Wyoming State Constitutional Convention 1889

The Wyoming Constitution Convention began September 2, 1889 without the authorization from an enabling act. The articles were individually voted on, creating the final Constitution of Wyoming on September 30, 1889. It was later ratified on November 5, 1889.

Committee of the Whole

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Document introduced in:

Session 5509: 1889-09-04 10:01:00

The committee considered the Rules of the Convention and read the article line by line.

Document View:

Rules of the Convention [Committee of the Whole]

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There is 1 proposed amendment related to this document on which a decision has not been taken.

RULES OF THE CONVENTION.

1. The president shall take the chair every day precisely at the hour to which the convention shall have adjourned on the preceding day, and shall immediately call the convention to order.

In case the president is absent, or fails from any cause to take the chair, the convention shall appoint a president pro tem.

2. The president shall have general direction of the hall, and shall have the right to name any member to perform the duty of the chair, but such substitute shall not extend beyond adjournment.

3. He shall preserve order and decorum in the proceedings of the convention and in case of any disturbance or disorderly conduct in the galleries or lobby, the president or chairman of the committee of the whole convention shall have the power to cause the same to be cleared.

4. No smoking shall be allowed in the hall while the convention is in session.

5. Reporters for newspapers or stenographers wishing to take down debates may be admitted within the bar of the convention by the president who shall assign such places to them as shall not interfere with the conveniences of the convention.

6. The president shall appoint the following standing committees on business.

No. 1. A committee of five to be known as the committee on preamble and declaration of rights and executive.

No. 2. A committee of ten to be known as the legislative committee.

No. 3. A committee of ten to be known as the committee committee.

No. 4. A committee of seven to be known as the committee on election and right of suffrage, and qualifications to office.

No. 5. A committee of five to be known as the committee on education, public buildings, state institutions, public health, and public morals.

No. 6. A committee of five to be known as the committee on county, city and town organization.

No. 7. A committee of seven to be known as the committee on corporations.

No. 8. A committee of ten to be known as the committee on taxation, revenue and public debt.

No. 9. A committee of five to be known as the committee of printing, publication, accounts and expenses.

No. 10. A committee of seven to be known as the committee on schedule, future amendments, and miscellaneous matters.

No. 11. A committee of five to be known as the committee on irrigation, water rights and mining.

No. 12. A committee of seven to be known as the committee on agriculture, manufactures, commerce, live stock interests and labor.

No. 13. A committee of ten to be known as the committee on boundaries and apportionment.

No. 14. A committee of five to be known as the committee on salaries of public officers, and homestead exemptions.

No. 15. A committee of five to be known as the committee on federal relations, public lands and military affairs.

No. 16. A committee of ten to be known as the committee on railroads and telegraph.

No. 17. A committee of five to be known as the committee on revision and adjustment.

7. All committees shall be appointed by the president, unless it shall be otherwise directed by the convention; in which case they shall be appointed by a vote of the convention.

THE RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF MEMBERS.

8. Members and officers of the convention are required to be constantly in attendance upon the duties of their position, and leave of absence to such will only be granted by vote of the convention or by unanimous consent.

9. Whenever a member is about to speak he shall rise from his seat and respectfully address himself to “Mr. President,” and he shall announce the gentleman from the county he represents; if there be more than one member from such county then by adding the name of the member. The member may then speak either from his seat or from the seat of any other member tendered him for the purpose or from the secretary’s desk.

10. In all cases the member who shall first rise and address the chair shall speak first but when two or more members shall rise at once, the president shall name the member who shall speak first.

11. No member shall speak more than twice on the same subject, without leave of the convention, nor more than once until every member choosing to speak on the question pending shall have spoken, and he shall confine himself to the question under debate and avoid personality.

12. Any member while discussing a question may read from books, papers, or documents, any matter pertinent to the subject under consideration without asking leave.

13. Any member may ask for the statement of the question which the president may give sitting.

14. Any member may call for a division of the question and the decision of the president as to its divisibility shall be subject to appeal as in questions of order.

15. Every member present when the question is put shall vote unless the convention excuses him, and any member requesting to be excused from voting or desiring to explain his vote may make a brief verbal statement of his reasons for making such a request and the question shall then be taken without further debate. The president shall vote on all questions taken by yeas and nays, and in all elections and decisions called for by the members. And in case of a tie vote the proposition pending shall be lost.

16. While the president or chairman is putting the question or addressing the convention no one shall walk across the hall; and while a member is speaking no one shall pass between him and the chair. No person or member shall go to or remain at the secretary’s table while the yeas and nays are being called or ballots counted except the secretary and his assistants.

17. ny two members shall have the right to demand the yeas and nays upon any question before the result is announced; but if objection is made the demand shall be sustained by one-fifth of the members present; if not sustained any member may upon request have his vote upon the question recorded upon the journal and upon the call for yeas and nays the secretary shall call over the names alphabetically.

18. Any three members have the right to demand a call of the convention but if objection is made the demand shall be sustained by one-fifth of the members present: and upon a call of the convention the names of the members shall be called alphabetically and the absentees noted upon the journal.

