29. Correction of patent errors:-
After a Bill has been passed by the
Legislative Assembly, the Speaker has
the power to correct any obvious
printing or clerical errors at any stage
of a Bill.
When a Bill has been passed, the Vidhan
Secretariat sends a copy thereof to the
Administrative Departments concerned,
for scrutiny with a view to assist the
Speaker in correcting such patent errors
etc. The Draftsman in the Law Department
is invariably consulted by the
Administrative Department .It is open to
the Draftsman to point out mistakes in
the Bill, if any, relating to printing,
spelling, punctuation, numbering of
sections or clauses, or cross-references
and marginal headings. As a rule, patent
errors pointed out by the Draftsman as
well as the Administrative Department
and accepted by the Speaker are carried
out in the Bills before they are printed
for presentation to the Governor for
assent.
30. Presentation of the
Bills for assent:
When a Bill is passed by the Assembly
and corrected, if necessary, it is
printed on thick or parched paper and
authenticated by the Speaker and if it
is a Money Bill, certified in the manner
prescribed under article 199 of the
Constitution. Four assented copies are
endorsed by the Speaker with a
certificate to the effect that the Bill
has been passed by the Assembly. It is
thereafter presented through the Law
Department to the Governor for assent
within a period of one month from the
date of signing of the Bill by the
Speaker.
Immediately, on receipt of the reference
from the Speaker, Secretary(Law)
procures the report of the
Administrative Secretary concerned and
also records his own report under rule
53 of the Rules of Business of the
Himachal Pradesh Government.
31. Assent to the Bill:
The Governor may either
assent to the Bill, withhold his assent,
or reserve the Bill for the
consideration of the President or return
the Bill, if it is not a Money Bill,
with a message for consideration of the
Bill or any specified provisions
thereof, or for consideration of the
desirability of introducing any such
amendments as he may recommend in his
message.
Where the Bills are reserved for the
consideration of the President, the
necessary action to transmit the Bill to
the Ministry of Home Affairs to the
Government of India for procuring the
assent of the President, is taken in the
Governor=s
Sectt, in accordance with procedure laid
down in the instructions issued by the
said Ministry vide their letter No.
17-23/72-Judl. and No.23/114/2001-Judl.
dated 3.8.1972 and 18.9.2001
respectively. Such reference is required
to be sent with at least six copies of
the Bill as introduced (with Statement
of Objects and Reasons) six copies of
the Bill as passed, six copies of the
letter forwarding the proposal and in
case the Bill is an amending, six
updated copes of the principal Act and
also a certificate to the extent that
all the said copies have been enclosed
therewith.
32. Custody of assented
copies:
Out of the four authenticated copies of
the Bills, as passed and assented to,
one copy is retained in safe custody
each by the Governor’s Sectt., Law
Department, Vidhan Sabha Sectt. and the
Administrative Department. Where a Bill
is assented to by the President, fourth
copy is retained in the Ministry of Home
Affairs in the Government of India.
33. Publication of the
Bill as Act:
A Bill becomes a law as soon as it is
assented to by the Governor or the
President, as the case may be. The
general rule regarding coming into
operation of an enactment is that in the
absence of any express provision to the
contrary, an Act comes into operation
on the day on which it is first
published in the Official Gazette, after
which it receives the assent. Thus after
the Bill is assented to by the President
or the Governor, as the case may be, and
is assigned the number and year by the
Law Department, by making entry in the
Register of Acts, the Bill, as assented
to, is published as an Act in the
Official Gazette.
34. Publication of
Authoritative English and Hindi texts of
State laws:
In the State of Himachal Pradesh w.e.f.
1st July, 1979 Hindi Language stands
declared under the Himachal Pradesh
Official Language Act, 1975, as the
Official Language for the transaction of
Legislative Business. Since Hindi is the
Official Language for the transaction of
the Legislative Business in this State,
efforts are made to publish under the
authority of the Governor, as far as
possible, simultaneously the
authoritative English texts
of the Acts, enacted in Hindi language,.
The authoritative texts in Hindi
of laws, originally enacted in English
language by the State Legislature, are
published by the Official Wing of the
Law Department, which processes
proposals to secure authentication by
the Governor of the translation of State
Acts into Hindi.
35.
Subordinate Legislation- permissible
limits of delegation:
With
the ever-widening Governmental
activities in a welfare State,
subordinate legislation has become
necessary. The Legislature lays down
principles to frame, in conformity with
those principles, formal and procedural
details about that measure in the form
of rules, regulations etc. The fields of
legislation and subordinate legislation
are treated as separate fields and
distinct though at times it is difficult
to draw a line between them. The Supreme
Court in AIR, 1951 SC 332 (known as
Delhi Laws Act case) has observed that
it is not open to the Legislature to
delegate its essential legislative
functions which consist in the
determination of the legislative policy
and of formally enacting that policy
into a binding rule of conduct.
