Abstract:
The East Bengal Financial Rules is really a reprint of the Bengal
Financial Rules published by the Government of prepartition Bengal,
but unlike the other rules they are not promulgated under the authority
of the Devolution Rules which ceased to exist with the constitutional
changes introduced in 1935. They have been framed under the
authority given to Finance Department under Rule 50 of the Rules
of Business and have been made to conform to the further constitutional
changes introduced in 1947. Since 1930 the Bengal Financial Rules could not be republished;
and the changes in the procedure relating to accounts could not be
introduced in the Bengal Financial Rules. Hence some of the rules
in the Civil Account Code, etc., were being followed. These rules
have been incorporated in the East Bengal Financial Rules which is
now, as far as possible, a self-contained set of rules. They are of course supplementary to the Treasury Rules framed
under section 151 of the Act and the Subsidiary Rules framed thereunder.
When the Treasury Rules and Subsidiary Rules framed thereunder
were compiled in 1944, it was contemplated that the revision
of the Bengal Financial Rules would follow quickly. Hence some of
the rules in the Bengal Financial Rules which deal with transactions in
Treasury, while included in the other compilation, were not removed
from the former. There was consequently duplication in this respect.
In the compilation of the East Bengal Financial Rules this duplication
has been removed. Where necessary, reference to the relevant rules in
•the Treasury Rules and Subsidiary Rules has been included in the
Financial Rules for convenience of working. In regard to maintenance
of initial accounts, they are distinct from, but when necessary have to
be applied in conjunction with, any direction issued by the Auditor-
General under section 168 of the Act. In the compilation of the publication, the arrangement in the old
book has been generally followed except that certain rules of general
application have been collected in Chapter II to give them their due
importance. This Chapter contains among others, the rules regarding
financial propriety, and personal responsibility of individual Government
servants in regard to wastage or irregular disposal of ptiblic money,
stores or property. They were previously scattered over more than one
publication, e.g., Audit Code, Civil Account Cede, etc.