CERTIFICATE TO SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS UNDER THE BANKRUPTCY ACT, 1883, SEC. 33.
Bankruptcy Rules, 1886, Form 169.
In the matter of the said A. B., of
a bankrupt, it is hereby certified by this Court to the Right Honourable the Speaker of the House of Commons, that the said A. B., being a member of the Commons House of Parliament, was by an order made by this Court on the 188, adjudged a bankrupt. And that although six months have expired since the date of the said order of adjudication, the said order of adjudication hath not been annulled, nor have the debts of the creditors who proved debts under the bankruptcy been fully paid or satisfied.
Certified under the seal of the Court, this
CHANGES IN THE MODE OF TAKING DIVISIONS IN THE HOUSE OF
AFTER the Whitsuntide adjournment, 1906, the following changes in the method of taking divisions in the House of Commons were introduced experimentally. On a division being called the Speaker or the Chairman, as the case may be, gives the order "clear the lobby" instead of the order that "strangers must withdraw" (see p. 356). The two-minute sand-glass is turned pursuant to standing order No. 28 and the tellers' doors in both lobbies are locked. As soon as the sand has run out the Speaker again puts the question, and the ayes and noes respectively declare themselves. The Speaker directs the ayes to go into the right lobby and the noes into the left lobby, and appoints two tellers for each party (see p. 361). The tellers at once proceed to their doors, which are then unlocked, and the counting begins at once. At the expiration of six minutes from the time at which the sandglass was first turned, the Speaker or Chairman directs the doors leading from the house into the division lobbies to be locked and they remain locked until the announcement of the numbers from the chair (see p. 362).
Under this arrangement the doors of the house are not locked in accordance with the directions of standing order No. 29, but remain open throughout the division by the Speaker's permission.' The house is not cleared (see p. 357), and accordingly it is no longer necessary for a member who has heard the question put the second time, but does not desire to vote, to leave the house (see pp. 357 and 358, n. 1).
Members who have voted in both lobbies in the same division have been allowed on the following day to state as a matter of personal explanation (see p. 319) in which lobby they intended to vote, and the numbers of the division have been directed to be corrected accordingly.2
1158 Parl. Deb. 4 s. 445.
PROCEDURE ON LORDS' AMENDMENTS.
No. 267 of the Rules, Orders, &c., of the House of Commons, dated 4th June, 1891, is reproduced here as it affords such a clear and effective statement of the procedure of the house on Lords' amendments:
"When a bill is returned from the Lords with amendments, the amendments are read and agreed to, or agreed to with amendments, or disagreed to, or the further consideration thereof put off for three or six months, or the bill ordered to be laid aside.
"On the consideration of a bill returned by the Lords, with amendments, no amendment can be proposed to a Lords' amendment, save an amendment strictly relevant thereto; nor can an amendment be moved to the bill, unless the amendment be relevant to or consequent upon either the acceptance or the rejection of a Lords' amendment.
"When this house has disagreed to a Lords' amendment, the Lords may return the bill with further amendments thereto, consequent upon the rejection of their amendment, or with amendments proposed as alternative to the amendments disagreed to by this house.
"When the Lords return the bill with a message that they insist on an amendment to which this house has disagreed, this house may either agree, with or without amendment, to the amendment to which it had previously disagreed, and make, if necessary, a consequential amendment to the bill; or may postpone the consideration of the Lords' amendments for six months; or discharge the order thereon, and withdraw the bill; or order the Lords' amendments to be laid aside."
Abandonment of Railway; standing order (private bills), relative to, 795. Abbot, Mr. Speaker; speech of, at the bar of the Lords (1814), 208, n.; ruling of, as to personal interest, 373; speaks in committee of the whole house, 368. Abercromby, Mr.; his complaint of words used by the lord chancellor, 82. Abingdon, Lord; case of published speech, 100.
Abjuration, Oath of. See Oaths.
Absence, Leave of. See Leave of Absence. Access to the Crown. See Crown, III. Account, Votes on. See Grants on Account. Accounts and Papers; protected from libel law by statute, 102; laid before Parliament, 536; obtainable by order or by address, ib.; presented by command of the Crown or under Act, 540; motions for unopposed returns, 237; motions for papers to be presented immediately, 245. 511; power of committees to send for papers, 406; after answer to address, the parties are subject to an order, 537; or further addresses moved, ib.; orders for, discharged, ib. ; returns relating to the other house, 538; subjects of re- turns, ib.; restriction on power of moving for, ib. ; returns not made, 539; effect of a prorogation, ib.
The presentation of papers, 540; debate on, ib.; presentation of papers by command of the Crown during recess, 541; dummies, 541; resolution regard- ing, 542; ordered to be printed, 542; committee (Commons) thereon, 542, n.; distribution of printed papers by Lords, 542; by the Commons, ib.; delivered to members by Vote Office, ib.; trans- mitted by post, ib.; publication and distribution, 543; unprinted papers, 543; orders and regulations laid before Parliament, 543; disapproval of, by address, 544; cases in which proceed- ings thereon exempted from interruption under standing order 1, 217, n.; Act for publication of papers, 102.
Acts of Parliament; amendment of, in same session, 308; read, in the house, 270. 463; preservation and printing of, 515; commencement of, ib.; public, repealed by private bills, 683; public general Acts which render individual private bills unnecessary, 689. See also Bills; Private Bills.
