Comptroller And Auditor General S Duties Powers And Conditions Of Service Act 1971 - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: comptroller and auditor general s duties powers and conditions of service act 1971Appropriation Accounts
Appropriation Accounts, 'appropriation accounts' means accounts which relate the expenditure brought to account during a financial year, to the several items specified in the law made in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution or of the Government of Union Territories Act, 1963, (20 of 1963) for the appropriation of moneys out of the Consolidated Fund of India or of State, or of a Union Territory having a Legislative Assembly, as the case may be. [Comptroller and Auditor-General's (Duties, Power and Conditions of Service Act, (56 of 1971), s. 2(b)]...
Accounts
Accounts, accounts, in relation to, commercial undertakings of a government, includes trading, manufacturing and profit and loss accounts and balance-sheets and other subsidiary accounts, Comptroller and Auditor-General [Duties, Powers and Conditions of Service Act, 1971 (56 of 1971), s. 2 (a)]...
Condition of service
Condition of service, includes transfer of the employees, General Officer Commanding-in-Chief v. Subhash Chandra Yadav, (1988) 2 SCC 351: AIR 1988 SC 876. [Cantonment Board Service Rules (1937) R. 5C]The expression 'conditions of service' is an expression of wide import. As pointed by the Supreme Court in Pradyat Kumar Bose v. Hon'ble the Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court, (1955) 2 SCR 1331, the dismissal of an official is a matter which falls within 'conditions of service' of public servants. The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in North West Frontier Province v. Suraj Narain Anand, (1948) LR 75 IA 343, took the view that a right of dismissal is a condition of service within the meaning of the words under s. 243 of the Government of India Act, 1935. Lord Thankerton speaking for the Board observed therein: 'apart from consideration whether the context indicates a special significance to the expression 'conditions of service' their Lordships are unable in the absence of any su...
Acting Chief Justice
Acting Chief Justice, A judge appointed under article 126 of the constitution to perform the duties of the Chief Justice of India. [High Court Judges (Conditions of Service) Act, 1954, (28 of 1954), s. 2(a)], [Supreme Court Judges (Conditions of Service) Act, (41 of 1958), s. 2(a)]...
Actual service
Actual service, 'Actual service' includes--(i) time spent by a Judge on duty as a Judge, or in the performance of such other functions as he may, at the request of the President, undertake to discharge; and(ii) vacations means such period or periods during a year as may be fixed as vacation by or under the rules of the Supreme Court made with the prior approval of the president. [Supreme Court Judges Conditions of Service Act, 1958, s. 2(b)...
Acting Judge
Acting Judge, means a person who was appointed to act as a Judge under sub-s. (2) of section 22 of the Government of India Act, 1935. [High Court Judges (Conditions of Service) Act, (28 of 1954), s. 2(b)]...
Military Service Acts
Military Service Acts of 1916 (English) (5 & 6 Geo. 5, c. 104, and 6 & 7 Geo. 5, c. 15), introducing compulsory military service during the late war for men of 18 and under 41,were amended from time to time during the war, e.g., the age was extended to 51 in 1918, and are now repealed (S.L.R., 1927). See Chitty's Statutes, tit. 'Army.'...
general jurisdiction
general jurisdiction see jurisdiction ...
Service
Service [fr. servitium, Lat.], that duty which a tenant, by reason of his estate, owes to his lord. There are many divisions of this duty in our ancient law books, as into personal and real, which is either urbane or rustic, free and base, continua land annual, casual and accidental, intrinsic and extrinsic, certain and uncertain, etc. see TENURE.The formal delivery of a writ, summons of other legal process 2. The formal delivery of some other legal notice such as pleading, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 1372.The formal mode of bringing a writ or other process, or a notice in a suit, to the knowledge of the person affected by it.The service of writs of summons is regulated by (English) R.S.C. 1883, Ord. IX., which by r. 1 dispenses wit service, when (as is usual) the defendant, by his solicitor, agrees to accept service, and enters an appearance. By r. 2, service, when required, must be personal, unless an order for 'substituted service, or the substitution of notice for service,...
Workman
Workman, does not include an apprentice/trainee appointed under the Apprentices Act, 1961, Dhampur Sugar Mills v. Bhola Singh, (2005) 2 SCC 470. [Uttar Pradesh Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (28 of 1947), s. 2(z)]Here includes an employee employed as supervisor. There are only two circumstances in which such a person ceases to be a workman. Such a person is not a workman if he draws wages in excess of Rs. 500 per month or if he performs managerial functions by reason of a power vested in him or by the nature of duties attached to his office, All India Reserve Bank Employees' Association v. Reserve Bank of India, AIR 1966 SC 305: (1966) 1 SCR 25.The term 'workman' as used in s. 33C(2) includes all persons whose claim, requiring computation under this sub-s., is in respect of an existing right arising from his relationship as an industrial workman with his employer, National Buildings Construction Corporation Ltd. v. Pritam Singh Gill, AIR 1972 SC 1579: (1972) 2 SCC 1: (1973) 1 SCR 40.Car...