White v. Commissioners of Multnomah County

10 P. 484, 13 Or. 317, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 23
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 10 P. 484 (White v. Commissioners of Multnomah County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Commissioners of Multnomah County, 10 P. 484, 13 Or. 317, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 23 (Or. 1886).

Opinions

Waldo, C. J.

This suit is brought to determine the constitutionality of the late act providing for the registration of voters. The constitution of Oregon (art. 2, sec. 2) provides:

“In all elections not otherwise provided for by this constitution, every white male 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 immediately preceding such election, and every white male of foreign birth of the age- of twenty-one years and upwards who shall have resided in this state during the six months immediately preceding such election, and shall have declared his intention to become a citizen of the United States one year preceding such election, conformably to the laws of the United States on the subject of naturalization, shall be entitled to vote at all elections authorized by law.”

[320]*320The counsel for the plaintiff pointed out in detail the extraordinary provisions of the law. The district attorney for the fifth judicial district, as a sample of the workings of the law, explained how he would be deprived of his vote by the mere fact of necessary absence from Clackamas County during the period of registration in attending to his official duties in .other counties in his district. We find it unnecessary, however, to enter into an examination of the details of the act, for it is met at the threshold by a fatal objection. As we construe the constitution, every law which requires previous registry as a prerequisite to the right to vote is ipso faato void. The legislature would, have the power by implication, had it- not been expressly conferred to prescribe the manner of regulating and conducting elections; but the right to vote itself has been placed beyond their interference or control. This fact seems to have been forgotten in framing the act. And how different apparently was the framers’ conception of the important nature of the right from that of Lord Holt, nearly 200 years ago, a judge who was never accused of being recreant to the liberties of Englishmen: “That a right which a man has to give his vote at the election of a person' to represent him in parliament, there to concur in the making of laws which are to him his liberty and property, is a most transcendent thing, and of a high nature.” (Ashby v. White, 2 Ld. Raym. 953.) If the attention were not permitted to wander beyond the act itself, the thought would hardly occur that the legislature were dealing with a right vested in the citizen by the constitution — a right of which “no department of the government, nor all of them combined,” said the court in State v. Adams, 2 Stew. 239, “have the power to divest an individual, otherwise than is prescribed by the constitution.” So in Brown v. Hummel, 6 Pa. St. 86, Coulter, J., said: “The [321]*321most important of all our franchises — the right of an elector and citizen — cannot, in a confined sense, he called property. It is not assets to pay debts, nor does it descend to the heir or administrator. But who does not feel its value, and who but would turn pale if he thought he could be deprived of it, without hearing or trial, by act of assembly?”

Important, however, as the question may be, we approach its consideration without solicitude other than an anxiety to understand and declare the law of the land. That inveterate argument, the gravity of declaring an act of the legislature unconstitutional, was urged as usual in such cases. If, however, a law be unconstitutional, the gravity of not declaring it to be so is also worthy of consideration. Our constitutions are “written securities of liberty,” as Chief Justice Buffin has expressed it. That sound and able judge, Mr. Justice Campbell, of Michigan, well said in Sears v. Cottrell, 5 Mich. 283, that “every unconstitutional law which is made to stand creates a permanent and deadly evil by overturning the only safeguards we have against public usurpation.” The judiciary, as the guardians of the people’s constitutional liberties, must, in duty, observe that vigilance against constitutional encroachment which is said to be the price of liberty. The rules of law are beyond the control of those who are merely to decláre what the law is. In every case the gravity consists in ascertaining what the law is. A text of the famous Littleton has come down to us in the Year Books (Y. B. 6th ed. 4, 8, pl. 18): Le ley est tout un en griend et meind — “the law is all one, in great things and small.”

The right to vote under the constitution is a vested constitutional right. “ When I say a right is vested, I mean that he has the power to do certain actions, or to possess certain things, according to the law of the land.” [322]*322(Chase, J., Colder v. Bull, 3 Dall. 394.) If the right be vested by the constitution, it denotes a right that cannot, under the constitution, be taken away. (Rich v. Flanders, 39 N. H. 385; Eakin v. Raub, 12 Serg. & R. 360.) It would seem that every case, from Capen v. Foster, 12 Pick. 485, S. C., 23 Am. Dec. 632, down, which has sustained against similar objections the constitutionality of a registry law which requires previous registry as a prerequisite to th§ right to vote, has taken it for granted that such laws were mere rules of procedure. It was assumed in Capen v. Foster, supra, that the right to make investigations into the qualifications of voters necessarily implies the right to compel the voter to furnish previous proof of his qualifications; that such a law was but “a reasonable and convenient regulation of the mode of exercising the right of voting.” It was placed on the same footing with a law which required the voter to offer his vote in writing.- Now, voting viva voce or by ballot is a pure rule of. procedure. So are laws regulating polling-places, and the times for opening and closing the polls. He who takes a check to a bank to cash it must indorse it. He who pays money is entitled to a receipt. This is procedure. But if a contract be to pay money on a fixed day, a subsequent law requiring the payee to-give ten days’ notice of the time and place of payment, or no obligation to pay shall arise, affects the substance of the contract, and is void. It is conceived that laws are of like nature which require previous registry in order to vote. Where the right is secured by the constitution, such laws, having merely a legislative sanction,, are void.

The- true view of this question seems to he that stated in State v. Baker, 38 Wis. 86—that where registry is required as a prerequisite to the right to vote, such registry is a condition precedent to the right itself, and [323]*323therefore a rule or substantive law. This principle was subsequently practically applied in Dells v. Kennedy, 49 Id. 555, in which a registry law of Wisconsin was held to be void. It results as follows: A “right” has been defined by Mr. Justice Holmes to be the legal consequence which attaches to certain facts. (The Common Law, 214). Every fact which forms one of the group of facts of which the right is the legal consequence appertains to the substance of the right. The right to vote under the constitution may be defined to be a vested right in prsesenti, to be exercised in futuro, on a fixed day. When that day arrives, and the right is to be exercised, every fact essential to the existence of the right is a substantive fact. Previous registry,, in order to vote, is precisely such a fact.

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Bluebook (online)
10 P. 484, 13 Or. 317, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-commissioners-of-multnomah-county-or-1886.