delivered the opinion of the court.
Four distinct propositions are advanced by counsel for appellee in support of the judgment rendered in this case. We will consider these propositions separately, though not in the exact order of presentation by the briefs.
First. That the statute under consideration is a nullity, because its application rests wholly upon the performance of an act nowhere directed or authorized, viz., the issuing of certificates of incorporation by the secretary of state to corporations organized for pecuniary profit.
The statute in question provides that from and after its passage all corporations organized for pecuniary gain shall pay to the secretary of state, “upon the issuing of the certificate as provided in said chapter,” the fee designated. But “said chapter,” being chapter 19 of the General Statutes, does not require the issuing of certificates by the secretary of state where the corporation “is organized for pecuniary gain.” Hence giving the word ‘£ issuing ” its ordinary signification, and the provision a literal construction, would render the enactment a mere idle collection of phrases without force or effect.
The question here presented, therefore, is not which of two or more views as to the meaning and effect of a statute shall be taken; it is, rather, shall the statute be *62regarded as wholly meaningless and ineffective for any purpose whatever? The rules of construction in the two cases may be different. When two legislative purposes, each of which renders the law effective, are suggested, the courts may not ordinarily supply or substitute a word in order to give one of such purposes preference over the other; but where the alternative is presented of attributing to the enactment a rational purpose and effect, or of regarding it as a dead letter upon the statute book, the courts, when necessary, exercise great latitude in the endeavor to avoid the latter contingency. The view that a solemn legislative provision is a useless and lifeless thing should only be entertained when no reasonable intendment can be fairly deduced therefrom after diligent and industrious search, aided by all pertinent rules of statutory interpretation.
Upon this subject courts and law-writers use language much stronger than the above. The learned author of Potter’s Dwarris on Statutes and Constitutions, at page 128, quotes with approval the following maxim laid down by Vattel: ‘ ‘ The interpretation which renders a treaty (or statute) null and void cannot be admitted; it is an absurdity to suppose that after it is reduced to terms it means nothing. It ought to be interpreted in such a manner as that it may have effect, and not to be found vain and illusive.” When a statute would otherwise fail of its object, words may be treated as surplusage. U. S. v. Stern, 5 Blatch. 514; Simmons v. Powder Works, 7 Colo. 285. An act referring in terms to one section may be held to refer to another, if it would otherwise be a nullity. People v. King, 28 Cal. 265. An act misdescribing a prior act, upon which it depends, may be given effect; and “where a statute would operate unjustly, or absurd . consequences would result from a literal interpretation of terms and words used, the intention of the framers, if it can be fairly gathered from the whole act, will prevail.” Murray v. Hobson, 10 Colo. 66. Words are to be *63supplied, if necessary to give the statute force and effect. Nichols v. Halliday, 27 Wis. 406.
We are obliged to assume that in adopting the statute before us the legislature meant to accomplish some rational and sensible purpose; and we must, if possible, discover and effectuate this purpose. It is evident, however, that that body erred in the selection of a word to express the legislative intent, for the fee prescribed is to be paid upon the performance of a specified act, “ as provided in said chapter,” when no such act is therein mentioned; but that the legislature intended to designate the fee for some act coupled with the formation of corporations, and required by chapter 19, admits of no doubt; that it is something to be done by the secretary of state in connection with the certificate of incorporation is likewise put beyond question by the language employed.
Where uncertainty as to the meaning of a particular section exists, the whole act in which it is found should be considered. Upon turning to chapter 19 we find that an essential step in the formation of corporations for pecuniary gain is the filing of certificates of incorporation with the secretary of state. For the filing of such certificates a fee has always been exacted; and, construing the provisions of the chapter together with those of the amendatory act, we cannot escape the conclusion that the word “ issuing,” used in the latter, was inadvertently substituted for the word “filing,” employed in the former. The intent to fix a larger fee or charge for the filing of certificates of incorporation with the secretary of state, where the corporation is organized for pecuniary gain, appears with sufficient clearness to forbid our declaring the statute a nullity.
