a number of individuals,
and to form a party capable of supporting and protecting
him in return.