Additional Provision (Private Bills); petitions for (Commons), 725. 817; (Lords), 841; before examiners, 701. 725. 841; when considered in com- mittee of the whole house (Commons), 726.
Addresses to the Crown; in answer to the royal speech, 175; proceedings thereon, ib.; amended and negatived and new address ordered, 175, n. ; public business, during, 175; form of, 453; amendments moved to, 175; amend- ments thereto hostile to ministers, 176, n.
Presentation of addresses by whole house, 61. 175. 452. 455; by lords with white staves, 175. 453; by privy councillors, and members of the royal household, 61. 175. 453; by members specially nominated, 453; his Majesty's pleasure inquired when he will be attended, 176.
Addresses in answer to written mes- sages from the Crown, 451; to verbal messages, ib.; joint addresses, 452; separate, 453; form of address, 453; mode of presenting, 455; members do not uncover when answer to address is reported, 446.
Subjects of addresses, 453; for prose- cutions, 76; for proclamations against absconding witnesses, 426. 571; for accounts and papers, 536; addresses for public money, 570; joint addresses for commissions of inquiry into corrupt practices, 661; not to relate to pending bill, 454; answers to, 455; may inter- rupt debate, 269.
Orders for, discharged, 300. 537; or superseded by a resolution, 301
Addresses to the Crown-continued. disapproval of statutory orders and regulations by an address, 544. Adelaide, Queen; forms on royal assent to bill providing for, 514, n. Adjourned Business; precedence of, in Lords, 210.
Adjournment of Debate; rules, and form of motion, 281. 295; moved to obtain precedence in debate, 313; restrictions on power of moving, 316; when motion lapses, 282; mover must rise and speak, 322; may not be moved by a member who has spoken, ib.; when moved, he may speak again, ib.; speech in moving cannot be reserved, 322; no adjournment of debate in com- mittee of whole house, 389; nor of a vote in committee of supply, 614; motions analogous thereto in committees, 390; adjournment of debate on going into committee of supply, 610. Adjournment of the House; in sole power of each house, 46; interference of Crown regarding adjournment, ib.; long adjournments, ib., 596; imprison- ment by the Commons not concluded by, 95, n.; by the Speaker in case of grave disorder, 194; sittings suspended, 228. 389, n.; no house, 230; adjourn ments as a mark of respect, 186; on royal marriages, 186, n.; on royal funerals, 187; motions for adjournment of the house to supersede questions, 281; restrictions put on use of these motions for purposes of obstruction, 316. 342; debate to be relevant, 317; matters discussion of which may not be anticipated in debate on, 317; effect of adjournment of house on giving notices of motions, 238; when motion lapses, 216. 282; no amendment to, except as to time, 295; reply not allowed, save to mover of a substantive motion for adjournment, 321; motions in com- mittee for the purpose of adjournment, 492; extended adjournments after pass- ing of Appropriation Act, 596.
Adjournment pursuant to standing. orders, 226; on Fridays, 227; on Saturdays, ib.; after exempted business, 226; beyond next sitting day, 227; notice not required, 256, n. ; from Friday to Monday, 183. 212; debate thereon, 317; adjournment on question, Lords, 209; Commons, 227; through absence of quorum, 228.
Motion for adjournment under stand- ing order No. 10, 252; rules regarding the motion, 253. 278; not permitted on last two days allotted to supply, 607.
Adjournment of the House-con- tinued.
Adjournment of committees (select), 412; (on private bills), 828. See also Debate, Adjournment of; Private Bills; Quorum of the House. Admiralty; arrest of member by warrant of board of, 117; communication to house, 118; no reply by house, 452; secretaryship to, does not vacate seat, 646; amendments (private bills), sug- gested by, 754; before private bill com- mittees, 815-6; provisional orders, 875. 882. See also Government Depart- ments.
Admiralty Court; judge of, disqualified to sit in Parliament, 30 n. Admission of Strangers; Lords, 205; Commons, ib.
Admonition; by Speaker, distinction between, and reprimand, 94. Advertisement; notices by (private bills), 694; (provisional orders), 864. Affidavits; as to compliance with stand- ing orders (private bills), 699. 792. Affirmations; in lieu of oath, 160;
permitted to Quakers, &c., 163; Mr. Bradlaugh's case, 165, et seq. See also Oaths.
Agents (Private Bills). See Parlia- mentary Agents.
Agreements; in private bills, 792. 850. Agriculture. See Board of Agriculture; Chamber of Agriculture.
Albert, Prince; excepted from the operation of 1 Geo. I., stat. 2, c. 4, 28. Aliens; incapable of voting, 27; not eligible as members, 28; eligible by naturalization, 28; naturalization acts, 860-1.
Alkali Works; provisional orders, 872. 886.
Allotments (Provisional Orders);
England and Wales, 889; Scotland, ib. 885; powers, as to costs, of committee on confirming bill, 821. 886. 890. Allotted Days; for business of supply, number of, 605; arrangements for business on, 259. 606; dilatory motions not permitted on last two, 607; mode of concluding business of supply upon, 606. Alterations in Private Bills; petitions against, 758. 761. 807.
Alternative Clauses; before private bill committees, 815.
Alternative Schemes; in the case of a private bill, 811.
Amalgamation Bills; railway bills, 796. 852; locus standi against, 772. Ambassadors, &c.; acceptance of office of, does not vacate seat, 649.
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