White v. Commissioners of Multnomah County

Thayer, J.

(dissenting). The appellant filed a complaint in the court below to restrain the respondents, as county judge and commissioners of said county, from auditing and allowing certain bills against their county *326incurred in the exception of the law known as the “Registry Law,” claiming that said law was unconstitutional, and that, unless restrained, the respondent would audit and allow claims to the amount of several hundred dollars of such bills. The complaint alleged that the appellant was a citizen of, and a legal voter and tax-payer in, said county and state, and that the execution of said law as threatened by the respondents would prove of great injury to the public and to the appellant. The respondents filed a demurrer to the complaint? which was pro forma sustained by the court, and the appeal is taken from the decision thereon.

It is apparent that the suit was begun for the purpose of obtaining the opinion of this court as to the validity of said law. Counsel upon both sides seemed to be conscious at the hearing that the court might view the matter in that light, and were particular to insist that the court had full cognizance of the case; but it seems to me that if we attempt to consider its constitutionality under these proceedings our determination would be extrajudicial. This court ought not to pass upon so important a question unless the litigation is genuine, and the plaintiff in the suit shows, by his allegations, that he has a right to have it decided. He should allege facts showing that he was liable to suffer a special injury, and that he was entitled to invoke an equitable remedy to prevent it. The question of the legality of the act known as the “Registry Law” is of great importance to the people of the state, yet I cannot reconcile myself to the notion that we should undertake to determine it unless a proper case is presented for our consideration. I cannot perceive that the appellant has any standing to raise the question. He is one of the public, it is true, and a tax-payer, but the execution of the act referred to will not affect him any more than any other tax-payer. If he wants to test *327the legality of it, he can do so, probably, by neglecting to register in accordance with its provisions, and offering his vote on election day. Then, if the judges refuse to receive his vote, he can maintain an action against them for such refusal, provided the registration act is unconstitutional. Whether it is unconstitutional or not depends upon whether it is inconsistent with the privileges secured by the constitution to the citizens. The constitution of the state provides fully the qualifications for voters.

In all elections not otherwise provided for by this -constitution, every male citizen of the United States, of the age of twenty-one years and upwards, who shall have resided in the state during the six months immediately preceding such election, and every male of foreign birth, •of the age of twenty-one years and upwards, who shall have resided in this state during the six months immediately preceding such election, conformably to the laws •of the United States on the subject of naturalization, shall be entitled to vote at all elections authorized by law.” (Const., sec. 2, art. 1.)

And section 17, article 2, of that instrument, provides where they shall vote, viz.:

“ In the election precinct in the county in which they may reside, for county officers, and in any county in the state, for state officers, or in any county of a congressional district in which such elector may reside, for members of congress.”

The legislature cannot add any other or different qualifications than these; but it is required to enact laws to support the privilege of free suffrage; prescribe the manner of regulating and conducting elections; and prohibit, under adequate penalties, all undue influence therein from power, bribery, tumult, and other improper conduct. (Const., sec. 8, art. 2.) And counsel for the appellant make no question in this case but *328that the legislature has the right to adopt a registry law for the purpose of ascertaining the qualifications of persons claiming the right to vote, but- they object to this act or acts (there are three or four of them, including amendments), for the following reasons: 1. The act impairs the right of suffrage; 2. The act is an unreasonable exercise of the power to regulate the elective franchise; 3. The act destroys the right of suffrage, and-absolutely denies the right to an unknown number of legal voters; 4. The act provides for and requires political tests as qualifications for the officers who execute the law; 5. The act prohibits any elector from voting any ballot except one obtained from a committee of a political party, and punishes, in effect, the independent or non-partisan voter; 6. The act, in effect, prohibits the supervisory control over congressional elections provided for by sections 2005, 2011-2014, 2016-2019, 2021, et seq., N. S. U. S., and in effect denies to citizens of the United States privileges and immunities conferred by these laws.

