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Simmons v. Byrd

Supreme Court of Indiana.June 23, 1922192 Ind. 274136 N.E. 14 (Approx. 6 pages)

Simmons v. Byrd

Supreme Court of Indiana.June 23, 1922192 Ind. 274136 N.E. 14 (Approx. 6 pages)

192 Ind. 274
Supreme Court of Indiana.
SIMMONS
v.
BYRD et al.
No. 24118.
June 23, 1922.

Attorneys and Law Firms

*14 Simmons & Dailey, of Bluffton, for appellant.
U. S. Lesh, Atty. Gen., and Virgil M. Simmons and W. H. Eichhorn, both of Bluffton, for appellees.

Opinion

EWBANK, J.
The sole question presented by the record and discussed in the briefs of counsel is whether or not the several laws enacted by the Legislature of Indiana, requiring voters to register before taking part in elections, were made unconstitutional and void by the amendment of article 2, § 2, of the Constitution of Indiana on September 6, 1921. Appellant filed his complaint as a citizen, qualified voter, and taxpayer, on behalf of all taxpayers of the state of Indiana, against the appellees, as public officers charged with duties under the provisions of the registration laws, seeking to enjoin appellees from doing any acts or incurring any expense under said laws, in the registration of the voters of Wells county, Ind., where all the parties reside. The circuit court sustained a demurrer to appellants' complaint, and he appealed, and has assigned that ruling as error.
The statutes thus attacked provide, in substance, as follows: (a) That no person may vote at any general election unless registered; (b) that the expenses of registration shall be paid out of the county treasury; (c) that precinct boundaries shall be established in March before the election; (d) that five days before the first date for registration an inspector and two clerks shall be appointed in a manner as stated; (e) that they shall hold a regular session on the fifty–ninth day before the election, and again on the twenty–ninth day before the election, at a suitable room in the precinct, provided by the county board of commissioners, of which notice shall be given by publication and posting; (f) that blanks with spaces for the residence, age, where born, when arrived in the United States, when and where declared intention, *15 and when and where naturalized, shall be furnished by the county auditor, and also blank books in which to record the names of persons registered, with such information concerning each of them; (g) that the registration blanks shall be distributed to the voters for use by them; (h) that every person residing in a precinct on the registration date, who will be qualified to vote if he continues to reside there until election day, shall be entitled to register, but no one else; (i) that the board shall keep open from 8 a. m. until 9 p. m. each of the two registration days; (j) that an applicant for registration, in person, may present his application, duly filled out and signed by such applicant, or duly attested by a person who knows him, if he signs by a mark; or (k) he may cause his application, so prepared and signed, to be delivered to the board on a registration day, by a voter of the precinct in which he resides; or (l) may mail it to the auditor of the county, to be by him delivered to the registration board; and (m) provision is made for transferring to the registration books of the proper precinct any names registered in the wrong precinct by mistake; (n) that a person offering to vote has not registered is made grounds for challenge, when the person challenged shall not be permitted to vote until he makes affidavit that he is the identical person registered under the name in which he offers to vote, and if his name is not on the registry his vote shall not be received even though he be not challenged; (o) after once registering a voter need not register again so long as he lives in the same precinct, and has not been disfranchised, unless a new registration is petitioned for by 300 resident freehold voters; (p) the county auditor and election officers being charged with certain duties in the matter of striking off the names of persons who have died or been disfranchised, or of whose removal from the precinct they receive information, verified by affidavit. Acts 1919, c. 186, p. 736; Acts 1920, c. 10, p. 38; Acts 1921, c. 273, p. 846. The specific objection to the constitutionality of these statutes urged by appellant is that section 2 of article 2 of the Constitution of Indiana was so amended, as a result of the special election on September 6, 1921, as to eliminate therefrom the words “if he shall have been duly registered according to law,” which had therefore followed and modified the enumeration of the qualifications which should entitle a person to vote. And while section 14 of article 2 of the Constitution still reads as it did before such amendment of the other section was made, and concludes with a provision that the General Assembly “shall also provide for the registration of all persons entitled to vote,” appellant insists that this does not confer authority to enact the laws in question.
A brief has been filed under leave of court by an amicus curiæ; in which he suggests that the judgment should be affirmed because the last amendment to section 2 of article 2 of the Constitution was not adopted by the vote of “a majority of the electors of the state,” within the meaning of article 16 of the Constitution (Burns' 1914, § 233), which authorizes the adoption of amendments. In construing the words “a majority of the electors,” it is proper to consider the facts which attended the insertion of those words in the Constitution. Section 1, article 8, of the Constitution of 1816 provided that every twelfth year thereafter, at the general election for Governor, a vote should be taken on the question of calling a convention to revise, amend, or change that Constitution, and that if “a majority of all the votes given at such election” should be in favor of a convention the Governor should inform the General Assembly thereof, whose duty it should be to provide by law for holding such a convention. R. S. 1843, p. 57.
And the act of February 14, 1851, under which the present Constitution was submitted to popular vote for ratification or rejection, provided that—
“If it shall appear that a majority of all the votes polled at such election were given in favor of the adoption of said Constitution, it shall then become the Constitution of the state of Indiana,” etc. Acts 1851, c. 29, p. 54.
The amendments by which the words “if he shall have been duly registered according to law” were added to section 2, article 2 (Burns' 1914, § 84), and the provision that the General Assembly “shall also provide by law for the registration of all persons entitled to vote” was added to section 14, article 2 (Burns' 1914, § 95), were adopted March 14, 1881, at a special election at which only 172,915 persons voted, of whom less than 170,000 voted on the subject of adopting or rejecting those two amendments, although 470,672 votes had been cast for candidates for the office of presidential electors in November, 1880, only four months before such election, and even more (470,738) for candidates for Governor in October, and the United States census of 1880 showed 498,437 men of the age of 21 years and over living in the state. But the Governor, acting upon a certificate of the Secretary of State as to the result of the election, issued his proclamation declaring the amendment adopted (Report Secy. of State 1881, p. 155) and his action has ever since been acquiesced in by all the people of the state.
The insistence by the amicus curiæ that the amendment for which a majority of the persons (210,816 in number) who voted at the special election on September 6, 1921, cast their ballots (Indiana Year Book 1921, p. 12) was not adopted is based upon the assumption *16 that only a small part of the qualified voters of the state took part in that election, and that the number who actually voted in favor of adopting it were not a majority of those qualified to vote, as shown by the United States census and the returns from the presidential election in 1920. It appears from the census returns in that year that 1,779,820 persons of the age of 21 years and over were living in the state of Indiana, and from the election returns that 1,262,964 qualified persons actually voted for presidential electors in November, 1920, only 10 months before the special election at which the constitutional amendments were submitted. Indiana Year Book 1920, p. 62. But it further appears that the Governor, acting upon a certificate of the Secretary of State as to the result of the election, issued his proclamation declaring that the amendment in question had been adopted and was in force. Record of Proclamations, vol. 1, p. 457.
It thus appears that the amendment of 1921 was adopted by a majority of the votes cast at a special election at which less than half of the qualified voters, as shown by the census and the returns from the general election, actively participated, but in exactly the same way that the amendments of 1881 were adopted.
From what has been said it is apparent that, if we should apply the rule that an amendment to the Constitution cannot be adopted by the vote of a majority of all the electors who cast ballots at the election at which it is submitted, but can only be adopted by the affirmative vote of a majority of all those in the state who are entitled to vote, as that number is ascertained in another way than by counting those participating in such election, the application of such rule would not aid the appellee. If the enactment of a registry law is authorized and commanded by the Constitution, it is because of amendments which were adopted only by a majority of the voters, cast at a special election when those who voted were less than half the qualified electors, as determined by such tests. And the Constitution itself was adopted at an election held under a law which made “a majority of all the votes polled at such election” decisive of the question whether or not it should be adopted. This argument as a cause for affirming the judgment, therefore, breaks under its own weight, and we shall not further consider it.
Prior to 1881 the Constitution of Indiana had not mentioned the subject of registering voters. On March 14th of that year a special election was held, pursuant to a statute (Acts 1881, c. 17, p. 30) and proclamation (Report Secy. of State 1881, p. 148) at which certain amendments of the Constitution were submitted for adoption by popular vote, and, the Secretary of State having certified the vote to the Governor, he issued a proclamation declaring the amendments adopted, including amendments of sections 2 and 14 of article 2, and that “each of said amendments is now part of the Constitution of the state of Indiana.” Report Secy. of State 1881, pp. 153, 155. Such action has been acquiesced in ever since by the people of the state and all departments of the state government. Of the amendments so adopted, section 14 of article 2 remains unchanged, and reads as follows:
“All general elections shall be held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November; but township elections may be held at such time as may be provided by law: Provided, that the General Assembly may provide by law for the election of all judges of courts of general and appellate jurisdiction by an election to be held for such officers only, *** and shall also provide for the registration of all persons entitled to vote.” Burns' 1914, § 95; R. S. 1881, § 95.
Nine years after the adoption of these amendments, Judge Olds, speaking for the Supreme Court of Indiana, said:
“In 1881 the electors of the state, by a majority vote of over 87,000, amended section 14 of article 2 of the Constitution so as to provide that the ‘General Assembly *** shall provide for the registration of all persons entitled to vote: *** That the General Assembly has the power to enact a law providing for a uniform system of registration of all voters, we think, cannot be controverted, and that it is made the duty of the General Assembly by the Constitution to enact a law providing a reasonable, uniform and impartial system for the registration of all voters must be conceded.” Morris v. Powell, 125 Ind. 281, 285, 286, 25 N. E. 221, 222 (9 L. R. A. 326).
Five years later Judge Coffey, speaking for the court, in setting out the provisions of the Constitution bearing upon the validity of the Registration Law of 1891 (Acts 1891, c. 144, p. 350), recited all of section 2, article 2, except the words “if he shall have been duly registered according to law,” and said that “section 14, article 2, provides for a general registration law,” without intimating an opinion that section 2 made any such provision. Brewer v. McCleland, 144 Ind. 423, 425, 32 N. E. 299, 17 L. R. A. 845.
The construction thus given to section 14 of article 2 that it authorizes and commands the General Assembly to “provide for the registration of all persons entitled to vote” has not since been challenged so far as we know until a different construction was suggested by the brief filed by appellant. We think that when this section says that the General Assembly shall provide for the registration of “all persons entitled to vote” it *17 means persons entitled to vote at all elections, and not merely at elections for judges, in case they are elected separately, as appellant suggests. As so interpreted, this section of the Constitution gives the Legislature power to enact a registration law, notwithstanding the amendment of section 2, article 2, provided such law does not violate any other provisions of the Constitution. See Morris v. Powell, 125 Ind. 281, 25 N. E. 221, 9 L. R. A. 326, and Brewer v. McCleland, 144 Ind. 423, 425, 32 N. E. 299, 17 L. R. A. 845.
But it is urged that the provisions in the registration laws that no person may vote unless he is registered, and that if a person offering to vote has not registered such fact shall be cause for challenging and excluding his vote, make the statutes conflict with section 2, article 2, of the Constitution, as amended. That section, as adopted in 1921, reads as follows:
“In all elections not otherwise provided for by this Constitution, every citizen of the United States, of the age of twenty–one years and upwards, who shall have resided in the state during the six months, and in the township sixty days, and in the ward or precinct thirty days immediately preceding such election, shall be entitled to vote in the township or precinct where he or she may reside.”
Section 1 of article 2 provides that:
“All elections shall be free and equal.”
And as section 14 of article 2, recited above, had given the General Assembly specific authority to “provide for the registration of all persons entitled to vote,” if the language quoted from section 2, article 2, be open to a fair and reasonable construction which will not make the two sections conflict with each other, that construction is to be preferred.
The precise question under consideration was presented to the Supreme Court of Illinois, where it was objected that a registry law, by forbidding any person to vote unless he should have registered on the fourth Tuesday or the third Tuesday before the election, violated the provisions of a section of the Constitution which declared every male citizen above the age of 21 years entitled to vote after having resided in the state one year and in the county 90 days, and in the election district 30 days, next preceding the election. After deciding that the Legislature had power to enact a reasonable registry law, the court, in holding the law under consideration to be valid, said:
