Page:Pocket Manual of Rules of Order for Deliberative Assemblies (1876).djvu/28

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28
RULES OF ORDER.
[§ 7

and yields to all Privileged, Incidental and Subsidiary Questions [§§ 7, 8, 9].

7. Subsidiary or Secondary Motions are such as are applied to other motions, for the purpose of most appropriately disposing of them.[1] They take precedence of a Principal Question, and must be decided before the Principal Question can be acted upon. They yield to Privileged and Incidental Questions, [§§ 8, 9,] and are as follows (being arranged in their order of precedence among themselves):

Lie on the Table See § 19
The Previous Question See § 20
Postpone to a Certain Day See § 21
Commit See § 22
Amend See § 23
Postpone Indefinitely See § 24

Any of these motions (except to Amend) can be made when one of a lower order is pending, but none can supersede one of a higher order. They cannot be applied[2] to


  1. Take, for example, amotion that an appeal lie on the table: to lie on the table is a subsidiary motion enabling the assembly to properly dispose of the appeal; while the appeal is an incidental question, arising out of a decision of the Chair, to which some members objected.
  2. See page 18 for explanation of some of these technical terms.