122 Tenn. 198 | Tenn. | 1909
delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court.
Tbe defendant was indicted in tbe criminal court of Knox county for knowingly voting, as tbe owner of real estate situated in tbe town of Lonsdale, Knox county, in a municipal election beld in that town, without first having there registered twenty days or more before tbe election, as provided by chapter 25, p. 59, Acts Ex. Sess. 1890, chapter 224, p. 438, Acts 1891, and chapter 12, p. 30 Acts Ex. Sess. 1891.
A motion was made to quash tbe indictment, upon tbe grounds that it was not a misdemeanor to vote illegally in a municipal election, and that registration ivas not required of owners of real estate in Lonsdale in municipal elections there beld. Tbe trial judge overruled tbe first ground of tbe motion, and sustained tbe latter, and quashed tbe indictment. Tbe State and tbe defendant both prosecuted appeals in the nature of writ of error, and have assigned tbe action of tbe trial judge adverse to them, respectively, as error.
We think the first ground of tbe motion was properly overruled, and tbe second erroneously sustained.
Tbe contention of tbe defendant is predicated upon tbe provision of tbe charter of Lonsdale (chapter 305, p. 1048, Acts 1907) defining tbe qualifications of voters in elections to be beld in tbe municipality for the election of municipal officers, which is in these words:
“The votes shall be by ballot, all persons owning real*201 estate within said corporation, all persons living therein and who have been residents thereof for six months previous to said election and Avho are entitled to vote for members of the general assembly shall be entitled to vote in said election.” ;;
The qualification here prescribed applies to all voters^ whether they be owners of real estate in the municipality or residents therein.
To be entitled to vote for members of the general assembly, under the constitution, the voter must be a male person who is twenty-one years old, a citizen of the United States, and a resident of the State for twelve months and of the county six months; and the only other qualification which can be prescribed is the payment of poll taxes and the production of satisfactory evidence of such payment for such preceding period as the legislature shall prescribe and at such time as may be prescribed by law. Const., art. 4, section 1.
These are all the qualifications required of those authorized to vote in elections held in the municipality.
The registration laAvs of the State do not prescribe qualifications of electors, but were enacted for the purpose of regulating the exercise of the elective franchise, and are authorized by the concluding clause of section 1, art. 4, of the constitution, ordaining that the general assembly shall have power to enact laws to secure the freedom of elections and the purity of the ballot box.
In Madison v. Wade, 88 Ga., 699, 16 S. E., 21, it is field that registration adds no qualification to voters,
“It is evident that a proper enforcement of this statute, in securing ten days before every election a full registry of all persons entitled to vote, furnishes a very efficient check against fraudulent voting. At any election in which much interest is felt, and where the opposing parties are supposed to be nearly equal in numbers, most careful scrutiny will be made of these registry lists, every voter’s name and residence taken, and his right to vote verified by examination. The matter Avill not be left to the pressure and excitement of election day, but will all be ascertained and determined prior thereto. The value of such a registry for the preservation of the purity of the ballot box cannot be too highly estimated. . . . Obviously, what was contemplated was the ascertaining beforehand, by proper proof, of the persons who should on -the day of election be entitled to vote.; and any reasonable provision for making such ascertainment must be upheld. Requiring a party to be registered is not in any true sense imposing an additional qualification, any more*203 than requiring a voter to go to a specific place for tbe purpose of voting, or requiring him to prove by his own oath or the oaths of other parties his right to vote when challenged, or than requiring a naturalized foreigner to pi’esent his naturalization papers. Each and all of these are simply matters of proof, steps to be taken in order to ascertain who are and who are not entitled to vote.”
Judge Cooley, in his work on Constitutional Limitations (page 601), said:
“In some of the States it has also been regarded as important that lists of voters should be prepared before the day of election, in which should be registered the names of every person entitled to vote. Under such a registration the officers whose duty it is to administer the election laws are enabled to proceed with more deliberation in the discharge of their duties, and to avoid the haste and confusion that must attend the determination upon election day of the various and sometimes difficult questions concerning the right of individuals to exercise this important franchise. Electors, also, by means of this registry, are notified in advance of the persons claiming the right to vote, and are enabled to make the necessary examination to determine whether the claim is well founded, and to exercise the right of challenge if satisfied any person registered is unqualified. When the constitution has established no such rule, and is entirely, silent on the subject, it has sometimes been claimed that the statute*204 requiring voters to be registered before the day of election and excluding from the right all whose names do not appear upon the list was unconstitutional and void, as adding another test to the qualifications of electors which the constitution has prescribed, and as having the effect, where the electors are not registered, to exclude from voting persons who have an absolute right to that franchise by the fundamental law. This position, however, has not been accepted as sound by the courts. The provision for a registry deprives no one of his right, but is only a reasonable regulation under which the right may be exercised. Such regulations must always have been within the power of the legislature unless forbidden.”
This was quoted by this court with approval in the case of Moore v. Sharp, 98 Tenn., 498, 41 S. W., 587.
These registration laAvs apply to all elections, including those of municipalities, in the counties and civil districts falling within their provisons. We quote the sections evidencing this as codified in Shannon’s edition of the Code, viz.:
“Sec. 1189. In all civil districts, wards, and voting-precincts in counties which have a population of 50,000 or over that number, computed by the federal census of 1890, or which may hereafter have that number or over, computed by any subsequent federal census, and in all cities, towns, and civil districts, having a population of 2,500 inhabitants or over that number computed by the federal census of 1890, or may hereafter have that number or over, computed by any subsequent federal census,*205 each, and every voter, in addition to the other regulations required by law, shall he registered as a voter as hereinafter provided before he shall be allowed to exercise the elective franchise in any election held in any civil district, ward, or voting precinct in said counties having a population as herein provided: Provided, that the last published census shall control in every case. (Ex. Sess. 1890, c. 25, section 1; 1891, c. 224, section 1; Ex. Sess, 1891, c. 12.)”
“Sec. 1198. Registration, as provided for in section 1197, and the other provisions thereof, shall be a prerequisite to voting in all elections in such territory; and when such registration has been made under the provisions of this article, no other or further general registration for two and four years shall be made or required as a prerequisite to his voting, except in cases where the voter has changed his residence. (Id., section 3.)
“Sec. 1199. No voter shall be allowed to vote in any election wherein registration is required by law, unless he shall have first registered, under the provisions of this article, as much as twenty days before the election wherein he offers to vote is held. But registration of voters shall only be required every four years hereafter in the civil districts having less than five thousand population, according to last census, whenever said civil districts are in the counties not wholly subject by the present laAvs to registration. (Id., section 4.)”
They not only apply to all elections in the territory coming within the provisions of the statute, but to all
The voter must register in the civil district, ward, or voting precinct where he offers to vote. This clearly appears from a consideration of all the provisions of the statutes, and such has been their practical construction. Section 1217 requires the registrars of each district, or voting precinct, to appear at the place where the election is held with the books in which the voters are numbered, which are made evidence of registration, and occupy places inside the polling precincts, and check off or mark said voters as each voter therein registered shall vote. The voter’s name cannot appear upon these books unless he has there registered. No other registration books are required or authorized to be present or used, and a registration in another precinct would not avail the voter anything. If the registration laws did not apply to the place of the residence of the nonresident voter, and the law was as insisted, he could not register anywhere, although he could not vote at the place where the laws do apply without registration. The registration must be in the district or ward where the vote is proposed to be cast.
The motion to quash is overruled, and the case remanded for trial.