Court Opinion

ID: 9325094
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-13 20:01:55.885002+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:14:59.147723
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

THE HONORABLE ANTHONY J.               §
ALBENCE, in his official capacity as   §
State Election Commissioner, and       §
STATE OF DELAWARE                      §
DEPARTMENT OF ELECTIONS,               §
                                       §
      Defendants Below,                §
      Appellants/Cross-Appellees,      §   No. 342, 2022
                                       §
            v.                         §   Court Below: Court of Chancery
                                       §   of the State of Delaware
MICHAEL HIGGIN and MICHAEL             §
MENNELLA,                              §   C.A. Nos.   2022-0641
                                       §               2022-0644
     Plaintiffs Below,                 §
     Appellees/Cross-Appellants.       §
____________________________

DELAWARE DEPARTMENT                    §
OF ELECTIONS and ANTHONY J.            §
ALBENCE, State Election                §
Commissioner,                          §
                                       §
      Defendants Below,                §
      Appellants,                      §
                                       §
            v.                         §
                                       §
AYONNE “NICK” MILES, PAUL J.           §
FALKOWSKI, and NANCY M.                §
SMITH,                                 §
                                       §
      Plaintiffs Below,                §
      Appellees.                       §

                          Submitted: October 6, 2022
                          Decided:   December 13, 2022
Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, VAUGHN, TRAYNOR, Justices and
JURDEN, President Judge1 constituting the Court en banc.

Upon appeal from the Court of Chancery. AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in
part.

Alexander S. Mackler, Esquire, Allison J. McCowan, Esquire, Zi-Xiang Shen,
Esquire, and Victoria R. Sweeney, Esquire, DELAWARE DEPARTMENT OF
JUSTICE, Wilmington, Delaware, for Appellants/Cross-Appellees The Honorable
Anthony J. Albence and the State of Delaware Department of Elections.

M. Jane Brady, Esquire, BRADY LEGAL GROUP LLC, Lewes, Delaware, for
Appellees/Cross-Appellants Michael Higgin and Michael Mennella.

Charlotte Davis, Esquire and Noel H. Johnson, Esquire, PUBLIC INTEREST
LEGAL FOUNDATION, Indianapolis, Indiana, for Appellee/Cross-Appellant
Michael Mennella.

Julianne E. Murray, Esquire, LAW OFFICE OF MURRAY, PHILLIPS & GAY,
Georgetown, Delaware, for Appellees Ayonee “Nick” Miles, Paul J. Falkowski and
Nancy Smith.

1
 Sitting by designation under Del. Const. art. IV, § 12 and Supreme Court Rules 2(a) and 4(a) to
complete the quorum.
                                               2
TRAYNOR, Justice:

       On July 22, 2022, Governor John C. Carney, Jr., signed into law two pieces

of legislation affecting how the citizens of our State register to vote and cast their

ballots.   Under one bill—what this opinion will refer to as the Same-Day

Registration Statute—the deadline for registering to vote in any presidential primary,

primary, special, and general election was changed from the fourth Saturday before

the date of the election to the day of the election. Under the other bill, the General

Assembly enacted and the Governor approved the addition of a chapter entitled

“Voting by mail ballot” to Title 15 of the Delaware Code, which contains the statutes

governing elections in our State. This new chapter, which we will call the Vote-by-

Mail Statute, and which applies to non-presidential primary, special, and general

elections, authorized2 all Delaware voters to cast their ballots by mail whether or not

they are able to appear at a polling place.

       On the very day the Governor approved the bills, two lawsuits were filed

challenging the constitutionality of both enactments under various sections of Article

V of the Delaware Constitution. Two sections are relevant to this appeal. Section 4

addresses voter registration and, among other things, directs the General Assembly

2
 Our choice of tense throughout this opinion takes into account that we announced our unanimous
decision in an Order entered on October 7, 2022, two months before the issuance of this opinion.
                                               3
to “enact uniform laws for the registration of voters in this State.” It also calls for

establishing “at least two registration days” within a window preceding each general

election—a window that is to close no less than ten days before the election. Section

4A is entitled “General laws for absentee voting” and, as its name suggests, requires

the General Assembly to enact laws providing that citizens who are unable to appear

in person at their regular polling place for a general election for certain specified

reasons may nonetheless cast a ballot, presumably by mail.

       The Plaintiffs sought declaratory and injunctive relief in the Court of

Chancery, contending that the Same-Day Registration Statute conflicts with Section

4, while the Vote-by-Mail Statute runs afoul of Section 4A. The Defendants—the

Department of Elections and the State Election Commissioner3—responded that the

Plaintiffs—voters, a candidate for political office, and an election inspector—lacked

standing to challenge the laws but that, even if they had standing, the laws were

within the General Assembly’s plenary power to enact and therefore valid. Because

the general election was set for November 8, 2022, and the Department hoped to

mail ballots to potential voters by October 10, 2022, litigation in the Court of

Chancery was expedited.

3
 In this Opinion, the Department of Elections and the State Election Commissioner will be referred
to together as the “Department.”
                                                4
         In an opinion issued two weeks after oral argument on the parties’ cross-

motions for summary judgment, the Court of Chancery rejected the Defendants’

standing argument, but upheld the validity of the Same-Day Registration Statute,

citing “the strong presumption of constitutionality [] and the advisability of keeping

the existing statutory scheme harmonious.”4 The court, however, invalidated the

Vote-by-Mail Statute, not because it found clear and convincing evidence of an

express or implied prohibition of voting by mail in the Constitution, but because it

felt constrained by three relevant precedents—one by this Court, another by three

Justices of this Court in an advisory opinion, and the other by the erstwhile Court of

General Sessions. Obviously unpersuaded by those opinions, the Court of Chancery

invited this Court to revisit them, and the Defendants joined in the invitation by

promptly appealing. For their part, the Plaintiffs cross-appealed, claiming that the

Court of Chancery’s rejection of their challenge to the Same-Day Registration

Statute was erroneous. Like the Court of Chancery, we agreed to expedite

proceedings in this Court.

         After expedited briefing and oral argument in this Court, we first determined

that one of the Plaintiffs, who was participating as a candidate for State

Representative in the impending election, had standing to challenge both statutes.

4
    Higgin v. Albence, 2022 WL 4239590, at *19 (Del. Ch. Sept. 14, 2022).
                                                5
We then entered an order announcing our unanimous conclusion that neither of the

newly enacted laws passes muster under the Delaware Constitution.5 Because of the

press of time, we were unable then to publish a full opinion explaining the reasons

underpinning that conclusion but promised to do so in due course. This opinion

fulfills that promise.

         As will be seen, our analysis of the constitutionality of the Vote-by-Mail

Statute is influenced by the historical context of Section 4A’s adoption and the

longstanding interpretation of its scope. Our analysis of the Same-Day Registration

Statute, on the other hand, is more textually driven, turning in large part on its

discordance with certain procedural provisions mandated by Article V, Section 4.

         The Vote-by-Mail Statute runs counter to a time-honored understanding

shared by our courts, the General Assembly, and the Department, that the General

Assembly is not free to limit or enlarge upon the categories of citizens specifically

enumerated in Section 4A who need not vote in person in general elections. And the

Same-Day Registration Statute effectively eliminated the rights—explicitly granted

in Section 4—of interested persons to appeal “[f]rom the decision of registration

officers granting or refusing registration, or striking or refusing to strike a name or

5
    Albence v. Higgin, 2022 WL 5333790 (Del. Oct. 7, 2022).
                                               6
names from the registration list.”6 The statute would also undermine Section 4’s

provisions allowing for the correction of voter registrations “at any time prior to the

day of holding the election.”7 We therefore affirm in part and reverse in part the

Court of Chancery’s judgment.

                                I.    BACKGROUND

      As we begin our inquiry into whether the challenged election laws are in line

or at odds with Article V of the Delaware Constitution, we take our bearings from

the historical context in which the relevant constitutional provisions were adopted,

interpreted, and, from time to time, amended.

      A. Colonial Period and the Constitution of 1776

      Our state constitutional history dates back to the momentous summer of 1776

following the Continental Congress’s resolution in May of that year urging the

colonies “to adopt such government as shall in the opinion of the representatives of

the people best conduce to the happiness and safety of their constituents in particular

and America in general.”8 Delaware responded by convening thirty delegates—ten

from each county—from among the leaders of Delaware’s colonial government.9

6
  DEL. CONST. art. V, § 4
7
  Id.
8
  RANDY J. HOLLAND, THE DELAWARE STATE CONSTITUTION 7 (2d ed. 2017).
9
  See id. at 7–8.
                                          7
          Before turning to the task of adopting a constitution, however, the Convention

of 1776 adopted the Declaration of Rights and Fundamental Rules of the Delaware

State (enacted September 11, 1776). The Declaration of Rights, which was similar

to bills of rights adopted by Maryland and Pennsylvania, both of whom based their

declaration on Virginia’s historic Declaration of Rights, stressed the importance of

the citizens’ right to vote:

                 SECT. 6. That the right of the people to participate in the
          Legislature, is the foundation of liberty and of all free government, and
          for this end all elections ought to be free and frequent, and every
          freeman, having sufficient evidence of a permanent common interest
          with, and attachment to the community, hath a right of suffrage.10

          Nine days after enacting the Declaration of Rights, the Convention adopted

Delaware’s first state constitution, which declared that “[t]he right of suffrage in the

election of Members for both Houses [of the General Assembly] shall remain as

exercised by law at present . . .” with a “President [] or Chief Magistrate . . . [to] be

chosen by joint ballot of both Houses.”11

          The historical record shows that, during the colonial era—that is, the period

preceding the adoption of the Constitution of 1776—in-person voting was required.

Under a 1700 “Act for regulating elections, and ascertaining the number of the

10
     Del. Declaration of Rights § 6 (1776).
11
     DEL. CONST. of 1776, art. 5.
                                              8
Members of Assembly”12—a statute enacted for “the well governing . . . of counties

of New-Castle, Kent, and Sussex,” . . . both the date and location of elections for the

Assembly were set:

                 [I]t shall and may be lawful to and for the freemen and
          inhabitants of the respective counties of this government . . . to meet on
          the first day of October yearly, for ever, at the most usual place of
          elections in the said respective counties; that is to say, for the county of
          New-Castle, at the court-house in the town of New-Castle: For the
          county of Kent, at the court-house in the town of Dover: And for the
          county of Sussex, at the court-house in the town of Lewes: . . . And
          then and there chuse their Representative or Delegates to serve them in
          Assembly . . . . And that every person within this government, qualified
          to elect according to the direction of this act, refusing or neglecting (not
          being hindered by sickness or other unavoidable accident) to attend at
          the election, and to give in his vote ... shall be fined the sum of Twenty
          Shillings . . . .13

          Thus, the Act not only designated the date and locations of the annual

elections, it mandated the personal attendance of all eligible voters unless excused

by illness or accident.

          That the framers of the 1776 Constitution intended to perpetuate the in-person

voting requirements is further evidenced by Articles 27 and 28 of the document.

Article 27, for instance, echoing the 1700 Act, stipulates that “[t]he first election for

the General Assembly of this state shall be held on the twenty-first day of October

12
     1 Del. Laws ch. LXI. a., 146.
13
     Id. at 147 (emphases added).
                                               9
next, at the Court Houses in the several counties, in the manner heretofore used in

the election of the Assembly . . . .”14 And Article 28 could hardly be more evocative

of an electoral process that envisions voters appearing in person to cast their votes:

              ART. 28. To prevent any violence or force being used at the said
       elections, no persons shall come armed to any of them; and no muster
       of the militia shall be made on that day, nor shall any battalion or
       company give in their votes immediately succeeding each other, if any
       other voter who offers to vote objects thereto; nor shall any battalion or
       company in the pay of the Continent, or of this or any other state, be
       suffered to remain at the time and place of holding the said elections,
       nor within one mile of the said places respectively for twenty-four hours
       before the opening said elections, nor within twenty-four hours after the
       same are closed, so as in any manner to impede the freely and
       conveniently carrying on the said election: Provided always, That
       every elector may in a peaceable and orderly manner give in his vote
       on the said day of election.15

Thus, at the founding of “The Delaware State,”16 our constitution required voters to

cast their ballots in person.

