delivered the opinion of the court:
Under the Election Code the county clerk is the county officer in charge of the registration of voters within each county outside the jurisdiction of cities having election commissions. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, chap. 46, par. 4 — 4.) It is his statutory duty to examine the records of deaths in the county each month and to cancel the registration of any voter who has died during the preceding month (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, chap. 46, par. 4 — 14.1) ; to record, after notification, changes of address and names of voters in the county and to erase from the register of voters the names of those no longer qualified to vote. Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, chap. 46, par. 4 — 16.
Since the adoption in 1943 of sections 4 — 12 and 4 — 13 of the Election Code there has been a statutorily prescribed method by which voters may apply to the county clerk for the erasure of names of unqualified voters from the register. Prior to the 1967 amendments to those sections applications to erase had to be made between the hours of 9:00 A.M. and 5 :oo P.M. on the Monday and Tuesday of the second week prior to the week in which “any” election was to be held. Upon receipt of such application it was the duty of the clerk to give the prescribed notice to the challenged voters that a hearing was to be held thereon, demanding that they appear before him to show cause why
As originally adopted in 1943, the pertinent sentence of section 4 — 12 read as follows: “Any voter or voters in the township, city, village or incorporated town containing such precinct may, between the hours of nine o’clock a.m. and five o’clock p.m. of Monday and Tuesday of the second week prior to the week in which any election is to be held, make application in writing, to the county clerk, to have any name upon the register of any precinct erased.” After the 1967 amendments, which were contained in House Bill No. 473, this sentence of section 4 — 12 read as follows: “Any voter or voters in the township, city, village or incorporated town containing such precinct may, between the hours of 9 :oo a.m. and 5 :oo p.m. of Monday
There are a number of cases, such as People ex rel. Martin v. Village of Oak Park,
This general rule of construction cannot prevail, however,
The primary purpose of statutory construction is ascertainment of the legislative purpose and intent. To that end, consideration of the history and course of the legislation is always proper. (People v. Boreman,
A review of the legislative path leading to the adoption
When House Bill No. 473, as amended in the House, reached the Senate it was there amended to provide that the optional re-registration would occcur on November 21, 1968, December 19, 1969, and January 15, 1970, in those counties adopting resolutions. The Senate amendment to the Bill also provided that the voters should have the right to employ the erasure procedure of 4 — 12 and 4 — 13 for “the 1970 primary election for the nomination of candidates for State and county offices or any election thereafter”. The House concurred in the Senate amendment and the Bill, as amended, was eventually enacted into law. It is thus apparent that the erasure provisions were retained in the original Bill and all amendments, and it seems quite clear that neither the House nor the Senate had any intent to eliminate this safeguard in the 1968 elections. The effect of this rather complicated course of legislative action was to leave the literal language of sections 4 — 12 and 4 — 13 as apparently repealing the erasure procedure for the presidential election of 1968 and reinstating it for the 1970 and subsequent elections. It is to us incredible that such a result was in fact intended by the General Assembly, and we find this particularly true in view of the availability of this procedure for some 25 years prior to 1968 and its express availability in the 1970 elections and thereafter. This is, in our judgment, clearly a legislative oversight resulting from the successive amendments to House Bill No. 473.
Ample precedent exists for the conclusions here reached. In Village of Glencoe v. Hurford,
The problem here is also similar in several material respects to Trustees of Schools v. Sons,
We also recently said in Illinois Crime Investigating Com. v. Buccieri,
We believe that the omission from the 1967 amendments to the Election Code of a provision expressly continuing the employment of the erasure procedure for the
Writ awarded.
