842 PARLIAMENTS OF THE DOMINIONS [PART III
The rule also is formally laid down that all appropriations
must be recommended by the Governor-General; this is
a commonplace of every Dominion Constitution since 1840,
and only in the Bahamas and Bermuda is some degree of
freedom still preserved to the individual member by law
to propose money votes, a right tending to financial chaos.!
The rule, however, does not apply to appropriation of fines
or pecuniary penalties.
In one respect the Constitution is somewhat more advanced
than any other Colonial Constitution. The provision in
the case of deadlocks as originally drafted was as follows :
if the Assembly passed a Bill and the Senate did not
agree, or insisted on amendments to which the Assembly
did not agree, the Governor-General might then convene
a joint sitting of the Houses at which the Bill, with any
amendments made by either House and disagreed to by
the other House, should be deliberated upon and voted for.
Any amendments which the majority of members sitting
together approved, and the Bill itself as amended, if so
approved, should be taken as passed, and the Bill should
then be presented to the Governor-General for his assent.
The nearest parallel for this procedure, which required no
delay, no election, no referendum, and no dissolution, is to
be found in the deadlock provisions of the Constitutions
of the Transvaal and the Orange River Colony.? There,
however, the procedure was much less simple ; in the first
place, the Bill must be carried twice by the Lower House,
and that in successive sessions; then the Governor might
t Cf. The Government of South Africa, i. 408. Until 1856 the individual
member could propose money votes in New Brunswick, but with respon-
sible government the House reluctantly curtailed the privileges of the
individual ; see Hannay, New Brunswick, ii. 78, 178, 179. In Jamaica
and the West Indies generally, until the surrender of the constitutions, the
same right existed, and it also existed until responsible government in
Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. For Canada. see 3 & 4 Viet. c. 35,
s. 57.
2 Letters Patent, December 6, 1906, s. 37 ; Letters Patent, June 5, 1907,
s. 39. The effect of these provisions is incorrectly stated in The Government
of South Africa. 1, 416.