22 Fla. 437 | Fla. | 1886
delivered the opinion of the court:
The appellee applied during the present month, July,
Section 8 of the act providing for the incorporation of cities and towns, approved February 4, 1869, provides that “ no person shall be a qualified elector at any municipal election in this State who shall not have attained the age of twenty-one years, shall not have resided within the
When the above statute was enacted there was in force a statute (§§7 and 8, chapter 1625, approved August 6, 1868,) under which the Clerk of the Circuit Court could at any time, save the six days preceding any election, register persons having the qualifications of State and county electors in the county registration books. In 1877 these sections were repealed, and there was enacted in their place section 2 of chapter 3021, (secs. 19 and 20, p. 490, McClellan’s Digest,) which was construed by this court in the case of The State ex rel. vs. County Commissioners of Sumter county, 20 Fla., 859, to provide that such registration can only be made between the first Monday of October and a period ten days before the holding of a general election in the same year, and that registration at any other time, or in any other mauuer, is not legal.
The question argued at the bar, is the constitutionality of the above act of 1869, in so far as it requires registration in the county books as a condition precedent to voting at a municipal election. Section 6 of Art. 14, of the State Constitution, provides that “ the Legislature, at its first session after the ratification of this Constitution, shall, by law, provide for the registration by the Clerk of the Circuit Court in each county of all the qualified voters in such county, and for the returns of elections, and shall also provide that after the completion, from time to time, of such
The purpose of a registration law is the ascertainment of who are the persons qualified to vote, and the registration lists are the legal and authorized evidence of what persons are entitled to vote. Where legislation does give reasonable opportunity to register, registration is as much a pre-requisite to voting as anything else is. Closing the books a short period before the day of election is not objectionable, particularly where those who will be of age on election day are allowed to register before the books are closed. A registration law which, however, does not give to those persons who may, at an approaching election, have the requisite age and residence to entitle them to vote, an opportunity to register, cannot be held to affect their right to vote. The act of 1877 has made no such provision for registration as to municipal elections held subsequent to a general election in the county where the municipality is located, and there is nothing in the act of 1877 which indicates that the provisions of the municipal act. of 1869, as to registration in the county, were in the contemplation of the framers of the former statute. The result of all this is, that the law governing registration in the County Clerk’s books does not give to appellee the opportunity to comply with the requirement of section 8 of the act of 1869 as to registration in such books. He has all the qualifications of age and residence necessary to entitle him to vote, and if he is not permitted to do it, it is the fault of the law, and not of himself. He became a resident of Orlando after the last general election held in Orange county, under the act of 1877, took place. We take judicial notice that such elec
The requirement of section 8, act of 1869, as to registration in the county books is one prescribing the evidence of a voter’s qualifications. We do not mean to say that as the registration law of 1868 stood when the law of 1869 was passed that such requirement was unconstitutional, but as the act of 1877 abrogates the then existing provisions of the act of 1868, and gives no reasonable opportunity to the ap
Judgment is affirmed.