At the last general election in the state of Idaho, which occurred in November, the following question was submitted to the electors of the state, to wit: “Shall section 2 of article 6 of the constitution of the state of Idaho be so amended as to extend to women the equal *137right of suffrage ?” The vote of the electors on the proposed amendment was as follows: For said amendment, twelve thousand one hundred and twenty-six; against said amendment, six thousand two hundred and eighty-two. The question submitted to this court is: “Under the provisions of the constitution and laws of this state, does this amendment become a part of the constitution?” No question of like importance has been submitted to this court during its existence. If decided in the affirmative, it nearly doubles the qualified voters of the state. It demands careful investigation and considerate judgment. It may not be improper, therefore, for me to give my reasons for concurrence in the judgment of this court.
The question of the policy or practicability of such a radical change in the fundamental law of the state, in regard to the qualification of electors, not being an issue in this cause, I do not propose to discuss. The proposition that the language of the constitution with reference to amendments thereto makes it practically impossible to secure any such I shall also dismiss, with the statement that it is not the province nor within the authority of this court to change or 'modify its provisions by judicial decision.
The provisions of our own constitution, and of others similar thereto, with reference to the votes necessary to carry any proposition, may be properly divided into three classes:
First, those which require a majority or two-thirds of all the votes cast at a general or special election. Of this class is section 3 of article 8, regarding county and city indebtedness, which requires “two-thirds of the qualified electors thereof voting at an election to be held for that purpose”; that is, two-thirds of the qualified electors of such county or city. Also of the same class is section 1 of article 12, which provides “that cities and towns may become organized whenever a majority of the electors at a general election shall so determine.” So is also section 3 of article 20, which provides that when it shall be deemed necessary to call a convention to revise or amend the constitution, which shall be called if a majority of all the electors voting at said election shall have voted for a, convention, etc. The language of these sections is clear and unmistakable. It needs no construction, and it is only neces*138sary to count the ballots cast at any such election and those voting for the proposition, to ascertain if a majority of all those voting at said election were in favor of the proposition.
Of the class of cases cited in support of this proposition are St. Joseph Tp. v. Rogers, 16 Wall. 664, in which ease the fourteenth section of the act required only a “majority of the legal voters of such township voting at such election.” Of the same tenor is the case of People v. Warfield, 20 Ill. 165, in which it is held that the phrase “majority of the voters of a county” is held to mean a majority of those” voting at the election. Also, People v. Garner, 47 Ill. 246; People v. Wiant, 48 Ill. 263; Cass Co. v. Johnston, 95 U. S. 360; State v. Linn co. Court, 44 Mo. 504; State v. Renick, 37 Mo. 270. From this class of cases we have, perhaps, sufficiently quoted. They differ from the language of our constitution in the particular under discussion in this: that in those cases the law or constitution,- as the case may be, positively and in terms requires a majority or two-thirds of all the voters of a particular district or of the state, while our constitution requires a majority of the electors. They are not in point except as giving the reasons for the decisions, which differ somewffiat in the different oases. In some cases the reason given is that it is a practical impossibility to ascertain how many legal voters there may be at the time of the election in any given city, county, or state. This reason applies witli equal force in the case at bar. There is no necessity for qualifying the word. It is impossible to ascertain how many voters there are in the state at any election. There may be many voters in the state who did not vote for governor, for instance, who did not vote for the presidential electors; and there may have been many voters who voted for attorney general, who voted neither for governor nor presidential electors. The impossibility of the task is apparent at -once. But, say the defendants, this is what the constitution requires, and, if it moans anything except a majority of the electors voting upon the proposition, the former is what it does mean. However, they say this provision is satisfied by considering the number voting at this ejection, as the whole number of electors. But we know this is not true, and we *139have no warrant for such construction, either in the words of the particular section, the context, or in reason.
The second class of cases are those which require a majority of all the quáliñed voters of a particular district, county, city, or of the qualified voters of the state. This provision would seem to be too plain to need any construction, or to lead to any difference of opinion. The courts, however, in quite a number of eases, have construed this provision to be satisfied by a majority of the votes cast upon the proposition, while others have construed it according to the strict letter of the constitution or law, as the case may be. Of the latter class are the following cases, cited by counsel for defendants, to wit: State v. Brassfield, 67 Mo. 331 (in which case the constitution of Missouri states that a countjr, city, or town shall not be authorized to become a stockholder, etc., unless two-thirds of the qualified voters of such county, city, or town, etc.); Hawkins v. Board, 50 Miss. 735. The same provision is in the constitution of Mississippi (article 12, section 14). (Cocke v. Gooch, 5 Heisk. 310.) “No part of a county shall be taken off without the consent of two-thirds of the qualified voters in such part.” (Tenn. Const., art. 10, sec. 4; Duke v. Brown, 96 N. C. 127, 1 S. E. 873.) Same provision in the constitution of North Carolina, article 7, section 7. These decisions are not in point, for the provisions in the various constitutions are all of the second class, as quoted above, and are radically different from our own provision in section 1, article 20. The decisions are instructive, however, as indicating the trend of the opinions held by the various courts of the country upon this subject. Of precisely the same tenor is the constitution of Illinois, as quoted in People v. Brown, 11 Ill. 478. Also statute of Illinois, as construed in Chestnutwood v. Hood, 68 Ill. 132. It required a “majority of all the legal voters of the county.” In People v. Town of Berkeley, 102 Cal. 298, 36 Pac. 591, also, the constitution required, in terms, a “majority of the electors voting at a general election.” It would manifestly be a bootless, and certainly a very monotonous, undertaking, to follow through all the decisions upon a precisely similar provision of statutes and constitutions. They' are substantially the same.
