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" And even in cases of treason, felony, and breach of the peace, to which privilege does not extend as to substance, yet in Parliament a member is privileged as to the mode of proceeding. "
Rules of Order: A Manual for Conducting Business in Town and Ward Meetings ... - Page 109
by Benjamin Matthias - 1850 - 130 pages
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Manual of Parliamentary Practice

1826 - 228 pages
...to make submission, committing him to the tower, expelling the house, &c. Scab. 72. L. Parl. c. 22. It is a breach of order for the speaker to refuse to put a question which is in order. 2 Hats. 175. 6. 5. Grey 133. stance, yet in parliament, a member is privileged as te the mode of proceeding....
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Trial of the Case of the Commonwealth Versus David Lee Child, for Publishing ...

John Winslow Whitman - 1829 - 314 pages
...order. How then is the Speaker justified in refusing to put the question on it ? The Manual says, that ' it is a breach of order for the Speaker to refuse to put a question which is in order.' If my question was in order, then the Speaker was out of order, and was the original wrong-doer, and...
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A Manual of Legislative Practice and Order of Business in Deliberative Bodies

Joel Barlow Sutherland - 1830 - 404 pages
...to make submission, committing him to the tower, expelling the house, &C. Scod. 72. L. Parl. c. 22. It is a breach of order for the speaker to refuse to put a question which is in order. 2 Hats. 175, 6. 5 Grey, 133. And even in cases of treason, felony, and breach of the peace, to which...
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Constitution of the United States of America, Rules of the House of ...

1837 - 240 pages
...to make submission, committing him to the tower, expelling the house, &c. Scob. 72. L. Parl. c. 22. It is a breach of order for the speaker to refuse to put a question which is in order. 2 Hats. 175, 6. 5 Grey, 133. in parliament a member is privileged as to the mode of proceeding. The...
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A Manual of Parliamentary Practice: Composed Originally for the Use of the ...

Thomas Jefferson - 1837 - 202 pages
...submission, committing him to the Tower, expelling the House, &c. — Scbb. 72 — Lex. Parl. c. 22. It is a breach of order, for the Speaker to refuse to put a question which is in order. — 2 Hats. 175, 176—5 Grey, 133. And even in cases of treason, felony, and breach of the peace,...
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The Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review, Volume 12

Charles Hodge, Lyman Hotchkiss Atwater - 1840 - 644 pages
...wrong. What was the nature of his offence ? It was not a breach of privilege as some have pretended. " It is a breach of order for the speaker to refuse to put a question which is in order." Sutherland's Manual, 95. The chair is not rendered vacant, but the moderator is guilty of a mere breach...
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A Congressional Manual; Or, Outline of the Order of Business: In the House ...

Joel Barlow Sutherland - 1841 - 530 pages
...to make submission, committing him to the tower, expelling the house, &c. Scab. 72. L. Parl. c. 22. It is a breach of order for the speaker to refuse to put a question which is in order. 2 Hats, 175, 6. 5 Grey, 133. And even in case of treason, felony and breach of the peace, to which...
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Rules of Order: A Manual for Conducting Business in Town and Ward Meetings ...

Benjamin Matthias - 1846 - 128 pages
...prtviously, on the same day, refused to consider said amendments, although other business had intervened. 9* And on the question " Is the motion in order?" it...Speaker to refuse to put a question which is in order. In Parliament, a question of order may be adjourned, to give time to look into precedents. <» I OF...
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Practical Elocution: Containing Illustrations of the Principles of Reading ...

Samuel Niles Sweet - 1846 - 372 pages
...describe him by his seat in the house, or who spoke last, or on the other side of the question. 19. It is a breach of order for the speaker to refuse to put a question which is in order. 20. It is a general rule that the question first moved and seconded shall be first put. JjT For the...
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The Legislative Guide, Containing All the Rules for Conducting Business in ...

Joseph Bartlett Burleigh - 1853 - 354 pages
...make submission, committing him to the tower, expelling the House, &c. [ Scob. 72. L. Parl. c. 22. ] It is a breach of order for the Speaker to refuse to put a question which is in order. [2 Hats. 175, 6. 5 Grey, 133. ] And even in cases of treason, felony, and breach of the peace, to which...
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