346. Power to make rules.—(1) The Central Government may, after previous publication, make
rules to carry out the purposes and objects of this Act.
(2) In particular, and without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing power, such rules may
provide for all or any of the following matters, namely:—
(a) the manner in which, and the authority to which, application for permission to occupy and
belonging to the Government in a cantonment is to be made;
(b) the authority by which such permission may be granted and the conditions to be annexed to
the grant of any such permission;
(c) the allotment to a Board of a share of the rents and profits accruing from property entrusted to
its management under the provisions of section 63;
(d) the appointment, promotion, transfer, tenure of office, salaries and allowances, provident
funds, pensions, gratuities, leave of absence, discipline and other condition of service of employees of
Boards;
(e) the circumstances in which security shall be demanded from employees of Boards and the
amount and nature of such security;
(f) the keeping of accounts by Boards and the manner in which such accounts shall be audited and
published;
(g) the definition of the persons by whom, and the manner in which, money may be paid out of a
cantonment fund or cantonment development fund;
(h) the preparation of estimates of income and expenditure by Boards and the definition of the
persons by whom, and the conditions subject to which, such estimates may be sanctioned;
(i) the regulation of the procedure of Committees of Arbitration;
(j) the prescribing of registers, statements and forms to be used and maintained by any authority
for the purposes of this Act;
(k) the grant of leave to the members of the Board;
(l) the form of notices, required to be sent under this Act and the manner of their service; and
(m) any other matter which is required to be, or may be prescribed.
347. Supplemental provisions respecting rules.—(1) A rule under section 346 may be made either
generally for all cantonments or for the whole or any part of any one or more cantonments.
(2) The power to make rules under clause (c) of sub-section (2) of section 346 shall include power to
give retrospective effect from a date not earlier than the date of commencement of the Cantonments Act,
2006, to the rules or any of them but no retrospective effect shall be given to any rule so as to
prejudicially affect the interests of any person to whom such rule may be applicable:
Provided that where any rule has to be given retrospective operation, the reasons therefor and the
effect of giving such retrospective operation shall be published along with the draft of the rules when such
draft is published for eliciting public opinion under sub-section (1) of section 346.
(3) All rules made under this Act shall be published in the Official Gazette and in such other manner,
if any, as the Central Government may direct and, on such publication, shall have effect as if enacted in
this Act.
(4) Every rule made by the Central Government under this Act shall be laid, as soon as may be after
it is made, before each House of Parliament, while it is in session, for a total period of thirty 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 the successive sessions aforesaid, both Houses agree in
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making any modification in the rule or both Houses agree that the rule 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 modification or annulment shall be without prejudice to the validity of anything previously done
under that rule.
348. Power to make bye-laws.—Subject to the provisions of this Act and of the rules made
thereunder, a Board may, in addition to any bye-laws which it is empowered to make by any other
provision of this Act, make bye-laws to provide for all or any of the following matters in the cantonment,
namely :—
(1) the registration of births, deaths and marriages, and the taking of a census;
(2) the enforcement of compulsory vaccination and inoculation and levy of fees where such
vaccination or inoculation is carried out at the houses of residents;
(3) the regulation of the collection and recovery of taxes, tolls and fees under this Act and the
refund of taxes;
(4) the regulation of any description of traffic in the streets and the enforcement of measures for
the reduction of noise caused thereby or the prohibition of any description of such traffic;
(5) the manner in which vehicles standing, driven, led or propelled in the streets between sunset
and sunrise shall be lighted;
(6) the seizure and confiscation of ownerless animals straying within the limits of the
cantonments and regulation and control of cattle pounds;
(7) the prevention and extinction of fire;
(8) the construction of scaffolding for building operations to secure the safety of the general
public and of persons working thereon;
(9) the regulation in any manner not specifically provided for in this Act of the construction,
alteration, maintenance, preservation, cleaning and repairs of drains, ventilation-shafts, pipes,
