This case has been twice before this court previous to the present appeal. We are now informed by the appellant that the chief object of this appeal is to present for decision a ¡joint which has hitherto purposely been withdrawn from our consideration, although it might have been presented on the prior appeals. That point is, that the act incorporating the Milwaukee & Superior Railroad Company had not been published at the time the mortgage mentioned in the complaint was made by the appellant to the company, and it was not, therefore, in force; and there was no such corporation as that company then in existence.
If the charter of the company is a general law, within the meaning of sec. 21, Art. VII of the state constitution, then it was not in force until after the publication thereof. This court, in several decisions, has considered the word general used in that section as synonymous with public, when the latter is applied to statutes which relate to the entire state, or create counties, cities or towns. There is a class of statutes, however, called public, which are not embraced in the term general, as used in our constitution. Of that class is every act that would be strictly private, but for a provision therein inserted that it shall be a public act. The acts that are public or general *260within the meaning of section twenty-one, are so inherently, without such provision.
Is the Milwaukee & Superior Railroad Company & public or a private corporation ?
The authorities are to the effect that those corporations are public which are created and exist for public purposes, such as counties, cities, villages, towns and parishes; those are private where the stock is owned by individuals, though their use may be public; such as banks, insurance companies, and corporations for building bridges, canals, and railroads. 2 Kent’s Com., 275; 1 Bald., 223; Dartmouth Col. v. Woodward, 4 Wheat., 518-668 et seq.; 9 Wheat., 907; The People v. Morris, 13 Wend., 325. If the Milwaukee & Superior Eailroad Company is a private corporation, as we think it is, it appears to us that it follows that the act creating it is a private act. But the counsel for the appellant insists that there are certain provisions in the act of incorporation, which are not only inherently public, but are so within the decisions of this court. Such, he contends, are those of the 25th section, which provides that any person or persons who shall maliciously stop or obstruct the trains of the company, or do certain injuries to its property, shall, on conviction, be punished by fine, or imprisonment in the state prison, or both. The 27th section provides that towns and villages may, by issuing their bonds, aid in the construction of the road. This section, it is contended, contains substantially the same provisions as the acts did, which this court decided to be public or general acts within the meaning of sec. 21, Art. VII. of the constitution, in The Town of Rochester v. The Alfred Bank, 13 Wis., 432, and in Berliner v. The Town of Waterloo, 14 Wis., 378. We think this is true. We shall not stop, however, to enquire whether those cases were correctly decided or not. The acts construed in those cases were additions to, or amendments of, acts the principal provisions of which were public and general. Sections 25 and *26127 are in an act tbe principal and all the other provisions of which are private. It might, perhaps, be held that the principal provisions of an act should govern its incidental, so far as to determine whether they are public or private.
The last section of the act incorporating the Railroad Company provides that the act shall be in force from and after the time a certain resolution therein described shall be filed in the office of the secretary of state. This resolution was filed before the appellant gave his mortgage. It is reasonable that we should give effect to this provision of the act, if we can. There are in it such provisions as make it mainly and essentially a private act, and other provisions, such as those of sections 25 and 27, of a public character, which are separate and distinct from the former, and without which the corporation may well exist and do that for which it was created. "We see no reason why the act, as to every part of it strictly private, may not be in force from and after such time as the legislature prescribes, though it is not published. "We therefore hold that the Milwaukee & Superior Railroad Company was a corporation existing at the time the mortgage was made.
2. It is maintained by the appellant that the bonds of the city of Milwaukee, delivered as the consideration of the transfer to the city of the note and mortgage, are void, having been made and delivered without authority. The questions which have arisen as to similar instruments, and which may arise as to the validity of these bonds and the rights of bona fide holders to enforce them, have been decided so differently by the United States courts from the decision of this and other state courts, that we do not think we could certainly protect the city by any decision of ours, unless the holders of the bonds should be within our jurisdiction, so that we could, by acting on their persons, require them to surrender and cancel the bonds. The bonds are payable to bearer, pass from hand to hand by delivery, and have several years to run before they *262will mature. On this point we adhere to the opinion given in this case the last term of this court.
By the Court — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.