19. Any five members have the right to demand the previous question. The previous question shall be put in this form: “Shall the main question now be put?” and, until decided, shall preclude all debate and all amendments and motions, except one motion to adjourn and one motion to lay on the table. All incidental questions or questions of order arising after a motion is made for the previous question and pending such motion shall be decided whether on appeal or otherwise without debate.

20. On motion for the previous question and prior to voting on same a call of the convention shall be in order, but after the demand for the previous question shall have been sustained, no call shall be in order, and the convention shall be brought to an immediate vote, first, upon the pending amendment in the inverse order of their age and then upon the main question.

21. If a call for the previous question be not sustained the subject under consideration shall not thereby be postponed.

ORDER OF BUSINESS FOR THE DAY.

22. As soon as the convention is called to order, prayer may be offered. The roll shall then be called and absentees noted, and a quorum being present the journal of the preceding day shall be read by the secretary, and if necessary, corrected by the convention.

23. A majority of the members of the convention shall be necessary to constitute a quorum to do business and a majority of those voting shall be sufficient to decide pending questions.

24. As soon as the journal is read and corrected, as aforesaid, the president shall call for presentation of petitions and memorials.

Reports of standing committees.

Reports of select committees.

Final readings.

The above business shall be disposed of in the order in which it is arranged and shall not be in order at any other time.

25.Every petition and memorial shall be referred on motion without putting the question for that purpose unless the reference is objected to by a member, at the time of its presentation. No petition or memorial or other matter shall be printed without the special order of the convention.

26. Communications from the executive department of the territory may be received, read and disposed of at any time except when the president is putting the question, while the yeas and nays are being called, or while ballots are being counted.

27. An interim between any two sessions of the convention on the same day shall be called a recess; and on re-assembling at the appointed hour any question pending at the time of taking such recess shall be resumed without motion to that effect.

MOTIONS AND QUESTIONS.

28. Every motion shall be reduced to writing if the president shall require it.

29. When a motion is made and seconded, it shall be stated by the president; or, being in writing, it shall be read audibly to the convention by the mover or the secretary before debate.

30. After a motion is stated by the president, or read by the secretary, it shall be deemed in the possession of the convention, but it may be withdrawn by leave of the convention at any time before decision or amendment.

31. All questions in committee or convention except privileged questions shall be put in the order in which they are made except in filling blanks, the largest sum or number and longest time shall be put first.

32. When a question is under debate no motion shall be received but to adjourn, to take a recess, to proceed to the orders of the day, to lay on the table, for the previous question. to postpone to a certain day, to commit, to amend, to postpone indefinitely; which several motions shall have precedence of each other in the order in which they are arranged.

33. When a motion is made to commit to committee of the whole convention or to a standing committee, it shall not be in order to amend such motion by substituting any other committee, but if any committee shall be suggested the motion shall first be put upon the committee first named and afterwards upon the committee or committees suggested in the order in which they are named; but a motion to refer to a committee of the whole convention, to a standing committee or to a select committee shall have precedence in the order here named.

34. A motion to postpone to a day certain or indefinitely being decided shall not again be allowed at the same stage of the proposition.

35. A motion to adjourn shall always be in order but being negatived shall not again be entertained until some motion, call or order shall take place.

36. The following questions shall be decided without debate, to-wit: To adjourn, to take recess, to take from the table, to go into committee of the whole on the orders of the day.

AMENDMENTS.

37. No motion or proposition differing from that under consideration shall be admitted under color of amendment.

38. A motion to strike out and insert shall be deemed divisible and a motion to strike out on a division being negatived, or a motion to insert being decided in the affirmative, shall be equivalent to agreeing to a matter, in that form, but shall not preclude further amendment, provided that substitutes for the pending propositions, shall, for the purpose of amendments, be treated as original propositions.

RECONSIDERATIONS.

39. A motion to reconsider must be made by a member voting with the prevailing side, and such motion to be in order must be within the next day of actual session of the convention after such vote was taken, and the same shall take precedence of all motions except a motion to adjourn.

QUESTIONS OF ORDER.

40. If any member in speaking or otherwise, shall transgress the rules of the convention, the president shall, or any member of the convention may, call him to order, and the member called to order shall take his seat, if required to do so by the president, until the question of order is decided.

41. The president shall decide all questions of order, subject to an appeal by any member, on which appeal no member shall speak more than once, unless by permission of the convention, except the member appealing, who may speak twice; and the president may speak in reference to any other member.

42. If the division be in favor of the member called to order, he shall be at liberty to proceed; if otherwise he shall not be permitted to proceed, in case any member object, without the leave of the convention.

43. If a member call another to order for words spoken in debate, he shall, if required by the president, reduce to writing the language used by the member which he deemed out of order.

OF COMMITTEES.

44. It shall be in order for the committee on revision and adjustment to report at any time when the convention is not otherwise engaged.

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COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE.

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RESOLUTIONS.

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CALENDAR.

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ON RULES OF THE CONVENTION.

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Decisions yet to be taken

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