water-closets, privies, latrines, urinals, cesspools and other drainage works;
(10) the regulation or prohibition of the discharge into, or deposit in, drains of sewage, polluted
water and other offensive or obstructive matter;
(11) the regulation or prohibition of the stabling or herding of animals, or of any class of animals,
so as to prevent danger to public health;
(12) the proper disposal of corpses, the regulation and management of burial and burning places
and other places for the disposal of corpses, and the fees chargeable for the use of such places where
the same are provided or maintained by Government or at the expense of the cantonment fund;
(13) the permission, regulation or prohibition of the use or occupation of any street or place by
itinerant vendors or by any person for the sale of articles or the exercise of any calling or the setting
up of any booth or stall, and the fees chargeable for such use or occupation;
(14) the regulation and control of encamping grounds, sarais, hotels, dak-bangalows, lodginghouses, boarding-houses, buildings let intenements, residential clubs, restaurants, eating-houses,
cafes, refreshment-rooms, guest houses, holiday resorts, cinemas and places of public recreation,
entertainment or resort;
(15) the regulation of the ventilation, lighting, cleansing, drainage and water-supply of the
buildings used for the manufacture or sale of aerated or other potable waters and of butter, milk,
sweetmeats and other articles of food or drink for human consumption;
(16) the matters regarding which conditions may be imposed by licences granted under
section 295 or section 277;
(17) the control and supervision of places where dangerous or offensive trades are carried on so
as to secure cleanliness therein or to minimise any injurious, offensive or dangerous effects arising or
likely to arise there from;
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(18) the regulation of the erection of any enclosure, fence, tent, awning or other temporary
structure of whatsoever material or nature on any land situated within the cantonment and the fees
chargeable in respect thereof;
(19) the laying out of streets, and the regulation and prohibition of the erection of buildings
without adequate provision being made for the laying out and location of streets;
(20) the form of and the particulars which shall be contained in a development scheme or an
improvement scheme and the manner in which such scheme shall be framed or altered and levy of
development charges;
(21) the regulation of the use of public parks and gardens and other public places, and the
protection of avenues, trees, grass and other appurtenances of streets and other public places;
(22) the regulation of the grazing of animals and the fees chargeable in respect thereof;
(23) the fixing and regulation of the use of public bathing and washing places;
(24) the regulation of the posting of bills and advertisment, and of the position, size, shape or
style or name boards, sign-boards and sign-posts;
(25) the fixation of a method for the sale of articles whether by measure, weight, piece or any
other method;
(26) the rendering necessary of licences within the cantonment for—
(a) persons working as job porters for the conveyance of goods;
(b) animals or vehicles let out on hire or used for hawking articles;
(c) the proprietors or drivers of vehicles, boats or other conveyances, or of animals kept or
plying for hire or used for hawking articles;
(d) persons impelling or carrying such vehicles or other conveyances; or
(e) persons practising as nurses, midwives or dais;
(27) the prescribing of the fee payable for any licence required under clause (26), and of the
conditions subject to which such licences may be granted, revised, suspended or withdrawn;
(28) the regulation of the charges to be made for the services of such job porters and of the hire of
such animals, vehicles or other conveyances, and for the remuneration of persons impelling or
carrying such vehicles or conveyances as are referred to in clause (26);
(29) the prescribing of fee payable for any licence except as otherwise specifically provided in the
Act, sanction or for any written permission granted by the Chief Executive Officer;
(30) the regulation or prohibition, for purposes of sanitation or the prevention of disease or the
promotion of public safety or convenience, of any act which occasions or is likely to occasion a
nuisance, and for the regulation or prohibition of which no provision is made elsewhere by or under
this Act;
(31) the circumstances and the manner in which owners of buildings or land in the cantonment,
who are temporarily absent from, or are not resident in, the cantonment, may be required to appoint as
their agents, for all or any of the purposes of this Act of any rule or bye-law made thereunder, persons
residing within or near the cantonment;
(32) the prevention of the spread of infectious or contagious diseases within the cantonment;
(33) the segregation in, or the removal and exclusion from, the cantonment, or the destruction, of
