Wolcott v. Holcomb

Grant, J.

The principal question presented in this case is whether the inmates of the Soldiers’ Home, situated in the township of Grand Bapids, in Kent county, are entitled to vote in that township. Section 5, art. 7, of the Constitution, reads as follows:

“No elector shall be deemed to hare gained or lost a residence by reason of his being employed in the service of the United States, or of this State; * * * nor while a student of any - seminary of learning; nor while kept at any alms-house or other asylum at public expense; nor while confined in any public prison.”

The Soldiers’ Home was erected under Act No. 1.52, Laws of 1885 (3 How. Stat. § 1984« et seq.), entitled “An act to authorize the establishment of a home for disabled soldiers, sailors, and marines in the State of Michigan.” By the act, $100,000 was appropriated from the genera; fund in the State treasury for its erection and equipment, and $50,000 for the purpose of maintaining it for the years 1885 and 1886. It has since been supported by 'annual appropriations made by the Legislature. Section 11 of the act, as amended by Act No. 44, Laws of 1891, provides the conditions for admission to the home, which are as follows: All applicants must be honorably discharged soldiers, sailors, or marines, who served in the army or navy of the United States in the war of the rebellion or in the Mexican war; they must be disabled by disease, wounds, or otherwise; must have no adequate means of support; must be incapable of earning their living, and otherwise dependent upon public or private charity. The board of managers is, by the same section, empowered to adopt rules and regulations to govern the admission of applicants. Among the rules adopted by the board for such admissions is one *363requiring the applicant to show .by satisfactory evidence “that he has no relatives of sufficient ability to maintain him, who are legally liable for his support under the laws of the State of Michigan.” Another rule provides that he must produce “the certificate of the supervisor of the township or ward in which the applicant resides, the county clerk or judge of probate of the county in which the applicant resides, or any member of the board of managers, that he has carefully examined the proofs; that, to the best of his knowledge and belief, they are true and satisfactory to him; and that the applicant is a proper person for admission.” The act further provides that no applicant shall be admitted who has not been a resident of the State for one year next preceding the date of the passage of the act, unless he served in a Michigan regiment or was accredited' to the State of Michigan.

Uriah Carpenter, the inmate of the home whose right to vote is here in question, was at the timé of his application and admission, in 1887, a resident of the township of Woodstock, in Lenawee county. In his application he made affidavit that he was a resident of that township, and upon it is indorsed the certificate of the supervisor that he was then an “actual resident” thereof. His vote was challenged and rejected on the ground that he was not an elector in the township of Grand Kapids,

The Soldiers' Home is purely eleemosynary ih character. To hold otherwise would be contrary to sound legal principle and good sense. The title to the act shows it. It is not the character of the beneficiaries, nor the cause of their inability to earn a living, nor the reason for granting the bounty, which determines whether such an institution is charitable in its character. An institution established and maintained for the support of indigent persons who became blind or deaf in the service of their *364country or State is as much eleemosynary as one established for the support of those who were born blind or deaf, or who have become so from other causes. All institutions in this State, established, and maintained at the public expense, for the care, education, and support of the unfortunate, belong to this class of institutions, and are included in the term “ asylum," used in the above clause of the Constitution. It is immaterial whether they are called schools, retreats, homes, or asylums. It is equally immaterial what the feeling is which prompts their erection and maintenance. An “asylum" is defined by Webster to be “an institution for the protection or relief of the unfortunate." Such is its meaning as used in the Constitution. It follows that one’s entry and residence in such an institution partake of the same character as the institution itself, and are likewise eleemosynary in character. One entering them cannot, under the Constitution, gain or lose his residence. Inmates of the home enter it for one purpose only, and the Constitution solemnly and clearly declares that their status as to residence when they enter must control while they remain there. When Mr. Carpenter entered the home, he was a legal resident of the township of Woodstock. He entered the home upon his own application, solely as a beneficiary, and a resident of that township, to accept a well-bestowed and deserving charity. He did not by this act lose his residence there, and his intent is wholly immaterial. To permit his intent to control would result in the practical annulment of this provision of the Constitution. The mischief intended to be avoided is as apparent in this ease as in any. The inmates of the home own no property, pay no local taxes, do no work in or for the benefit of the municipality, and have no pecuniary interest in its local affairs. In fact, they have no connection with, and stand in no relation to, the local *365municipal government. They occupy State property, and are exclusively under the control and management of the State.

This provision of our Constitution was evidently copied from that of New York, for the two are nearly identical in language. The court of appeals of that state, in an opinion concurred in by the entire court, held that tire inmates of the soldiers home of that state were not entitled to vote in the municipality where the home was" located. Silvey v. Lindsay, 107 N. Y. 55. The facts in that case and in this are substantially identical. After stating the facts, the court say:

“These reasons satisfied the conscience of the plaintiff [the inmate], and enabled him to say he was a resident of Rath, but in reality they bring the case within the prohibition of the constitution. He could not gain a residence by being an inmate, which means nothing more than his presence in the home; and, excluding that, there is nothing in the case to show that a residence in Bath. had been acquired. It follows that he has not lost the right to vote in the place of his legal residence, — New York. * * * As to that city, he is to be regarded as temporarily absent, and his residence as a citizen still therein.
“ We have no doubt that the institution in question is within the purview of the constitutional provision. * * * It is an asylum supported at the public expense, and its members are within the mischief against which that provision is aimed, — the participation'of an unconcerned body of men in the control, through 'the ballot-box, of municipal affairs, in whose further conduct they'have no interest, and from the mismanagement of which by the officers their ballots might elect they sustain no injury."

This language is applicable to the present case, and we. quote it with approval.

