[Constitution, Jefferson's Manual, and the Rules of the House of Representatives, 110th Congress]
[110th Congress]
[House Document 109-157]
[Jeffersons Manual of ParliamentaryPractice]
[Pages 301-303]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]


[[Page 301]]
 

                           sec. xlviii--assent




Sec. 572. Parliamentary law as to presenting a bill for 
the King's assent.

  The  House which has received a bill and passed it may 
present it for the King's assent, and ought to do it, though they have 
not by message notified to the other their passage of it. Yet the 
notifying by message is a form which ought to be observed between the 
two Houses from motives of respect and good understanding. 2 Hats., 242. 
Were the bill to be withheld from being presented to the King, it would 
be an infringement of the rules of Parliament. Ib.



  In the House it was held that where there had been no unreasonable 
delay in transmitting an enrolled bill to the President, a resolution 
relating thereto did not present a question of privilege (III, 2601).




Sec. 573. Parliamentary law as to enrollment of 
bills.

  When a  bill has passed both Houses of Congress, the House last acting 
on it notifies its passage to the other, and delivers the bill to the 
Joint Committee on Enrollment, who sees that it is truly enrolled in 
parchment. When the bill is enrolled it is not to be written in 
paragraphs, but solidly, and all of a piece, that the blanks between the 
paragraphs may not give room for forgery. 9 Grey, 143. * * *



[[Page 302]]

concurrent resolution is privileged for consideration in the House 
during the last six days of the session (see 1 U.S.C. 106 for authority 
to waive ordinary printing requirements at the end of a session), but 
before the last six days, a joint resolution changing the law to permit 
hand enrollments is required and may be considered in the House by 
unanimous consent (Dec. 10, 1985, p. 35741) or by special order of 
business (H. Res. 580, Oct. 8, 1998, p. 24735). The two Houses have by 
joint resolution authorized not only a ``hand enrollment'' of a time-
sensitive bill but also a parchment enrollment of the same measure, to 
be prepared at a later time for deposit in the National Archives with 
the original (P.L. 100-199, Dec. 21, 1987; P.L. 100-454, Sept. 29, 
1988). Where an enrolled bill enacts another numbered bill by reference, 
that same law may require the Archivist to include as an appendix to 
that law the text of the referenced bill (see, e.g., P.L. 106-554). Only 
in a very exceptional case have the two Houses waived the requirement 
that bills shall be enrolled (IV, 3442). The enrolling clerk should make 
no change, however unimportant, in the text of a bill to which the House 
has agreed (III, 2598); but the two Houses may by concurrent resolution 
authorize the correction of an error when enrollment is made (IV, 3446-
3450), and this seems a better practice than earlier methods by 
authority of the Committee on Enrolled Bills (IV, 3444, 3445).



Sec. 574. Practice of the two Houses of Congress 
as to enrollment of bills.

  Formerly the  enrollment in the House and the Senate was 
in writing (IV, 3436, 3437); but in 1893 the two Houses, by concurrent 
resolution, provided that bills should be enrolled on parchment by 
printing instead of by writing, and also that the engrossment of bills 
before sending them to the other House for action should be in printing 
(IV, 3433), and in 1895 this concurrent resolution was approved by 
statute (IV, 3435; 1 U.S.C. 106). In the last six days of a session of 
Congress the two Houses, by concurrent resolution, may permit the 
enrolling and engrossing to be done by hand (IV, 3435, 3438; H. Con. 
Res. 436, Dec. 20, 1982, p. 32875; H. Con. Res. 375, Oct. 11, 1984, p. 
32149), and such a





Sec. 575. Signing of enrolled bills for 
presentation to the President.

  * * * It is  then put into the hands of the Clerk of 
the House to have it signed by the Speaker. The Clerk then brings it by 
way of message to the Senate to be signed by their President. The 
Secretary of the Senate returns it to the Committee of Enrollment, who 
present it to the President of the United States. * * *



[[Page 303]]

  The practice of the two Houses of Congress for the signing of enrolled 
bills was formerly governed by joint rules, and has continued since 
those rules were abrogated in 1876 (IV, 3430). The bills are signed 
first by the Speaker, then by the President of the Senate (IV, 3429). By 
unanimous consent where errors are found in enrolled bills that have 
been signed, the two Houses by concurrent action may authorize the 
cancellation of the signatures and a reenrollment (IV, 3453-3459), and 
in the same way the signatures may be cancelled on a bill prematurely 
enrolled (IV, 3454).



Sec. 576. Authority of pro tempore presiding 
officers to sign enrolled bills.

  A Speaker pro  tempore elected by the House (II, 
1401), or whose designation has received the approval of the House (II, 
1404; VI, 277), signs enrolled bills (see clause 4 of rule I); but a 
Member merely called to the chair during the day (II, 1399, 1400; VI, 
276), or designated in writing by the Speaker, does not exercise this 
function (II, 1401).


  The Senate, by rule, has empowered a presiding officer by written 
designation to sign enrolled bills (II, 1403).






Sec. 577. Presentation of enrolled bills to the 
President.

  In early  days a joint committee took enrolled bills to the President 
(IV, 3432); but in the later practice the chairman of the committee in 
each House that had responsibility for the enrollment of bills also had 
the responsibility of presenting the bills from that House, and 
submitted from his committee daily a report of the bills presented for 
entry in the Journal (IV, 3431). In the 107th Congress the 
responsibility in the House for enrolled bills was transferred from the 
Committee on House Administration to the Clerk (sec. 2(b), H. Res. 5, 
Jan. 3, 2001, p. 25). Enrolled bills pending at the close of a session 
have, at the next session of the same Congress, been ordered to be 
treated as if no adjournment had taken place (IV, 3487-3488). Enrolled 
bills signed by the presiding officers at one session have been sent to 
the President and approved at the next session of the same Congress (IV, 
3486). At the close of the 97th Congress, some enrollments were 
presented to the President, and were signed by him, after the convening 
of the 98th Congress.