animals suffering from or reasonably suspected to be suffering from any infectious or contagious
disease;
(34) the supervision, regulation, conservation and protection from injury, contamination or
trespass of sources and means of public water-supply and of appliances for the distribution of water
whether within or without the limits of the cantonment;
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(35) the manner in which connections with water-works may be constructed or maintained, and
the agency which shall or may be employed for such construction and maintenance;
(36) the regulation of all matters and things relating to the supply and use of water including the
collection and recovery of charges there for and the prevention of evasion of the same;
(37) the maintenance of schools, and the furtherance of education generally;
(38) the regulation or prohibition of the cutting or destruction of trees or shrubs, or of the making
of excavations, or of the removal of soil or quarrying, where such regulation or prohibition appears to
the Board to be not prejudicial to the maintenance of ecological balance and to be necessary for the
maintenance of a water-supply, the preservation of the soil, the prevention of landscape or of the
formation of ravines or torrents, or the protection of land against erosion, or against the deposit
thereon of sand, gravel or stones;
(39) the rendering necessary of licences for the use of premises within the cantonment as stables,
kennels, sites or cow houses or as accommodation for sheep, goats or fowls;
(40) the control of the use in the cantonment of mechanical whistles, sirens or trumpets;
(41) the regulation of supply of copies of official document and prescribing the fee payable in
respect thereof;
(42) the regulation of permission for granting licence for use of loud-speakers and prescribing the
fee payable in respect thereof;
(43) the conservation and maintenance of ancient and historical monuments, archaeological sites
and remains or place of public importance in the cantonment; and
(44) generally for the regulation of the administration of the cantonment under this Act.
349. Penalty for breach of bye-laws.—(1) Any bye-law made by a Board under this Act may
provide that a contravention thereof shall be punishable—
(a) with fine which may extend to five thousand rupees; or
(b) with fine which may extend to five thousand rupees and, in the case of a continuing
contravention, with an additional fine which may extend to five hundred rupees for every day during
which such contravention continues after conviction for the first such contravention; or
(c) with fine which may extend to one hundred fifty rupees for every day during which the
contravention continues after the receipt of a notice from the Board or Chief Executive Officer by the
person contravening the bye-law requiring such person to discontinue such contravention.
(2) Any such bye-law may also provide that a person contravening the same shall be required to
remedy, so far as lies in his power, the damage or mischief, if any, caused by such contravention.
350. Supplemental provisions regarding bye-laws and regulations.—(1) Any power to make
bye-laws conferred by this Act is conferred subject to the conditions of bye-laws being made after
previous publication and of their not taking effect until they have been approved and confirmed by the
Central Government and published in the Official Gazette.
(2) The Central Government in confirming a bye-law may make any change therein which appears to
it to be necessary.
(3) The Central Government may, after previous publication of its intention, cancel any bye-law
which it has confirmed, and thereupon the bye-law shall cease to have effect.
(4) Every bye-law and Regulation made under this Act and every order made under sub-section (3)
shall be laid as soon as may be after it is made, before each House of Parliament while it is in session, for
a total period of thirty 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 the successive sessions
aforesaid, both Houses agree in making any modification in the bye-law and Regulation, or order or both
Houses agree that the bye-law and Regulation, or order should not be made, the bye-law and Regulation,
or order shall thereafter have effect only in such modified form or be of no effect, as the case may be; so,
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however, that any such modification or annulment shall be without prejudice to the validity of anything
previously done under that bye-law and Regulation or order.
351. Rules and bye-laws to be available for inspection and purchase.—(1) A copy of all rules and
bye-laws made under this Act shall be kept at the office of the Board and shall, during office hours, be
open free of charge to inspection by any inhabitant of the cantonment.
(2) Copies of all such rules and bye-laws shall be kept at the office of the Board and shall be sold to
the public at cost price singly, or in collection at the option of the purchaser.