Legislature must lay down the
legislative policy and principles and
must afford guidance for carrying out
the said policy before it delegates its
subordinates powers in that behalf.
Legislature can only delegate to an
outside body subordinate or ancillary
legislative functions for carrying out
the purpose and the policy of the Act.
The essential
legislative functions and the ancillary
or subordinate legislative functions can
be broadly distinguished with sufficient
clarity as follows-
(A). Essential
Legislative functions are :-
1. Declaring what
the laws shall be in relation to any
particular territory or locality;
2. Extending the
duration of operation of an Act, beyond
the period mentioned in the Act itself;
(however this power may be delegated to
the Executive, if sufficient guide for
the maximum period of extension are laid
down in the Act);
3. Repealing or
amending the law;
4. Modifying any
existing or future law in any essential
feature so as to involve a change of
policy;
5. Power to tax;
6. Power to levy
fees;
7. Power to create
offences (Penalties can be prescribed by
rules provided the parent Act contains a
specific provision to this effect and
the maximum amount of penalty is also
laid down in the Act);
8. Power to allow
exemptions (After laying down the policy
of law and the standards to be applied
in the administration, the Legislature
may authorise the Executive to make
rules or regulations prescribing classes
of cases in which relief or exemption
may be granted);
9. Expenditure from
public revenues, as for instance,
appointment of a penal of assessors,
payment of fees and travelling
allowances to them (Rules may govern
these matters provided the Act contains
the necessary enabling provision, and
adequate indication is given in the Act
that expenditure from the public
revenues is likely to be incurred on
these matters);
10. Matters affecting
the jurisdiction of the Courts;
11. Right to
appeal (When the entire machinery
for taking original decisions is created
under the rules, authorised by the
enabling provisions of the Act, there
may be no objection to provide also by
rules, machinery and procedure for
appeals against such decisions, but if
the original decisions are taken under
the specific provisions of the Act and
there is no provision of appeal made in
the Act, it will not be right to
fill the lacuna by making provisions
regarding appeals under rules on grounds
of natural justice);
12. Provisions
affecting interest or rights in
properties and providing for
compensation;
13. Trespassing upon
individual rights and liberties:- (Rules
may be made affecting interest or rights
in properties and providing for
compensation therefor or for trespassing
upon individual rights and liberties,
provided there are specific enabling
provisions in the Act and sufficient
guides are indicated therein regarding
the manner in which and the extent to
which these rights, interests and
liberties are going to be affected).
(B) The Ancillary or
subordinate legislative functions are as
follows and can be governed by the rules
framed by the Executive Government-
1. All matters of
subsidiary or ancillary nature or those
which relate to procedure or matters of
detail;
2. Fees can be
prescribed, if there is enabling
provisions in the Act, but they should
not be out of all proportion to the
services rendered so as to be in he
nature of impost or tax;
3. As regards
taxation, it seems permissible to
delegate, the power to carry out certain
taxation policy, if the principles of
taxation are clearly embodied in the
Act. Examples of these may be mentioned
as follows:-
(a) Powers to
determine the time when or the manner in
which tax should be paid, i.e. power to
determine matters of computation,
appraisement, adjustment, and such other
like powers involving more certainty of
details;
(b) Powers to
authorise administrative authority to
mathematically deduce the rate from
facts and events referred to in the
taxing measures;
(c) Power to revise
rates according to the changing
circumstances provided definite
standards are laid down to guide the
exercise of such powers;
(d) Rate making
functions, provided adequate standards
are provided to guide the administrative
body in rate making process;
(e) In matters of
sales tax, power to prescribe by rules
at what single point in series of sales
by successive dealers the goods shall be
liable to tax;
(f) discretion as
regards the procedure to be followed in
the matter of collection or assessment
of taxes, provided sufficient guide or
standards for the exercise of such
discretion is provided;
(g) power to
determine whether a particular article
or merchandise is dutiable, after the
Legislature had laid down the principles
and the rate according to which a duty
is to be levied.
Exemptions:-
The Legislature may authorise the
Executive to make rules or regulations
prescribing classes of cases in which
exemptions would be granted after laying
down the policy for the purpose.