       B. The Constitution of 1792

       The Constitution of 1776, like the federal Articles of Confederation, was short

lived. In the wake of the adoption of the United States Constitution—ratified first

14
   DEL. CONST. of 1776, art. 27 (emphasis added).
15
   DEL. CONST. of 1776, art. 28 (italics in original).
16
   DEL. CONST. of 1776, art. 1 (“The government of the counties of New-Castle, Kent and Sussex,
upon Delaware, shall hereafter in all public and other writings be called The Delaware State.”)
(italics in original).
                                              10
by Delaware on December 7, 1787—a convention, presided over by John Dickinson,

again met in Dover to consider defects in the 1776 Constitution.

       In the Convention’s eventual report to the General Assembly, it noted that the

Constitution of 1776 was “so very deficient, and inadequate to the great purposes of

government, that they became obliged, from a duty they owed to their constituents,

to propose an almost entire new plan.”17 On June 12, 1792, the new constitution was

signed by the requisite number of delegates, and “Delaware had its second

constitution.”18

       The 1792 Constitution provided “the basic framework for Delaware’s

government for more than a century, until the adoption of the current Constitution

in 1897.”19 Under that framework, in-person voting remained the constitutional

norm. All elections were, according to Article I, Section 3, to be “free and equal,”20

and under Article IV, Section 21, “by ballot.”21 These provisions, standing alone,

did not mandate in-person voting. But Section 3 of Article IV clearly contemplated

in-person voting: “Electors shall in all cases except treason, felony, or breach of the

17
   HOLLAND, supra note 8, at 12.
18
   Id. at 13.
19
   Id.
20
   DEL. CONST. of 1792, art. I, § 3.
21
   DEL. CONST. of 1792, art. IV, § 1.
                                          11
peace, be privileged from arrest during their attendance at elections, and in going

to, and returning from them.”22

       C. The Constitution of 1831 and the Civil War

       Delaware’s third constitution, which, according to Justice Holland, “is more

accurately regarded as a modification of the 1792 Constitution[,]”23 was adopted in

1831. The 1831 Constitution retained the basic election framework found in its

predecessor. For example, the 1792 Constitution’s provisions that elections be “free

and equal”24 and that established a privilege from arrest “during [voters’] attendance

at elections, and in going to and returning from them []”25 remained intact. The new

constitution did, however, add two provisions of arguable relevance to the case

before us.26 Section 1 of Article IV, provided that:

       [a]ll elections for Governor, Senators, Representatives, Sheriffs and
       Coroners shall be held on the Tuesday next after the first Monday in the
       month of November of the year in which they are to be held, and be by
       ballot.

              But the legislature may by law prescribe the means, methods and
       instruments of voting so as to best secure secrecy and the independence
       of the voter; preserve the freedom and purity of elections and prevent
       fraud, corruption and intimidation thereat.

22
   DEL. CONST. of 1792, art. IV, § 2 (emphasis added).
23
   HOLLAND, supra note 8, at 17.
24
   DEL. CONST. of 1831, art. I, § 3.
25
   DEL. CONST. of 1831, art. IV, § 2.
26
   Article IV of the 1831 Constitution contained other new provisions, but they deal largely with
voter qualifications—an issue not directly relevant to our opinion.
                                               12
       Three decades after the 1831 Constitution was adopted, the American Civil

War “inspired the first major effort for absentee balloting in the United States.”27 As

one scholar explained,

       [l]arge numbers of young men who were eligible to vote served in the
       armies of both the Union and the Confederacy, and, as the 1864
       presidential elections approached, spirited legislative battles erupted in
       the state legislatures over the question of allowing soldiers stationed
       away from home to cast votes in their home states. In the Union states,
       some of the impetus behind these battles was partisan, with Republicans
       pushing for soldier-voting and Democrats opposing these efforts
       because the soldier vote was for Lincoln.28
       This partisan divide manifested itself in the Delaware General Assembly in

February 1862 when a bill was introduced in the House giving soldiers serving in

the Union Army the right to vote outside the State.29 Predictably, the bill foundered:

ten Republicans voting in favor and 11 Democrats voting against it.30

       D. Delaware’s Current Constitution: The Constitution of 1897

       Delaware’s fifth constitutional convention—a convention in 1853 produced a

proposed new constitution, but it was soundly rejected by the electorate31—was held

27
   John C. Fortier and Norman Ornstein, The Absentee Ballot and the Secret Ballot, 36 U. MICH.
V.L. REFORM 483, 492 (2003).
28
   JOHN C. FORTIER, ABSENTEE AND EARLY VOTING: TRENDS, PROMISES, AND PERILS 7 (2006).
29
   JOSIAH HENRY BENTON, VOTING IN THE FIELD: A FORGOTTEN CHAPTER OF THE CIVIL WAR 266–
67 (Forgotten Books 2018) (1915).
30
   Id. at 267.
31
   According to Justice Holland’s survey of our state constitutional history, “as part of resolving
[a] dispute over the legitimacy of the [1853] Convention, the delegates had unanimously decided
to submit the final product to the people of Delaware for ratification.” HOLLAND, supra note 8, at
21.
                                                13
in 1897. Drafted, debated, and adopted that same year, the 1897 Constitution is our

State’s fourth, and current, constitution.32 It contains seventeen Articles, most of

which contain multiple sections, and, as of 2017, the General Assembly had adopted

more than 90 amendments. Relevant to the issues before us now, Article V,

consisting of thirteen sections, encompasses a comprehensive framework for the

administration of elections.33 For present purposes, we train our attention on

Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, 4A, and 5.

        Section 1 of Article V establishes the “time”—“biennially on the Tuesday

next after the first Monday in the month of November”—and the “manner”—by

ballot—of holding general elections.         Section 1 also authorizes the General

Assembly to “prescribe the means, methods and instruments of voting so as to best

secure secrecy and the independence of the voter, preserve the freedom and purity

of elections and prevent fraud, corruption and intimidation thereat.”34 This provision

is identical to the first two paragraphs of Article IV, Section 1 of the 1831

Constitution and has remained unaltered since its adoption.

        Section 2 addresses voter qualifications for voting, providing in pertinent part

that:

32
   Id. at 24.
33
   Id. at 207.
34
   DEL. CONST. art. V, § 1.
                                           14
       Every citizen of this State of the age of twenty-one years who shall have been
       a resident thereof one year next preceding an election, and for the last three
       months a resident of the county, and for the last thirty days a resident of the
       hundred or election district in which he or she may offer to vote, and in which
       he or she shall have been duly registered as hereinafter provided for, shall be
       entitled to vote at such election in the hundred or election district of which he
       or she shall at the time be a resident, and in which he or she shall be
       registered[.]35

       Section 3 prohibits the recipients of bribes from voting “at any general or

special or municipal election in this State[.]”36 This section allows for challenges of

voters on bribery or improper-influencing grounds “before the officers authorized

for that purpose . . . .”37 The challenged voter must then “swear or affirm before

such officers” a denial of the charge, and upon such oath, is permitted to vote “at

such election.”38 As will be seen, the right to challenge a voter on a charge of bribery

figured prominently in a 1939 determination that an absentee-voting statute was

unconstitutional.

       Section 4, which lies at the heart of the Plaintiffs’ challenge to the Same-Day

Registration Statute, contains the Constitution’s voter-registration framework.

Because Section 4 was the subject of an amendment in 1925, which the Court of

35
   DEL. CONST. art. V, § 2.
36
   DEL. CONST. art. V, § 3.
37
   Id.
38
   Id.
                                          15
Chancery found particularly relevant to its analysis, we do well here to compare the

relevant provisions as adopted in 1897 with their current format.

       The original version of Section 4 directed “[t]he General Assembly . . . [to]

provide by law for a uniform biennial registration of all the voters in this State who

possess the qualifications prescribed in this Article . . . .”39 The current version

retains the uniformity requirement, using slightly different language: “The General

Assembly shall enact uniform laws for the registration of voters in this State entitled

to vote under this Article . . . .”40 The 1897 version of Section 4 also designated a

time when registration would occur:

       Such registration shall be commenced not more than one hundred and
       twenty days nor less than sixty days before and be completed not more
       than twenty days nor less than ten days before such election.
       Application for registration may be made on at least five days during
       the said period; provided, however, that such registration may be
       corrected as hereinafter provided, at any time prior to the day of
       holding the election.41

       As the Court of Chancery noted, the General Assembly amended Section 4,

replacing the above-quoted provision with similar—though not identical—verbiage:

       There shall be at least two registration days in a period commencing not more
       than one hundred and twenty days, nor less than sixty days before, and ending
       not more than twenty days, nor less than ten days before, each General
       Election, on which registration days persons whose names are not on the list

39
   DEL. CONST art. V, § 4 (amended 1925).
40
   DEL. CONST. art. V, § 4.
41
   DEL. CONST art. V, § 4 (amended 1925) (emphases added).
                                            16
       of registered voters established by law for such election, may apply for
       registration, and on which registration days applications may be made to strike
       from the said registration list names of persons on said list who are not eligible
       to vote at such election; provided, however that such registration may be
       corrected as hereinafter provided at any time prior to the day of holding the
       election.42

       The penultimate paragraphs of both the 1897 and current versions of Section

4 are identical and contain two procedural mechanisms that are integral to the

registration process: appeal and correction. Section 4 provides that a registration

officer’s decision granting or refusing registration, may be appealed by “any person

interested, or any registration officer . . . to the resident Associate Judge of the

County.”43 According to the pre-eminent expert on our state constitutional law, the

purpose of the right of appeal to a member of the judiciary is “to insure to all

qualified electors in the State the right to qualify and vote, without hindrance.”44

       The judge considering an appeal

       shall have power to order any name improperly omitted from the . . .
       registry to be placed thereon, and any name improperly appearing on
       the said registry to be stricken therefrom, and any name appearing on
       the said registry, in any manner incorrect, to be corrected, and to make
       and enforce all necessary orders in the premises for the correction of
       the said registry.45

42
   DEL. CONST. art. V, § 4 (emphases added).
43
   DEL. CONST. art. XVII, § 4.
44
   HOLLAND, supra note 8, at 214 (quoting Appeal of Brown, 49 A.2d 618, 622 (Del. Super. 1946)).
45
   DEL. CONST. art. V, § 4.
                                              17
Consequential to us now is Section 4’s stipulation that registrations “may be

corrected . . . at any time prior to the day of holding the election.”46

       Finally, before turning to Section 4A, which is titled “General laws for

absentee voting” and thus occupies center stage in our analysis of the challenged

Vote-by-Mail Statute, we touch briefly on Section 5 of Article V. Employing the

very same words used by the drafters of our 1792 and 1831 Constitutions, the current

version of Section 5, adopted in 1897, provides that: “Electors shall in all cases

except treason, felony, or breach of peace, be privileged from arrest, during their

attendance at elections, and in going to and returning from them.”47

       In sum, leaving Section 4A’s absentee voting provisions aside for the moment,

all the sections of Article V discussed above seem to take for granted that elections

are held in some identifiable place. To recap, Section 1 seeks to “prevent fraud,

corruption and intimidation thereat.”48 Section 2 speaks of eligible voters who are

“entitled to vote at such election in the hundred or election district of which he or

she shall at the time be a resident . . . .”49 Section 3’s anti-bribery provisions are

concerned with whether a person should be allowed to “vote at such election.”50

46
   Id.
47
   DEL. CONST. art. V, § 5.
48
   DEL. CONST. art. V, § 1.
49
   DEL. CONST. art. V, § 2.
50
   DEL. CONST. art. V, § 3.
                                           18
Likewise, Section 4’s registration provisions govern “the right of every person so

registered to vote at any General Election.”51 And if the simple preposition “at”

does not adequately denote a physical place, Section 5’s reference to “attendance at

elections and . . . going to and returning from them”52 should suffice.

