[Constitution, Jefferson's Manual, and the Rules of the House of Representatives, 116th Congress]
[116th Congress]
[House Document 115-177]
[Jeffersons Manual of ParliamentaryPractice]
[Pages 302-307]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]
sec. xlvii--messages
| Sec. 560. Messages sent only when both Houses are sitting. | Messages between the Houses are to be sent only while both Houses are sitting. 3 Hats., 15. * * * |
| Sec. 561. Messages received during debate. | * * * They are received during a debate without adjourning the debate. 3 Hats., 22. |
| Sec. 562. Reception of messages during voting, in absence of a quorum, etc. | In Senate the messengers are introduced in any state of business, except: 1. While a question is being put. 2. While the yeas and nays are being called. 3. While the ballots are being counted. The first case is short; the second and third are cases where any interruption might occasion errors difficult to be corrected. So arranged June 15, 1798. |
| Sec. 563. Informal rising of Committee of the Whole to receive a message. | In the House, as in Parliament, if the House be in committee when a messenger attends, the Speaker takes the chair to receive the message, and then quits it to return into committee without any question or interruption. 4 Grey, 226. |
| Sec. 564. Salutation of messengers by the Speaker. | Messengers are not saluted by the Members, but by the Speaker for the House. 2 Grey, 253, 274. |
| Sec. 565. Correction and return of messages. | If messengers commit an error in delivering their message, they may be admitted or called in to correct their mes |
| Sec. 566. Disposal of messages after reception. | As soon as the messenger who has brought bills from the other House has retired, the Speaker holds the bills in his hand; and acquaints the House ``that the other House have by their messenger sent certain bills,'' and then reads their titles, and delivers them to the Clerk to be safely kept till they shall be called for to be read. Hakew., 178. |
| Sec. 567. Information by message as to bills passed. | It is not the usage for one House to inform the other by what numbers a bill is passed. 10 Grey, 150. Yet they have sometimes recommended a bill, as of great importance, to the consideration of the House to which it is sent. 3 Hats., 25. * * * |
| Sec. 568. Information by message as to rejection of bills. | * * * Nor when they have rejected a bill from the other House, do they give notice of it; but it passes sub silentio, to prevent unbecoming altercations. 1 Blackst., 183. |
| Sec. 569. Questions asked by conference, not by message. | A question is never asked by the one House of the other by way of message, but only at a conference; for this is an interrogatory, not a message. 3 Grey, 151, 181. |
| Sec. 570. Messages as to neglected bills. | When a bill is sent by one House to the other, and is neglected, they may send a message to remind them of it. 3 Hats., 25; 5 Grey, 154. But if it be mere inattention, it is better to have it done informally by communication between the Speakers or Members of the two Houses. |
| Sec. 571. Messages from the President to the two Houses. | Where the subject of a message is of a nature that it can properly be communicated to both Houses of Parliament, it is expected that this communication should be made to both on the same day. But where a message was accompanied with an original declaration, signed by the party to which the message referred, its being sent to one House was not noticed by the other, because the declaration being original, could not possibly be sent to both Houses at the same time. 2 Hats., 260, 261, 262. |