CHAP. viii] RELATIONS OF THE HOUSES 643 either dissolve the Houses, and after a general election and a repeated rejection of the Bill convene a joint session of the Houses, or if he preferred, he might at once convene 2 joint session. The former procedure involved considerable delay and a general election ; the latter permitted of the Whole matter being disposed of in the second session of Parliament. In the case of the Commonwealth,! from Which the provisions in the Transvaal Constitution are borrowed with modifications, the procedure permits of the Second passing of the Bill in question in the same session, but three months after the first rejection, and then the dissolution may take place, but it does not permit the simple holding of a joint session after the second rejection, and in this regard the Transvaal and Orange River Constitutions Were more democratic. Perhaps this alteration was due to the fact that the Upper House in these Colonies was not to be in the first instance elective, and therefore it was felt that it would be impossible to insist always on a penal dissolution of the Lower House. The South African rule, as first drafted for discussion at the Natal Conference, was of remarkable simplicity ; the whole thing could take place IN one session, and there was no need for a second passing of the disputed Bill. The Upper House was thus certainly Placed in a somewhat weaker position than any other elective Upper House in the Dominions, for as a rule any Bill passed by a substantial majority in the Lower House would be able to secure the majority in the joint sitting requisite for the Passing of the law. On reconsideration, however, a second session was required to take place before a joint sitting could be held? On the other hand, the Upper House will have power to amend laws in all questions of detail, and to BXercise a revising power on legislation. and if it does this 163 & 64 Viet. ยข. 12, Const. 8. 57; Quick and Garran, Constitution of Commonwealth, p. 687; Egerton, Federations and Unions, p. 256, n. 1. * Save in the case of Bills for the appropriation of revenue or moneys for the public service (s. 63). It may be noted that the Upper House is only about a third in number of the Lower House, while in Australia it must he hearly g hale