of the British government. And that the said
Warren Hastings, having substituted his own instruments
to be the managers and collectors of the public revenue,
in the manner hereinbefore mentioned, did act in manifest
breach and defiance of an act of the 13th of his present
Majesty, by which
the ordering and management and
government of all the territorial revenues in the
kingdoms of Bengal, Bahar, and Orissa were vested
in the Governor-General and Council, without any power
of delegating the said trust and duty to any other
persons; and that, by such unlawful delegation of
the powers of the Council to a subordinate board appointed
by himself, he, the said Warren Hastings, did in effect
unite and vest in his own person the ordering, government,
and management of all the said territorial revenues;
and that for the said illegal act he, the said Warren
Hastings, is solely answerable, the same having been
proposed and resolved in Council when the Governor-General
and Council consisted but of two persons present,—namely,
the said Warren Hastings, and the late Edward Wheler,
Esquire, and when consequently the Governor-General,
by virtue of the casting voice, possessed the whole
power of the government. That, in all the changes
and innovations hereinbefore described, the pretence
used by the said Warren Hastings to recommend and
justify the same to the Court of Directors has been,
that such changes and innovations would be attended
with increase of revenue or diminution of expense
to the East India Company; that such pretence, if
true, would not have been a justification of such acts;
but that such pretence is false and groundless:
that during the administration of the said Warren
Hastings the territorial revenues have declined; that
the charges of collecting the same have greatly increased;
and that the said Warren Hastings, by his neglect,
mismanagement, and by a direct and intended waste
of the Company’s property, is chargeable with
and answerable for all the said decline of revenue,
and all the said increase of expense.
XVI.—MISDEMEANORS IN OUDE.
I. That the province of Oude and its dependencies
were, before their connection with and subordination
to the Company, in a flourishing condition with regard
to culture, commerce, and population, and their rulers
and principal nobility maintained themselves in a state
of affluence and splendor; but very shortly after
the period aforesaid, the prosperity both of the country
and its chiefs began sensibly and rapidly to decline,
insomuch that the revenue of the said province, which,
on the lowest estimation, had been found, in the commencement
of the British influence, at upwards of three millions
sterling annually, (and that ample revenue raised
without detriment to the country,) did not in the
year 1779 exceed the sum of 1,500,000_l._, and in the
subsequent years did fall much short of that sum,
although the rents were generally advanced, and the
country grievously oppressed in order to raise it.