       E.      The 1923 Absentee Voting Statute and State v. Lyons

       We now digress to discuss the events leading to the General Assembly’s

amendment of Article V and the addition of Section 4A in the early 1940s, entitled

“General laws for absentee voting.”

       In 1923, the 99th Session of the General Assembly passed “AN ACT to permit

voting by persons not present at the polling places, under certain circumstances and

conditions.”53 Section 1 of the Act provided:

       That any qualified elector of this State, duly registered, who may be in
       the public service of the United States of America or of this State, and
       who because of such public service, or who because of the nature of his
       work or business, may be absent, or may expect to be absent, from this
       State, or from the election district in which he or she is a qualified
       elector, or who because of sickness or physical disability cannot appear
       at the polling place in such district, on the day of holding any general
       election, may vote at such election as hereinafter provided.54

51
   DEL. CONST. art. V, § 4.
52
   DEL. CONST. art. V, § 5.
53
   33 Del. Laws ch. 103, 258.
54
   Id. The Court of Chancery’s characterization of the 1923 absentee-voting statute as “broad”
cannot be squared with the statute’s text. See Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590, at *26–27. The statute,
whose title itself implies limitation, was strictly limited, similarly to Section 4A as initially
adopted, to qualified electors “who may be in the public service of the United States of America
or of this State, and who because of such public service, or who because of the nature of his work
                                               19
       The constitutionality of this statute was challenged in 1939 in State v. Lyons.55

The defendants challenged an indictment alleging that they had conspired to abet

fraud in connection with votes cast under the 1923 absentee-voting act on the

grounds that the act conflicted with Section 2 of Article 5. They pointed to certain

“critical words [in Section 2] and those most requiring consideration[:]” namely,

those identifying eligible voters as “male citizen[s] . . . [who are] resident(s) of the

hundred or election district in which [they] may offer to vote . . . .”56 This language,

the defendants claimed, indicated “the place where the election is to be held . . . [and]

contemplated the personal attendance of voters at the polls.”57

or business, may be absent, or may expect to be absent, from this State, or from the election district
in which he or she is a qualified elector, or who because of sickness or physical disability cannot
appear at the polling place in such district, on the day of holding any general election. . . .” 33
Del. Laws ch. 103, § 1, 258. Electors who sought the benefit of the statute because of sickness or
physical disability were required to attach their application for an absentee ballot “a certificate[]
of a duly licensed practicing physician certifying as to such sickness or disability. . . .” Id. at § 3,
259. That the right to an absentee ballot was to be carefully circumscribed is further evidenced by
Section 14 of the 1923 act: “Section 14. In so far as the provisions of this Act shall apply to voters
by reason of the nature of their work or business, it is intended that those qualified electors, duly
registered, who may vote under the provisions of this Act shall be those only who may be absent,
or may expect to be absent, from the polling place in the election district in which he or she may
be a qualified elector because of the inherent nature of his or her work or business, such as
commercial travelers, rail-road employees, pilots and sailors, and not merely because such electors
may find it more convenient to follow his or her work or employment in localities other than those
in which they may reside such as mechanics, farm workers and other ordinary laborers.” Id. at §
14, 264 (emphasis added).
55
   5 A.2d 495 (Del. Gen. Sess. 1939).
56
   DEL. CONST. art. V, § 2 (emphasis added), quoted in Lyons, 5 A.2d. at 500.
57
   Lyons, 5 A.2d at 500.
                                                  20
       The Court of General Sessions58 agreed with the defendants, but nevertheless

recognized that this conclusion, standing alone, did not mean that the General

Assembly could not “enact a law by which, under prescribed conditions, certain

absentee electors could vote.”59 That was so because in the court’s words:

       It is not necessary that express power be given by the Constitution to
       the Legislature to enact legislation regarding elections, or legalizing the
       casting of votes by absentee voters. The Constitution does not consist
       of a series of powers expressly delegated to the people, acting through
       the Legislature. Rather the power of the Legislature exists, except in
       so far as expressly or impliedly limited by the Constitution. Whether
       the language “offer to vote” contemplates a personal attendance by the
       voter and a personal casting of the vote can only be correctly
       determined by a consideration of all the material and pertinent
       provisions of the Constitution.60

       Two principal considerations ultimately led the Court of General Sessions to

conclude that the Constitution as it then existed required the personal attendance of

the voter at the polls and that “no power . . . existed[ed] in the Legislature to provide

for absentee voting.”61 First, a review of the debates during the Constitutional

58
   The 1792 and 1831 Constitutions established a Court of General Sessions of the Peace and Jail
Delivery, while the 1897 Constitution called for a Court of General Sessions. Under the 1897
Constitution the court was responsible for, among other things, trying non-capital criminal cases.
The court was abolished in 1951, and its responsibilities were assumed by the newly organized
Superior Court. See 48 Del. Laws ch. 109, 221. See also Court of General Sessions, DELAWARE
PUBLIC ARCHIVES (last visited December 7, 2022), https://archives.delaware.gov/delaware-
agency-histories/court-of-general-sessions/ (discussing the history of Delaware’s Court of General
Sessions).
59
   Lyons, 5 A.2d at 500.
60
   Id.
61
   Id. at 503.
                                               21
Convention of 1897 persuaded the court in no uncertain terms that the Convention

intentionally omitted provisions that would have authorized the type of absentee

voting found in the 1923 Act:

        It is . . . an inescapable fact that the direct question of absentee voting
        came before the Convention and was intentionally eliminated in so far
        as citizens in actual military service were concerned. The inference is
        unmistakable that the Convention expressly refrained from providing
        for absentee voting, but left the Constitution as it theretofore had been.62

        The second influential consideration supporting the court’s conclusion was

the process set forth in Section 3 of Article 5 for challenging voters at the polls on

the ground of bribery. The court observed that “[n]o voter can meet that challenge

without his personal presence at the polls” and that “[a] challenged vote at the polls

can only be received and counted when the voter is personally present to meet the

challenge.”63 Unable to reconcile the 1923 Act with these considerations, the court

understood that it was its “plain duty . . . to hold the statute unconstitutional, leaving

the perfection of the statute to be brought about by proper constitutional

amendment.”64

62
   Id. at 502.
63
   Id.
64
   Id. at 503.
                                            22
       F. The Adoption of Section 4A

       Two years after Lyons struck down the 1923 Act, the 108th Session of the

General Assembly heeded the Court of General Session’s reproof and approved a

constitutional amendment, adding Section 4A to Article V of the Delaware

Constitution. Though not a verbatim version of the ill-fated 1923 Act, the operative

provisions of Section 4A were functionally equivalent to the statute’s:

              Section 4A. The General Assembly shall enact general laws
       providing that any qualified elector of this State, duly registered, who
       shall be unable to appear to cast his or her ballot at any general election
       at the regular polling place of the election district in which he or she is
       registered, either because of being in the public service of the United
       States or of this State, or because of the nature of his or her business or
       occupation, or because of his or her sickness or physical disability, may
       cast a ballot at such general election to be counted in such election
       district.65

       Because amending the Delaware Constitution by the General Assembly is a

“two-legged” process requiring the approval of two-thirds of the members of both

Houses by two successive General Assemblies,66 Section 4A did not become part of

the Constitution upon both Houses’ approval in May 1941. But it was officially

adopted when the 109th Session of the General Assembly completed the “second leg”

65
  43 Del. Laws ch. 1, 3 (approved May 9, 1941).
66
  DEL. CONST. art. XVI, § 1. Article XVI contains two different procedures for amending the
constitution—a supermajority vote of both Houses of two successive General Assemblies
described above and a constitutional convention procedure set forth in Section 2 of Article XVI.
In our history, the only proposal submitted to a popular referendum was, as briefly described
above, the failed 1853 Constitution.
                                              23
of the amendment process in 1943 and, since that year, the Delaware Constitution’s

“General laws for absentee voting” have resided in Section 4A of Article V.

       G. The Soldiers’ Vote Act and Harrington

       The same year that Section 4A cleared the “second leg” and became part of

our Constitution, a second blow befell the cause of voting other than at a traditional

polling place when this Court decided State ex rel. Walker v. Harrington,67

addressing the constitutionality of the “Soldiers’ Vote Act.” Under this Act, adopted

in 1898 on the eve of the Spanish American War, qualified voters of this State who

were in the military service of this State or the United States were authorized to cast

their votes at their place of encampment. Unlike the absentee-voting statute struck

down in Lyons, the Soldier’s Vote Act required, among other things, the opening of

a poll “in each company at the quarters of the captain,”68 which was to remain open

between specific hours. It also required the presence of election judges at the

“polling place[s]”69 who, upon the challenge of any voter, were authorized to

examine voters under oath and to determine the voter’s right to vote. The Act also

directed the Governor to designate two persons from different political parties,

whose duties were to visit the encampments, deliver registration lists and ballots,

67
   30 A.2d. 688 (Del. 1943).
68
   21 Del. Laws ch. 39, § 2, 134. See also Revised Code of Del., ch. 60, art. 4, § 118 (1935).
69
   21 Del. Laws ch. 39, § 4, 134.
                                               24
close the polls, and return the ballots to this State. In brief, the Soldiers’ Vote Act

purported to set up an extra-territorial polling place and, as such, differed essentially

from the 1923 absentee voting statute.

         When the constitutionality of the Soldiers’ Act was challenged in the wake of

the 1940 election, the Court juxtaposed the Act with Article V’s provisions and

found it wanting, principally on three grounds. First, the Harrington Court noted

that the Act was incompatible with Section 3’s bribery-challenge provision.70 The

Court next pointed to Section 5:

         If [Section 3] is not sufficient to imply that the drafters of the
         Constitution intended that electors, when offering to vote must
         personally appear at polling places within the limits of the State, for
         their respective hundreds or districts, then all doubt can be removed by
         reference to Section 5, of Article V of the Constitution, wherein it is
         provided that “Electors shall in all cases, except treason, felony, or
         breach of the peace, be privileged from arrest, during their attendance
         at elections, and in going to and returning from them.”71

         And finally, the Court concluded that the Act’s provisions for determining the

state of the election were “irreconcilably antagonistic” to the procedures governing

the Board of Canvass’s and the Superior Court’s post-election responsibilities. In

the Harrington Court’s view, “both from the letter and the spirit of the Constitution,

there is no reasonable ground to doubt but that it requires the polling places for the

70
     Harrington, 30 A.2d at 692.
71
     Id. at 692.
                                           25
reception of ballots at general elections held in this State to be located within the

territorial limits of the State.”72

       This conclusion would not seem to bear directly on the questions we must

answer in this case. But in response to the amici curiae’s suggestion that under the

Soldiers’ Vote Act—unlike under the 1923 absentee-voting statute—the voter is

personally present at a polling place and subject to challenge, the Court remarked:

       The Constitution, by Section 4, Article V, has prescribed for uniform
       laws for registration of voters for the purpose of determining that
       prospective voters duly possess the necessary and prescribed
       qualifications. This section provides that all questions of the
       qualifications of voters should be determined before election day, and
       on that day, beyond the fact of the identity of the persons, the sole
       ground of challenge should be the violation of said Section 3 of Article
       V.73

       H. The 1972 Opinion of the Justices

       The next significant development relevant to our historical discussion—and

later, to our analysis—occurred in 1972. In that year, Governor Russell W. Peterson,

acting under 29 Del C. §2102,74 propounded three questions to the members of this

72
   Id. at 693.
73
   Id. at 691.
74
   Under 29 Del. C. § 2102, “[t]he Governor may, whenever the Governor requires it for public
information or to enable the Governor to discharge the duties of office with fidelity, request the
members of the Supreme Court to give their opinions in writing touching the proper construction
of any provision in the Constitution of this State or of the United States or the constitutionality of
any law enacted by the General Assembly of this State.”
                                                 26
Court.75 Two of the questions inquired into the constitutionality of the then-existing

absentee-voting statute, 15 Del. C. §5503, as it related to primary elections, and the

third asked the more general question: “May the General Assembly constitutionally

provide by statute for absentee voting by any person in an election other than a

general election?”76

       The Justices took up the third question first. Noting that, under the residual-

power doctrine, “the General Assembly has all legislative power not expressly or

impliedly limited by the Constitution[,]” Chief Justice Wolcott, Justice Carey, and

then-Justice Hermann77 answered the question in the affirmative with one voice:

       [I]t is not necessary to find in the Constitution an express grant to the
       General Assembly of authority to provide for absentee voting in
       primary elections; the inquiry is whether there is any limitation in the
       Constitution upon the power of the General Assembly to do so. In the
       absence of such constitutional limitation, the power of the General
       Assembly to provide for absentee voting in primary elections, as it has
       done in [§] 5503, is unquestionable.

