delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellees who are registration officers of the seventh precinct of the twenty-first ward of Baltimore City registered one George Rotan as a qualified voter and
The only question presented, therefore, is whether the Act of 1892, chapter 401, is constitutional.
If the precinct from which the voter moved, and that to which he moved and applied for registration are in the same legislative district, then it is conceded he was legally registered; but, on the contrary, if these precincts are in different legislative districts it is admitted that the voter was not entitled to registration, for he had not lived six months in the third legislative district where he applied for registration. By the legislation in force prior to 1892 (see 1882, chapter 2, 1888, chapter 98,
But we think it is clear the Act in question (1892, ch. 401,) must be declared unconstitutional, for it omits to make any provision for the inhabitants of the sixteenth ward of Baltimore City to vote at any election, that ward being placed in neither of the three legislative districts. It was, of course, conceded that if the Act in question had this effect, namely to disfranchise the inhabitants of the sixteenth ward and deprive them of their right to representation in the Legislature, it would be void.
And this result was sought to be avoided by an attempt to show that the Act of 1882, chapter 2, which does provide for the sixteenth and other wards, and the Act of 1892, chapter 401, could stand together. But while recognizing the full force of the rule that Courts ought to make every intendment in support of legislative enactments, yet we must give to the language used by the Legislature its full effect and meaning, according to its plain, ordinary and natural import. Clark vs. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, 29 Md., 283. And so construing the words of section 2 of the Act of 1892, it is clear that it was intended thereby to repeal so much of section two of the Act of 1882, as prescribes the bound- • aries of the second and third legislative districts. When by the Act of 1892 it is provided that certain named
If, therefore, the Act of 1892 stands, the Act of 1882 must fall, and the result would be, as we have said, the disfranchisement of the voters of the sixteenth ward. The Act of 1892, chapter 401, must therefore be declared unconstitutional. Maxwell, et al. vs. State, ex rel. Baldwin, 40 Md., 294.
But there is another objection to the validity of the Act in question.
Section one provides that “the legislative district lines of the second and third legislative districts of Baltimore City, * * * as now described and defined by an ordinance of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, Ho. 36, approved April the 6th, 1882, * * * are hereby amended and changed so as to read as follows:” Then follows what, at first sight, appears to be intended for section 2 of the Act of 1892, which section, as we have seen, professes to set out and fully describe the boundaries of the second and third legislative districts — omitting altogether the sixteenth ward. Although we have thus far assumed that “section 2” is, as it appears to be, a separate and independent section of
Order affirmed.
