after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
The constitution of Missouri in force at the time of the enactment of the' law of June 19, 189.9, usually referred' to as the Nesbit law, in addition to prescribing certain qualifications as necessary to the right to vote, empowered the general assembly of the State to “ provide by law for the registration of voters in cities and counties having a population of more than one hundred thousand inhabitants; ” and further directed that the general assembly “ may provide for such a registration in cities-having a population exceeding twenty-five thousand inhabitants and not exceeding one hundred thousand, but not otherwise.” A law approved May 31, 1895, applied to all cities having a population in excess of one hundred thousand inhabitants, and' before the adoption of the Nesbit law,.the act .of 1895 .was operative in the city of St. Louis. The Nesbit law, which applied to cities having a population , of over three hundred thousand inhabitants, necessarily withdrew the city of St. Louis from the operation of the earlier statute.
The contention that the Nesbit law denied to citizens of St. Louis the equal protection of the laws, in violation of the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, is based upon certain propositions, elaborated in the argument of counsel, which we have reproduced in the statement of the case.
The assertions referred to,'it must be borne in'mind, are made by a public official, who is seeking to avoid the performance, of duties enjoined upon him by the law in question, and who does mot allege that any particular rights possessed • by him as an individual have been expressly invaded. Whether under the ruling in Wiley v. Sinkler, ante, 58, the plaintiff in error could properly raise the objection in question, we shall not deter *334 mine, in view of the fact that the Supreme Court of Missouri entertained and considered the question whether' the law' in question violated the Constitution of the United States.
In its final analysis it is apparent that the reasoning urged to sustain the propositions relied on must rest upon the assumption that under the constitution of Missouri but one registration law can be enacted applicable to cities having a population in excess of one hundred thousand inhabitants, whatever the maximum number of inhabitants may be; that, as a natural consequence, the citizens of St. Louis cannot be classified separately from cities having a population in excess of one hundred thousand but less than three hundred thousand inhabitants, and that as the law of 1895 more effectually protected the exercise of the right and privilege of voting, and threw about the enjoyment of the right of suffrage greater safeguards than does the later law, therefore the last enactment denies to the citizens of the city of St. Louis the equal protection of the laws.
But the state Supreme Court has, in. this case, decided that the provision of the state constitution respecting the enactment of registration laws does not limit the power of the general assembly to create more than one class composed of cities having a population in excess of one hundred thousand inhabitants, and hence that the Nesbit law was not repugnant to the state constitution. This conclusion must be accepted by this court.
Backus
v.
Fort Street Union Depot Co.,
In one aspect the argument urged against the validity of the provisions of the Nesbit law depends merely on comparison of the requirements of that law with the act of 1895. All the other contentions are reducible to the proposition that a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States has resulted from the putting in force by the general assembly of Missouri, in cities having a' population of over three hundred thousand inhabitants, of a registration law which, in the mind of a judicial tribunal, may not as effectually safeguard the right and privilege of voting as might be devised, considered alone or with reference to a prior enactment.
*335
But the obvious answer is that the law in question has been declared to be valid under the constitution of the State. The general right to vote in the State of Missouri is primarily- derived from the State,
United States
v. Reese,
Jxidgxnent affirmed.
