74 Md. 326 | Md. | 1891
delivered the opinion of the Court.
George E. B. Key was horn in- Charles County, and resided there continuously until the summer, or fall of eighteen hundred and eighty-nine, when, having been •employed as a laborer in the Navy Yard at Washington, he removed to the District of Columbia, and shortly thereafter took his family to reside with him in that place. He rented a house in Washington, and gave up the one he had occupied in Charles County. He has remained in the employ of the United States' Government nearly ever since, and during that period he returned to Charles County only to make some brief visits. When he left the county his name appeared upon the registration hooks of the first election district as a qualified voter, hut during the sitting of October, 1890, the ■officer of registration struck his name from the registry lists, and thereupon the appellant, alleging that he,
The qualifications of a voter in this State are prescribed by the first section of Article one of the Constitution of Maryland. Those qualifications are that he shall be a citizen of the United States of the age of' twenty-one years or upwards, and that he shall have been a resident of the State for one year, and of the Legislative District of Baltimore City, or of the county in which he offers to vote, for six months next preceding the election at which he offers to vote. Before he can exercise his right to vote he must he duly registered-These qualifications, fixed by the organic law, can neither be enlarged nor curtailed by the General Assembly; but there is no provision of the Constitution, as there is no principle of constitutional law, that denies to the Legislature the power to enact rules of evidence by which the facts establishing the right to vote may be proved. The Constitution itself merely designates the qualifications, and then leaves the Legislature free to declare by what, evidence those qualifications must be shoAvn to exist. It is perfectly competent to the Legislature to say what shall and what shall not he admissible evidence to prove-a particular fact; and this it has repeatedly done. Its power to change an established rule of evidence is equally undoubted; and the adoption by it of a new rule whereby the proof of a fact is rendered more difficult than it liad been before, invades, on that account, no vested right whatever. The right to have one’s controversies determined by existing rules of evidence is not a vested right. These rules, like others affecting remedies, must at all times be subject to modification and control by the Leg-
The legal residence of Key is the controverted question in the case at bar, and was the question before the officer of registration. Row, what evidence has the General Assembly declared shall alone be competent, both before the officer of registration and in the Courts upon appeal from him, to prove residence in cases where the voter had left the State before the passage of the Act of 1890, ch. 573 ? Prior to the adoption of that Act there was no rule of evidence prescribed by the Legislature on this subject, and in dealing with such questions resort was of necessity had by the Courts to general principles and analogies. By sec. 14, of the Act of 1890, ch. 573, it is provided, in substance, that all persons whose names Were upon the registration lists at the date of the passage of the Act, but who had previously removed from the State and had taken up a domicile, dwelling-place, abode or habitation beyond the limits of Maryland, shall be presumed to have thereby intended to abandon their legal residence in this State, unless within thirty days after the passage of the Act they shall go in person before the clerk of the Circuit Court for the county from which they shall have so removed, or before the clerk of the Superior Court of Baltimore City, if their removal shall have been from said city, and make and acknowledge before such clerk an affidavit that when
It is argued that the section is unconstitutional in consequence of its requiring him and others similarly situated, to possess qualifications in addition to and beyond those prescribed by the Constitution; and further, because Key having departed from the State prior to the passage of the Act, its provisions cannot alter or change his right to vote, or to register, or to have his name remain on the registration list, as that right existed and was recognized by the law in force at the date of his removal to the District of Columbia. The section in question does not purport
The establishment of this new rule of evidence, consequently violated no vested right of Key or of other persons similarly situated. The requirement that the affidavit shall be made within a limited time is not an unreasonable condition — certainly not so unreasonable as to render the statute in this particular either oppressive or invalid.
There is nothing in the letter or the spirit of the statute to justify the conclusion that its terms do not apply to employees of the Eederal Government. Because an individual who leaves the State, and takes up a domicile elsewhere, happens to be in the service of the General Government, he is not exempted from the operation of a rule of evidence which upon its face applies to all persons who depart from the State and acquire a residence beyond its limits. We have no authority to import into the statute an exception which we do not find there, — to write into it by judicial construction, a qualification of its meaning, and a restriction of its scope, when nothing contained in the body of the Act will justify it. The language is plain and unambiguous, and does not admit of the construction contended for. A clause exempting officers of the General Government from the operation of this section was incorporated in the bill before the Senate of Maryland, but was stricken out by that branch of the Legislature. We
We think the Court was right in rejecting the prayers of the appellant, and in dismissing his petition, and its judgment will therefore he affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.