Dissenting Opinion by
Mr. Justice Brown,May 6, 1912:
Though the Constitution has imposed upon the legislature the duty of providing for the maintenance and support of a thorough and efficient system of public schools, and this duty must be discharged, the legisla*338ture may not, in discharging it, disregard constitutional prohibitions. What the Constitution forbids the legislature to do, it dare not do, even in providing for the maintenance and support of a thorough and efficient system of public schools, and the “Commission of prominent citizens of the Commonwealth” who framed the School Code of 1911 ought to have understood this and been able to draft an act free from flagrant disregard of the supreme law of the State.
The demurrer to the bill filed in the court below sets forth a number of reasons why the Act of 1911 should be declared unconstitutional, but a consideration of only two of. them will suffice to show that the demurrer ought to have been sustained. The act divides the school districts of the State into four classes, as follows: Each school district having a population of five hundred thousand (500,000), or more, shall be a school district of the first class; each school district having a population of thirty thousand (30,000), or more, but of less than five hundred thousand (500,000) shall be a school district of the second class; each school district having a population of five thousand (5,000), or more, but of less than thirty thousand (30,000), shall be a school district of the third class; each school district having a population of less than five thousand (5,000) shall be a school district of the fourth class.
Classification of school districts is not forbidden by the Constitution: Sugar Notch Borough, 192 Pa. 349; Com. v. Gilligan, 195 Pa. 504; Com. v. Guthrie, 202 Pa. 209; and if the complaint of the appellants were only as to the classification of the school districts of the State, they could not be heard. But heed surely ought to be given to their contention that, under the guise of a general classification of the districts, the Act of 1911 produces, and was passed for the undoubted purpose of producing, local and special results. It constitutes the cities of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh districts of the first class; it makes the directors in. those districts ap*339pointive; it provides that districts of the second, third and fourth classes shall collect an occupation tax on all male citizens over twenty-one years of age of at least $1.00; it provides that in districts of the first class certain workmen only may be employed on school buildings, and attempts to regulate the wages which shall be paid to them; it prohibits directors in districts of the first class from using cut stone in school buildings unless the same shall be prepared in the district; and it gives to the electors outside the districts of the first class the right to elect school directors, but denies this franchise to the citizens of the school districts of the first class. The legislature has, in effect, said to the people of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh that while citizens in other districts of the state may be trusted to manage their school affairs, they cannot be so trusted. It is difficult to conceive of legislation more local and special in its character, making this uncalled-for distinction between the citizens of the two leading municipalities of the State and those of all other localities. “It is not only local and special, but odious in its discrimination”: Davis v. Clark, 106 Pa. 377. In McCarthy v. Commonwealth, 110 Pa. 243, this court had before it an act of assembly which directed that the fees belonging to county officers in counties the population of which exceeded one hundred thousand, but was less than one hundred and fifty thousand, should be turned over to the county treasurer, and the officers compensated by salaries, and, in holding that the act offended against the Constitution, we said, through Mr. Justice Gordon, “But by what process of reasoning is this legislation, which has selected for its operation three or four counties from all those composing the commonwealth, to be justified? Is the justification to be found in the well recognized legislative power of classification. We think not. It is admitted that classification, even where not specially recognized by nature, custom, the laws of trade, or the Constitution, must, in certain *340cases, be adopted ex necessitate, as in tbe case of cities, under the Act of May 23, 1874, P. L. 230 ......If, indeed, such legislation were to be recognized as legitimate, vain would be the constitutional prohibition of local or special laws. But little ingenuity in the way of so called classification would be necessary in order to isolate every single county, borough, ward, township and school district in the State, and provide for each its own local code.”
