Sec. 2-29. Engrossing of bills and amendments; correction of errors after passage. Presentation to the Governor.
Sec. 2-29. Engrossing of bills and amendments; correction of errors after passage. Presentation to the Governor. Immediately upon the passage of any bill, the
clerk of the house last taking action thereon shall cause a copy thereof to be sent to the
Governor. All bills and proposed amendments to the Constitution shall be engrossed in
print as soon as passed, under the direction of the legislative commissioners, on suitable
paper of uniform size, with wide margins; and the commissioners shall carefully compare all engrossed bills and amendments with the bills and amendments as finally passed
and one of them shall certify by his signature to the correctness of the engrossed copies.
As soon as engrossed and certified, as herein provided, such bills and amendments shall
be presented to the House and Senate clerks, who shall sign such engrossed and certified
copies. The house last taking action on any bill may, before engrossing, order its immediate presentation to the Governor for his approval. If either commissioner or the clerk
of the House or Senate, after the final passage of any bill or proposed amendment and
prior to its certification, finds that an error of form has been made in its text, he shall
deliver the bill or proposed amendment to the Joint Committee on Legislative Management with a written statement as to the error. If the committee believes that no correction
should be made, it shall so inform the commissioner or the clerk. If the committee
believes that a correction should be made, it shall, within five calendar days, Sundays
and holidays excepted, after its passage, report the bill or proposed amendment with
the proposed correction in the form of an amendment to the house which last took action
thereon. Each such bill and proposed amendment, with the engrossed copy thereof, shall
be transmitted by the clerks of the House and Senate to the secretary as soon as it has
been signed, as herein provided, and not later than the twelfth day after the expiration
of the time allowed for reconsideration under the rules of the General Assembly, Sundays
and legal holidays excepted; and the secretary shall forthwith present the engrossed
copy of each such bill to the Governor for his approval. The secretary shall give the
clerks a receipt for each such bill and proposed amendment and shall notify them of the
date and hour at which each bill was presented to the Governor. The secretary shall give
the Governor a receipt showing the date and hour at which the Governor approved it or
returned it to the secretary with a statement of his objections and shall notify the clerks
of such dates and hours. The clerks shall record such dates and hours of presentation
and approval or return in the journals of the House and Senate.
(1949 Rev., S. 41; 1957, P.A. 1, S. 10; 1959, P.A. 478, S. 3; 1961, P.A. 350, S. 2; 1967, P.A. 254, S. 1; P.A. 76-198,
S. 1, 2.)
History: 1959 act made technical changes necessary because of appointment of two legislative commissioners instead
of one; 1961 act extended, from five to twelve days after time for reconsideration, mandatory date for transmittal of
engrossed bills to secretary; 1967 act replaced "resolution" with "proposed amendment" and removed language providing
that constitutional amendments proposed by house be signed only by the house clerk; P.A. 76-198 changed reference to
"committee on rules" to "committee on legislative management" and time limit for making correction before engrossing;
(Revisor's note: In 1995 the word "Joint" was added editorially by the Revisors in the phrase "Committee on Legislative
Management" to conform section with Sec. 2-71a).
See Conn. Const. Art. IV, Sec. 15; Conn. Const. Amdts. Art. III.
Governor may withdraw approval of bill improperly placed before him. 79 C. 151. History of section. 87 C. 515.