But it is insisted that that case still leaves the question open to depend upon the intention of the elector, by reason of the following language:

“But the question in each case is still, as it was before the adoption of the constitution, one of domicile or resi*366dence, to be decided upon all tbe circumstances of the case. The provision (art. 2, § 3) disqualifies no one; confers no right upon any one. It simply eliminates from those circumstances the fact of presence in the institution named or included within its terms. It settles the law as to the effect of such presence, and as to which there had before been a difference of opinion, and declares that it does not constitute a test of a right to vote, and is not to be so regarded. The person offering to vote must find the requisite qualifications elsewhere.”

Mr. Carpenter, as above stated, was a resident and elector in the township of Woodstock, which was then his domicile of citizenship, when he made his application and was admitted to the home. There was no indication in his application of any intention to change his residence for the purpose of voting, or for any other purpose than that for which the home was established. In his complaint against the election inspectors he states that he had always lived with his father prior to his death, in 1887; that he was unmarried; that by the death of his father the home was broken up; that since that time he had had no home with any relative or friend; and “that he always intended, and in fact made, the township of Grand Rapids, and that part of it in which said Soldiers’ Home is located, his home, subsequent to Ms entry therein.” His father was living at the time he'entered the home. If he entered as a resident of Woodstock, and that was then his actual residence, can he gain a new residence while kept in this asylum at public expense, except in violation of this plain provision of the above section? Would not this be losing one residence and gaining another while kept in an asylum at public expense? In the New York case the inmate had been in the home for six years, and swore that it was his intention at all times to make his residence in said institution so long as he should be permitted to do so. Is Mr. Carpenter’s statement in fact any stronger than this? Does he swear to any residence or domicile of citizenship aside from *367that which attached to him as an inmate of the home? That case gives us no light upon the requisite qualifications which must be found 'elsewhere. It determined the one question before the court, and held that one who had been for six years an inmate, and who swore that he intended to remain there the rest of his life if permitted to do so, was not an elector in the township where the home was located. If the inmate was a resident of the township where the home is located at the time of his admission, the requisite qualifications of an elector would be found in that fact, and his right to vote would be undoubted.

We are of the opinion that the terms “by reason of” and “while” were understood by the framers of the Constitution to have a different meaning. In the former case the intention would very largely, if not entirely, govern the question of domicile, while in the latter it would not. It was clearly the intention of the former provision to give the citizen the right, if he chose, to carry his residence with him to the place where he was employed in the service of the United States or of the State, and in the latter case it seems equally clear that it was the intention not to give that right. What object otherwise could there have been in the use of these two terms?

While the results of the adoption of one construction of the fundamental law of the State are not conclusive nor of much force where the construction is otherwise clear, still they are important considerations in determining the intent and purpose of the law. If the construction contended for by the relator be correct, it follows that all the inmates of county alms-houses and of prisons and jails are electors, at their option, in the townships and cities where those institutions are located. In the township of Nankin, in Wayne county, where the alms-house of that county is located, there were, in the year 1891, 1,851 male inmates, more than twice the whole number of voters in the town*368ship. Annual Report of Superintendents of Poor, 1891, p. 11. Furthermore, students in all institutions of learning, although they are in attendance there for the sole purpose of obtaining an education, might, at their own will, become electors in the places where such institutions are located. We think the Constitution prohibits a change of residence under such circumstances, and that, when one's presence in any of the institutions named is due to the sole jrarpose of receiving the benefits conferred, his former residence must be considered his domicile for citizenship.

We are cited to the language of Mr. Justice Campbell in Warren v. Board of Registration, 72 Mich. 401. That language is conceded to be a dictum. It is not, therefore, binding in this case. It has often been said by this and other courts that the language of a decision must be construed with reference to and confined to the facts of that case. The sole question in that case was whether the lodging room or boarding place of the voter should govern. Applied to that question, the language was appropriate, and the reasoning conclusive.

No question of disfranchisement is involved. The inmates of the home are no more disfranchised than were the soldiers when absent from their domiciles and in the army. The people in that case amended their Constitution, providing that they might cast their votes when absent from home in the service of their country. So, in this case the people may amend their Constitution, either making these inmates electors in the township where the home is located, or providing for casting their ballots at the home, to he counted in the township from which they came.

Another question of no little importance is also involved. Are inspectors of election clothed by the law with judicial or only ministerial functions? Have they the right to-reject a ballot when the voter is registered, and tenders the oath prescribed by the statute? Mr. Carpenter was *369registered, took the prescribed oath, and tendered his ballot, which the inspectors refused to receive. Section 24, Act No. 190, Laws of 1891, determines the conditions under which a challenged voter may have his vote received. This section is the same as those in former laws, and was referred to in People v. Cicolt, 16 Mich. 302, where it was said that “the inspectors cannot reject a registered voter who takes the proper oath.” The statute is clearly mandatory. It says that, “if the person so challenged shall take such oath, his vote shall be received.” Inspectors are sometimes partisan and sometimes corrupt, and the clear purpose of the act is to take from them all discretionary and judicial power, and confer upon thém a purely ministerial function. The qualification of the voter is no concern of theirs. Upon taking the oath, his vote must be received. If he swear falsely, the law provides a way to deal with him. Mr. Cooley states the rule as follows:

“ Where, however, by the law under wliich the election is held, the inspectors are to receive the voter’s ballot if he takes the oath that he possesses the constitutional qualifications, the oath is the conclusive evidence on which the inspectors are to act, and they'are not at liberty to refuse to administer the oath, or to refuse the vote after the oath has been taken. They are only ministerial officers in such a case, and have no discretion but to obey the law and receive the vote.” Cooley, Const. Lim. 617.

For this reason it was the duty of the respondent to entertain the complaint, issue a warrant, and proceed to an examination.

The writ must issue.

McGrath and Montgomery, JJ., concurred with Grant, J.