[110th Congress House Rules Manual -- House Document No. 109-157]
[From the U.S. Government Printing Office Online Database]
[DOCID:hruletx-26]
[Page 201-203]
sec. xxi--resolutions
When <<NOTE: Sec. 395. Orders and resolutions of the House.>> the
House commands, it is by an ``order.'' But fact, principles, and their
own opinions and purposes, are expressed in the form of resolutions.
A resolution for an allowance of money to the clerks being moved, it
was objected to as not in order, and so ruled by the Chair; but on
appeal to the Senate (i.e., a call for their sense by the President, on
account of doubt in his mind, according to clause 5 of rule XXII) the
decision was overruled. Jour., Senate, June 1, 1796. I presume the doubt
was, whether an allowance of money could be made otherwise than by bill.
[[Page 202]]
In <<NOTE: Sec. 396. Concurrent resolutions of the two Houses.>> the
modern practice concurrent resolutions have been developed as a means of
expressing fact, principles, opinions, and purposes of the two Houses
(II, 1566, 1567). Joint committees are authorized by resolutions of this
form (III, 1998, 1999), and they are used in authorizing correction of
bills agreed to by both Houses (VII, 1042), amendment of enrolled bills
(VII, 1041), amendment of conference reports (VIII, 3308), requests for
return of bills sent to the President (VII, 1090, 1091), authorizing the
printing of certain enrolled bills by hand in the remaining days of a
session (H. Con. Res. 436, Dec. 20, 1982, p. 32875), providing for joint
session to receive message from the President (VIII, 3335, 3336),
authorizing the printing of congressional documents (H. Con. Res. 66,
July 1, 1969, p. 17948); paying a birthday tribute to former President
Truman (H. Con. Res. 216, Apr. 24, 1969, p. 10213); calling for the
humane treatment of prisoners of war in Vietnam (H. Con. Res. 454, Dec.
15, 1969, p. 39037), and fixing time for final adjournment (VIII, 3365).
The Congressional Budget Act of 1974 (P.L. 93-344) provides for the
adoption by both Houses of concurrent resolutions on the budget that
become binding on both Houses with respect to congressional budget
procedures (see Sec. 1127, infra). A concurrent resolution is binding on
neither House until agreed to by both (IV, 3379), and, since not
legislative in nature, is not sent to the President for approval (IV,
3483). A concurrent resolution is not a bill or joint resolution within
the meaning of clause 5 of rule XXI (requiring a three-fifths vote for
approval of such a measure if carrying an increase in a rate of tax on
income) (Speaker Gingrich, May 18, 1995, p. 13499). In the 106th
Congress the Senate neglected to adopt a House concurrent resolution
vacating signatures of the Presiding Officers on an enrolled bill and
laying that bill on the table as overtaken by another enactment (H. Con.
Res. 234, adopted by the House on Nov. 18, 1999, p. 30719). The Congress
subsequently enacted section 1401 of the Miscellaneous Appropriations
Act of 2001, which adopted that concurrent resolution (as enacted by
P.L. 106-554).
Another <<NOTE: Sec. 397. Joint resolutions.>> development of the
modern practice is the joint resolution, which is a bill so far as the
processes of the Congress in relation to it are concerned (IV, 3375;
VII, 1036). With the exception of joint resolutions proposing amendments
to the Constitution (V, 7029), all these resolutions are sent to the
President for approval and have the full force of law. They are used for
what may be called the incidental, unusual, or inferior purposes of
legislating (IV, 3372), as extending the national thanks to individuals
(IV, 3370), the invitation to Lafayette to visit America (V, 7082,
footnote), the welcome to Kossuth (V, 7083), notice to a foreign
government of the abrogation of a treaty (V, 6270), declaration of
intervention in Cuba (V, 6321), correction of an error in an existing
act of legislation (IV, 3519; VII, 1092), enlargement of scope of
inquiries provided by law (VII, 1040), election of managers for National
Soldiers' Homes (V, 7336), special appropriations for minor
[[Page 203]]
and incidental purposes (V, 7319), continuing appropriations (H.J. Res.
790, P.L. 91-33, p. 17015); establishing the date for convening of
Congress (H.J. Res. 1041, P.L. 91-182, p. 40982); extending the
submission date under law for transmittal of the Budget and Economic
Report to Congress by the President (H.J. Res. 635, P.L. 97-469, p.
32936); and extending the termination date for a law (H.J. Res. 864,
P.L. 91-59, p. 22546). At one time they were used for purposes of
general legislation; but the two Houses finally concluded that a bill
was the proper instrumentality for this purpose (IV, 3370-3373). A joint
resolution has been changed to a bill by amendment (IV, 3374), but in
the later practice it has become impracticable to do so.
Where a choice between a concurrent resolution and a joint resolution
is not dictated by law, the House by its votes on consideration of a
measure decides which is the appropriate vehicle (and a point of order
does not lie that a concurrent rather than a joint resolution would be
more appropriate to express the sense of the Congress on an issue) (Mar.
16, 1983, p. 5669).
* * * * *