4. Power to give
retrospective effect:-
(i) this must flow
from the Act itself either by expressed
words or by necessary intendment which
must be gathered from the provisions of
the Act itself;
(ii) should be
given only to confer benefits on subject
and not to impose any new obligations or
restrictions affecting the existing
rights and that too in circumstances
which are compelling and the
power should be used;
(iii) should not be
earlier than the date when the Act comes
into force unless the Act specifically
provides otherwise.
36. Guidance to Executive
and other safeguards.-
While processing the proposal to frame
rules, bye-laws etc. should be kept in
view that:-
(a) it is couched
in simple language;
(b) it contains, if
it is an amending regulations or rules,
adequate references to the principal
regulations, rules etc.;
(c) it indicates
exact statutory authority under which
these have been made;
(d) it does not
involve sub-delegation of legislative
power without the authority of the
parent Act, or where sub-delegation is
authorised, it should not be wide and
general without proper safeguards;
(e) it is not
likely to cause any hardship to any
citizens on the ground of lack of
adequate notice provision;
(f) it does not
contain provisions whereby the Executive
is empowered to issue orders affecting
the interest of the citizens, affording
them an opportunity of being heard and
without the right of appeal.
(g) it does not
contain any provision which may result
in arbitrary exercise of powers; and
that any of its provision is not
unjustified on general democratic
principles and is not ambiguous.
37. Procedural
requirements.-
(a) Previous publication.- There
is no uniform procedure in India for
making subordinate legislation, except
in the case of rules or bye-laws made
under the Acts which provide for
requirement of previous publication.
Thus, besides, the cases where the
provisions of the General Clauses Act,
applies, the procedure for making
subordinate legislation depends upon the
provisions, if any, of the enabling Act
under which it is made. The essentials
of the procedure by section 22 of the
Himachal Pradesh General Clauses Act,
1968 (which corresponds to section 23 of
the General Clauses Act, 1897) are the
antecedent publicity of the draft rules
or bye-laws in the Official Gazette with
a view to give the persons likely to be
affected an opportunity of making
objections, and consideration of
objections, if any, before the rules or
bye-laws are finally made.
(b) Requirement of
laying.- So far as the laying of
rules before the legislative is
concerned, the formula is now finally
well settled. Invariably the rule
making section read as under:
AEvery
rule made under this Act, shall be laid,
as soon as may be after it is made,
before the Legislative Assembly, while
it is in session for a total period of
ten days, which may be comprised in one
session or in two or more successive
sessions, and if, before the expiry of
the session immediately following the
session or successive sessions
aforesaid, the Legislative Assembly
agrees in making any modifications in
the rule, or agrees that the rules
should not be made, the rule shall
thereafter have effect only in such
modified form or be of no effect, as the
case may be, so, however, that any such
modifications or annulment shall be
without prejudice to the validity of
anything previously done under that
rule.@
Section 22-A of the
Himachal Pradesh General Clauses Act,
1968, makes general provisions that
every rule made under the Himachal Act,
or under the Central Act, relating to
the matters with respect to which the
State Legislature has power to make laws
for the State of Himachal Pradesh, as
soon as may be after it made is to be
laid before the State Legislative
Assembly for a period of ten days, which
may be comprised in one or more
successive sessions. The procedure for
laying the rules, etc. is prescribed in
the Rules of Procedure for the Internal
working of the Committee on Papers Laid
on Table annexed to the Directions
issued by the Speaker and in rules 340,
341, 342 and 343 of the Rules of
Procedure and Conduct of Business in the
Legislative Assembly. Where in a
particular session if the said period of
ten days is not completed, the rules are
relaid in the successive session and
this process continues till the period
of ten days is completed.
(c) Requirement of
Consultation.- In some cases
enabling Act contains provisions which
lay down the requirement of previous
consultation with some named agency. An
example of such a provision is the
consultation of the State Public Service
Commission in framing the service rules
of the Government employees, or of the
High Court in framing the rules
concerning judicial services etc.
(d) Requirement of
prior Approval or sanction.-
Requirement of prior approval or
sanction, if any, prescribed by the
enabling Act, is held to be mandatory,
subordinate legislation will have to
receive the prior approval or sanction
prescribed before it can be effective.
38.
Powers implied from the General Clauses
Act:
(a) Power to vary, amend and rescind
etc..- It is implied, because of
section 20 of the Himachal Pradesh
General Clauses Act, 1968 (which
corresponds to section 21 of the General
Clauses Act, 1897), that where a power
to issue notification, orders, rules
bye-laws is conferred then that power
includes a power exercisable in the like
manner and subject to the like sanction
and conditions(if any) to add to, amend,
or rescind any notifications, orders,
rules or bye-laws so issued. But the
power to amend or modify, in the absence
of any clear authorisation to that
effect, can only be exercised during the
period in which original notification,
order etc. continues to be effective,
for it cannot be brought to life post
facto ex after it has ceased to exist.
