In re Appointment of "Supervisors of Election" of Delaware

1 F. 1, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2322
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1 F. 1 (In re Appointment of "Supervisors of Election" of Delaware) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Appointment of "Supervisors of Election" of Delaware, 1 F. 1, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2322 (uscirct 1880).

Opinion

Bradford, J.

The provisions of the United States laws which it is supposed covers this case are found in sections 2011, 2012, 2013, 201é and 2015 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, and in these words:

“Section 2011. Whenever, in any city or town having upwards of 20,000 inhabitants, there are two citizens thereof, or whenever, in any county or parish, in any congressional district, there are ten citizens thereof, of good standing, who, prior to any registration of voters for an election for representative or delegate in the congress of the United States, or prior to any election at which a representative or delegate in congress is to be voted for, may make known, in writing, to the judge of the circuit court of the United States for the circuit wherein such city or town, county or parish is situated, their desire to have such registration, or such election, or both, guarded and scrutinized, the judge, within not less than ten days prior to the registration, if one there be, or, if no registration be required, within not less than ten days prior to the election, shall open the circuit court at the most convenient point in the circuit.
“Sec. 2012. The court, when so opened by the judge, shall proceed to appoint and commission, from day to day and from time to time, and under the hand of the judge, and under the seal of the court, for each election district or voting precinct in such city or town, or for such election or voting precinct in the congressional district, as may have applied in the manner herein prescribed, and to revoke, change or renew such appointment from time to time, two citizens, residents of the city or town, or of the election district or voting pre[3]*3cinct in the county or parish, who shall be of different political parties, and able to read and write the English language, and who shall be known and designated as supervisors of election.
“Sec. 2013. The circuit court, when opened by the judge, as required in the two preceding sections, shall therefrom and thereafter, and up to and including the day following the day of election, be always open for the transaction of business under this title, and the powers and jurisdiction hereby granted and conferred shall be exercised as well in vacation as in term time; and a judge, sitting at chambers, shall have the same powers and jurisdiction, including the power of keeping order and of punishing any contempt of his authority, as when sitting in court.
“See. 2014. Whenever, from any cause, the judge of the circuit court, in any judicial circuit, is unable to perform and discharge the duties herein imposed, he is required to select and assign to the performance thereof, in his place, such one of the judges of the district courts within his circuit as he may deem best; and, upon such selection and assignment being made, the district judge so designated shall perform and discharge, in place of the circuit judge, all the duties, powers and obligations imposed and conferred upon the circuit judge by the provisions hereof.
“Sec. 2015. The preceding section shall be construed to authorize each of the judges of the circuit courts of the United States to designate one or more of the judges of the district courts within his circuit to discharge the duties arising under this title.”

There is no question raised now as to the appointment of supervisors of election to guard and scrutinize the elections. 13at it is denied that there is any registration of voters within the meaning of the act of congress, and that therefore the appointment of supervisors of election, with power to guard and scrutinize the assessment lists in the hands of the assessors and,in the hands of the levy court, and the list of voters furnished by the clerks of the peace in the respective [4]*4counties of the state for the use of the inspectors of election, is not warranted by law.

As this law, leaving out the question of constitutionality, is meant to be fair and impartial in its operation, and as its object and purpose is the protection to each citizen of the right of the elective franchise, both by securing his own vote and preventing the illegal votes of others, the construction of the act should be a liberal one, and such as to carry into effect the manifest intention of the framers of the ‘law. And, while the fact of penalties attached to the violation of the law should, as in every case demanding serious investigation, make more imperative the necessity for the fjudge to give a careful investigation to the case, I know of no rule of interpretation arising from that fact which should require a narrow and technical construction to such a statute — a statute which is eminently an enabling one.

We are then brought to the consideration of the question, what was the manifest intention of congress in the use of the words “registration of voters?”

It will hardly be denied that, if these lists made by the assessors and the levy courts are lists of such a character that to be placed on them is a prerequisite to the right to vote, the guarding and scrutinizing such lists give the means of remedying the evil which congress designed to be remedied. And if it is a sound rule of interpretation or construction of a law that such a construction or interpretation should be given as will remove the evil sought to be removed, and protect the rights sought to be protected, then, unless there is something on the face of the acts of congress which in terms denies the applicability of the registration of voters therein named to the assessment lists under the laws of Delaware, an adherence to this rule would compel the court to give to such a system the substantial character of a registration of voters.

It is admitted in argument that if there was a system of registration of voters eo nomine, in this state, then the statute would apply, and the^supervisors could guard and scrutinize such lists.

[5]*5Now such registry lists, eo nomine, are imperfect; they only make a prima, facie case. No voter’s right is extinguished by being omitted from that list, and no voter’s right is secured by being illegally placed on it. The wrong done can be remedied at any time prior to the election; and yet such imperfect lists as those, under the name of registration of voters, congress, in the interests of the parity of the elective franchise, has ordered to be guarded and scrutinized.

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Bluebook (online)
1 F. 1, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-appointment-of-supervisors-of-election-of-delaware-uscirct-1880.