People ex rel. Orman v. Riley
People ex rel. Orman v. Riley
Opinion of the Court
Field, C. J. and Cope, J. concurring.
This was a contest for the office of Sheriff. The only point we think it necessary to notice, is the objection to the admission of a muster roll offered, to show that some contested votes given at one of the precincts of the county, were given by soldiers of the United States army stationed there. The mere fact that the men voting were soldiers of the United States army, did not disqualify them from voting. But they were not entitled to vote unless citizens of this State and of the county for the required period before the election; and a mere residence, or sojourn in the county in this capacity, does not make them citizens, or prove them to be such. The rule, as fixed by the Constitution is, that the fact of such sojourn or residence as soldiers, neither creates nor destroys citizenship—leaving the political status of the soldier where it was before.
But the proposed proof was not admissible. The muster roll was a
It seems to us that the proof that these men were soldiers, and not citizens of the county, is very simple. It could, we presume, be easily shown that these men came into the county as soldiers, and that they have been since acting as such, and that they were not citizens of the county before; and thus the presumption would arise that they were not legal voters. But the burden of this proof rests upon the party contesting their right to vote.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- PEOPLE ex rel. ORMAN v. RILEY
- Cited By
- 2 cases
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- Syllabus
- The mere fact that a man is a soldier in the United States army, does not disqualify him from voting in this State. But he cannot vote unless he has been a citizen of the State and of the county in which he votes, for the constitutional period. And a mere residence or sojourn in the county as a soldier, does not make him a citizen, or prove him to be such. The rule, as fixed by the Constitution, is that the fact of such sojourn or residence as a soldier, neither creates nor destroys citizenship—leaving the political status of the soldier where it was before. A copy of a copy of a muster roll of United States soldiers is not admissible in evidence to prove a man to be a soldier. Where the right of a United States soldier to vote is contested, the burden of proof is upon the contestant.