112 Ga. 794 | Ga. | 1901
The authorities of Floyd County caused an election to be held on the first day of December, 1900, to determine whether bonds of the county for the total sum of sixty-nine thousand dollars should be issued, of which proposed issue thirty-four thousand five hundred dollars were to be applied to the floating debt of the county, nineteen thousand five hundred dollars to the payment of past due bridge bonds, and fifteen thousand dollars to other bridge bonds thereafter to fall due. The ascertained and declared result of the election showed that 2,050 votes were cast, 1,955 in favor of the issuance of bonds, and 95 against the issue. Subsequently the solicitor-general of the Rome circuit, having been notified of the election and its result, under the provisions of an act approved December 6, 1897, presented a petition to the superior court of Floyd county for the purpose of obtaining a judgment confirming and validating the bonds which, it was claimed, the county had authority to issue by virtue of such election. See Acts 1897, p. 82. All the requirements of this act were seemingly complied with. The county commissioners were made parties, filed their
Inasmuch as, in our judgment, for the reasons hereinafter given,
But the main and only question to be decided in this case is, how shall the number of qualified voters in a county be ascertained, so as to determine whether two thirds of such voters have given their assent to the bond issue ? Soon after the adoption of the constitution the General Assembly enacted that the tally-sheets of the last general election held in the county should be taken as the correct enumeration of the qualified voters in such county. Acts 1878-9, p. 40; Political Code, § 380. It is also contended, that this provision of law has not been changed by the enactment subsequently made, which provides for the registration of voters, which is now, and since 1894 has been, in force in this State, and that there is nothing in these two acts which affords any reason why one should affect the other; and the legal doctrine that repeals by implication are not favored is invoked. It is unnecessary to refer in detail to the provisions of the law requiring the registration of voters. The general law on the subject can be found in the Political Code, §§35, et seq. It declares that “no person shall be permitted to vote in any election in the State, for presidential electors, for members of Congress, for Governor, for State-house officers, for members of the General Assembly, for county officers, county commissioners, for justices of the peace, for constables, for members of the county board of education where chosen by the people, nor in any other popular election to fill any other State or county office now existing or hereafter created, nor in any State or county election for any purpose whatever, unless such person shall have been registered as hereinafter provided.” Certainly the provisions of this act are broad enough to cover every State and county election, no matter what may be its purpose; and certainly, too, registration is necessary, by its terms, for the exercise of the right of suffrage by a qualified voter. The requirement for registration does not add a qualification. It only serves to identify the persons qualified to vote. Mayor of Madison v. Wade, 88 Ga. 699; Cooley’s Const. Lim. 756. It will be noted that the provisions of the code to which we have just referred do not apply to elections held in cities or towns. There is no reason, of which we know, why a general registration might not be provided for all elections held in these
At the time of the election in Floyd County the general registration law was in force. The test, then, for ascertaining the number of qualified voters in the county, by the rulings heretofore made, was a reference to the registration list. That number could not, because of the application of the registration law, be determined by reference to the tally-sheets of the last general election. There are several cases, subsequent to the decision in the Gavin-case, in which it was ruled that the number of qualified voters in a municipality was to be determined by reference to the tally-sheets;; but an examination shows, in each instance, that no method of registration had been provided, and the line of reasoning on which these decisions are placed is that, as registration was not required to ascertain the number of qualified voters under the constitution and no provision for registration had been made, section 380 of the Political Code, codified from the act of 1879, which prescribes a reference to the tally-sheets of the last general election, was applicable. See Kaigler v. Roberts, 89 Ga. 476; Howell v. Athens, 91 Ga. 139; Carver v. Dawson, 99 Ga. 7. So that the established rules on this subject are’ as follows: If within the county or municipality a system of registration has been provided by which the number of qualified voters of the county or municipality can be determined, the question whether two thirds of the qualified voters' of the county or municipality voted for bonds must be determined-from an inspection of the registration list. If the municipality has
Judgment affirmed.