Opinion by
Porter, J.,The city of Scranton, by an ordinance approved by the city recorder on September 26, 1902, provided for the construction of a sewer in Meridian street, in said city, and directed the director of the department of public works to make an assessment against the owners of. abutting property in accordance with the foot-front rule. The assessment 'was made as directed by said ordinance and the city filed a lien against the abutting property owned by the defendants. A scire facias was issued ujion this lien and the appellees defended upon the ground that the city was without legal authority to authorize the director of the department of public works to make an assessment upon the property under the foot-front rule, and to file and enforce a lien for the collection of said assessment. The facts were undisputed at the trial, and the court reserved the question of law as to the right'of the city of Scranton, being a city of the second class, to make the assessment and file the lien under the provisions of the Act of May 23, 1889, article XIII, P. L. 277, entitled “ An act providing for the incorporation and government of cities of the third class.” The court subsequently entered judgment in favor of the defendants non obstante veredicto *135upon the question of law reserved and the city appeals. The sole question is whether the act of 1889, providing for the government of cities of the third class, is in force in the city of. Scranton, which is, and from a time considerably prior to Sep-, tember, 1902, had been, a city of the second class.
The appellant, the city, asserts the right to make the assessment and proceed for the collection thereof in this manner by virtue of article XX of the Act of March 7, 1901,- P. L. 20, entitled “ An act for the. government of cities of the second class.” The provision of the statute thus relied upon is in. these words, viz.: “From and after the passage of this act, all laws relating to cities of the third class shall continue to apply to cities of that class which have passed or may pass into a city of the second class by reason of increase in population, except so far as such laws are supplied by, or in conflict with, laws relating to cities of the second class.” The defendants contend that the provision of the act of 1889 empowering councils to direct the city engineer to levy an assessment for the construction of a lateral sewer against abutting property according to the front-rule is, within the meaning of the provision of the act of March 7, 1901, above quoted, “ supplied by ” the Act of May 16, 1891, P. L. 75, authorizing the construction of sewers and the assessment of the cost thereof upon abutting property, according to benefits; which applies to cities of the second class as well as all other cities of the commonwealth, and that, therefore, the act of 1901 did not revive and extend the provisions of the act of 1889 to the city of Scranton. Thejfurther contend that if this provision of the act of 1901 is to be construed as reviving and extending to the city of Scranton, a city of the second class, all the powers conferred upon cities of the third class b}r the act of 1889, then this provision of the statute produces local results and is obnoxious to the seventh section of the third article of the constitution, which prohibits the general assembly from passing any local or special law regulating the affairs of counties, cities, townships, wards, boroughs or school districts.
“ It may be taken as settled law that in cases of this character the courts will look beyond the mere form of the act, and examine its true intent and effect, in the light of the purpose of the constitutional restrictions: ” Commonwealth v. Gilligan, *136195 Pa. 504. The effect and consequence of a proposed construction of a statute, as well as its reason and spirit, are to be considered in determining its validity: Whitmire v. Muncy Creek Twp., 17 Pa. Superior Ct. 399; Appeal of City of Scranton School District, 113 Pa. 176. Classification is the grouping together for the purposes of legislation of municipalities which, by reason of similar situation, circumstances, requirements and convenience, will have their public interests best subserved by similar regulations. The basis of the classification to which the statutes with which we are now dealing refer is population, the number of the inhabitants of the various cities of the commonwealth. The division of the cities of the state, for purposes of legislation, into three classes, determined by the number of their inhabitants, under the provisions of the act of 1874, was sustained by the Supreme Court, but a clear warning was given in Ayars’ Appeal, 122 Pa. 266, that an increase in the number of classes would not be sustained. The act of 1874 designated cities of the third class as those containing less than 100,000 and exceeding 10,000 inhabitants, and cities of the second"class as those containing less than 300,000 and exceeding 100,000 population. The city of Pittsburg was, at the time of the passage of that act, the only city of the second class. The census of 1890 disclosed that the city of Allegheny had a population exceeding 100,000 and that city passed from the third class into the second class. The census of 1900 established that the city of Scranton had over 100,000 inhabitants and it ceased to be a city of the third class and entered the second. There were at the time of the approval of the act of 1901 three cities of the second class, to no one of which at that date did the provision of the act of 1889, relating to cities of the third class and authorizing an assessment for the construction of a sewer according to the foot-front rule, apply. The city of Pittsburg never had been subject to the provisions of any of the statutes providing for the government of cities of the third class; the city of Allegheny had been a city of the third class prior to 1890, and Scranton had been a city of the third class prior to the year 1901, but both of the latter cities had passed out of the third class and were no longer subject to the provisions of the legislation which invested cities of the third class with power to levy an assessment for the construction of a sewer according to *137the foot-front rule. The effect, therefore, of the above quoted provision of the act of 1901, if it is to be construed as now contended for by the city of Scranton, was to revive and extend to that city all the powers and rights conferred by the act of 1889 upon cities of the third- class, while withholding such powers and rights from the city of Pittsburg, although both cities were unquestionably within the same class. Whether such rights and powers were also denied to the city of Allegheny it is not necessary to inquire; they certainly were not granted to all the members of the class. A statute relating to the government of cities of a given class is a general act, although it applies only to a city while it is in the class. We are not dealing with the question of whether a local or special law is repealed by a later general law with which it comes into conflict, nor are we dealing with the form of the municipal government, the number and character of its officers; this is a question of a power to tax in a particular manner. The act of 1901 is a statute for the government of cities of the second class, and, while dealing with them as a class, the article above quoted attempts to confer, upon some member's of the class, powers and privileges which it withholds from other members of the same class. That statute made no change in the classification of cities as fixed by the act of 1874 and the Act of 1889, P. L. 133, but the provisions in question certainly discriminated between members of the same class. If such a discrimination is valid then we would have in addition to the three classes of cities established by the Act of May 8, 1889, P. L. 133, an additional class composed of those cities of the second class which have at some time since the year 1874 been members of the third class. “ Instead of one form of municipal government for all cities of the commonwealth we have now three forms, one for each class, and to the form so provided every member of each class must conform. A reason for this is found in the fact that since 1874 local legislation regulating the affairs of a city is forbidden by the constitution, so that legislation for that purpose can be had only for a class, and must be applicable to every member of the class Commonwealth ex rel. McKirdy v. Macferron, 152 Pa. 244; Commonwealth v. Wyman, 137 Pa. 508. We are of opinion that the provision of the act of 1901, above quoted, cannot, without bringing it into conflict with the *138constitutional restriction, be given the construction contended for by the appellant, and made to clothe the city of Scranton with power to assess the cost of a sewer upon abutting property according to the foot-front rule.
The judgment is affirmed.