The attempt to adopt any law upon the subject seems to have been attended by a series of blunders. The main act, which was approved February 24, 1885, provided for holding a general election on the first Monday of June, 1885, and made it the duty of the judges and clerks of the election to meet at the usual place of voting in their precinct on the first Monday in March preceding each general election for the purpose of registering ‘'voters” in said precinct. It was afterwards discovered that the general election could not be had until the first Monday in June of 1886. A special session of the legislature was convened to correct it, and for other purposes, and an amendment, approved November 24, 1885, was adopted to cure theerror. Subsequently, the legislature adopted another amendment, approved November 25> *3291885, in which it was provided that the judges and clerks of election should meet on the first Monday in April preceding each general election for the purpose of registering “votes,” and amending the original act in other particulars. Thereafter, and on the thirtieth of November, 1885, the legislature adopted a sort of supplemental act, entitled “An act for a uniform system of books and certificates, to be used in the registration of voters and elections, as laid down in an act entitled,” etc., including the title of the original act, approved February 24, 1885, which contained rules and .instructions for judges and clerks of election; but in providing therefor, it was provided that on the first Monday in March preceding each general election the judges and clerks should meet for the registration of voters. This provision, however, related to the instruction that should be contained in a certain book calléd “ The Precinct Register.”

By a close inspection of the act, it will, I think, be discovered that the legislature did not intend to change the time for the meeting of the judges and clerks back to the first Monday of March, but it provided an instruction which would require them to meet at the latter time-It was evidently a mistake in that respect. The intention of the legislature, no doubt, was to have the instruction conform to the act as amended November 25, 1885. It is a misfortune that the effort to adopt so commendable a law should have been attended with so many mishaps, as they tend very much to prejudice it with the-community, and deprive it of that support so essential to the maintenance of legislative enactments.

The main grounds upon which the act is claimed to-be unconstitutional are that the length of time allowed voters in which to register is unreasonably short, and that there is no provision for allowing voters to vote for *330state officers and members of congress outside of the precinct in which they reside. The amended act of November 25,1885, provides that the judges of election shall ■organize by electing one of-their number as chairman; that they shall meet at nine o’clock in the forenoon, and ■continue until five o’clock in the afternoon; that they may adjourn one hour at noon; that they shall continue ■said session for three days. Section 13 of the original ;act provides that in case of sickness or absence from the precinct, etc., of any qualified elector during the time the judges are sitting to register voters, such elector may .apply to the chairman of the board of judges; and on making satisfactory proof that the said applicant is a qualified voter of said precinct, and that said applicant was sick or necessarily absent from skid precinct during the time said board was sitting to register voters, the .said chairman may register the name of the applicant on the register in his possession, and issue to him the required certificate; but such application, by section 14 of the act as amended, cannot be made after the twenty-fifth day of April preceding the general election.

It is contended that the regulation is not reasonable, because the right to register is not continued until the ■day of the election. I suppose the legislature deemed the three days’ session of the board as sufficiently long to enable the voters in the precinct to register, and that the provision for those who were sick, or absent therefrom, as ample time to enable them to do so, and conceding that the legislature has the right to require such registration prior to the time of the election, it has the right to judge as to what would be a reasonable time for the purpose. Whether it has judged correctly or not will be ascertained by the practical working of the law. A person would naturally suppose that the voters of a precinct could all register in three days as well as all vote in one. *331They certainly would do so if they attached that importance to the elective franchise that good citizens should. This law will doubtless subject many citizens to considerable inconvenience, but they had much better submit to that than' have their voice stifled by the admission to the privilege of a horde of lawless mercenaries and repeaters. The citizen’s duty is not fully discharged when he has deposited his ballot; he should attend to it that no spurious or illegal vote counteracting the effect of his own be cast. Elections are but a travesty where every vagabond may vote without restraint. It is no privilege to vote when an irresponsible wretch can be imported to vote, or hired to repeat his vote. Elections may as well be turned over to the hoodlum element of the community to manage and control, if citizens are unwilling and refuse to submit to the inconvenience a registry law imposes.