“ The object to be accomplished or the mischief to be remedied or guarded against ” may be considered in construing doubtful statutes. Aside from securing a material increase of the public revenue, the statute before us will discourage the organization of corporations for *64fraudulent purposes. The good name and credit of the state has suffered through the sale of stock by manipulators who have no serious expectation that there will be a return upon the investment. The capital stock is put at a fabulous sum, and sold at a figure so surprisingly low as to tempt the unwary. The comparatively large advancement in cash' as a filing fee made prerequisite by the statute will operate, to some extent, as a wholesome restraint.
Second. That since the statute under consideration is an amendment of chapter 19, section 1416 (which is a part of chapter 38) is not affected thereby, and the secretary of state should have demanded but $8.50, in accordance with the terms of said section 1416, instead of $7,341.50 under this provision.
The statute in pursuance of which the secretary proceeded is the later act, having been adopted eight years subsequent to the passage of section 1416. It is an affirmative statute, providing a different regulation in connection .with the same specific act. It covers the whole subject, and was evidently intended to prescribe the exclusive rule for the payment of the particular fee referred to. The two provisions are repugnant. It would hardly be contended, even by appellee, that both can stand, and that the secretary of state might, for filing the same certificate, exact the aggregate fees designated in both. One or the other must give way; and it requires the citation of no authorities to demonstrate that the former would have been repealed to the extent of the conflict by implication, even had the latter contained no repealing clause.
The fact that the latter statute does not in words refer to the earlier, but on the contrary purports to amend a different chapter, does not take away the repugnancy or alter the consequences arising therefrom. It is not absolutely necessary under the constitution that a repealing statute shall, either in its title or body, mention the statute repealed. Cooley, Const. Lim. 183.
*65Third. That the act in question is unconstitutional and void because the subject thereof is not clearly expressed in its title. Const, art. 5, § 21. The title challenged reads: “ An act to amend chapter 19 of the General Laws of Colorado, entitled ‘ An act to provide for the formation of corporations.’”
Chapter 19, as the title indicates, relates to the formation of corporations. Anything pertaining to or connected with the organization of corporations would therefore be a proper subject of treatment in this chapter. Without the filing of its certificate of incorporation a corporation does not acquire a complete de jure existence; yet the payment of the fee prescribed in connection with such filing is essential thereto, and until the deposit thereof the secretary of state may refuse to receive the instrument. The specific matter, therefore, covered by the statute is clearly germane to- the general subject expressed in the title, and we do not consider the present objection well taken.
The purpose of this constitutional provision is to prevent surprise and deception through legislation pertaining to one subject under a title relating to another. But it would be unreasonable as well as dangerous to require that each and every specific branch or subdivision of the general subject of an act be enumerated by its title. In reciting the several subordinate matters referred to, the hazard of violating that part of the provision which prohibits the treatment of more than one subject in the act is incurred; and, as a rule, it is wiser and safer not to attempt such enumeration, but to select an appropriate general title, broad enough to include all the subordinate matters considered. Canal Co. v. Bright, 8 Colo. 144.
Fourth. That the act is void because it purports to be an amendment of an existing statute, yet re-enacts no portion thereof.
The constitution (art. 5, § 24) declares that “no law shall-be revived, or amended, or the provisions thereof *66extended or conferx-ed, by l-eferexxce to its title only, but so much thereof as is revived, amended, extended ox-conferred shall be x-e-eixacted axxd published at length.”
The object of this constitutional px-ovision is to prevent obscurity, confusioxx and uncertainty in the laws; likewise to defeat attempted impositions ixi the enactment of laws. It forbids, among other things, amending a statute simply and solely by striking out or inserting certain wox-ds, phrases or clauses; a proceeding formex-ly common, through which laws became complicated, and their real meaning often difficult of ascertainment even by the legal profession. It also in a measure frustrates the passage of vicious legislation through amendments, the scope or effect of which is nob apparent from the acts themselves, by means whereof they ax-e made. It deals with such amendments of existing legislatioxx as change the application, force or effect of an act, or a portion thereof.
