Faced with a "virtually bankrupt colonial administration" Governor
Robert FitzRoy had in 1843 waived the Crown's right of pre-emption to purchase Māori land, allowing settlers to directly buy land from Māori if they held certificates waiving the Crown's right. Under what became known as the "penny-an-acre" proclamation, 90,000 acres were bought by settlers. When Governor
George Grey took office in 1845, he decided to take a
test case, with a claimant seeking a writ of to "justify his refusal to award Crown grants over land to persons whose claims were based on those certificates." The case involved an island in the
Firth of Thames that McIntosh had bought from
Māori, which he claimed extinguished all title that the Crown had. The same island was then conveyed by Grey as a Crown grant to Symonds. The argument for the
plaintiff was that the
Māori language text of the Treaty of Waitangi only gave the Crown the right of first refusal and not pre-emption over Māori land. As
David Williams has noted, "The essential political issue at stake in the Gipps/Wentworth debates and in
The Queen v Symonds related to the extent of Crown control over the profits to be made in the process of extinguishing Māori title and making land available to incoming settlers." ==Judgment==