While school districts may be constitutionally classified — and their classification must also of necessity involve different conditions in the different classes — there cannot be a classification which is manifestly intended to have as its real purpose special legislation for certain districts. Classification based upon actual necessity is one thing; but when it is apparent that, under the plea of necessity, the ulterior object of the legislature is special legislation for certain .districts, the attempted classification is but a mere subterfuge to evade the Constitution; and courts will look at the substance and not the sum of legislation in determining whether a statute is local or special, repugnant to the fundamental law, though disguised as a general act: Sample v. Pittsburgh, 212 Pa. 533. If local results either are or may be produced by an act of assembly, it offends against the Constitution and is void: Scranton. School District’s Appeal, 113 Pa. 176. “The underlying principle of all the cases is that classification, with the view of legislating for either class separately, is essentially unconstitutional, unless a necessity therefor exists, — a •necessity springing from manifest peculiarities clearly distinguishing those of one class from each of the other classes, and imperatively demanding legislation for each class, separately, that would be useless and detrimental to the others”: Ayars’ Appeal, 122 Pa. 266. In the light of these unavoidable utterances by this court, and of many more like them, I confess my utter inability to follow any process of reasoning that attempts to sus*341tain the Act of 1911. What was said by Mr. Justice Paxson in Scowden’s Appeal, 96 Pa. 422, may well be repeated here: “It requires but a glance at the act to see that it is an attempt to evade the Constitution. It ■ is special legislation under the attempted disguise of a general law. Of all forms of special legislation this is the most vicious.” When the act was passed, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh were the only two cities which could have become, under it, school districts of the first class, and how can it possibly be doubted that the legislature intended to legislate specially for them when it provided, inter alia, that the people in those two cities should not vote for school directors; that the directors in those districts should be limited, in building and furnishing schoolhouses, to the employment of certain kinds of labor at certain rates, which they had no voice in establishing; that no cut stone could be used in the erection of a school building in a district of the first class, unless prepared in a stone yard in the district; that in all other parts of the state voters could choose their school directors; that the directors in other districts could build schoolhouses out of any material they might see fit to use, without regard to where it came from, and that the male citizens in all classes of districts except the first should be compelled to pay at least $1.00 of an occupation tax, from which the male citizens of the first class districts were exempt. No conceivable ground of necessity justified these startling discriminations, which must be read as local or special legislation, intended as such, and, therefore, coming within the clear prohibition of the constitution, unless there is to be expunged from it that clause which declares that the general assembly shall not pass any local or special law “regulating the management of public schools, the building or repairing of schoolhouses, and the raising of money for such purposes.” The majority of the court concede that some of the provisions of the Act of 1911, relating to school districts of the first *342class, “may well be condemned as local legislation,”' because they cover matters “in no conceivable way peculiar to sucb districts as distinguished from other districts.” What is there so peculiar to the cities of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh that their people ought not to have the same right that is given to the people in all other parts of the state — to elect their own school directors?
The people of the State have vested the taxing power absolutely in the legislature, and it cannot delegate that power wholly or in part to either of the other departments of government, to any individual or to any board or commission. Delegatus non potest delegare. An exception to this rule — more apparent than real, however — is the power which the legislature may give to municipal authorities to assess and collect taxes for local purposes: Durach’s Appeal, 62 Pa. 491; Pennsylvania Railroad Company v. Pittsburgh, 104 Pa. 522. “There is an exception to the rule that the legislature cannot delegate the power of taxation, which has already been referred to. It is an exception as old as the rule itself; has its origin in the same causes; and is justified by the same governmental reasons. The local municipalities are, viewed in one aspect, the agents of the state for the purposes of local government; viewed in another aspect they are the local legislature, directly representative of and responsible to the people of their respective territories. The principle that taxation can only be by consent of the people to be taxed, acting through their representatives authorizes taxation by local authorities for local purposes, and discountenances interference in such matters by the representatives of other portions of the State. Long settled usage confirms this reasoning; and it is a firmly established doctrine that the power of local taxation for local purposes may be exercised by municipalities. In authorizing the local governmental bodies to exercise the power, the legislature may be regarded in theory, not really *343as delegating the power (for it is a power which belongs to the locality rather than to the government at large) but as laying down a general rule for the exercise, by the municipalities, of the power which belongs to them”: Gray, Limitations of Taxing Power, 281. “There is, nevertheless, one clearly defined exception to the rule, that the legislature shall not delegate any portion of its authority. The exception, however, is strictly in harmony with the general features of our political system, and it rests upon an implication of popular assent, which is conclusive. The exception relates to the case of municipal corporations”: Cooley on Tax., (2d Ed.), 63. Such corporations are considered parts of the machinery of the government, governmental agencies, necessary and most effective to manage the local affairs of the people residing in the designated locality, and, by custom immemorial, a portion of the political powers of the State has been delegated to them, to be exercised in local administration. But school directors are not municipal officers. They are not invested with any of the municipal powers, nor are they charged with the performance of municipal functions: Chalfant v. Edwards, 173 Pa. 246; Dillon Municipal Corporation, Sec. 25; Heller v. Stremmel, 52 Mo. 309.
