Daggett v. Hudson

1 Ga. L. Rep. 141
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 1, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ga. L. Rep. 141 (Daggett v. Hudson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daggett v. Hudson, 1 Ga. L. Rep. 141 (Ga. 1885).

Opinion

Atherton, J.

The grounds upon which the return is claimed to be insufficient, is that the law entitled “an act to provide for ascertaining the citizens who shall be entitled to vote in the cities of the first and second grades of the first class, by amending and supplementing section 2926. of the Revised Statutes,” 82 O. L., 232, is unconstitutional and void.

It is claimed that the provisions of that act are in violation of Ser. 1, Art. V, of the Constitution which provides: “ Ev.ery- while male citizen of the United States of the age of twenty one years, who shall have been a resideut of the State one year next preceding the election, and of the county, township, or ward in which he resides such time as may be provided by law, shall have the qualifi :ations of an elector, and be entitled to vote at all elections.”

In Pennsylvania, the Supreme Court held that a registry law was unconstitutional on the ground that it impaired the free exercise of the right of suffrage as conferred by the Constitution, and that “ no Constitutional qualifications of an elector can in the least be abridged, added to or altered by legislation, or the pretense of legislation.” Page vs. Allen, 58 Pa. St., 338.

And the Supreme Court of Wisconsin held: “That part of Sec. 8, Ch. 235, laws of 1879, which provides that no vote shall be received at any general election, unless the name of the person offering to vote be on the register completed by the board of registry as previously provided in said act, excepting only the case of persons who may have become qualified voters before such election, but after the completion of the register — is in violation of Sec. 1, Art. 3, of the State Constitution: which defines the qualifications of electors; and that provision being [144]*144an essential part of the act, without which it cannot be supposed that statute would have been enacted, the whole act is invalid.” Dells vs. Kennedy, 49 Wis., 555.

In these States, like ours, there was no constitutional provision requiring, or expressly authorizing, registration.

Registration laws are in terms either authorized or required to be enacted by the Constitutions of the following States : Alabama, Ar-

kansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia. The Constitutions of the following States are silent on the question: California, Conneticut. Delaware, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas and Vermont.

The question here presented is, whether in the absence of Constitutional provisions expressly authorizing it, the legislature can, by its general grant of legislative power and for the purpose of “ascertaining the citizens who shall be entitled to vote,” enact the registration laws.

The leading case upon this subject is admitted on all sides to be Capen vs. Foster, 12 Pick., 485, and, as will be seen by the foregoing list, was determined by the court of last resort of a State whose Constitution was silent on the subject of registration.

A s'a'u.te was enacted establishing the City of Boston, and in sec. 24 of the act it was provided that prior to every election it should be the duty of the city officers of that city to make a registration of voters, and that no person should be entitled to vote whose name was not found on the list. The Supreme Court held that the provisions of that act were not to be regarded as prescribing a qualification in addition to those, which by the Constitution, entitles a citizen to vote, but only a reasonable regulation of the mode of exercising the right of voting, which it was competent for the legislature to make.

So, in Wisconsin where the Constitution was also silent on the subject of registration laws, the Supreme Court held that, although the Constitution, sec. 1, Art. 3, prescribed the qualifications of electors and that a statute could not impair the right of those possessing them, they might require proof thereof, consistent with the right itself, and that the registry law of that State was valid so far as it provided for a register of qualified electors to be made in the manner therein prescribed, and constituted such register one mode of proof of the elector’s right, and so far also as it requires the elector whose name is not upon such register to make other reasonable proof of his right to the inspectors of the election at the time of offering his voce. State ex rel. Wood vs. Baker, 38 Wis., 71.

[145]*145So in Iowa it was held that while the right to vote by one possessing the qualifications of an elector as prescribed by the State Constitution, cannot either be destroyed or impaired by the legislature, yet that the legislature may regulate the exercise of the right by enacting provisions for determining the age, length of residence, etc., of persons offering to vote, and that the registry law of that State providing for the registration of voters was not in conflict with the Constitution prescribing the qualifications cf electors. Edmunds vs. Banbury, 28 Iowa, 267.

This court has adopted the doctrine laid down in the case of Capen vs. Foster, supra. Monroe vs. Collins, 17 Ohio. St., 666, 687.

Other decisions of the character might\>e cited; and we think the current of authority is opposed to the decisions in Page vs. Allen, and Dells vs. Kennedy, in so far as they may be understood to pronounce against the constitutionality of all registration laws; and that it is competent for the legislature, under the general powers of legislation granted to it by the Constitution, to provide for a general registration of voters and to make the fact of registry a condition to the exercise of the right of voting. The power being conceded, the legislature is supposed to know best the wants of the State in that regard, and it is not for the courts to question the wisdom of making such enactments.

Begistration is one of the modes in which purity in election may be attained, and every honest and qualified voter has an interest in securing the integrity of the ballot, and excluding the ballots of the dishonest and unqualified.

Every honest voter is as much injured by the reception of a fraudulent vote, as by the exclusion of his own, and it makes but little difference to him whether his vote is wrongfully excluded, or completely neutralized by the ballot of a person unqualified, Among the safeguards that we deem most efficacious to prevent fraud, insure integrity at the polls, and enable the honest and qualified elector to exert his just influence,'and control the result, is a wise system of registration; and we are satisfied that it is within the constitutional province of the legislature to enact a wise registration law. that without in any way abridging the rights of qualified electors, or adding any unlawful qualifications to the voter, may secure the purity of the election by a registry law so framed as to be a reasonable regulation of the mode of exercising a constitutional right.

. But it is claimed in the case at bar that, admitting the general right to enact a proper registration law, the act under consideration is unconstitutional, because it does not contain reasonable regulations as to the right to vote, hut imposes on the voter unreasonable and unnec[146]

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Related

Darby v. . City of Wilmington
76 N.C. 133 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1877)
Webster v. Byrnes
34 Cal. 273 (California Supreme Court, 1867)
State ex rel. Wood v. Baker
38 Wis. 71 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1875)
Dells v. Kennedy
49 Wis. 555 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1880)
Byler v. Asher
47 Ill. 101 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1868)
Edmonds v. Banbury
28 Iowa 267 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1869)
State v. Butts
31 Kan. 537 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1884)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ga. L. Rep. 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daggett-v-hudson-ga-1885.