135 P. 358 | Or. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a special proceeding instituted in this court by the City of Portland, a municipal corporation, against John B. Coffey, as county clerk of Multnomah County, Oregon, to compel him to perform the duties alleged to devolve upon him pursuant to Sections 3447 to 3469, inclusive, of L. O. .L-, particularly with respect to the registration of electors of the City of Portland, and to prepare and furnish to the auditor of that city precinct registration lists and blanks for use at a special election to be held in the City of Portland December 9,1913. An alternative writ of mandamus having been issued and served on the defendant, he demurred thereto on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
2. The writ of mandamus was, at common law, a command issued in the name of the sovereign. Though it is a civil remedy, the rule prevailing in Oregon permits such proceedings to be prosecuted in the name of the state on the relation of some person: State ex rel. v. Bryan, 26 Or. 502 (38 Pac. 618); State ex rel. v. Williams, 45 Or. 314 (77 Pac. 965, 67 L. R. A. 166); State ex rel. v. Malheur County Court, 46 Or. 519 (81 Pac. 368). Such civil remedies, which are not ordinary actions, have more frequently been maintained in this State by a private party as plaintiff: Warner v. Myers, 4 Or. 72; Smith v. King, 14 Or. 10 (12 Pac. 8); Che Gong v. Stearns, 16 Or. 219 (17 Pac. 871); Biggs v. McBride, 17 Or. 640 (21 Pac. 878, 5 L. R. A. 115); Stevens v. Carter, 27 Or. 553 (40 Pac. 1074, 31 L. R. A. 342).
It is unnecessary to set forth the entire averments of the alternative writ of mandamus, since the only question involved is the validity of an act of the legis
The act in question requires the county clerk of each county in this state to procure such books, cards, or other material as may be needed in registering the voters of the county: Section 1.
Precinct registers are prescribed, and registration therein shall be in duplicate for precincts not wholly within a municipal corporation, and in triplicate for precincts wholly therein, “and in all cases one copy shall be given by the county clerk as a certificate of election to the elector”: Section 3.
“No elector who is not registered as provided in this act shall be entitled to vote at any election provided for by law except in school district or road district elections ; provided, that in case the Supreme Court should hold the above provisions for compulsory registration ■ invalid then, and in that ease only, the elector may register with the judges of the election upon election day by subscribing to the following form and securing the affidavit of six freeholders that they are personally acquainted with the elector and his qualifications as an elector” — setting forth the form prescribed: Section 6.
Any elector who may complete his residence during the period in which the registers are closed, or who may attain the age of 21 years, may register during a period of four months next preceding the closing of the registration for the election at which he desires to vote:' Section 7.
As soon as this law goes into effect, the county clerk of each county is required to appoint an official registrar in each precinct in the county not included in or a part of the municipality in which the county courthouse is situated: Section 10.
When an elector removes from a precinct in which he is registered, and gains residence in another precinct, he must re-register by surrendering to the county clerk his certificate of registration to be canceled. “In case such certificate of registration has been lost, or has been destroyed in any natural calamity, such elector shall produce before the official registrar, or the county clerk, two witnesses who shall sign an affidavit under oath that such is the fact”: Section 13.
Sections 3447, 3448, 3449, 3450, 3451, 3452, 3453, 3454, 3455, 3456, 3457, 3458, 3459, 3460, 3461, 3462, 3463, and 3466 of L. O. L. are repealed: Section 22.
By Section 23 of the act Section 3464, L. O. L., was amended in some particulars.
It will be remembered that Section 6 of the enactment declares that no elector who is not registered shall be entitled to vote at any state election “provided,'that in case the Supreme Court should hold the above provisions for compulsory registration invalid then, and in that case only, the elector may register with the judges of the election upon election day. ’ ’
Section 21 of Article I of the state Constitution reads: “No ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligations of contracts, shall ever be passed, nor shall any law be passed the taking effect of which shall be made to depend upon any authority, except as provided in this Constitution; provided, that laws locating the capital of the state, locating county seats, and submitting town and corporate acts, and other local and special laws, may take effect or not, upon a vote of the electors interested.”
Chapter 323 of the Laws of Oregon, 1913, was not complete when it left the legislative assembly.
When an elector removes from one precinct in which he is registered and gains a residence in another precinct, he is required to re-register by surrendering to the proper officer his certificate of registration and causing his former registration to be canceled. “In case such certificate of registration has been lost, or has been destroyed in any natural calamity, such elector shall produce before the official registrar, or the county clerk, two witnesses who shall sign an affidavit under oath that such is the fact”: Section 13.
Prom the language last quoted it is fairly to be implied that unless the elector can substantiate in the manner prescribed the fact of the loss of his certificate, or that it has been destroyed in some natural calamity, the voter cannot thereafter exercise the right of suffrage. Hence if his certificate were torn up by a child or destroyed by a pup or any other animal, his right to vote in any election is forever gone, the unreasonableness of which provision would seem quite apparent.
We are satisfied that the legislature would not have repealed the sections of the statute in question if it had been supposed that the new act adopted in lieu thereof was invalid.
It follows from these considerations that the demurrer should be overruled and a peremptory writ issued as demanded in the alternative writ, and it is so ordered. Peremptory Writ Issued.