[Constitution, Jefferson's Manual, and the Rules of the House of Representatives, 118th Congress]
[118th Congress]
[House Document 117-161]
[Jeffersons Manual of ParliamentaryPractice]
[Pages 239-243]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]


[[Page 239]]

                    sec. xxxiii--privileged questions



Sec. 437. Possession of a bill by the 
House.

  It is no  possession of a bill unless it be delivered to the Clerk to 
read, or the Speaker reads the title. Lex. Parl., 274; Elysynge Mem., 
85; Ord. House of Commons, 64.





Sec. 438. Theory as to privileged questions.

  It is a  general 
rule that the question first moved and seconded shall be first put. 
Scob., 28, 22; 2 Hats., 81. But this rule gives way to what may be 
called privileged questions; and the privileged questions are of 
different grades among themselves.



  In the House, by rule and practice, the system of privileged motions 
and privileged questions has been highly developed (rule IX, clause 5 of 
rule XIII, clause 1 of rule XIV, and clause 4 of rule XVI).




Sec. 439. Precedence of the motion to adjourn.

  A motion  to 
adjourn simply takes place of all others; for otherwise the House might 
be kept sitting against its will, and indefinitely. Yet this motion can 
not be received after another question is actually put and while the 
House is engaged in voting.


  The rules and practice of the House have prescribed comprehensively 
the privilege and status of the motion to adjourn (clause 4 of rule 
XVI). The motion intervenes between the putting of the question and the 
voting, and also between the different methods of voting, as between a 
vote by division and a vote by yeas and nays, as after the yeas and nays 
are ordered and before the roll call begins (V, 5366). But after the 
roll call begins it may not be interrupted (V, 6053). Clause 4 of rule 
XVI was amended in the 93d Congress to provide that a motion that when 
the House adjourns on that day it stand adjourned to meet at a day and 
time certain is of equal privilege with the motion to adjourn, if the 
Speaker recognizes for that purpose (H. Res. 6, p. 26). In the 102d 
Congress the motion to authorize the Speaker to declare a recess was 
given an equal privilege (H. Res. 5, Jan. 3, 1991, p. 39).




Sec. 440. Obsolete parliamentary law governing 
orders of the day.

  Orders of  the day take place of all other questions, except 
for adjournment--that is to say, the question which is the subject of an 
order is made a privileged one, pro hac vice. The order is a repeal of 
the general rule as to this special case. When any Member moves, 
therefore, for the order of the day to be read, no further debate is 
permitted on the question which was before the House; for if the debate 
might proceed it might continue through the day and defeat the order. 
This motion, to entitle it to precedence, must be for the orders 
generally, and not for any particular one; and if it be carried on the 
question, ``Whether the House will now proceed to the orders of the 
day?'' they must be read and proceeded on in the course in which they 
stand, 2 Hats., 83; for priority of order gives priority of right, which 
cannot be taken away but by another special order of business.


  ``Orders of the day'' were part of the regular and daily order of 
business (IV, 3056). Although a mention of them has survived in clause 1 
of rule XIV, they have disappeared from the practice of the House (IV, 
3057).



Sec. 441. Jefferson's discussion of certain privileged 
motions.

  After  these there are other privileged questions, which will 
require considerable explanation.



  It is proper that every parliamentary assembly should have certain 
forms of questions, so adapted as to enable them fitly to dispose of 
every proposition which can be made to them. Such are: 1. The previous 
question. 2. To postpone indefinitely. 3. To adjourn a question to a 
definite day. 4. To lie on the table. 5. To commit. 6. To amend. The 
proper occasion for each of these questions should be understood.


  The House by clause 4 of rule XVI has established the priority and 
other conditions of motions of this kind.




Sec. 442. Obsolete use of the previous 
question.

  1. When a  proposition is moved which it is useless or inexpedient now 
to express or discuss, the previous question has been introduced for 
suppressing for that time the motion and its discussion. 3 Hats., 188, 
189.



  The previous question of the parliamentary law has been changed by the 
House into an instrument of entirely different use (V, 5445; clause 1 of 
rule XIX).




Sec. 443. The motion to postpone indefinitely.

  2. But as  the 
previous question gets rid of it only for that day, and the same 
proposition may recur the next day, if they wish to suppress it for the 
whole of that session, they postpone it indefinitely. 3 Hats., 183. This 
quashes the proposition for that session, as an indefinite adjournment 
is a dissolution, or the continuance of a suit sine die is a 
discontinuance of it.



  As already explained, in the House the previous question is no longer 
used as a method of postponement (V, 5445) but a means to bring the 
pending matter to an immediate vote. The House does use the motion to 
postpone indefinitely, and in clause 4 of rule XVI and the practice 
thereunder, has defined the nature and use of the motion.




Sec. 444. Postponement to a day certain.

  3. When a  motion is 
made which it will be proper to act on, but information is wanted, or 
something more pressing claims the present time, the question or debate 
is adjourned to such a day within the session as will answer the views 
of the House. 2 Hats., 81. And those who have spoken before may not 
speak again when the adjourned debate is resumed. 2 Hats., 73. 
Sometimes, however, this has been abusively used by adjourning it to a 
day beyond the session, to get rid of it altogether as would be done by 
an indefinite postponement.



  The House does not use the motion to adjourn a debate. But it 
accomplishes the purpose of such a procedure by the motion to postpone 
to a day certain, which applies, not to a debate, but to the bill or 
other proposition before the House. Of course, if a bill that is under 
debate is postponed, the effect is to postpone the debate. The 
conditions and use of the motion are treated under clause 4 of rule XVI.




Sec. 445. Motion to lay on the table.

  4. When the  House has 
something else which claims its present attention, but would be willing 
to reserve in their power to take up a proposition whenever it shall 
suit them, they order it to lie on their table. It may then be called 
for at any time.



  This is the use of the motion to lay on the table that is established 
in the general parliamentary law, and was followed in the early practice 
of the House. But by an interesting evolution in the House the motion 
has now come to serve an entirely new purpose, being used for the final, 
adverse disposition of a matter (clause 4 of rule XVI; V, 5389). And a 
matter once laid on the table may be taken therefrom only by suspension 
of the rules (V, 6288) or similar process, unless it be a matter of 
privilege (V, 5438, 5439) such as bills vetoed by the President (IV, 
3549; V, 5439). A proposition to impeach having been laid on the table, 
a similar or identical proposition may be again brought up (III, 2049; 
VI, 541).



Sec. 446. Delegation of consideration to 
committee.

  5. If the  proposition will want more amendment and digestion than the 
formalities of the House will conveniently admit, they refer it to a 
committee.



[[Page 243]]

they then proceed to consider and amend it themselves.

  6. But if the proposition be well digested, and may need but few and 
simple amendments, and especially if these be of leading consequence, 


  In the House it is the general rule that business goes to committees 
before receiving consideration in the House itself. Occasionally a 
question of privilege or other matter is presented and considered at 
once by the House.




Sec. 447. Privileged motions in the Senate and in 
Parliament.

  The Senate,  in their practice, vary from this regular graduation of 
forms. Their practice comparatively with that of Parliament stands thus: