Clark v. Statesville.

52 S.E. 52, 139 N.C. 490, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 156
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 52 S.E. 52 (Clark v. Statesville.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Statesville., 52 S.E. 52, 139 N.C. 490, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 156 (N.C. 1905).

Opinion

Walker, J.,

after stating the case: The decision of this case must turn upon the construction of article 6 of the Con *493 stitution and especially of section 4 thereof, it being the one ;which prescribes a certain educational qualification for a .voter and the payment of his poll tax before he shall be entitled to vote, and provides for the registration of all who are entitled to vote without having successfully undergone the educational test therein required and for the making of a permanent record of such registration. It is now contended by the learned counsel for the plaintiff in this case, that this registration of voters, who have not submitted to the 'educational test, was intended to be permanent, in the sense that .the voter can register once for all time and'for all elections, the permanent record required to be made answering as a registration, not only for the next, but for all subsequent elections, such a voter not being required ever to register anew. We are unable to take this view, though it has been ably argued by counsel and presented to us with great plausibility. A consideration of article 6 of the Constitution, and of the system of conducting elections in this State established under its provisions, leads us, without any hesitation, to the conclusion that such a construction would defeat the main purpose of our election laws, constitutional and statutory, and produce grave and serious results in their operation. The meaning of this section of the Constitution is to our minds unmistakable .and we think the framers of it have selected words most apt .and adequate to express that meaning. After prescribing in sections 1 and 2 certain qualifications for a voter, it is provided in section 3 that “every person offering to vote shall be, at the time, a legally registered voter as herein prescribed, and in the manner hereafter provided by law and the General Assembly shall enact general registration laws to carry into effect the provisions of this article.” In section 4 we find that every person presenting himself for registration shall be able to read and write any section of the Constitution in our language, and before he shall be entitled to vote, he must show that he has paid his poll tax for the previous year *494 on or before the- first day of May of the year in which he proposes to vote, but no male person who was, on January 1, J867, or at any time prior thereto, entitled to vote under the laws of any one of the United States, wherein he then resided, and no lineal descendant of any such person shall be denied the right to register and vote at any election in this State by reason of his failure to possess the educational qualifications therein prescribed. Provision is then made, in the same section, for a registration of all voters of the latter class and the making of a permanent roll or record of their names. This was intended to be done, most clearly, for the sole purpose of furnishing convenient and easily available evidence of the fact that those whose names appear on the list thus made are not required to have the educational qualification. The educational test did not apply to any persons who themselves were, or whose ancestors were, voters on January 1, 1867, and to ascertain and record who such persons were, the roll was required to be made. The registration and permanent roll were intended to be a substitute for the educational test or. qualification, nothing more and nothing less. This appears from the language that no person thus registered “shall be denied the right to register and vote at any election in this State, by reason of his failure to possess the educational qualifications herein prescribed.” In all .other respects, the two classes of voters, those who are educationally qualified and those otherwise qualified under said section, are to remain on the same footing and to be subject alike to the same laws regulating the exercise of the elective franchise. The context plainly shows 'that this was the intention and should be the construction of the section, and good and valid reasons can be urged in its support and in favor of the policy adopted. It cannot be doubted, that it was the purpose to arrange the voters of this State into two classes, one with the educational qualification and the other without it, but with another qualification deemed to *495 be sufficient in the place of it. But when they are thus classified and brought to a position of equality of privilege in the exercise of the right to vote, why discriminate against the former class by requiring them to register at each successive election, if so provided by statute, in favor of the latter, by relieving them of this burden. Is it not more reasonable to suppose that the “registration and permanent Teeord,” were merely intended to preserve the evidence as to who had thus qualified themselves under the second of the provisions of that section 1 But the construction may well be sustained by either of two other reasons. There is a condition annexed in section 4 to the right of persons thus registered on the permanent roll to vote “in all elections by the people of this State” namely, “unless disqualified under section 2 of this article, and provided that such person shall have paid his poll tax as above required.” Now section 2 requires, as a qualification for voting, a residence in the State for two years, in the county six months,, and in the precinct or ward, or other election district four months next preceding the election, with a proviso that removal from one voting precinct to another shall, after four months from the time of such removal, deprive the voter of the right to vote in his former precinct, and he cannot vote of course without registration in his new precinct, and it also provides that conviction of a felony punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary shall disqualify him as a voter until restored to citizenship in the manner prescribed by law. It is evident from this reference in section 4 to section 2, that it was not intended to ,do more for the one class than for the other. They must all •comply with the general provisions of the election laws, enacted for the purpose of securing regularity and certainty in ,the methods of holding elections, and of protecting the ballot ¡box against fraudulent voting. There is no reason why this class of voters (those who are to be on the permanent roll) should be exempt from the operation of those laws, which do *496 not equally apply to tbe other class. The object of the lawmakers can be well and fully accomplished without such discrimination as between different classes of voters. But we think the very words of section 4 exclude any other conclusion as to the meaning of the organic law upon this subject. The language is that no such person who could vote, or whose ancestor could vote on January 1, 18 6J, “shall be denied the right to register and vote at any eléction in this State by reason of his failure to possess the prescribed educational qualifications,' provided, he shall have registered in accordance with the terms of this section prior to December, 1, 1908.” He shall not be denied — not the right to vote — we observe, but the right “to register and vote,” provided he complies with the section by 'registering on the permanent roll or record.

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.E. 52, 139 N.C. 490, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-statesville-nc-1905.