       We find in the Constitution no limitation of the General Assembly to
       legislate in this field.78

75
   Opinion of the Justices, 295 A.2d 718 (Del. 1972).
76
   Id. at 720.
77
   We refer to the members of the Court individually as the statute authorizing the Governor to
seek advisory opinions contemplates that the members of the Court will, in their discretion, “give
their opinions.” 21 Del. C. § 2102. See also HOLLAND, supra note 8, at 181 (“The justices of the
Supreme Court as individuals . . . are authorized by statute to issue advisory opinions in certain
situations.”) (emphasis added).
78
   Opinion of the Justices, 295 A.2d at 720.
                                               27
          They concluded, moreover, that based on Article V, Section 7’s “express

recognition of the existence and nature of primary elections”—that is, as being

“within the special province of the political parties, to be conducted by them under

party rules and regulations”79—the framers had “intentionally and successfully

avoided any limitation upon the legislative powers of the General Assembly as to

primary elections.”80 Notably, however, the Justices contrasted this intentional

limitation with the implied limitation upon absentee voting in general elections

identified in Lyons and Harrington.

          The Justices then circled back and tackled the first question: Did 15 Del C. §

5503(3), as recently amended, violate the Delaware Constitution’s requirement of

free and equal elections found in Article I, Section 3, and the United States

Constitution’s equal protection clause, by denying the right to vote in primary

elections to persons unavoidably absent on primary election day, while granting that

right to persons unavoidably absent on the day of the general election? The genesis

of this question was the amended statute’s identification of qualified electors who

are “unavoidably absent from the county in which he resides on the day of the

general election” as persons eligible to vote by absentee ballot.

79
     Id. at 721.
80
     Id.
                                            28
          Although the amended statute appeared to broaden the scope of absentee

voting to include “unavoidably absent” voters heedless of the reason for their

absence, the Governor’s questions did not explicitly encompass that issue. Put

differently, the Governor did not ask the Justices to opine on the authority of the

General Assembly to enact a statute that expanded the categories of voters entitled

to absentee-voting privileges beyond those enumerated in Section 4A.

          Sticking to the question as asked by the Governor, the Justices surmised that,

when the scope of § 5503 was enlarged to cover “any general election, primary

election, choosing candidates for statewide or local officers, or special election held

under the provisions of Chapter 73 of this title,” the General Assembly had

negligently failed to enlarge the “unavoidably absent” provision to reflect the basic

enlargement.81 The Justices therefore concluded that subparagraph 5503(3) should

be read as “(3) Unavoidably absent from the county in which he resides on the day

of the election, or ***.”82 Because this reading would eliminate the constitutional

problem raised by the Governor’s first question, the Justices answered the question

in the negative.

81
     Id. at 722.
82
     Id.
                                            29
       But the answer to the specific question asked left the impression—or so it

seems to us—that the Justices were placing their stamps of approval on the

expansion of the class of voters who would be eligible for absentee voting. Hence,

the Justices offered a caveat of direct relevance to this issue before us now:

       But there is a caveat as to general elections in this connection: Del.
       Const. Art. 5, [§] 4A specifically enumerates the classifications of
       persons eligible to vote by absentee ballot at general elections. We are
       of the opinion that by expressly including certain classifications, the
       drafters of [§] 4A impliedly excluded all other classifications. It is
       beyond the power of the Legislature, in our opinion, to either limit or
       enlarge upon the [§] 4A absentee voter classifications specified in the
       Constitution for general elections. It is our opinion, therefore, that,
       insofar as general elections are concerned, the classifications in [§]
       5503(2) are unconstitutional limitations, and the classification in [§]
       5503(3) is an unconstitutional enlargement, upon the ‘business or
       occupation’ classification of absentee voter in Del. Const. Art. 5, [§]
       4A. The mandate of [§] 4A, that the ‘General Assembly shall enact
       general laws’ for absentee voting at general elections is not met by [§]
       5503 insofar as the ‘business or occupation’ classification in [§] 4A is
       concerned.83

       I. Expansion of Absentee Voting via Constitutional Amendments

       Over the next 50 years, the General Assembly adhered to the understanding—

developed by the Delaware judiciary in Lyons, Harrington, and the 1972 Opinion of

the Justices—that the General Assembly could only add absentee-voter

83
  Id. at 722–23. Section 5503(2) purported to grant absentee-voting privileges to persons “[in]
the Armed Forces of the United States or the Merchant Marine of the United States, or attached to
and serving with the Armed Forces of the United States in the American Red Cross, Society of
Friends, or United Service Organizations . . . .”
                                              30
classifications through the constitutional-amendment process. In 1977, the General

Assembly expanded Section 4A by amendment to allow voters on vacation to cast

absentee ballots.84 Section 4A was enlarged again in 1983 with an amendment

allowing persons with qualifying religious reasons to vote absentee.85 Then, in 1993,

the legislature passed another amendment expanding Section 4A, this time

permitting spouses and dependents of those in service of the state or of the United

States to participate in absentee voting.86 In its current form, Section 4A provides

that:

        The General Assembly shall enact general laws providing that any
        qualified elector of this State, duly registered, who shall be unable to
        appear to cast his or her ballot at any general election at the regular
        polling place of the election district in which he or she is registered,
        either because of being in the public service of the United States or of
        this State, or his or her spouse or dependents when residing with or
        accompanying him or her because of the nature of his or her business
        or occupation, because of his or her sickness or physical disability,
        because of his or her absence from the district while on vacation, or
        because of the tenets or teachings of his or her religion, may cast a ballot
        at such general election to be counted in such election district.87

84
   61 Del. Laws ch. 39, 52.
85
   64 Del. Laws ch. 177, 444.
86
   69 Del. Laws ch. 81, 174.
87
   DEL. CONST. art. V, § 4A. We have quoted the text of Section 4A as it is recorded in Volume
1 (2007 Replacement Volume) of the Delaware Code Annotated published by MichieTM. One
might reasonably suspect that the absence of a comma between the phrases “his or her spouse or
dependents when residing with or accompanying him or her” and “because of the nature of his or
her business” is a scrivener’s error. Indeed, our review of the most recent amendment to Section
4A in 1991 and 1993 indicates that a comma was intended. See H.B. 298, 136th Gen. Assem.
(Del. 1991) and H.B. 192, 137th Gen. Assem. (Del. 1993). In any event, the inclusion or omission
of the comma has no bearing on our analysis here.
                                              31
        J. The Pandemic and the First Vote-by-Mail Statute

        In 2020, the General Assembly confronted the challenge of providing for an

election that would, to the extent possible, protect voters and polling workers from

the highly contagious COVID-19 virus. Authorizing voters who did not fall within

the categories of citizens who, under Section 4A, were permitted to vote by absentee

ballot to vote by mail appeared to be the answer.          But Section 4A and the

longstanding interpretation of it stood in the way.

        The General Assembly found its way around this apparent obstacle through

the exercise of its emergency powers, which are found in Article XVII, section 1 of

the Constitution. Under Article XVII,

        [t]he General Assembly in order to insure continuity of State and local
        governmental operations in periods of emergency resulting from . . .
        disease . . . shall have the power and the immediate duty . . . to adopt
        such . . . measures as may be necessary and proper for insuring the
        continuity of governmental operations.
        Of course, resort to the Article XVII emergency powers would be unnecessary

if it were within the General Assembly’s plenary authority to authorize by statute

no-excuse voting by mail. Two critical findings and declarations in the 2020 Vote-

by-Mail Statute, however, show that the General Assembly understood that it was

constrained by Section 4A. In particular, the General Assembly found and declared

that:

                                          32
       (11) Article V, §4A of the Delaware Constitution permits absentee
       voting in limited circumstances including when an elector is in the
       public service of the United States, the nature of an elector’s business
       or occupation, or an elector’s sickness, disability, or absence from the
       district while on vacation. The list of reasons for absentee voting is
       exhaustive . . .

       (13) It is the judgment of the General Assembly that due to the highly
       contagious nature of COVID-19 and the need to protect the electors and
       polling workers in this State from infection of COVID-19, voting by
       mail is necessary and proper for insuring the continuity of
       governmental operations, and to conform to the requirements of Article
       V, §4A, would be impracticable.88

       Grounded in these findings and declarations, the 2020 Vote-by-Mail bill

passed both houses of the General Assembly with solid bipartisan support,89 and the

Governor promptly signed it into law. By its terms, though, the statute applied only

to the elections occurring in 2020.

       Despite this temporal limitation and the exigencies presented by the COVID-

19 pandemic, the constitutionality of the 2020 Vote-by-Mail Statute was challenged.

Like the case before us now, because the plaintiffs sought to enjoin the Department

from implementing the statute, the challenge was filed in the Court of Chancery.

According to the Vice Chancellor, the plaintiffs’ objection to the 2020 statute under

Article V, Section 4A of the Constitution was “uncomplicated”90 and the issue to be

88
   H.B. 346, 150th Gen. Assem. (Del. 2020) (emphases added).
89
      H.B.      346     syn.,   150th      Gen.     Assem.    (Del.   2020),     available   at
https://legis.delaware.gov/BillDetail?legislationId=48136.
90
   Republican State Comm. of Del. v. Dep’t. of Elections, 250 A.3d 911, 918 (Del. Ch. 2020).
                                              33
decided “straightforward,”91 facilitated, in great part, by the parties’ shared

understanding of Section 4A. The court framed the issue in this way:

       The parties agree that the list in Article V, § 4A of those citizens entitled
       to vote by absentee ballot is meant to be exhaustive. Thus the General
       Assembly may only expand remote voting beyond that list by properly
       invoking the emergency powers of Article XVII, § 1 to “[e]nsure the
       continuity of State and local governments.” In doing so, however, it
       must conform to the Delaware Constitution’s requirements “except to
       the extent that[,] in the judgment of the General Assembly[,] to do so
       would be impracticable or would cause undue delay.”92

       Thus, the court’s focus was on the propriety of the General Assembly’s

invocation of its emergency powers in service of an objective—no-excuse voting by

mail—that the parties understood could not otherwise be achieved. In the end, the

Court of Chancery determined that the General Assembly’s determination that the

2020 Vote-by-Mail Statute was necessary to the continuity of governmental

operations was not “clearly unreasonable or manifestly incorrect . . . .”93 Hence,

because the invocation of emergency powers under Article XVII is “a matter the

Constitution explicitly commends to [] legislative discretion,”94 the court did not

block implementation of voting by mail in 2020, even though its enactment by

statute was through an “otherwise extra-constitutional means.”95

91
   Id. at 917.
92
   Id. (emphasis added).
93
   Id. at 921.
94
   Id. at 922.
95
   Id.
                                            34
       K. The Failed Vote-by-Mail Amendment