The reasoning of the court in Daggett v. Hudson, 3 N. E. Rep. 538, to my mind, is puerile. It is to the effect that the legislature may adopt a registry act, but it must not incommode the legal voter. The steamboat man, the student, and the commercial traveler must not be required to attend and have his name registered as a voter prior to the time of exercising the right to vote, for the reason, in effect, that the steamboat might lose a trip, the student a lesson, and the commercial traveler the opportunity of making a sale of merchandise to- a customer, the consequences of which, according to such logic, would outweigh the necessity of preserving the purity of the ballot-box and the efficiency of government. If any one is able to discover a hardship in requiring a citizen to attend once in two years at the polling-place in the precinct where he resides to be registered as a voter, and that a regulation is unreasonable which requires him to do that as a prerequisite to his voting at an election, in order to prevent *332fraudulent voting, and elections from becoming a farce, is exceedingly critical. That it is an inconvenience no one will deny; but who would not endure that in preference to having elections, at which persons are selected to administer the affairs of the government, made a mockery and be the subject of ridicule? The claim that the right to register should be continued down to the day of voting, in order to make the regulation reasonable, would destroy the whole efficiency of it. There is an object and purpose in such a law. It is intended to prevent illegal voting. This cannot be accomplished unless the names of voters are enrolled a length of time' before the election, so that they can be inspected, and it be ascertained whether they have the requisite, qualifications or not. If it is left until the day of the election, when they can rush in pell-mell, and roll under their tongue “ as a sweet morsel ” a false oath regarding their qualifications as an elector, it would be an idle, useless performance, and the community would be as well off without it.

There are some provisions in the act which require construction. The form of oath, when a voter is challenged, should be adapted to the circumstances under which the vote is offered. The legislature did not, evidently, intend that the voter should swear that he was a resident of the county and precinct where he offered his vote when, he only proposes to vote for state officers or congressman, and the requirement that he has been for the last ninety days an actual resident of the county cannot be enforced at all. The constitution makes no provision that the voter.,should have been a resident in the county for the ninety days. It requires that he shall vote in the election precinct in the county in which he resides for county officers. This ninety-day provision, however, was in the old law, and the legislature has continued it in this. It is an extra requirement that cannot *333be enforced, but does not affect the validity of the new law any more than it did the old one.

Counsel for the appellant seemed to imagine that there were many features in the law that would operate oppressively. But I fail to discover how they are liable to, with a fair and intelligent administration of its provisions. It has just come from the hands of the legislature —has not been tried, nor should thus early b.e condemned. If the people will take hold of it as patriotic citizens ought to of a measure that so vitally concerns their welfare, it will, I believe, be found to be a great blessing. The system of fraudulent voting that has been inaugurated in some parts of this state, and affects every part of it, is as certain to retard and ruin its prosperity as vice is certain to result in misery. It is the violation of the moral law;' and that it will be attended with fearful consequences is as sure as the violation of the organic law is to produce disease and death.

The appellant has attempted to impose upon the court a very delicate duty. He asks the court to determine that the act of a co-ordinate branch of the government is a nullity. This ought never to be done unless the legislature has clearly overstepped its authority. It would certainly present an anomalous condition of affairs if the relief sought herein were granted. Representatives chosen by the people, constituting the legislative branch of the government, meet at the capitol of the state in February, 1885, and enact a form of law to ascertain the qualification of persons claiming to be electors, and requiring the names of those found to possess the requisite qualification to be registered, and a certificate issued to them that they are qualified to vote. The act is duly approved by the governor of the state, but it is subsequently observed that in consequence of some clerical error, perhaps, the act will be ineffectual. The legislature *334is again convened, and proceeds by amendment to perfect it. Tbe amendments are also approved by tbe governor, and included among the laws of the state. But before the time has arrived for the execution of any of its material provisions, and before the ink with which it was written has fairly dried, parties rush into court to have it nullified. The courts have important functions to perform, but they are not autocratic tribunals. They have no authority to say to the people that they shall not have the benefit of a law their representatives have made for them, presumably in accordance with their wishes. Courts are instituted to administer the law, not to unmake it. They may question its validity when it infringes upon the right of a person which they are called upon in a suitable proceeding to protect. The legality of any enactment may be drawn in question incidentally, but it would be highly improper for them to attempt to exercise a veto power upon legislative proceedings. That would be as unconstitutional as the legislative enactment could possibly be.