While the legislature may authorize municipal authorities to levy taxes for local purposes, because municipalities are but the agents of the State, and their authorities are elected directly by the people from whom the taxes are to be collected, the Act of 1911 goes far beyond this. In school districts of the first class school directors are not to be elected by the people. They are not even to be appointed by the legislature, but are to be appointees of the judges of the courts of common pleas, who, strictly speaking, are not the representatives of the people. They represent only the law, chosen for that purpose at long intervals. In these appointees of an intervening branch of the State govern*344ment the legislature has undertaken to vest the power of taxation. The people who are to be taxed will have no voice in the selection of those who are to tax them. The scheme is one of bald taxation without representation and strikes at the very root of a republican form of government, for taxes are a grant of the people, and the grant must be made by their immediate representatives. The people are not to be taxed except by their own consent or that of officers truly representing them: Keasy v. Bricker, 60 Pa. 9. “From the very dawn of our liberties the principle most unquestionable of all has been this: that the people shall vote the taxes they are to pay, or be permitted to choose representatives for the purpose.” Cooley, J., in Detroit Board of Park Commissioners v. Detroit, 28 Mich. 228. “Self taxation, or taxation by officers chosen by or answerable to those directly interested in the district to be taxed, is inseparable from that protection of the right of property that is either expressly or impliedly guaranteed by all written constitutions, under our system of government. Of all the powers of government the one most liable to abuse is the power of taxation. If placed in hands irresponsible to the people of the district to be taxed, its abuse is a mere question of time”: Parks v. Wyandotte County Board of Com’s, 61 Fed. Repr. 436.
In Schultes v. Eberly, 82 Ala. 242, the question before the court was the constitutionality of an act of the legislature investing trustees appointed by the act, eo nomine, and their successors, to be appointed by the state superintendent of education, with the power to levy taxes for school purposes, and, in holding that the act could not be upheld, it was said: “It is useless to waste discussion to show that the ‘Cullman school district’ is not a municipal corporation. Speaking of such districts as corporate bodies, Judge Dillon says: ‘Considered with respect to the limited number of their corporate powers, the bodies above named rank low down in the scale or grade of corporate existence; and *345hence have been frequently termed quasi corporations. This designation distinguishes them, on the one hand, from corporations aggregate, and on the other, from municipal corporations proper, such as cities or towns acting under charters, or incorporating statutes, and which are invested with more functions and a larger amount of corporate life.’ 1 Dillon Munc. Corp., Sec. 25; Heller v. Stremmel, 52 Mo. 309. The people have no voice in the selection of the trustees, nor in the management and control of the public schools, the building of school houses, or any of the local affairs of the district. The first trustees are appointed eo nomine, in the act, and their successors by the state superintendent of education. They are clothed with all the executive powers pertaining to the purposes of the corporation, and are vested with the highest attribute of legislative power, to levy and collect a tax. Exclusive of the trustees, the corporation has no function; it does not possess what has been said to be the distinguishing feature of a municipal corporation proper, the power of local government in a corporate capacity; and the cardinal principle of self-taxation is ignored. It has no features in harmony with our system of republican government. However earnest may be the interest in popular education, and however great may be the desire to contribute to its spread and advancement, we cannot afford, in order to accomplish an end so benevolent and beneficial to break down the constitutional safeguards of property, which the sovereign people have ordained for their protection. If the authority of the legislature to delegate the power to tax to the trustees of this district is upheld, the constitutional limitations upon the power of the general assembly, counties and municipal corporations, are vain and delusive. Similar corporations, to an indefinite number, may be created, covering the entire territorial area and population of the state — subordinate agencies despotic