This is an action upon a judgment obtained by the plaintiff against the Central Vermont Railroad" Company, *602a different corporation from the defendant, and upon a Vermont statute, St. 1900, No. 142, requiring the defendant to pay certain judgments of which the plaintiff’s was one. The defendant was incorporated for the purpose of taking over the property of the judgment debtor, the Central Vermont Railroad Company, by means of a foreclosure sale. In payment it was authorized to give its own stock and bonds, and the charter provided, expressly and by reference to a preliminary agreement in pursurance of which the charter was obtained, who were to receive the stock and bonds, and in what amounts. The plaintiff was not mentioned or included in the arrangement. Vt. St. 1898, No. 159. The charter however provided that it should be “ subject to alterations, amendment or repeal, as the public good may require,” and the later statute justifies itself by its title as such an amendment, although in its enacting part it simply adds the requirement of these new payments to those which are in the original act. The defence is that the so-called amendment is contrary to the Constitution of Vermont and of the United States.
We regret very much that the former question at least should not be answered by the Supreme Court of Vermont rather than by ourselves. But as it arises in a suit properly before us we must deal with it to the best of our ability, as our predecessors and the courts of other States have done in similar cases. Simonds v. Simonds, 103 Mass. 572. Shoe & Leather National Bank v. Wood, 142 Mass. 563, 568. Stoddart v. Smith, 5 Binn. 355, 363. New York Life Ins. Co. v. Board of Commissioners, 106 Fed. Rep. 123.
The statute requires the defendant to pay a sum of money to a stranger, to whom, so far as appears, the defendant was under no previous legal, equitable, or moral obligation. A purchaser at a mortgage sale is not bound to pay creditors of the mortgagor who are less well secured than himself. It does not appear and is not contended, that, when the charter was granted, there was even an intention on the part of any one that the defendant should pay judgments like the present. It rather may be said to appear that there was no such intention, so far as any expression can be found in the documents. Such an intention cannot be presumed, because' one purpose *603of a foreclosure is to withdraw property from the reach of creditors of the mortgagor who have inferior Hens or none. In short, we cannot deal with the act as correcting a mistake and carrying out the understanding on which the defendant was called into being, and therefore uphold it upon the somewhat swampy ground of Danforth v. Groton Water Co. 178 Mass. 472.
The statute is an attempt to require private property to be applied to a private use, and therefore encounters those provisions of the Vermont constitution which declare the right to possess property, and, by making express provisions for compensation, etc., “ whenever any person’s property is taken for the use of the public,” implicitly prohibit the taking of it for uses not public. Vt. Const, c. 1, arts. 1, 2 and 9. Williams v. School District No. 6, 33 Vt. 271. Tyler v. Beacher, 44 Vt. 648, 651. Quimby v. Hazen, 54 Vt. 132, 140. Snow v. Sandgate, 66 Vt. 451. Talbot v. Hudson, 16 Gray, 417, 421. We presume that these provisions would not be limited by construction to cases where the statute identified the specific property taken, but would apply equally where the act required some property to be appropriated to the specified use. Indeed, as in this case the appropriation is to be in • the form of money, the further question is raised whether even if the use were public the taking of property in that form is within the power of the State. Cary Library v. Bliss, 151 Mass. 364, 378, 379.
It follows that the statute is void unless it is saved by the reservation of the power to amend the charter in the original act. We are of opinion that it is not saved. No doubt under a general reservation of such power amendments have been held valid which directly affected the property of a corporation by cutting down the tolls which the charter allowed it to charge, or by increasing the share of profits which the charter required it to pay over to another institution. Parker v. Metropolitan Railroad, 109 Mass. 506. Massachusetts General Hospital v. State Mutual Life Assurance Co. 4 Gray, 227, 234. But cases like these are in the strictest and most literal sense amendments of the charter, and do not lead to the conclusion that the power to take away property rights is unlimited. The contrary proposition of Chief Justice Shaw now is accepted by most courts as *604elementary law. An unqualified power to amend authorizes a modification of the franchise conferred, but does not authorize a departure from the general restrictions on legislation with regard to property acquired and owned by the company, by the device of inserting a confiscation clause in the charter by way of- amendment. Commonwealth v. Essex Co. 13 Gray, 239, 253. Sinking-Fund Cases, 99 U. S. 700, 720, 741, 748, 758. Detroit v. Detroit & Howell Plank Road Co. 43 Mich. 140, 147. People v. O’Brien, 111 N. Y. 1. Dow v. Northern Railroad, 67 N. H. 1. See Attorney General v. Old Colony Railroad, 160 Mass. 62.
The so-called amendment would not have fallen within the power of the Legislature had the power to amend the charter been general. But the power reserved is qualified by the words “ as the public good may require,” and this qualification presents a further objection to the act. We agree that every reasonable presumption is to be made in favor of the validity of the act, and that there are cases where the payment of public money to an individual not legally entitled to it may serve a public end. But we cannot invent fictions to save acts of the Legislature. We are unable to see how the public good can be said to require that the defendant should be compelled to pay another person’s debt.
Judgment for defendant.