(After Stating the Facts.) — Counsel for defendants contend that the act of the legislature on which the plaintiff relies is unconstitutional, in that it contravenes the provisions of section 6 of article 15 of the state constitution. Said act is entitled “An act to establish a uniform price for the use of water under a sale, rental, or distribution.” (See Sess. Laws 1897, p. 52.) Said act provides, inter alia,, that it shall be unlawful to charge a higher price than sixty-two dollars and fifty cents per cubic foot per second, continuous flow, for water for any irrigating season. Said section 6 of article 15 of the state constitution is as follows: “The legislature shall provide by law the manner in which reasonable maximum rates may be *180established to be charged for the use of water sold, rented or distributed for any useful or beneficial purpose.” Said section of the constitution commands the legislature to provide by law the method or manner by which reasonable maximum rates for water may be established. Said act, supra, was not passed with a view of carrying out the provisions of said section of the constitution. No attempt is made in said act to provide the manner in which reasonable maximum rates may be established. It absolutely establishes the maximum rate at sixty-two dollars and fifty cents per cubic foot per second, continuous flow, for an irrigating season, for all ditches and canals in the state. It is a well-established rule that a state legislature has plenary power over all subjects of legislation not prohibited by the federal or state constitution, and, unless the fixing of maximum rates that may be charged for water is prohibited by the constitution, the legislature had the power to establish such rates. Prohibitions are either express or implied. It is contended by counsel for the defendants that, as the provisions of section 6 of the state constitution command the legislature to provide by law the manner in which reasonable maximum rates may "be established for the use of water, it contains an implied prohibition on the legislature from absolutely fixing such rates. The framers of the constitution in preparing said section 6, and the people in adopting it, evidently intended that it should have some force and effect. If the legislature can refuse to provide by law the manner in which maximum rates for water may be established as commanded by said section, and proceed as it may deem best, and absolutely fix such rates, then said section of the constitution amounts to nothing and has no force or effect. Said section 6 would not have been inserted in the constitution had it been intended that the legislature should fix water rates. Without it the legislature had the power to fix reasonable maximum rates. By it the legislature is commanded to provide by law the manner in which reasonable maximum rates may be fixed or established,- and by necessary implication prohibited from fixing or establishing such rates itself. Every provision of the constitution must, if possible, be given force and effect, and to hold that the legislature need not provide by law the manner in *181which maximum rates may be established is to hold that said section means nothing, and that the legislature is at liberty to disregard its command. An act was passed by the third state legislature (see Sess. Laws 1895, p. 175) providing the manner in which reasonable maximum rates might be fixed. It authorizes the district court to fix reasonable maximum rates of compensation for the use of water, after due notice and trial, in which all interested parties are entitled to a hearing. Said act was passed with a view of complying with the provisions of said section 6 of the constitution. The act of 1897, supra, contains no repealing clause, and does not repeal the act of 1895, supra. By the act of 1895, the third state legislature undertook to carry into effect the provisions of said section 6 of the constitution but the fourth legislature, without directly repealing the said act of the third legislature, attempts to render it of no effect by absolutely fixing a maximum rate to be applied to every canal in the state. Some canal companies can furnish water for much less than others, and still make a reasonable profit on their investment. A rate that would pay a reasonable profit on the investment in one canal would be confiscation, for another. No state can deprive a person of his property without due process of law. The framers of the constitution had in view, when drafting said section 6, a plan whereby a reasonable maximum rate might be established for each canal. They were men of intelligence, and knew that no one maximum rate could be established that would do even-handed justice to all ditch owners and all water consumers. What would be a fair rate to consumers under one canal might be extortion to the consumers under another canal, and what would be a fair rate to the owners of one canal might be confiscation to the owners of another. The framers of the constitution recognized these facts, and by the provisions of said section 6 provided a plan whereby the conditions actually existing might be fairly met, and no injustice be done to the canal owner or the consumer of water. Said section clearly shows that the framers of the constitution recognized the fact that any one maximum rate could not justly apply to all parts of the state and all canals or ditches. They therefore, in framing said section 6, declare that the legislature *182shall provide the maimer in which reasonable maximum “rates,” not “rate,” may be established. Had they intended that a single rate should or could be made applicable to all ditches and canals, the word “rate” would have been used, and not the plural, “rates.” It is thus clearly shown that the framers of the constitution understood the conditions existing in the state, and provided for the establishment of a reasonable maximum rate for each locality or each canal, as the facts in each case would ■warrant, and thus do justice as nearly as possible to the owners of the ditches and canals, and to the consumers of water •thereunder.
It is conceded by counsel for plaintiff that, if the rate fixed by the legislature would result in confiscation of any canal, the rate so fixed would be void as to such canal, as the fourteenth amendment to the federal constitution prohibits the taking of private property without due process of law. That admission shows the utter inutility of the legislature in attempting to fix one reasonable maximum rate to be charged for water, to be applied to all canals and ditches in the state. A rate that would give a reasonable profit to the owners of one canal might not pay any profit to the owners of another and different canal, and the rate to one consumer might be just, and the same rate extortionate when applied to a consumer of water from a different canal. The state cannot compel canal owners to furnish water to consumers without some reward; neither can it do that which in law amounts to the taking of private property for public use without just compensation or without due process of law. (Reagan v. Trust Co., 154 U. S. 362, 14 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1047; Railway Co. v. Gill, 156 U. S. 649, 15 Sup. Ct. Rep. 484.) In order to establish a reasonable maximum rate that would be just to both the owner and consumer of water, certain facts must be known. Among them the cost of the canal, the annual cost of maintenance of the canal or ditch, and all necessary expenses connected therewith, and the amount of land that may be irrigated from such canal, etc. Thus, it is shown that many facts must be known to intelligently establish a reasonable maximum rate for water — one that would be just to the owner of the canal and the consumer of the water. And without these facts the legislature *183•or any other tribunal could not establish such rates. The framers of the constitution knew that it was an impossibility for the legislature to ascertain all facts necessary to establish a just maximum rate under each ditch or canal system in the state -during sessions of the legislature limited to sixty days, and biennial sessions at that; and said section 6 of article 15 of the •constitution was framed with a view of requiring the legislature to provide by law the manner in which reasonable maximum rates might be ascertained and established. It is thus shown that it would be impracticable, if not impossible, for the legislature to ascertain the facts necessary to be known in order to establish a reason-able maximum rate under each canal system or ditch in the state at its biennial sessions of sixty days. So the constitution, by the provision of said section 6 of the state constitution, prohibits the legislature from fixing such rates, and commanded it to provide the manner or method in which or by which such rates can be intelligently and justly established. The conclusion reached is that’ the provisions of said section 6 ■of article 15 of the state constitution, by necessary implication, prohibit the legislature from passing the act in question, and ■that said act wherein the legislature attempts to fix the reason-able -maxirrm-m rate to be charged for the use of water is unconstitutional and void. The demurrer to the petition is sustained. The alternative writ of mandate heretofore issued is quashed, and •a peremptory writ denied. Costs of this proceeding are awarded To the defendants.
Huston and Quarles, JJ., concur.