Judicial positions Day was initially appointed to the Court of Queen’s Bench of Lower Canada in 1842. Eight years later, in 1850, he was appointed to the
Superior Court. In 1862, he resigned his position on that court and resumed his legal practice. The commissioners worked for six years on the project. When Morin died in 1865, he was replaced by
Joseph-Ubalde Beaudry for the remaining term of the Commission. Day was the main author of the portion of the proposed code dealing with commercial law, which was his legal specialty. His work became the fourth book of the
Civil Code of Lower Canada, entitled "Commercial Law". He also wrote a substantial portion of "Book Third, Of the Acquisition and Exercise of Rights of Property". In 1866, the provincial Cabinet passed an order-in-council authorising the Governor General to proclaim the
Code in force on August 1, 1866.
Arbitrator under the Constitution Act, 1867 After Confederation in 1867, the province of
Quebec appointed Day as their representative on the arbitration board set up to divide the assets and liabilities of the former Province of Canada between the new provinces of Quebec and Ontario.
Counsel before the British-American Joint Commission In 1869, Day was retained by the
Hudson's Bay Company to argue its case before the British-American Joint Commission appointed under a treaty between the two countries, signed in 1864, respecting property claims in the
Oregon Country (referred to as the
Columbia District by Britain). The Hudson's Bay Company and its subsidiary, the
Puget Sound Agricultural Company, had operated in the area that Britain ceded to the United States by the
Oregon Treaty of 1846. The Oregon Treaty stated that they were entitled to fair compensation for their lands. The 1864 treaty set up the joint commission to adjudicate the claims. Day appeared before the commission in Washington, DC on behalf of the Hudson's Bay Company. He argued that the Company was entitled to $1,388,703.33. However, the final award was $200,000.
Royal Commission on the Pacific Scandal In 1873, Day was appointed chair of the
Royal Commission which investigated charges of corruption against the federal government in the
Pacific Scandal. The commission’s mandate was to investigate allegations that the
Conservatives under
Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald had agreed to give the contract for the
Canadian Pacific Railway to Sir
Hugh Allan, owner of the
Allan steamship line, in exchange for substantial campaign donations to the Conservatives in the
1872 federal election. Day was proposed as a possible chair for the commission by Sir
Hector-Louis Langevin, the
federal Minister of Public Works, who had sounded Day out and found that he was generally sympathetic to the position of the Macdonald government. The other members of the commission were two judges,
Antoine Polette and
James Robert Gowan. The
Liberal opposition boycotted the commission proceedings, because they had wanted an inquiry by a parliamentary committee. As a result, only witnesses proposed by the government were called, and only Prime Minister Macdonald cross-examined them. The witnesses' testimony was often evasive, and the commissioners did not ask many questions of the witnesses. The commission did not make any findings, but simply filed the transcripts of the evidence with Parliament, when it returned following a
prorogation. Day met personally with the Governor General,
Lord Dufferin, for two days and went over the evidence with him. Dufferin concluded that the evidence cleared Macdonald of personal corruption, and of any knowledge of the key point, that Allan had covert arrangements with American financiers for control of the proposed railway. However, on one point, Macdonald admitted that the Conservatives had used some of the money received from Allan for improper election expenses. The opposition Liberals relied on the evidence of the commission in the subsequent debates in Parliament, which ended with the resignation of the Conservative government and the installation of a Liberal government, led by Prime Minister
Alexander Mackenzie. == Promoter of education ==