From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishpoint of orderˌpoint of ˈorder noun (plural points of order) [countable] formal PPVa rule used to organize an official meetingon a point of order (=according to a rule) One MP raised an objection on a point of order.
Examples from the Corpus
point of order• Mr. Faulds On a point of order, Mr. Speaker.• Mr. Speaker No, I can not take a point of order until after the statement.on a point of order• Mrs. Wise With respect, Mr. Speaker, and on a point of order.• That is why I have raised the matter on a point of order.• The Russian delegation was allowed to speak on a point of order.From Longman Business Dictionarypoint of orderˌpoint of ˈorder noun (plural points of order) [countable] in a meeting or parliament, a question about whether its rules are being followed properlyThe South Carolina Democrat raised a point of order against the planned change.