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To reconsider.

Lie over one day.

First to be referred.

Expendi

ture, resolutions to be referred.

Previous question.

50. No motion for reconsideration of any vote shall be in order unless on the same day or the following legislative day to that on which the decision proposed to be reconsidered took place, nor unless one of the majority shall move such reconsideration. A motion for reconsideration being put and lost shall not be renewed; nor shall any subject or vote be a second time reconsidered, without unanimous consent.

CHAPTER XI.

OF RESOLUTIONS.

51. The following classes of resolutions shall lie over one day for consideration, after which they may be called up, of course, under their appropriate order of business:

1. All concurrent resolutions.

2. Resolutions containing calls for information on the Executive Department.

3. Resolutions giving rise to debate; except such as relate to the disposition of matters immediately before the House, such as relate to the business of the day on which they are offered, and such as relate to adjournment.

52. All resolutions for the printing of an extra number of any document, paper or bill shall be referred, as of course, to the Standing Committee on Public Printing to consider and report thereon.

53. All other resolutions calling for or leading to expenditure, for the uses of the Legislature, shall be referred to and reported on by the Committee on the Expenditures of the House, unless the House shall designate some other committee.

CHAPTER XII.

OF THE PREVIOUS QUESTION.

54. The "previous question" shall be as follows: "Shall the main question be now put?" and until it is decided shall preclude all amendments or debate.

tion.

When, on taking the previous question, the House shall decide that the main question shall not now be put, the main question shall be considered as still remaining under debate. The "main question" shall Main quesbe on the passage of the bill, resolution or other matter under consideration; but when amendments are pending, the question shall first be taken upon such amendments in their order; and when amendments have been adopted in Committee of the Whole, and not acted on in the House, the question shall be taken upon such amendments in like order, and without further debate or amendment.

CHAPTER XIII.

OF THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBER, AND THE PRIVILEGES OF
ADMISSION TO THE FLOOR THEREOF.

55. The use of the Assembly Chamber may be Who may granted to the State Agricultural Society, the State use. Medical Society, and such other societies as are required by law to report to the Legislature. Application for the use of the Chamber may be acted on when offered.

56. The following classes of persons, and no others, Who may be may be admitted to the floor of the House during the admitted. sessions thereof, viz.:

1. The Governor and Lieutenant-Governor.

2. The members of the Senate.

3. The State Officers.

4. The Regents of the University.

5. Persons in the exercise of an official duty.

6. The Reporters for the press.

7. Such other persons as the Speaker may invite.

CHAPTER XIV.

MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS.

57. In all cases of the absence of a quorum during Absence of the sessions of the House, the members present may quorum. take such measures as they shall deem necessary to

secure the presence of a quorum, and may inflict such

Tie vote.

Questions,

when to be divided.

The journal.

Yeas and nays.

Journal to be print. d.

No rule to

ed except on notice.

censure or pecuniary penalty as they may deem just on those who, on being called on for that purpose, shall render no sufficient excuse for their absence.

58. When the House shall be equally divided on any question, including the Speaker's vote, the question shall be deemed to be lost.

59. If any question contain several distinct propositions, it shall be divided by the Chair at the request of any member; but a motion to strike out and insert shall be indivisible.

60. In all cases where a bill, order, motion or resolution shall be entered on the journal, the name of the member introducing or moving the same shall also be entered on the journal.

61. The yeas and nays may be taken on any question, whenever so required by any ten members (unless a division by yeas and nays be already pending), and when so taken shall be entered on the journal.

62. The journal of each day's proceedings of the House shall be printed, so that it shall be laid on the tables of members within four days after its approval, and the Sergeant-at-Arms shall cause the printed journals to be kept on files in the same manner as other printed documents.

63. No standing rule or order of the House may be be suspend- suspended, changed or rescinded, except, upon one day's notice being given of the motion therefor, by the vote of a majority of all the members elected. Such notice and motion shall in all cases state specifically the object of the suspension, and every case of suspension of a rule under such notice and motion shall be held to apply only to the object specified therein. Nor shall the forty-second rule, so far as it applies to two-thirds bills, be altered, rescinded or suspended, unless two-thirds of all the members elected to the House agree to such alteration, rescinding or suspension.

JOINT RULES

OF THE

SENATE AND ASSEMBLY,

ADOPTED JANUARY 21, 1859.

1. Each House shall transmit to the other all papers Papers to be on which any bill or resolution shall be founded. transmitted. 2. When a bill or resolution which shall have passed Bils rejected in one House shall be rejected in the other, notice thereof shall be given to the House in which the same may have passed.

3. Messages from one House to the other shall be Messages decommunicated by their Clerks respectively, unless the livered by House transmitting the message shall specially direct

otherwise.

the Clerks.

4. It shall be in the power of either House to amend Amendany amendment made by the other to any bill or reso- inents. lution.

committees to be ap

5. In every case of difference between the two In case of Houses, upon any subject of legislation, either House difference, may request a conference, and appoint a committee for that purpose, and the other shall also appoint a pointed. committee to confer. The committee shall meet at such hour and place as shall be appointed by the chairman of the committee on the part of the House requesting such conference. The conferees shall state to each other verbally, or in writing, as either shall choose, the reasons of their respective Houses, and confer freely thereon. The committee shall report in writing, and shall be authorized to report such modifications or amendments as they think advisable. But

no committee on conference shall consider or report on any matters except those directly at issue between the two Houses. The papers shall be left with the conferees of the House assenting to such conference, and they shall present the report of the committee to their House. When such House shall have acted thereon, they shall transmit the same, and the papers relating thereto, to the other, with a message certifying its action thereon.

Matters of 6. It shall be in order for either House to recede difference, how settled. from any subject matter of difference subsisting between the two Houses at any time previous to conference, whether the papers on which such difference arose are before the House receding, formally or informally; and on such vote to recede, the same number shall be required to constitute a quorum to act thereon, and to assent to such receding, as was required on the original question out of which the difference arose.

Bills, when deemed lost.

Joint committee.

Final read

7. After each House shall have adhered to their disagreement, the bill which is the subject of difference shall be deemed lost, and shall not be again revived during the same session in either House.

8. All joint committees of the two Houses, and all committees of conference, shall consist of three Senators and five Members of Assembly, unless otherwise specially ordered by concurrent resolution.

9. No bill which shall have passed one House shall ing of bills. have its final reading in the other in less than two days thereafter, without the consent of two-thirds of the members thereof present; and whenever ten or more bills shall be in readiness for final reading in either House, such House shall forthwith proceed to the final reading of such bills, under the order of third reading of bills, and continue the same from day to day, until all such bills then in readiness for final reading shall have been read, unless this order of business shall, by the vote of two-thirds of the members present, be suspended or laid on the table. All such bills shall have their last reading in each House in the order in which the same

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