sub modo, being governed by trustees of legislative appointment with power to impose *346a tax on the people, to whom they are under no official accountability, who have clothed them with no authority, and who are appointed without the consent of those who are to pay the tax, directly or indirectly expressed. If this can be done for educational purposes, it may be done for any other public purpose. Such legislation, first induced by a patriotic desire to secure the great desideratum of popular education, calculated to lull vigilance, may become misgovernment, subversive of the fundamental and distinguishing principles of republican institutions.” In the comparatively recent case of Vallelly, et al., v. Board of Park Commissioners (Supreme Court North Dakota), 111 N. W. Repr. 615, an act of the legislature authorized a board appointed by the city council, without the consent of the people, to levy general taxes. In declaring it unconstitutional, the court said in part: “It has become a well-recognized principle of constitutional law that local boards and councils elected by the people are bodies to which the power to tax may be delegated. This is so upon the principle that the legislative power to levy taxes rests with the people; and, so long as the people have a voice in the selection of bodies to which the power to tax is delegated, the constitutional restriction is not violated. The power of the legislature to delegate the authority to levy taxes is generally held to be limited to boards or councils elected by the people, and is not sanctioned when delegated to those appointed, when the appointment has not been assented to by a vote of the people. This limitation is recognized under the principle that all powers of taxation are reposed in the people, and, unless the people assent by vote to the appointment or election of the taxing authorities, the law authorizing such powers of taxation to those not thus assented to is repugnant to the Constitution, and not to be upheld. The power to levy taxes is one of the most important of legislative functions. If abused, it may amount to a practical confiscation of property. A power so far-*347reaching should not be reposed in any one not directly responsible to the people. If appointed by the people, and abuses follow, a remedy by removal is in their hands; otherwise, redress is so remote as to be without practical results. Regardless of Section 180, of the Constitution, the delegation of the taxing power to a person or board without some assent by the people could not be sustained. The power to tax is a legislative power and cannot be delegated to boards or commissions whose appointment has not been in some way assented to by the people.”
It is no answer to the contention that the legislature has delegated the power of taxation to school directors in school districts of the first class, that it has fixed the limit of the tax: to be levied and collected in those districts. It has not, as it might have, fixed definitely the rate of taxation in those districts but has delegated to boards to be appointed by the judiciary an absolute discretion and power to tax within certain limits, and the people who are to be taxed by such boards have no voice as to what the rate of taxation shall be. While a minimum below which and a maximum above which these appointed boards cannot go have been designated in the act, the authority to fix the rate of tax between the designated limits has been delegated to the boards and can be exercised according to their arbitrary discretion. Until they determine the rate of taxation to be levied within the districts for which they are appointed, no one in those communities can determine from the Act of 1911 what the tax is or will be. Until the boards act, the rate of tax is an unknown quantity. Indeed, until they do act, there, is no tax provided, for an undetermined tax is no tax in law. The determination of the amount or rate of a tax to be imposed is as essential in the exercise of taxing power as the designation of the property to be taxed, or the time for its collection or enforcement: State v. Ashbrook, 154 Mo. 375. All of the foregoing authorities, and many more that might *348be cited, announcing a fundamental principle of a republican form of government, have been ignored in sustaining the Act of 1911; and this is to be deplored.
The court below should have declared the Act of May 18, 1911, to be local or special legislation, so far as it relates to school districts of the first class, and an unauthorized attempt on the part of the legislature to delegate its power of taxation. I would, therefore, reverse the decree and dismiss the bill at appellee’s costs.
Mestrezat and Stewart, JJ., concur in this dissent.