Rule-making power enables government to prescribe governance, membership, financial disclosure and dispute procedures for societies. The State Government has comprehensive rule-making power under the Act to prescribe matters including membership qualifications and limits, registration forms and procedures, by-law subjects and procedures, governance of committees and officers, financial and accounting requirements including audit and publication of balance-sheets, modes of raising funds and lending to members, dispute referral to the Registrar or arbitration, valuation and transmission of members' interests, and procedural rules on appeals, delegation, publication and laying of rules before the legislature.
Cases where this provision is explicitly mentioned in the judgment/order text; may not be exhaustive. To view the complete list of cases mentioning this section, Click here.
Provisions expressly mentioned in the judgment/order text.
Rule-making power enables government to prescribe governance, membership, financial disclosure and dispute procedures for societies.
The State Government has comprehensive rule-making power under the Act to prescribe matters including membership qualifications and limits, registration forms and procedures, by-law subjects and procedures, governance of committees and officers, financial and accounting requirements including audit and publication of balance-sheets, modes of raising funds and lending to members, dispute referral to the Registrar or arbitration, valuation and transmission of members' interests, and procedural rules on appeals, delegation, publication and laying of rules before the legislature.
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