       After the 2020 Vote-by-Mail Statute expired and in apparent recognition of

the limiting nature of Section 4A, the 150th General Assembly (2019-2020)

attempted to pass a constitutional amendment allowing for no-excuse voting by

mail.96 To accomplish this goal, the proposed amendment sought to replace the

entirety of Section 4A with the following language: “The General Assembly shall

enact general laws providing the circumstances, rules, and procedures by which

registered voters may vote by absentee ballot.”97

       As mentioned above, the amendment of the Delaware Constitution is a two-

step process, requiring a two-thirds majority vote in both houses of the General

Assembly across two consecutive General Assemblies.98 The “first leg” of the

amendment was introduced as House Bill 73 on March 12, 2019.99 Its original

synopsis stated that the purpose of the amendment was to “eliminate from the

Delaware Constitution the limitations as to when an individual may vote by absentee

ballot.”100

96
   H.B. 73, 150th Gen. Assem. (Del. 2020).
97
   Id.
98
   DEL. CONST. art. XVI, § 1.
99
        H.B.     73    syn.,   150th      Gen.     Assem.    (Del.   2020),   available   at
https://legis.delaware.gov/BillDetail?legislationId=47181.
100
    Id.
                                               35
          The bill passed the House on April 11, 2019, with 38 votes in favor and 3

opposed.101 The amendment was then transferred to the Senate where, on July 1,

2019, it initially failed to garner the necessary two-thirds majority vote, counting 11

senators in favor and 8 opposed.102 The act was revived in the Senate on January

16, 2020, this time passing the chamber with 14 “yeses” and 5 “noes.”103

          After the amendment’s “first leg” was approved by the 150 th General

Assembly, its “second leg” was introduced as House Bill 75 to the 151 st General

Assembly on January 14, 2021.104 The House voted on the bill on June 10, 2021,

and this time it was defeated with 14 representatives opposed and only 25 in favor.105

The act was tabled in the House on June 17, 2021, effectively concluding the General

Assembly’s consideration of the amendment.106 It never reached the Senate for a

vote.107

          Stymied by the proposed amendment’s failure in the House, the legislative

proponents of the expansion of no-excuse voting by mail reverted—albeit with a

101
    Id.
102
    Id.
103
    Id.
104
        H.B.     75     syn.,   151st     Gen.     Assem.    (Del.   2021),   available   at
https://legis.delaware.gov/BillDetail?legislationId=48291.
105
    Id.
106
    Id.
107
    Id.
                                               36
measure of diffidence108—to the ordinary legislative process. We turn next—and at

long last—to the resulting statutes, which are the subject of the current constitutional

challenges.109

       L. The Challenged Statutes

                      i.   Same-Day Registration Statute

       As mentioned earlier, Sections 2036 and 2047 of Title 15 previously required

that voters be registered “by the fourth Saturday prior to the date of a primary or

general election, or by 10 days prior to a special election, in order to vote in that

election.”110 The Same-Day Registration Statute would allow Delaware voters to

register to vote on election day.

       Under the new statute, same-day registrations would be handled at polling

location “help desk[s].”111 Any issues regarding the registration or eligibility of

voters would be referred to the Department staff from the county offices.112 The

108
     Contemporaneous comments by members of the General Assembly suggested that the
legislature anticipated legal challenges to the new law. For example, the primary sponsor of the
Vote-by-Mail Statute in the Senate proclaimed that if “we have exceeded our powers, the Supreme
Court will tell us so.”108 The Speaker of the House asserted, “I don’t know whether it’s
constitutional or not constitutional, and neither do you guys or anybody else in here. The best way
to get this thing done is to hear this bill, move forward, and let a challenge go to the courts and let
them decide it.” Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590, at *5.
109
    Id.
110
    Defs.’ Opening Br. in Supp. of Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. and Answering Br. in Opp’n to Pls.’
Mot. for Summ. J. at 10, Higgin v. Albence, C.A. No. 2022-0641, Dkt. 28.
111
    Id.
112
    Id.
                                                 37
Department would maintain an electronic poll list available by request to each

election candidate and update it in as close to real-time as possible.113 According to

Commissioner Albence, no election officers would                    be involved in handling

problems with registration or eligibility.114

                    ii.   Vote-by-Mail Statute

       The Vote-by-Mail Statute contained only one meaningful difference from the

2020 Vote-by-Mail Statute: where the 2020 version contemplated the automatic

delivery of an application to vote by mail to all voters, the 2022 version would

require the voter to request an application for a mail-in ballot.115 The voter would

not be required to offer a reason why she could not vote in person. A requested

ballot would then be mailed to qualified voters “who must confirm and provide

required identification information, seal the ballot envelope, sign the voter oath on

the envelope, place a provided security label over the identification information, and

either mail the ballot to the Department or place it in a secure drop-box at a county

election office.”116 The Department would process and scan ballots when they were

received, but they were not permitted to count ballots until election day.117

113
     Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590, at *5.
114
     Id.
115
    Id. at *5 (citing Summ. J. Arg. Tr. at 99:3–100:3), Higgin v. Albence, C.A. No. 2022-0641, Dkt.
36).
116
     Id. at *6.
117
     Id.
                                                38
Completed ballots were to remain in a secure location until they were ready to be

tabulated.118 According to Commissioner Albence, no election officers would be

involved in the opening, processing, or tabulating of any of the mail-in ballots.119

           II.     PROCEEDINGS IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY

       On the day—July 22, 2022—the Governor signed the two statutes into law,

Michael Higgin and Michael Mennella filed their complaint in the Court of

Chancery, seeking a declaration that the Vote-by-Mail Statute and the Same-Day

Registration Statute violated the Delaware Constitution and an injunction

prohibiting their implementation. At the time, Higgin was a resident of Bear,

Delaware, a registered voter and “a filed-candidate for State Representative in

District 15 for the November 8, 2022 General Election.”120 Mennella was a resident

of Newark, Delaware, a registered voter, and a past inspector of elections who hoped

to serve in that role “at the 2022 Primary and General Elections and at other future

elections.”121

       That same day, Ayonne “Nick” Miles, Paul J. Falkowski, and Nancy M. Smith

filed their complaint, seeking similar relief but only as to the Vote-by-Mail Statute.

118
    Defs.’ Opening Br. in Supp. of Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. and Answering Br. in Opp’n to Pls.’
Mot. for Summ. J. at 10, Higgin v. Albence, C.A. No. 2022-0641, Dkt. 28.
119
    Id.
120
    App. to Opening Br. at A21.
121
    Id.
                                              39
These Plaintiffs were, when their complaint was filed, Delaware residents—each

from different counties—and registered voters.

         Because the Department was planning to mail ballots to potential voters in

early October the parties and the Court of Chancery agreed to an expedited litigation

schedule. After expedited briefing on the parties’ cross-motions for summary

judgment, the court entertained oral argument on August 31, 2022, and issued its

Memorandum Opinion two weeks later.

         In a thoughtful and lucidly written opinion, after rejecting in part and

sidestepping in part the Department’s claim that all the Plaintiffs lacked standing to

challenge the statute, the Vice Chancellor found that he was “compelled by

precedent to conclude that the Vote-by-Mail Statute’s attempt to expand absentee

voting to the Delawareans who do not align with any of Section 4A’s categories

must be rejected.”122 The court did not feel so constrained, however, in its review

of the Same-Day Registration Statute. It viewed Article V, Section 4’s provision

that there must be “at least” two registration days within a specified time-period as

“establish[ing] a constitutional floor, not a ceiling.”123 In other words, the court

concluded that Section 4’s registration window within which there must be at least

122
      Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590, at *2.
123
      Id. at *1.
                                         40
two registration days established a “constitutional minimum.” In consequence, the

legislative authorization of registration outside the window—even up to the closing

of the polls124 on election day—did not, the court decided, run afoul of Section 4.

       The parties cross-appealed, the Department arguing that the Court of

Chancery erred in its determination that the Plaintiffs had standing to challenge the

statutes and that the Vote-by-Mail Statute was unconstitutional, and the Plaintiffs

contesting the court’s ruling that the Same-Day Registration Statute passed muster.

                         III.   ISSUES RAISED ON APPEAL

       The issues before us on appeal mirror those raised by the parties in the Court

of Chancery. The Department leads off with its contention that none of the Plaintiffs

has standing to challenge either of the statutes. But, the Department argues, even if

they did, the Court of Chancery erred when it struck down the Vote-by-Mail Statute.

Relying heavily on the presumption that duly enacted legislation is constitutional

and the absence in the Constitution of an express prohibition against voting by mail,

the Department urges us to disregard Delaware precedent that casts doubt on the

validity of the Vote-by-Mail Statute.               Instead, we should, according to the

124
   Under 15 Del. C. § 4947, “[t]he election shall be continued open until 8:00 p.m. when it shall
be closed.” Voters who are present and prepared to vote but waiting in a line at 8:00 p.m. are
nevertheless permitted to vote.
                                               41
Department, follow the approach adopted by courts in Pennsylvania and

Massachusetts and revive the Vote-by-Mail Statute.

       Not surprisingly, the Plaintiffs defend the Court of Chancery’s rejection of the

Vote-by-Mail Statue, which they claim “is in direct contravention of”125 Article V,

Sections 1 and 4 of the Delaware Constitution. The Plaintiffs contest, however, the

Court of Chancery’s upholding of the Same-Day Registration Statute, which was

based, they claim, on an “interpretation [that] is contrary to the constitution’s text

and intention, as well as precedent.”126

                                   IV.     ANALYSIS

       We review the Court of Chancery’s granting of summary judgment de novo.127

Likewise, questions of law, including standing128 and constitutional claims129 are

reviewed de novo.

       A. Standing

       “Standing” refers to the right of a party to invoke the jurisdiction of a court to

enforce a claim or redress a grievance.130 “Standing is a threshold question that must

125
    Answering Br. at 6.
126
    Id. at 40.
127
    Cerberus Int’l, Ltd. v. Apollo Mgmt., L.P., 794 A.2d 1141, 1153 (Del. 2002).
128
    Rosenbloom v. Esso Virgin Islands, Inc., 766 A.2d 451, 458 (Del. 2000).
129
    Doe v. Wilm. Hous. Auth., 88 A.3d 654, 661 (2014).
130
    Dover Hist. Soc’y. v. City of Dover Plan. Comm’n, 838 A.2d 1103, 1110 (Del. 2003) (citing
Stuart Kingston, Inc. v. Robinson, 596 A.2d 1378, 1382 (Del. 1991)).
                                             42
be answered by a court affirmatively to ensure that the litigation before the tribunal

is a ‘case or controversy’ that is appropriate for the exercise of the court’s judicial

powers.”131 The issue of standing is concerned “only with the question of who is

entitled to mount a legal challenge and not with the merits of the subject matter of

the controversy.”132 “The party invoking the jurisdiction of a court bears the burden

of establishing the elements of standing.”133

       In the absence of a specific statutory grant of review, to establish standing in

Delaware, “a plaintiff or petitioner must demonstrate first, that he or she sustained

an ‘injury-in-fact’; and second, that the interests he or she seeks to be protected are

within the zone of interests to be protected.”134                Delaware’s standards for

determining standing are generally the same as the requirements for establishing

Article III standing in federal court.135 Unlike the federal courts, however, where

standing may be subject to stated constitutional limits, we “apply the concept of

standing as a matter of self-restraint to avoid the rendering of advisory opinions at

the behest of parties who are ‘mere intermeddlers.’”136

131
    Riverfront Hotel LLC v. Bd. of Adjustment of City of Wilm., 213 A.3d 89, 2019 WL 3884031,
at *1 (citing Dover Hist. Soc’y, 838 A.2d at 1111).
132
    Stuart Kingston, 596 A.2d at 1382 (emphasis in original).
133
    Dover Hist. Soc’y, 838 A.2d at 1110.
134
    Id.
135
    Dover Hist. Soc’y, 838 A.2d at 1111 (citing Oceanport Indus., Inc. v. Wilm. Stevedores, Inc.,
636 A.2d 892, 904 (Del. 1994)).
136
    Id. at 1111 (citing Stuart Kingston, 596 A.2d at 1382) (cleaned up).
                                               43
       Generally, this means that “a plaintiff must demonstrate that: (i) the plaintiff

has suffered an ‘injury-in-fact,’ i.e., a concrete and actual invasion of a legally

protected interest; (ii) there is a causal connection between the injury and the conduct

complained of; and (iii) it is likely the injury will be redressed by a favorable court

decision.”137 In addition, the plaintiff must demonstrate that the interest they seek

to vindicate is “arguably within the zone of interests to be protected or regulated by

the statute or constitutional guarantee in question.”138 Although we refer to the

federal courts’ interpretation of Article III standing, Delaware courts are not bound

by the federal rules of justiciability.139 That is because the authority of our courts is

derived from the plenary and unenumerated powers of state sovereignty.140 Federal

courts, on the other hand, “can only exercise the sovereign power that the states

delegated to the United States as a limited government with enumerated powers.”141