“First, the Legislature possesses all the lawmaking power of the state, which the Constitution does not expressly or impliedly prohibit it from exercising. *** Second, by prescribing certain qualifications for voters, the Constitution necessarily intended, that the Legislature should provide some mode of ascertaining and determining the existence of those qualifications. A registry law is merely a mode of ascertaining and determining whether or not a man possesses the necessary qualifications of a voter. *** There must be some tribunal to decide, whether or not a person is a citizen of the United States over 21 years of age, and has resided in the state one year, in the county 90 days, and in the district 30 days. There must be some fixed rules and regulations, by which such tribunal is to be guided, in determining this fact of citizenship and these periods of residence. There must be a statute, which shall designate the tribunal and prescribe the rules and regulations. The passage of such a statute is the legitimate province of the Legislature alone. *** It is said, that the Legislature has no authority to require, that the registry be closed three weeks before the election; that it has no authority to prohibit a man from voting, because he has not established his qualifications three weeks before the day for voting arrives. *** If it be admitted, that the Legislature can require a voter to establish his qualifications before election, it is difficult to see why, upon principle, or as a question of power, it cannot require such proof to be made, as well 3 weeks before the day for voting, as 10 days, or 5 days, or even 1 day, prior thereto. The real question, involved in the objection, is, whether any man can be prevented from voting, who proves, or offers to prove, on the day, on which he seeks to cast his ballot, that he is a legal voter. If cases can be supposed where the ‘three weeks' requirement will deprive qualified electors of the privilege of depositing their votes, cases can also be supposed, where 1 day's requirement will work the same result. This mode of reasoning, carried out to its logical sequence, will make any kind of a registry law unconstitutional. For it would be a physical impossibility for the judges of election to receive the votes and make up the registry at the same time and on the same day. If the Legislature has the power to direct the registry to be completed before election day, and if, in its wisdom and under a sense of its responsibility to the people, it has said that three weeks before election is a reasonable date for the completion of the registry, shall this court substitute its judgment for that of the lawmaking power, and say that a shorter time would have been more reasonable. *** It may be, that as much as three weeks will be required to make such investigations as are necessary to determine the qualifications of the electors. The register must be made, as nearly as possible, a correct record of qualified voters. The names of those, who are not entitled to vote, must be kept from the lists. The names, which may have been placed there by false or perjured testimony, must be erased. *** All parts of the Constitution must be construed together. If there is a provision, that all persons, possessing certain qualifications shall be entitled to vote, there is also a provision, that all elections shall be free and equal. It is as much the duty of the Legislature to *18 pass measures for carrying the latter as for carrying the former provision, into effect. *** If closing the registry three weeks before election may deprive a few persons *** of the privilege of casting their ballots, keeping it open until a late date may admit to the polls hundreds of persons, who should never have been allowed to vote. When the ballot box becomes the receptacle of fraudulent votes, the freedom and equality of elections are destroyed. *** Where the lawmaking department of the government, in the exercise of a discretion not prohibited by the Constitution, has declared that a certain period of time is needed for a specified investigation, it is not the duty of this court to declare, that such period is unreasonably long.” People v. Hoffman, 116 Ill. 587, on pass 611, 5 N. E. at page 607 (8 N. E, 788, 56 Am. Rep. 793).
The reasoning in the case cited is unanswerable. Being charged by the Constitution with the duty to “provide for the registration of all persons entitled to vote,” and to enact such laws governing registration and the holding of elections that “all elections shall be free and equal,” the Legislature has power to determine what regulations shall be complied with by a qualified voter in order that his ballot may be counted, so long as what it requires is not so grossly unreasonable that compliance therewith is practically impossible. Requiring voters to appear at the polling booth between certain hours on election day and to cast their ballots in person involves inconvenience, and some voters find themselves unable to attend at the time fixed. But that fact does not make a statute unconstitutional which provides when the polls shall open and close, and permits none to vote except those who cast their ballots in person during the hours when they are open. And since the Legislature has power to provide by law for the registration of all voters, it has power to exclude from the privilege of voting those persons who refuse or neglect to register a reasonable number of days before the election.
The Constitution requires that all persons shall reside in a precinct 30 days before they can vote therein, and the provision contained in the registry laws that voters shall register 29 days before the election is not such an abuse of the legislative discretion that the courts can declare the laws void.
The judgment is affirmed.
TOWNSEND, J., concurs in the conclusion.

All Citations

192 Ind. 274, 136 N.E. 14
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