*140The third class are those which require a majority vote in. the affirmative, without the specifications attached to the other classes. In this class the term “plurality of votes” is spoken of as being sufficient or insufficient to adopt a constitutional amendment, both in brief of defendant and in some of the decisions of the courts. The term must have been used inadvertently, as there can be no plurality of votes unless there' are three or more candidates, or three ways of voting upon a proposition, as a plurality is the number of votes received by one candidate, in excess of those' received by either one of two or more other candidates, and not a majority over both. There can be no plurality where there are but two candidates, or but two ways of voting on a proposition, as upon a constitutional amendment. Section 2 of article 18 of the constitution of Idaho requires two-thirds of the qualified electors of a county, voting on the proposition at a general election in favor of removal, to remove a county seat. Section 3 of article 18, relating to the division of counties, requires a majority of the qualified electors of the territory proposed to be cut off voting on the proposition ¿t a general election to divide a county. Section 3 of article 20 (the next section of the same article), in which is the provision under discussion, requires, in order to call a convention to revise or amend the constitution, that “a majority of all the electors voting at said election shall have voted for such convention, at the next general election.”' Evidently, it was not the intention of the framers of the constitution to require either one of these conditions to secure an amendment to the constitution. If it had been, they would have so expressed it, and at a time when the different methods of making the constitution were fresh in their minds; but they did not do so, and therefore we must conclude they did not intend it. It may be said, however, that if they had intended that only the votes cast for and against this amendment should be considered, they would have so expressed it, as in section 9 of article 7, in section 1 of article 8, and section 2 of article 10. While they have not used the same words in sections 1 and 2 of article 20, we contend they have substantially said so. Section 2 of article 20 provides that, “if two or more amendments are proposed, they shall be submitted in such manner *141that the electors shall vote ior or against each of them separately.” Here is a positive direction that the elector shall vote either for or against the proposition. This is followed by the statute (1st Sess. Laws, sec. 57, p. 75), providing that, when the question of a constitutional amendment is to be submitted to the people, a space of half an inch shall be left opposite the words “Yes” and “No,” printed upon the ballot, on which the voter is to make a cross opposite the answer he desires to make. This was followed by an amended section ■57, page 95, of 3d Session Laws of Idaho, in which it is- provided that a circle half an inch in diameter shall “he made opposite the words “Yes” and “No,” when the same or a similar question is to be submitted, in which the voter is to make ■a cross opposite the answer he desires to make.
In Senate Joint Besolution No. 2, approved January 21, 1895, the same legislature provided that the following question shall be submitted to the electors of the state: “Shall section 2 of article 6 of the constitution be so amended as to extend to women the equal right of suffrage?” In accordance with the constitution and the statute, the question was submitted with the words “Yes” and “No” printed in separate spaces, with a circle of the required size opposite each, in one of which each voter who desired to express an opinion on the question was required to make a cross. Why should the constitution and two different legislatures provide that those who desired to vote against the proposition should make a cross •opposite the word “No” if these votes were not to be counted, and why should they be counted if all those who did not vote at all were to be counted as having voted “No”? There is no answer. The constitution and the statutes say: “All you electors who believe that equal right of suffrage should be extended to women stand up and be counted.” Twelve thousand •one hundred and twenty-six voters stand up, and are counted m the affirmative. The constitution and statutes say with equal distinctness: “All you qualified electors who believe that the equal right of suffrage should not be extended to women stand up and be counted.” Six thousand two hundred and eighty-two stand up and are counted. Eighteen thousand tour hundred and eight votes in all cast upon the question. *142But, say the defendants, there were about ten thousand qualified voters in the state who did not vote at all on the question, that should be counted, as having voted “No.” Why should they be counted in the negative ? The constitution does not require it, neither do the statutes. These electors either-have no opinion on the subject, or they have none that they care to express. Why should they be counted as having voted in the negative, when they did not vote at all on the subject? There is absolutely no reason, unless the constitution or the statutes require it, and we have seen they do not.