137
    Reeder v. Wagner, 974 A.2d 858, 2009 WL 1525945 (Del. June 2, 2009) (TABLE) (citing
Dover Hist. Soc’y, 838 A.2d at 1110).
138
    Gannett Co., Inc. v. State, 565 A.2d 895, 897 (Del. 1989); Oceanport Indus., 636 A.2d at 904
(“A party who is required to show an injury in fact, and that such injury is within the zone of
interests sought to be protected by the statute, clearly comes within the purview of these statutes.”);
Riverfront Hotel LLC, 2019 WL 3884031, at *1.
139
    ASARCO Inc. v. Kadish, 490 U.S. 605, 617 (1989) (“We have recognized often that the
constraints of Article III do not apply to state courts, and accordingly the state courts are not bound
by the limitations of a case or controversy or other federal rules of justiciability[.]”).
140
    Murphy v. Nat’l Collegiate Athletic Ass’n, --- U.S. ----, 138 S. Ct. 1461, 1475–77, 200 L.Ed.2d
854 (2018).
141
    In re Del. Pub. Schs. Litig., 239 A.3d 451, 510 (Del. Ch. 2020) (citing Murphy, 138 S. Ct. at
1475–77).
                                                 44
Consequently, Delaware’s courts may hear cases and controversies that the federal

courts cannot.142

       Because Higgin has challenged the constitutionality of the Vote-by-Mail

Statute and the Same-Day Registration Statute, if he has standing as to both

challenges, we need not pass upon the standing of the other Plaintiffs. Therefore,

we first attend to Higgin’s status as a candidate on the 2022 ballot at the time of his

challenge. The uncontested facts show that Higgin was a candidate for State

Representative in District 15 of Delaware in the 2022 election.143 As a candidate for

state office in Delaware, Higgin was actively campaigning, fundraising, meeting

with voters, and distributing campaign literature daily.144

       Higgin claims that the Vote-by-Mail Statute is unconstitutional and that “the

mail-in-voting process requires a candidate to waste valuable time and resources on

campaigning to people who may have already voted through mail-in voting.”145 He

argues, moreover, that he “is entitled to a fair election, guaranteed by the Delaware

Constitution, and votes made and tabulated in violation of the Delaware Constitution

142
    See Reeder, 2009 WL 1525945, at *2 (“Even absent the showing of a particularized injury . . .
this Court has recognized in certain cases that a plaintiff may have standing, as a taxpayer, to
enjoin the unlawful expenditure of public money or the misuse of public property.”).
143
    Higgin Aff. ¶3-4, Higgin v. Albence, C.A. No. 2022-0641, Dkt. 24.
144
    Id. at ¶ 6.
145
    Answering Br. at 18.
                                               45
are unlawful on their face.”146 Higgin argues further that “a fair election” is an

election conducted in accordance with the Delaware Constitution147 and that the

Same-Day Registration Statute would “deprive him of the opportunity to utilize the

full amount of time before the election to reach out to as many voters as possible

until election day.”148 We agree with the Court of Chancery that Higgin’s concerns

go beyond a claim of voting dilution.149 They “strike at the voting right itself” and

the tenet that “only votes legally made—count.”150

       It seems nearly self-evident that a candidate who runs the risk of defeat

because of the casting of ballots that are the product of an extra-constitutional statute

has standing to challenge that statute. And, for standing purposes, it matters little

whether the ballots are unlawful because they are constitutionally unauthorized

absentee ballots or because they are cast by unlawfully registered voters. Simply

put, the casting and counting of legally invalid ballots would necessarily lead to an

inaccurate vote tally, which, as the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth

Circuit has recognized, is a concrete and particularized injury to candidates

146
    Verified Compl. ¶7, App. to Opening Br. at A20.
147
    Oral Arg. on Cross-Motions for Summ. J., App. to Opening Br. at A470.
148
    Verified Compl. ¶7, App. to Opening Br. at A20.
149
    Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590, at *12 (“Regardless of how laudable the purpose behind the Vote-
by-Mail Statute may be, the statute cannot introduce into the General Election votes prohibited
under the Delaware Constitution.”).
150
    Id.
                                              46
participating in the affected election.151 It is equally plain to us that Higgin’s interest

in an election that comports with Article V of the Delaware Constitution is squarely

within the zone of interests Article V is designed to protect and regulate.

       This conclusion, in our view, is consistent with the United States Supreme

Court’s standing analysis in Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife.152 In Lujan, Justice

Scalia observed that “[w]hen . . . the plaintiff is himself an object of the action (or

forgone action) at issue . . . there is ordinarily little question” that he has standing.153

To be sure, a fair point could be made that the direct objects of the Vote-by-Mail

Statute and Same-Day Registration Statute are the electors and registrants, and not

the candidates for whom they might vote.154 But to ignore that the ultimate objects

of our elections are the elected, as well as the defeated, would be to turn a blind eye

to the reality that those most immediately affected—and harmed by an inaccurate

vote count—are those running for office.155

151
    Carson v. Simon, 978 F.3d 1051, 1058 (8th Cir. 2020) (holding that “[a]n inaccurate vote tally
is a concrete particularized injury to candidates” who were nominees to be electors for the State
of Minnesota in the 2020 presidential election and, as such, treated as “candidates” under
Minnesota law). See also Trump v. Wis. Elections Comm’n, 983 F.3d 919, 924 (7th Cir. 2020)
(concluding that then-President Trump alleged “‘concrete and particularized’ harm stemming from
the allegedly unlawful manner by which Wisconsin appointed its electors.”).
152
    504 U.S. 555 (1992).
153
    Id. at 561.
154
    Cf. Michel v. Anderson, 14 F.3d 623, 626 (D.C. Cir. 1994) (“It could not be argued seriously
that voters would not have an injury if their congressman was not permitted to vote at all on the
House floor.”).
155
     See Gallagher v. N.Y. State Bd. of Elections, 477 F. Supp. 3d. 19, 35 (S.D.N.Y. 2020)
(“Candidates have an interest not only in winning or losing their elections, but also in ensuring
                                               47
       Here, the facts surrounding the relationship of Higgin’s candidacy and the

imminent injury156 it would have suffered on election day had the challenged statutes

been left unchecked are sufficient to satisfy our standing requirements.157

       B. Relevant Interpretative Principles

       Our analysis of the constitutional claims advanced by Higgin is informed by

certain well-settled interpretative principles.            We begin with the fundamental

precept that, as the Court of Chancery correctly observed, “[e]nactments of the

Delaware General Assembly are presumed to be constitutional.”158 “This is because

of the familiar principle which is nowhere questioned, that in the American States,

as distinguished from the Federal Government, the legislative power is as broad and

ample in its omnipotence as sovereignty itself, except in so far as it may be curtailed

by constitutional restrictions express or necessarily implied.”159

       One who seeks to invalidate a statute on constitutional grounds “has the

burden of rebutting this presumption of validity and constitutionality which

that the final vote tally accurately reflects the votes cast.”). See also ASARCO Inc., 490 U.S. at
616 (the basic inquiry for Article III standing is whether the party “alleges personal injury that is
fairly traceable to the challenged conduct and likely to be redressed by the requested relief.”).
156
    But see Lujan, 504 U.S. at 564 n.2 (“Although ‘imminence’ is concededly a somewhat elastic
concept, it cannot be stretched beyond the breaking point . . .”).
157
    This conclusion is dependent upon Higgin’s status as an active candidate in the affected election
and renders consideration of his and the remaining Plaintiffs’ other standing arguments based on
their status as registered voters unnecessary.
158
    Hoover v. State, 958 A.2d 816, 821 (Del. 2008), quoted in Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590, at *15.
159
    Collison v. State ex rel. Green, 2 A.2d 97, 100 (Del. 1938).
                                                48
accompanies every statute.”160 Constitutional prohibitions to legislative action must

be shown by “clear and convincing evidence.”161 As the Court of Chancery noted,

when evaluating the constitutionality of a challenged statute, the court shows

“deference to legislative judgment in matters ‘fairly debatable.’” 162 Consequently,

“[a]ll reasonable doubts as to the validity of a law must be resolved in favor of the

constitutionality of the legislation.”163

       But when such a construction discerns a conflict between the Constitution and

a statute, the Constitution will prevail.164 Indeed, the foundation upon which our

constitutional jurisprudence is built is the principle that “the constitution controls

any legislative act repugnant to it.”165 It follows that “an act of the legislature

repugnant to the constitution is void.”166

160
    McDade v. State, 693 A.2d 1062, 1065 (Del. 1997).
161
    Sierra v. Dep't of Servs. for Children, Youth & their Families, 238 A.3d 142, 156 (Del. 2020).
162
    Helman v. State, 784 A.2d 1058, 1068 (Del. 2001), quoted in Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590, at
*15.
163
     Hoover, 958 A.2d at 821 (quoting McDade, 693 A.2d at 1065). The Court of Chancery
classified these principles as falling within “the doctrine of constitutional avoidance.” Higgin,
2022 WL 4239590, at *17. That “doctrine,” which is more aptly described as the “avoidance
canon,” cautions courts to avoid, when possible, the interpretation of a statute that would render
the statute unconstitutional or that would raise serious constitutional difficulties. See WILLIAM N.
ESKRIDGE, JR., INTERPRETING LAW: A PRIMER ON HOW TO READ STATUTES AND THE
CONSTITUTION 425 (2016). As we see it, that canon has no work to do in this case. Neither the
Court of Chancery nor this Court has been asked to interpret either of the challenged statutes as
there is no dispute as to their meaning.
164
    Evans v. State, 872 A.2d 539, 553 (Del. 2005).
165
    Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 177 (1803), quoted in Evans, 872 A.2d at 553.
166
    Id.
                                                49
       C. Vote-by-Mail Statute

       The Department’s defense of the Vote-by-Mail Statute leads with the

contention that voting by mail is fundamentally different than absentee voting, which

is the express subject matter of Article V, Section 4A of the Delaware Constitution.

It follows, argues the Department, that “the Court’s analysis need not reach Section

4A at all.”167 But, according to the Department, even if we were to consult Section

4A, because it does not expressly prohibit voting by mail without an excuse— that

is, it does not explicitly state that the categories of eligible absentee voters are

exhaustive—only an implied restriction will suffice to defeat the Vote-by-Mail

Statute. And the Court of Chancery’s “reluctant[]” finding of an implied prohibition

“in the limited decades-old (and readily distinguishable) Delaware case law

addressing absentee voting and mail-in voting”168 is, the Department says, contrary

to “modern judicial pronouncements counseling against engrafting an unstated

implied limitation.”169 The Department’s preferred approach is embodied, not in the

Delaware precedents and not in the apparently long held understanding of the

General Assembly, but in the reasoning of the high courts of Pennsylvania and

Massachusetts.

167
    Opening Br. at 21.
168
    Id. at 22.
169
    Id. at 23.
                                         50
          We reject the Department’s claim that Section 4A’s absentee-voting

provisions are not implicated in the proper analysis of the Vote-by-Mail Statute. We

cannot, moreover, ignore the historical context in which our constitutional absentee-

voting provisions were adopted and the settled understanding of them as expressed

by all three branches of our state government in favor of the approach by other states

whose historical experience differs from ours. Consequently, we reaffirm that our

Constitution impliedly excludes voting by mail by electors who do not fall within

one of the categories set forth in Section 4A.