In Patterson v. Barlow, 60 Pa. St. 54, a similar question was brought before that court by a suit similar to the one in this case. Judge Agnew, in delivering the opinion of the court, said that the defendants denied the standing of the plaintiffs as proper parties, and the jurisdiction of the court over the subject; but that in view of the danger to the peace and quiet of the people if the constitutionality of the law should be left in uncertainty, the court would pass by the question of standing and jurisdiction in order to reach the all-important one upon the validity of the law. The learned judge suggested, however, that in passing them by the court did not mean it to be inferred that it had not grave doubts of the right of the .plaintiffs to represent the public, and of its own jurisdiction to enjoin against one of the *335political systems of the state in its entire scope because-of the invalidity of some of its provisions; that the court doubted the right of the plaintiffs to call for an injunction beyond that portion of the law which they, as private citizens, could show to be injurious to their own rights; and that it was more than doubtful how far, as private citizens, they could impugn the law in its public-aspects, and ask the court to restrain its execution on public grounds; that the system there referred to was-the only one to regulate elections intended by the legislature to be left in force, all laws supplied by it, and all inconsistent with it, being expressly repealed. It was further suggested that if the court, as a court of equity,, could lay its hands on the whole system because of the-illegality of some of its parts, it could, on the eve of any election, arrest the entire political machinery of the-commonwealth which is set in motion by a general-election.

In view of the said suggestions, the opinion of the-court regarding the merits of the case must have been ex gratia, and such necessarily will be the character of' any opinion as to the validity of the act in question we may express in this case. There is no party before the court who has the right to require us to determine as torts validity. What relief could a court of equity grant, the appéllant in his suit? What “bills” would it interdict the County Court from auditing? What restrain could it place upon that tribunal? What functions would it decree should not be exercised by the county judge and commissioners sitting to transact county business? Should it say to them that a certain enactment of the legislative assembly was void, and inhibit them from administering its provisions? A common-law writ of prohibition could not have been sued out for any such purpose. It could only be resorted to against judicial. *336encroachments. It lay to prevent inferior courts from exceeding their jurisdiction. An injunction may be granted to restrain the unlawful acts of public officers when they would produce irreparable injury, or create a cloud upon title, or when such remedy is necessary to prevent a multiplicity of suits. Upon those grounds the imposition or enforcement of illegal taxes may be enjoined at the suit of a tax-payer. There, however, the party’s estate is directly affected. The immediate object of the act is to impose a charge upon it. School laws, highway laws, laws incorporating towns, and police laws, generally, have the effect to create a public expense; but who ever supposed that a party, because he was liable to be affected thereby, could have the officers charged with the execution of such laws enjoined from enforcing their provisions upon the grounds of their supposed invalidity? If such a rule is to obtain, it ought to be extended far enough to include the legislature itself.

I am of the opinion that the registry act in question is not unconstitutional; that the legislature has power to provide the mode it has in order to ascertain who are qualified electors under the constitution; and that the provisions of the act are not so unreasonable as necessarily to deprive voters from the exercise of the right of suffrage; but I do not consider my opinion in the case, in the condition it is before the court, as any more authoritative than if it were delivered on the street informally. I do not believe that a citizen at large can require the courts to inquire into the constitutionality of a legislative enactment until he is hurt by it, or there, is imminent danger of his receiving special injury from its threatened enforcement.

The complaint herein should be dismissed.