The supreme court of Maryland, in Walker v. Oswald, 68 Md. 146, 11 Atl. 711, in construing an act of submission of the question of high license to the voters of a county, wherein it is provided that the act shall take effect if a majority of the voters of said county shall determine by their ballots in its favor, holds that those voters absenting themselves, and those who, being present, abstain from voting, are considered as having acquiesced in the result, and that the measure is adopted if it receives a majority of those voting upon it, even though it fail to receive a majority of the votes cast upon some other subject. (Cass Co. v. Johnston, 95 U. S. 369.) The supreme court of Minnesota, in Dayton v. City of St. Paul, 22 Minn. 400, construes the following provision of the constitution of the state: “And if it shall appear in a manner provided by law that a majority of the voters present and voting shall have ratified such alterations or amendments, the same shall be valid to all intents and purposes as a part of the constitution.” The court declares that “the amendment is ratified if it receives a majority of all the votes upon it, although not a majority of the votes cast at the election.” The court says further that “it is the general rule in affairs of government that an election or a voting, whenever called for, is to be determined by the votes of those who vote to fill the office which is to be filled, or for or against the proposition which is to be adopted or rejected, and not by counting on either side those who do not vote at all.” And this, in my opinion, is the true rule, as those who express no opinion should not be counted as having expressed any on either side.. This is a government by the people who have opinions, and. *143are wilbng to express them. [Representatives are elected both in Congress and the legislature. Officers are elected, constitutions are framed, and laws enacted, and, of right, ought to be, by these men, and by these only. (See, also, Taylor v. Taylor, 10 Minn. 107 (Gil. 81). In Stale v. Barnes, 3 N. Dak. 319, 55 N. W. 883, the court says: “Congress passed an enabling act permitting North Dakota to call a convention, formulate a constitution, submit it to the people, at the same time submit separate articles which required for their adoption a majority of the legal votes cast.'” The supreme court held that an article which was submitted under this clause, and received a majority of the votes cast upon this question, was adopted, although it did not receive a majority of the votes cast for governor. The language is much stronger than in the case at bar. In People v. Clute, 50 N. Y. 461, 10 Am. Eep. 508, the court says: “It is the theory and practice of our government that a minority of the whole body of qualified electors may elect to an office when a majority of that body refuse or decline to vote for anyone for that office. Those who are absent from the polls, in theory and practical result are assumed to assent to the action of those who go to the polls; and those who go to the polls,- and do not vote for any candidate for an office [that express no opinion], are bound by the result of the action of those who do; and he who receives the highest number of earnest, valid ballots is the one chosen to the office.” The supreme court of Kansas, in Board, v. Winkley, 29 Kan. 36, says that “at a general election for county or township officers, if a majority of the votes east are for a bounty for the growing of hedges, the county commissioners shall declare the law to be in full force and effect.” Held, that if a majority of the votes cast upon that question are for the proposition, it is legally adopted, notwithstanding it failed to receive a majority of all the votes cast at the election for township officers. In the case of St. Joseph Tp. v. Rogers, supra, the thirteenth section of the act then under consideration provided that where elections may have already been held, and a majority of the legal voters of any township or incorporated town were in favor of the proposition, then, etc. It will be noticed that this language is much strong t *144than the language under discussion in this cause; as in section 1, article 20 of the constitution, the language is that if a majority of the electors shall ratify the same, it shall become a part of the constitution, etc.; and in the above cause (St. Joseph Tp. v. Rogers), the court hold that a majority of the legal voters of the township voting at the election was sufficient to authorize the subscription, although all the voters voting on both sides were together but a minority of all the legal voters of the township. In People v. Warfield, 20 Ill. 165, the court further says: “If we go beyond this, and inquire whether there are other voters of the county who were detained from the election by absence or sickness, or voluntarily absented themselves from the polls, we should introduce an interminable inquiry, and invite contest in elections of the most harassing and baneful character, if we did not destroy all the practical benefits of laws passed under those provisions of the constitution.”
Here, then, are a number of decisions which declare that, when a constitution or statute declares that a proposition requires a majority or two-thirds of all the voters of a given locality, such provision is satisfied if the proposition receives a majority or two-thirds, as the case may be, of all those voting, taking no account whatever of those, be the number large ■or small, who fail to vote. It is admitted that if a special election was authorized and held on this question, and it appeared that three thousand votes or a less number were cast for the proposition, and one thousand five hundred against it, it would be legally adopted. This is a distinction without a •difference, as in this case the amendment is voted on separately, precisely the same as it would be if no other question was presented, or no officers were to be elected, and the vote taken and reported to the canvassers separately in the same way it would have been had this been the only question before the electors for their decision.
To' recapitulate, then: Neither the constitution nor the statutes require either a majority of all the qualified voters of -the state, or a majority of all the votes cast at the election. It is clear that the decided weight of authority in such cases is that the proposition is decided in the affirmative if it re*145'•ceives a majority of all the votes cast upon the question. By many of the courts it is considered that those who absent themselves from the polls, or, being present, do not vote upon the question, assent to the will of the majority who do vote npon the question. By this court it is held that those who have no opinion on the subject, or none that they care to express, not having voted on either side of the question, should not be counted upon either side. As to this question they ®re not qualified voters.
For the reasons stated, I concur with opinion expressed by Mr. Justice Huston.