                   (i) Applicability of Section 4A

          The Department’s contention that “mail-in voting is not absentee voting” is

grounded in the notion that “Section 4A contemplates absentee voting as predicated

on a voter’s inability to appear in-person to vote” while “the Vote-by-Mail Statute

allows all registered voters to apply and submit a mail-in ballot, and they need not

identify a reason.” Thus, the Department argues, “[t]here is no constitutional

prohibition on the General Assembly’s ability to authorize voting by mail, and the

General Assembly is free to legislate as it deems fit.”170

          As the Court of Chancery observed, the Department offers no authority for

distinguishing voting by mail from absentee voting. It bears noting here that, when

170
      Id. at 21.
                                              51
the General Assembly passed the 2020 Vote-by-Mail bill under its emergency

powers, it explicitly linked that temporary measure to its inability to legislate around

Section 4A’s absentee-voting provisions.            Along these same lines, when the

Department defended the 2020 statute’s constitutionality in the Court of Chancery,

it candidly acknowledged the relevance of Section 4A’s absentee-voting provisions

and the similarity of the 2020 statute and the absentee-voting statute codified at 15

Del. C. ch. 55.171 Given that, it is not surprising that the Court of Chancery then

described the 2020 Vote-by-Mail Statute as authorizing “general absentee

voting.”172

       Nor is it surprising to us that two years later the Court of Chancery would

conclude that the Department’s distinction between voting by mail and absentee

voting is “contradicted by Delaware law and, frankly, common usage.”173 We

concur in that assessment.

       Both the Vote-by-Mail Statute and Section 4A address the authorization of

voting without appearing at a regular polling place while the Vote-by-Mail Statute

expands that authorization to include electors who merely choose not to appear. This

171
    Defs.’ Corrected Answering Br. in Opp’n to Pls.’ Mot. for Summ. J. at 9, Republican State
Comm. of Del. v. Dep’t of Elections, C.A. No. 2020-0685, Dkt. 25.
172
    Republican State Comm., 250 A.2d at 918. In this case, the Court of Chancery noted that the
court’s 2020 opinion “consistently used the terms interchangeably.” Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590,
at *23.
173
    Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590, at *23.
                                              52
does not create an essential difference in the underlying subject matter of the

constitutional provision and the statute, which is the scope of eligibility for remote

voting. The statute purports to expand that scope by adding a new—and admittedly

all-encompassing category: voters who choose to vote absentee. It is no small

coincidence that, when the General Assembly recently attempted to adopt an

amendment that would allow what the Department now attempts to distinguish as

“Mail-in Voting” it did so by proposing that Section 4A’s absentee-voting provisions

be amended. The proposed amendment speaks for itself: “The General Assembly

shall enact general laws providing the circumstances, rules, and procedures by which

registered voters may vote by absentee ballot.”174 Now calling what appears to be

general or universal absentee voting by another name will not insulate the statute

from review under Section 4A.

          As previously discussed in this opinion, each rendition of this state’s

constitution, culminating in the still operative 1897 Constitution, has envisioned that

electors will vote in-person at their regular polling place. In fact, it is precisely

because our Constitution “contemplates and requires the personal attendance of the

voter at the polls,” that the Court of General Sessions struck down the 1923 absentee

voting law in State v. Lyons, concluding that “the statutory authority for voters to

174
      See H.B. 73, 150th Gen. Assem. (Del. 2020) (emphasis added).
                                                53
cast their ballots by mail is unconstitutional under the present provisions of the

Constitution.”175     Importantly, the invalid law allowed voters who “may be

absent”—for specific reasons—on election day to “mail[] . . . or . . . [to] deliver in

person” prepaid ballots to their local polling place.176

       Four years later, in State ex rel. Walker v. Harrington, this Court affirmed the

Lyons court’s conclusion that absentee voting was repugnant to the Constitution. As

previously discussed, Harrington involved a challenge to the Soldiers’ Vote Act,

which allowed soldiers to vote away from their regular polling place by permitting

them to vote in-person at their place of encampment.177 The Harrington court struck

down the law because, according to the opinion, not only did the Constitution require

that votes be cast in-person—which the Soldiers’ Vote Act technically provided for

by erecting a polling place at the soldiers’ camp—it also “require[d] the polling

places for the reception of ballots at general elections . . . to be located within the

territorial limits of the State.”178 Taken together, Lyons and Harrington made clear

that our Constitution prohibited voting away from one’s local polling place—

regardless of what form such voting took.

175
    Lyons, 5 A.2d at 503 (emphasis added).
176
    33 Del. Laws ch. 33, 258–60.
177
    Harrington, 30 A.2d at 690.
178
    Id. at 693.
                                             54
       The addition of Section 4A to the Delaware Constitution in 1943—an

apparent response to Lyons and Harrington179—created, for the first time, a

constitutional exception to the general rule requiring that all votes be cast in-person

at a voter’s local polling place, expressly identifying specific categories of voters

who would be permitted to vote absentee. Because it is the only provision in our

Constitution concerning absentee voting, and because we consider mail-in voting to

be a form of absentee voting—it is voting away from one’s regular polling place—

the validity of the Vote-by-Mail Statute, which expands the categories of voters

allowed to vote absentee, is properly assessed with reference to Section 4A.

               (ii)   The Opinion of the Justices (1972)

       The Department next argues that, even if voting by mail is equivalent to

absentee voting, the Vote-by-Mail Statute is nevertheless constitutional because,

“although the plain text of Section 4A requires the General Assembly to provide for

absentee voting for voters in [] specific categories, nothing in Section 4A prevents

the General Assembly from enacting absentee voting for additional categories of

voters.”180 In other words, the General Assembly is free to extend the right to vote

179
    The Court of Chancery accurately noted that Harrington was decided between the first and
second legs of the amendment adopting Section 4A. Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590, at *26 n.217.
From this, the court speculated that the Harrington decision might have been “eased significantly
by the anticipated second leg . . . .” Id. We, however, do not see the timing of Harrington vis-à-
vis the ultimate passage of the amendment as relevant to the opinion’s constitutional analysis.
180
    Opening Br. at 22.
                                               55
absentee to all voters because Section 4A, by its own terms, does not purport to be

an exhaustive list; for the Department, it “establishes a constitutional floor,” rather

than “a ceiling.”181 We disagree. The overwhelming weight of our history, as

evidenced by the opinions and actions of generations of legislators, election officials,

and judges, compels the conclusion that the categories of voters identified in Section

4A constitute a comprehensive list of eligible absentee voters. In consequence, the

legislature is impliedly prohibited from either abridging or enlarging those

categories except by constitutional amendment.

       We will not rehearse that history in full here: a summary, at the risk of

repetition, of our prior historical discussion should suffice. In the more than two

centuries preceding the adoption of Section 4A, all voting occurred in person and at

regular polling places. In the year of Section 4A’s adoption—in fact less than two

months before182—this Court remarked that “the drafters of the Constitution

intended that electors, when offering to vote must personally appear at polling places

within the limits of the State . . . .”183 This, of course, followed close on the heels of

the Court of General Sessions’ pronouncement four years earlier that the General

181
    Id.
182
    The Harrington opinion was issued on February 22, 1943. See Harrington, 30 A.2d at 688. It
appears that the approval of Section 4A was communicated to the executive on April 9, 1943. See
H.B. 5, 109th Gen. Assem. (Del. 1943).
183
    Harrington, 30 A.2d at 692.
                                              56
Assembly was powerless to provide for absentee voting by statute.184 In the midst

of this constitutional skirmish, the General Assembly initiated the amendment

process that led to the adoption of Section 4A.185 Rather than allowing for expansive

absentee voting, the amendment carefully limited eligibility to electors who were

“unable to appear to cast his or her ballot at any general election at the regular polling

place of the election district in which he or she is registered, either because of being

in the public service of the United States or this State, or because of the nature of his

or her business or occupation, or because of his or her sickness or physical disability

. . . .”186

        For the next 29 years, as best we can tell, absentee voting was strictly limited

to public servants, disabled voters, and certain persons in the work force, on the

condition that they were unable to appear in person at their polling places. In 1972,

in response to questions propounded by the Governor regarding the then-current

absentee voting statute, which, as noted earlier, expanded absentee-voting eligibility

to qualified electors who were “unavoidably absent” on the day of the election, each

of the three Justices then composing the entirety of this Court opined that:

184
    Lyons, 5 A.2d at 503.
185
    The amendment cleared the first leg of the amendment process in the 108th Session of the
General Assembly in 1941 and the second leg in the 109th Session of the General Assembly in
1943. See 43 Del. Laws ch. 1, 3 (documenting “first leg”) and 44 Del. Laws ch. 1, 3 (documenting
“second leg”).
186
    44 Del. Laws ch. 1, 3.
                                              57
       Del. Const. Art. 5, [§] 4A specifically enumerates the classifications of
       persons eligible to vote by absentee ballot at general elections. We are
       of the opinion that by expressly including certain classifications, the
       drafters of [§] 4A impliedly excluded all other classifications. It is
       beyond the power of the Legislature, in our opinion, to either limit or
       enlarge upon the [§] 4A absentee voter classifications specified in the
       Constitution for general elections. It is our opinion, therefore, that
       insofar as general elections are concerned, the classifications in [§]
       5503(2) are unconstitutional limitations, and the classification in [§]
       5503(3) is an unconstitutional enlargement, upon the ‘business or
       occupation’ classification of absentee voter in Del. Const. Art. 5, [§]
       4A.187
       This opinion, we admit, does not have binding precedential effect.188 Yet the

1972 Opinion of the Justices has been treated, over the last fifty years and until this

litigation, as the well-settled interpretation of Section 4A. Each time the General

Assembly sought to expand the categories of voters entitled to vote absentee, they

attempted to do so by means of constitutional amendment—successfully in 1977,

1983, and 1993. In 2020, the General Assembly explicitly found—in an effort to

187
    Opinion of the Justices, 295 A.2d at 722 (emphasis added).
188
    See HOLLAND, supra note 8, at 181 (“Since the nature of this advisory function is nonjudicial,
it does not constitute an adjudication by the Supreme Court. Accordingly, advisory opinions by
the individual justices do not have a binding precedential effect.”). See also State v. Highfield,
152 A. 45, 52 (Del. 1930) (“The relator very largely bases his contention on an advisory opinion
involving a similar question given by the then Chancellor and Law Judges, to the Governor, in
1910. While that opinion was contrary both to our conclusion and to that of the majority of the
court below in this case, the facts would seem to indicate that the Judges who gave it did not have
the benefit of the argument of counsel or the citation of authorities on the question before them,
and that the rights of the parties were, therefore, not fully presented to them. Further than that, as
was pointed out by the court below, opinions of that character, in this State, are usually not reported
and are not considered to have the binding effect of a judgment regularly entered in a court
proceeding.”)
                                                 58
authorize universal absentee voting ahead of the 2020 election through the

legislature’s emergency powers—that “[t]he list of reasons for absentee voting

[contained in Article V, § 4A] is exhaustive.”189 And in defending against challenges

to the 2020 Vote-by-Mail act in the Court of Chancery, lawyers for the Department

“concede[d] that the Delaware Constitution lists reasons for which ballots may be

provided for absentee voting [and] that this list of reasons is intended to be

comprehensive.”190

          The General Assembly continued to adhere to this traditional understanding

of Section 4A even after the expiration of the 2020 act, attempting to pass, in 2021,

the “second leg” of an amendment to create a constitutional right to universal

absentee voting. Only when this amendment failed did the General Assembly decide

to avoid fifty years of precedent and expand Section 4A via statute—a strategy that

the Department now defends despite its previous statements to the Court of Chancery

in 2020. Rather than accept the Department’s change of position, we review our

history through a widened lens and affirm that Section 4A’s categories are

exhaustive.

