Order Code 98-826 GOV
Updated December 12, 2007
Engrossment, Enrollment, and
Presentation of Legislation
R. Eric Petersen
Analyst in American National Government
Government and Finance Division
Engrossment, enrollment, and presentation of legislation are components of the
legislative process1 that attest to the accuracy of bill texts, confirm House and Senate
action, and confirm delivery of the bills to the President for review.2
Engrossment. When either house orders the third reading of a bill, it
simultaneously orders the engrossment of the bill. Engrossment is the formal reprinting
of the bill in the form upon which the chamber will vote final passage. (In earlier times,
such bills were handwritten in very large script, hence the term “engrossment.”) House
and Senate Rules require that all bills, amendments, and joint resolutions passed in each
chamber must be examined by the Clerk of the House or Secretary of the Senate, as
appropriate.3 Official engrossed copies are prepared by staff in the Office of the Clerk of
the House and the Office of the Secretary of the Senate. The clerk or secretary are
required to attest to the accuracy of the engrossed text by signing the measures.4 The
House-engrossed measures (including amendments to bills passed by the Senate) are
printed on blue paper; the Senate prints its engrossed measures on white paper. If either
chamber later discovers errors in one of its engrossed measures, it may adopt a resolution
formally requesting the other chamber to return the engrossed bill or resolution to it for
correction.
An engrossed bill is “messaged” by the originating house to the other; the second
chamber to act attaches the text of whatever amendments it adopts to the original measure
it has received from the first.
1 For more information on legislative process, see [http://www.crs.gov/products/guides/
guidehome.shtml].
2 This report was written by Paul S. Rundquist, formerly a Specialist in American National
Government at CRS. Dr. Rundquist has retired, but the listed author updated the report and is
available to answer questions concerning its contents.
3 House Rule II, cl. (2)(d)(2); and Senate Rule XIV, cl. 5.
4 1 U.S.C. 106.

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Enrollment. An enrolled bill is the final version of a measure agreed to by both
chambers, printed on parchment or paper.5 Enrolled measures in the Senate are
“examined under the supervision of the Secretary of the Senate, to see that the same are
correctly enrolled.”6 In the House, the clerk, in cooperation with the Senate, examines
“all bills and joint resolutions that have passed both Houses to see that they are correctly
enrolled.”7 House-enrolled bills are also certified by the clerk as having originated in the
House.8 Enrolled bills are then signed by the presiding officers of both chambers,9 with
the Speaker typically signing the measure first.10 In the House, the Speaker may sign
enrolled measures at any time.11 A formally designated Speaker pro tempore, appointed
with the approval of the House, may sign enrolled bills in the Speaker’s absence. The
presiding officer of the Senate is authorized to sign enrolled measures when the Senate
is in session. When a new Congress convenes, the Senate typically adopts by unanimous
consent an order authorizing the President of the Senate, the President pro tempore, or any
Senator12 appointed by the President pro tempore to sign duly enrolled bills and joint
resolutions during recesses and adjournments for the duration of that Congress.13
Both houses must adopt a concurrent resolution to recall an incorrectly enrolled bill
already sent to the President, or to make changes in the text of an enrolled bill still in the
possession of the Congress.14
When the officials from both chambers have signed an enrolled bill, the measure is
sent by the clerk or secretary, as determined by the chamber from which the bill
originated, to the President for his consideration. With the general exception of an
5 1 U.S.C. 107.
6 Senate Rule XIV, cl. 5.
7 House Rule II, cl. (2)(d)(2).
8 Lewis Deschler, Deschler’s Precedents of the United States House of Representatives, vol. VII,
H.Doc. 94-661, 94th Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 1977), p. 453. The clerk signs the back
of an enrolled measure to certify that it originated in the House.
9 1 U.S.C. 106.
10 See Floyd M. Riddick and Alan S. Frumin, “Riddick’s Senate Procedure: Precedent and
Practices
,” S. Doc. 101-28, 101st Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 1992), p. 830; and
Deschler, Deschler’s Precedents, p. 453.
11 House Rule I, cl. 4.
12 The Senate President pro tempore may designate in writing another Senator to sign enrolled
bills in his or her absence, but under Senate Rule I, cl. 3, this authority may not extend beyond
an adjournment, except by unanimous consent.
13 See “Unanimous Consent Agreement,” Congressional Record, daily edition, January 4, 2007,
p. S8; and “Unanimous Consent Agreement,” Congressional Record, daily edition, January 4,
2005, p. S7.
14 See S.Con.Res. 112, 109th Congress, a concurrent resolution relating to correcting a clerical
error in the enrollment of S. 3693 (A bill to make technical corrections to the Violence Against
Women and Department of Justice Reauthorization Act of 2005), adopted July 20, 2006, and
H.Con.Res. 35, 108th Congress, a concurrent resolution directing the Clerk of the House of
Representatives to make a technical correction in the enrollment of H.J.Res. 2 (Consolidated
Appropriations Act of FY2003) adopted February 12, 2003.

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expiration of a Congress, there is no specific deadline within which Congress must submit
an enrolled bill to the President. Preparing and signing enrolled bills may take significant
time, especially at the end of a Congress when many such bills must be prepared.
Presentation. The Constitution provides that “Every Bill which shall have passed
the House of Representatives and the Senate, shall, before it become a Law, be presented
to the President of the United States.”15 Enrolled bills are delivered to the White House
by the Clerk of the House or Secretary of the Senate, as determined by the chamber in
which the measure originated, and stamped to certify the date and time of their arrival.
The clerk and secretary are also required to report the fact and date of presentation to the
President to their respective chambers.16 When the President has been away from
Washington, DC for long periods of time, Congress has sometimes agreed to present
enrolled measures to him on his return; at other times, bills have been sent to him.
If the President signs a bill during the 10-day period (excluding Sundays) provided
in the Constitution for his review, it becomes law. If the President disapproves (vetoes)
a bill, he must return it to the originating chamber with a message indicating his reasons
for disapproval. If the President does not sign or return a bill during the 10 days, the bill
becomes law,17 unless the Congress has adjourned during the 10 days, thereby making
impossible the return of the bill (pocket veto). Some doubt exists about the President’s
power to pocket veto a bill during intra-session and inter-session adjournments. In 1974,
the Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that a pocket veto was improper during an intra-session
adjournment in which House and Senate administrative officers had been authorized to
receive presidential messages.18 Many claim that Congress may also authorize its officers
to receive messages, including vetoes, during any intra-session adjournment or after any
inter-session adjournment. The courts have not ruled directly on this pocket veto-related
issue.
Any attempt by Congress to deprive the President of his right to be presented with
measures before they become law may be constitutionally suspect. The Supreme Court
in 1983 ruled the legislative veto to be unconstitutional for this reason.19 Subsequently,
in 1998, the Court declared that procedures set up in the Line Item Veto Act (P.L. 104-30)
also violated the presentment clause of the Constitution.20
15 U.S. Constitution, Article I, sec. 7.
16 House Rule II, cl. (2)(d)(2); and Senate Rule XIV, cl. 5.
17 U.S. Constitution, Article I, sec. 7.
18 Kennedy v. Sampson, 511 F.2d. 430 (D.C. Cir., 1974).
19 INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919, (1983).
20 Clinton v. City of New York, (118 S. Ct. 2091 (1998).