144 Ind. 423 | Ind. | 1892
An act of the General Assembly, approved March 9, 1891, Acts of 1891, p. 350, provides
Assuming to act under the provisions of this law, the clerk of the Hendricks Circuit Court purchased the blanks necessary to carry out its requirements, for
It is assigned as error here that the circuit court erred in overruling the demurrer of the appellant to the complaint.
It will be seen, therefore, that the only question before us relates to the constitutionality of the law, the main provisions of which are set out above.
Section 2, Art. 2, of the constitution of the State, defines the qualifications of the electors of the State. It provides, among other things, that every 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, and in the township sixty days, and in the ward or precinct thirty days; immediately preceding the election, shall be entitled to vote in the township or precinct where he may reside.
Section 4, Art. 2, provides that “no person shall be deemed to have lost his residence in the State by reason of his absence, either on business of this State or of the United States;” and section 1, Art. 1, provides that “All elections shall be free and equal.”
Section 14, Art. 2, provides for a general registration law.
It is conceded by the attorney-general, as well as
In the opinion written by Olds, J., in that case, in which all the judges, except Mitchell, concurred, it was said: “Indeed, it seems to us to be beyond controversy that if the present act can be upheld, aimed as it is at a class of traveling men, and men whose business, either of a public or private character, or ill health, may take from the State six months, and persons who may be required to move from one county to another to obtain employment, within six months preceding an election, and imposing, as it does, a burden upon this class of citizens, which is imposed upon none other, then the Legislature may enact a valid law relating to any class, designating them by nationality, place of birth, religious belief, professional, or business pursuits, and require them, and none other, to register.”
So Elliott, J., in a separate opinion, in that case, in speaking of the law then under consideration, said: “It violates the constitution by assuming to classify voters into those who remain continuously in the State and those who temporarily absent themselves from it. Where the constitution makes a classifica
The law now under consideration is subject to most of the constitutional objections urged against the law of 1889. It assumes to classify the voters of the State, and to impose upon one class burdens not borne by the others. Indeed, it seems to have been enacted in the very face of the decision in the case of Morris v. Powell, supra. But little can be said in addition to what was said in that case in elaboration of the objectionable features of this law. All we desire to add is, that it cannot be demonstrated by any course of sound reasoning, that an election held under a law which imposes upon one class of citizens burdens not borne by others, is equal. So far as we are informed, all legislation in this State prior to 1889, intended to regulate elections, was general and applied alike to all the citizens of the State. Legislation like that we are now considering is a departure from the long established and approved practice in this State. It is plainly in conflict with our organic law and. is, for that reason, void.
The court did not err in overruling a demurrer to the complaint in this case.
Judgment affirmed.