OASIS LegalDocumentML (LegalDocML) TC

  • 1.  Re: [legaldocml] Acts and bills

    Posted 02-11-2013 03:04
    I find this discussion frighteningly parochial. Fear of deferring to the U.S. Federal construct, which has been settled since the first edition of Jefferson's Manual, seems to be creating an unnecessary tempest. The distinction is entirely procedural and depends on the instrument's posture in the process. The term "bill" has since the Second Session of the First U.S. Congress referred to any writing seeking to become an element of the U.S. Statutory system ("Public "Laws") properly introduced into one of the two houses of Congress. In its introduced form, it may (and now commonly does) adopt the style and caption of the form it will have if passed--that is, it refers to itself as an "Act"...BUT IT IS NOT an "ACT" until passed by both houses (at which point it is No Longer a "bill") and sent to the President for his signature, at which point, the Act will become Law. Consult anyone who ever served in either house's office of legislative counsel. I'm sure this will NOT clarify a thing because some knucklehead among us will find a scintilla of contrary data.


  • 2.  RE: [legaldocml] Acts and bills

    Posted 02-11-2013 08:54
    Hi Michael, You find the conversation parochial because it refers in some sense to a church parish or because it is narrow in its scope and views? I assume it has to be one of the two. I am not quite getting you here! What are knuckleheads? In line with this thread, I am not familiar with the terminology. Lewis ________________________________________ From: legaldocml@lists.oasis-open.org [legaldocml@lists.oasis-open.org] On Behalf Of Aisenberg, Michael A. [maisenberg@mitre.org] Sent: 11 February 2013 03:03 To: 'fabio@cs.unibo.it'; 'legaldocml@lists.oasis-open.org' Subject: Re: [legaldocml] Acts and bills I find this discussion frighteningly parochial. Fear of deferring to the U.S. Federal construct, which has been settled since the first edition of Jefferson's Manual, seems to be creating an unnecessary tempest. The distinction is entirely procedural and depends on the instrument's posture in the process. The term "bill" has since the Second Session of the First U.S. Congress referred to any writing seeking to become an element of the U.S. Statutory system ("Public "Laws") properly introduced into one of the two houses of Congress. In its introduced form, it may (and now commonly does) adopt the style and caption of the form it will have if passed--that is, it refers to itself as an "Act"...BUT IT IS NOT an "ACT" until passed by both houses (at which point it is No Longer a "bill") and sent to the President for his signature, at which point, the Act will become Law. Consult anyone who ever served in either house's office of legislative counsel. I'm sure this will NOT clarify a thing because some knucklehead among us will find a scintilla of contrary data.