(b) Power to frame
rules before the commencement of the Act.-
Power conferred by enabling Act to make
subordinate legislation may at time be
exercised even before the commencement
of the Act. This is made possible by
section 21 of the Himachal Pradesh
General Clauses Act, 1968, (which
corresponds to section 22 of the General
Clauses Act, 1897). It is enabling
provision, its intent and purpose being
to facilitate the making of rules,
bye-laws or orders before the date of
commencement of an enactment the
anticipation of its coming into force.
Subordinate legislation so made comes
into operation with the coming into
operation of the Act and facilitates its
effective implementation, for an Act may
contain provisions which are not
workable till the rules are made.
(c) Continuation
of orders etc. issued under enactments
repealed and re-enacted.-By virtue
of the provisions of section 23 of the
Himachal Pradesh General Clauses Act,
1968 (which corresponds section 24 of
the General Clauses Act, 1897), where
any Act is repealed and re-enacted with
or without modification, then unless it
is otherwise expressly provided, the
rules framed under the repealed Act so
far these are not inconsistent with the
re-enacted provisions, are to continue
to be in force, unless and until these
are superseded by the rules etc. under
the re-enacted provisions.
39.
Parliamentary control over subordinate
legislation:
The Authority delegated
to the Executive has to be kept under
scrutiny. The State Legislature
exercises the necessary check and
control through its Departmentally
Related Standing Committees under rule
273 of the Rules of Procedure and
Conduct of Business in the Assembly. It
is the function of the said committees
to see that the rule making power of the
Executive, conferred by the Constitution
or delegated by the Legislature, is
being exercised within such delegation.
In practice the Committee scrutinizes
all orders made by the State Government
or by an other subordinate authority
ultimately responsible to the
Government, and which are published in
the Official Gazette or laid on the
table. While examining rules, the
committee considers in particular
whether these are in accordance with the
general objects of the Constitution or
the Act pursuant to which these are
made, whether these contain matter which
in the opinion of the Committee should
more properly be dealt with in a Act of
Legislature, whether it contains
imposition of any tax; whether these
directly indirectly bar the jurisdiction
of the courts; whether these give
retrospective effect to any of the
provisions in respect of which the
Constitution or the Act does not
expressly give any such power; whether
these involve expenditure from the
Consolidated Fund of the State or the
Public Revenues; whether these appear to
make some unusual or unexpected use of
the powers conferred by the Constitution
or the Act pursuant to which these are
made; whether for any reasons their form
or purpose calls for any elucidation;
and whether there appears to have been
unjustified delay in their publication
or in laying them before the
Legislature. Under rule 1 of the Rules
of Procedure for the Internal Working of
the Committee on Papers Laid on the
Table (annexed to Directions by the
Speaker), the Standing Committees are
required to see, that:-
(a) there has been
compliance with the provisions of the
Constitution, rule, regulation under
which the papers have been laid;
(b) there has not
been any unreasonable delay in laying
the papers; and
(c) in the case of
delay a statement explaining the reasons
for delay has been laid on the table of
the House.
40. Maintenance of State
Statutory Code:
Law Department is also
responsible for preparation and revision of
State Code (containing all rules, important
notifications/statutory orders) and to keep
them up to date by bringing Annual
Supplements.
41. Computer Technology in
the field of legislation:
A scheme by way of storing information in
the computer in relation to State Laws, in
collaboration with the National Informatics
Centre, has been initiated. To have better
and efficient performance, this scheme has
been strengthened by having an independent
computer set. On maturity of this scheme, it
is likely to facilitate the immediate
availability of State Laws, for reference to
Courts, which are to interpret laws, to
Government Officers, who are to implement
the laws and to the public, who are the
actual consumers of Laws.
.
See rule 159 of the Rules of
Procedure and Conduct of Business in
the Legislative Assembly and
Directions No. 28 and 29 of the
Directions by the Speaker..
.
See rule 161 of the Rules of
Procedure and Conduct of Business in
the Legislative Assembly.
.
See article 200 of the Constitution
of India.
.
See Annexures-“A” and “B”.
.
See section 3 of the Himachal
Pradesh General Clauses Act, 1968.
.
See article 348(3) of the
Constitution of India.
.
See section 3 of the Himachal
Pradesh Official Language
(Supplementary Provisions) Act,
1981.