189
      H.B. 346, 150th Gen. Assem. (Del. 2020) (emphasis added).
190
      Republican State Comm., 250 A.3d at 913.
                                               59
      But it is not history alone that persuades us that the Vote-by-Mail Statute

violates Section 4A. Our construction of Section 4A also comports with two time-

honored principles of interpretation. Under the linguistic canon known as “expressio

(or inclusio) unius,” the expression of one thing—here the categories of absentee

voters provided in Section 4A—suggests the exclusion of others.191 Of course, this

canon “must be applied with great caution, since its application depends so much on

context[] . . . .”192 Here, however, the context of Section 4A’s enactment and

amendment as described above weighs heavily in favor of its application. Thus,

Section 4A’s enumeration of absentee-voter classifications suggests the exclusion of

additional classifications.

      The Vote-by-Mail Statute also creates a surplusage problem. As the Court of

Chancery aptly observed, “if both Section 4A and the Vote-By-Mail Statute enable

citizens to vote without appearing in-person, and the Vote-By-Mail Statute is

unlimited as to such eligibility, then the Vote-By-Mail statute necessarily would

paint over the specific categories of eligible citizens enumerated in Section 4A.”193

Put another way, if electors are permitted to vote without appearing at their regular

polling places, Section 4A’s categories become superfluous, and the possibility that

191
    See ESKRIDGE, supra note 163, at 408.
192
    ANTONIN SCALIA & BRYAN A. GARNER, READING LAW: THE INTERPRETATION OF LEGAL TEXTS
107 (2012).
193
    Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590, at *24.
                                         60
a future General Assembly might someday repeal the Vote-by-Mail Statute thereby

reviving Section 4A is an insufficient reason for ignoring this problem.194

       For all these reasons, we stand by our predecessors’ conclusion that the

General Assembly is constitutionally prohibited from enlarging upon Section 4A’s

absentee-voter classifications.

              (iii)   Decisions from Sister States

       In reaching our decision, we have considered, and have declined to follow

opinions—one by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania195 and the other from the

Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts196—both of which reached a different

conclusion than ours under similar circumstances. In diverging from the approach

taken in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts, we do not insinuate a failure of wisdom

or analysis on the part of our learned counterparts in those states; indeed, had our

historical record and constitutional tradition not pointed us firmly in the direction

we have taken, we might very well have followed their lead. In the end, however,

194
    According to the Court of Chancery, the Department had identified a “straightforward and
compelling harmonization of the Vote-by-Mail Statute and Article V, Section 4A. . . ” predicated
on the notion that statutes are not necessarily permanent. Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590, at *28 n.221.
A future General Assembly, the Department notes, might choose to repeal the Vote-by-Mail
Statute in which case Section 4A would no longer be superfluous. We are not inclined to base our
analysis on this contingency.
195
    McLinko v. Dep’t of State, 279 A.3d 539 (Pa. 2022).
196
    Lyons v. Sec’y of Commonwealth, 192 N.E.3d 1078 (Mass. 2022).
                                               61
we are satisfied with the guidance provided by our own history as reflected in our

case law and its longstanding acceptance by our political branches.

          D. Same-Day Registration Statute

          We turn next to Higgin’s claim that the Same-Day Registration Statute

conflicts with Article V, Section 4’s requirement that voter registration occur within

a specified window of time—“not more than one-hundred and twenty days nor less

than sixty days before and be completed not more than twenty nor less than ten days

before such election.”197 If this requirement sets strict temporal boundaries around

voter registration, then allowing voters to register as contemplated by the Same-Day

Registration Statute through the day of the election is outside constitutional bounds.

          The Court of Chancery rejected Higgin’s reading of Section 4. In the court’s

eyes, Section 4’s stipulation that there should be “at least two registration days”

within the specified time period results in “[a] plain-language reading of Section 4

[that] suggests that it provides for a minimum period of registration, and the Same-

Day Registration Statute[’s] providing for additional days would not disturb that

constitutionally[]protected minimum.”198

197
      DEL. CONST. art. V, § 4.
198
      Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590, at *16 (emphasis in original).
                                                62
          The Court of Chancery also pointed to the 1925 amendment of Section 4,

discussed earlier, as a “very significant change to the text of Article V, Section 4”

that not only supported the court’s plain-meaning analysis, “but also independently

compel[led] the conclusion that the Higgin Plaintiffs have failed to show clear

evidence that the Same-Day Registration Statute violates the Delaware

Constitution.”199 Of particular interest to the court was the deletion of the words “to

be completed” from Section 4’s delineation of the registration window.

          We disagree with the Court of Chancery’s conclusion.               The court’s

interpretation of Section 4, in our view, does not take sufficient account of the appeal

and correction procedures that are part of the constitutionally mandated registration

process. Moreover, it places undue emphasis on a non-substantive, and partially

semantic revision of Section 4 in the 1925 amendment. In our view, the Same-Day

Registration Statute cannot be reconciled with Section 4 and is therefore void.

          As mentioned earlier, Section 4 envisions both an appeal process and a

correction process. The appeal process is described in the fourth paragraph of

Section 4:

          From the decision of the registration officers granting or refusing
          registration, or striking or refusing to strike a name or names from the
          registration list, any person interested, or any registration officer, may
          appeal to the resident Associate Judge of the County, or in case of his

199
      Id. at *18.
                                             63
       or her disability or absence from the County, to any Judge entitled to
       sit in the Supreme Court, whose determination shall be final; and he or
       she shall have power to order any name improperly omitted from the
       said registry to be placed thereon, and any name improperly appearing
       on the said registry to be stricken therefrom, and any name appearing
       on the said registry, in any manner incorrect, to be corrected, and to
       make and enforce all necessary orders in the premises for the correction
       of the said registry.200

       In recognition of the importance of this appeal right, the General Assembly

enacted Chapter 21 of Title 15 to govern registration appeals. Among other things,

the registration-appeal statute requires that a notice of appeal be in writing and

“served personally or by registered mail, return receipt requested . . . .”201 All

required notices must be served “at least 5 days prior to the day on which the appeal

or application is made to the court.”202 The statute also requires the appellant “to

make and file . . . an affidavit that notice of that appellant’s intention to present the

appeal on the day was given to the Department or registration officers or both, and

to the person affected by the appeal. . . .”203 And the statute directs the court to give

priority to appeals that remain “undetermined within 30 days before that date of the

general election” and to “enter an order . . . on or before the tenth calendar day

preceding the last registration day.”204

200
    DEL. CONST. art. V, § 4
201
    15 Del. C. § 2104(a).
202
    15 Del. C. § 2104(b).
203
    15 Del. C. § 2105.
204
    15 Del. C. § 2106.
                                           64
          It is evident that the Same-Day Registration Statute is patently incompatible

with this appeal regime. But, one might counter, a conflict between the Same-Day

Registration Statute and the registration-appeal statute does not render the Same-

Day Registration Statute unconstitutional. This would miss the point, however,

which is that permitting voter registration up to and including the date of the election

effectively eliminates the ability to conduct an orderly appeal process. Because

Section 4 creates appeal rights and the Same-Day Registration Statute interferes with

those rights, the statute violates Section 4.

          The same can be said of the correction process. Section 4 provides that

registrations “may be corrected as hereinafter provided at any time prior to the day

of holding the election.”205 To state the obvious, an incorrect registration based on

an application received on the day of the election will not be subject to correction

under this provision. Again, the Same-Day Registration Statute clashes with the

time-honored provisions of Section 4.

          The Court of Chancery’s answer to the charge that the Same-Day Registration

Statute conflicts with Section 4’s provision that “such registration[s] may be

corrected . . . at any time prior to the day of holding the election” was that “‘such

registration’ refers to registrations described in the immediately preceding passage

205
      DEL. CONST. art. V, § 4 (emphasis added).
                                                  65
and is silent as to registrations occurring on the day of the general election.”206

Under the Court of Chancery’s reading, it seems to us, some registrations would be

subject to correction and others would not. But this resolution of an otherwise clear

conflict between the statute and Section 4 runs head-on into Section 4’s uniformity

requirement, imposed by the very first words of Section 4: “The General Assembly

shall enact uniform laws for the registration of the voters in this State entitled to vote

under this Article. . . .”207

          In short, the Court of Chancery’s indulgence of the presumption of the Same-

Day Registration Statute’s constitutionality goes too far. We read Section 4 as

establishing a deadline for voter registration that will allow time for the appeal and

correction processes to work. By enacting the Same-Day Registration Statute, which

permits registration beyond that deadline, the General Assembly exceeded its

legislative authority.

          We also disagree with the notion that the 1925 amendment of Section 4

signaled the General Assembly’s intention to eliminate the registration deadline.

The original language of Section 4 provided for “biennial registration” that “shall be

commenced not more than one hundred and twenty days nor less than sixty days

206
      Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590, at *16.
207
      DEL. CONST. art. V, § 4 (emphasis added).
                                                  66
before and be completed not more than twenty days nor less than ten days before

such election.”208 The 1925 amendment eliminated the “biennial registration”

requirement in favor of a requirement of “at least two registration days in a period

commencing not more than one hundred and twenty days, nor less than sixty days

before, and ending not more than twenty days, nor less than ten days before, each

General Election . . . .”209

       The Court of Chancery chided Higgin for “fail[ing] to grapple with [the

amendment’s] unambiguous deletion of ‘be completed’ from the text.”210 The court,

it would seem, saw this deletion as removing the earlier version’s registration

deadline. But the court appears to have disregarded the amendment’s inclusion of

substitute language that set the registration period as “ending” within the same

temporal limitations as were applicable under the pre-amendment language—not

more than twenty days nor less than ten days before the election. At least as to the

issue before us, the amendment’s replacement of a registration period that is to be

“completed” within a range of dates with one “ending” within that same date range

lends no support to Court of Chancery’s interpretation of Section 4.

208
    DEL. CONST. of 1897, art. V, § 4 (emphasis added), quoted in Higgin, 2022 WL 423950, at *18.
209
    DEL. CONST. art. V, § 4 (emphasis added).
210
    Higgin, 2022 WL 4239590, at *18.
                                              67
      Finally, we note that, although our conclusion that the Same-Day Registration

Statute is incompatible with Section 4’s registration deadline and its relationship to

the appeal and correction process is textually driven, it is also consistent with the

framers’ intention “that the possession of the qualification of the right to vote should

be settled and determined, not at the moment of election, but by the registration[,]”211

and that “if the registration is to serve any purpose, it is to afford an opportunity of

ascertaining the facts after deliberation and within a suitable period before the

election.”212

      Although these passages were not cited in Harrington, they support the

Court’s conclusion in that case that “the qualification of voters should be determined

before election day . . . .”213 The Same-Day Registration Statute is at odds with that

objective.

                                 V. CONCLUSION

      Our decision—announced two months ago and explained in this opinion—is

not intended to reflect the Court’s views on the relative advantages and drawbacks

of universal absentee voting or a later registration deadline. The resolution of those

211
     2 CHARLES G. GUYER & EDMOND C. HARDESTY, DEBATES AND PROCEEDINGS OF THE
CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE 1101 (Milford Chronicle Publ’g Co.
1958) (1897).
212
    Id.
213
    Harrington, 30 A.2d at 691.
                                          68
issues is within the General Assembly’s province. The Court’s role—indeed, our

duty—is to hold the challenged statutory enactments up to the light of our

Constitution and determine whether they are consonant or discordant with it. For

the reasons discussed in this opinion, we conclude that the Vote-by-Mail Statute and

the Same-Day Registration Statute violate the Constitution’s relevant provisions and

thus cannot stand. The changes to our election regime embodied in the challenged

statutes must be effected, if at all, by constitutional amendment. Accordingly, the

Court of Chancery’s judgment as to the Vote-by-Mail Statute is affirmed; as to the

Same-Day Registration Statute, it is reversed.

                                        69