The statute challenged as void by virtue of conflict with the constitutional provision now under consideratioxi in effect adds a section to the chapter mentioned by its title. It is propex-ly termed an amexxdment, because, as we have seen, it deals with a matter germane to the general subject of the chapter. Yet it in no way changes any sectioxx or other specific portioxx of the act relating to the formation of domestic corporatioxxs for pecuniary gain. It introduces a requirement wholly new to the act, in so far as it pertaixxs to this class of corporations. It is complete ixx itself, covering all there is in the chapter as amended with referexxce to- the filing fee to be exacted from domestic corporations of the kixxd mentioxxed. It enacts axxd publishes at length so much of the act as it treats of. It can result in xxo ambiguity or uncex-tainty, nor could any legislator have been misled or deceived as to its purpose and effect.
- Is it true that ixx order to adopt this provision as an amendment the legislature must have re-enacted the en*67tire one hundred and sixty sections of chapter 19, filling forty-two pages of the General Statutes, or at least the one hundred and twenty-five sections thereof that relate to domestic corporations for pecuniary gain? We cannot think for a moment that the framers of our constitution ever contemplated such an expensive, absurd and useless proceeding as the offspring of the constitutional section mentioned. It is, in our judgment, not within the spirit of the provision, and we shall decline to treat it as within its letter.
We do not admit the correctness of those decisions which hold analogous constitutional provisions to be directory merely; nor do we indorse the accuracy of the cases in which it is declared that these provisions are mere rules for the guidance of the legislature in the enactment of laws. In our judgment they are mandatory, not directory, and are to be classed among limitations of legislative power, rather than among those .regulations of legislative conduct, a disobedience of which is held not necessarily fatal.
But since doubts exist with reference to the meaning of this constitutional provision, we discover no reason why the rule giving weight to legislative interpretation in such cases should not be invoked. The legislative view would, it is true, not be conclusive, yet it is important and deserves cai’eful attention. Upon examination we find that the amendment of existing acts by the addition thereto of new provisions, without re-enacting the entire acts amended, has been a very frequent occurrence. Every general assembly of the state, from the first to the last, inclusive, has in some instances adopted this course; while, on the contrary, we know of no case where in merely adding a section the unamended portion of the act has been re-adopted as an entirety. Thus •we have a legislative construction of the constitutional provision, uniformly and repeatedly announced by the *68action of all general assemblies of the state hitherto assembled.
It is a matter also worthy of notice that among the statutes adopted in this way are provisions relating to the most important subjects of legislation. Educational institutions have been organized, judicial proceedings have been conducted, public improvements have been made and public debts incurred, and property rights have accrued, under and in pursuance of such statutes. The disastrous consequences that would result from holding them unconstitutional can neither be foreseen nor appreciated. While this consideration might not justify us in upholding statutes that ai’e clearly unconstitutional, yet, were the scales of judgment upon the question evenly poised, it might properly incline the balance towards the validity of the legislation.
We are aware of the language employed by Mr. Cooley and other learned writers and jurists with reference to constitutional provisions somewhat analogous to the one now under consideration. Cooley, Const. Lim. 181 et seq., and cases cited. But most of the constitutions mentioned by Cooley differ from ours in one important particular: they require the whole act or section amended to be re-enacted and published at length. The mandate we are considering directs that so much only of the law as is amended be thus re-enacted and published. In this respect the corresponding provisions in the constitutions of Colorado and Missouri are substantially the same. See Mayor v. Trigg, 46 Mo. 288. We have found but one case where the constitutionality of an act was challenged under facts similar to those presented in the case at bar, and upon the specific ground here urged, though that of Mayor v. Trigg, supra, is closely analogous. But the case referred to was decided by the supreme court of Alabama, where the constitutional provision is unlike that of Colorado in the particular above recited.
In so far as the statute under consideration relates to *69the formation of domestic corporations,— corporations like appellee, — this particular constitutional objection is also overruled. The judgment of the court below must be'reversed.
Reversed.