This action was commenced by the Nebraska Telephone Company in the district court of Lancaster county to enjoin the members of the board of transportation and their secretaries from taking cognizance of a complaint presented to them by John O. Yeiser, and from assuming to exercise jurisdiction under the provisions of chapter 56 of the Session Laws of 1897. A more extended statement of the facts out of which the controversy has arisen will be found in the former opinion affirming the judgment of the trial court. See Nebraska Telephone Co. v. Cornell, 58 Nebr., 823, 80 N. W. Rep., 43. On motion of appellant a rehearing was allowed, and the cause having been reargued is again submitted. LWe have read with great interest the very able and im*746pressive arguments presented by counsel, for both parties, and have endeavored to give the casé the careful and thorough consideration which the importance of the questions involved entitles it to receive. After much reflection the conclusion reached ■ is that, while the reasons given for the former decision require revision, the judgment of affirmance is right and should be adhered to.
On the first submission it was held (the writer dissenting) that the plaintiff’s petition did not disclose a right to equitable relief, assuming the legislation relative to the board of transportation to be valid. This holding was wrong, and we afterwards so decided in Pacific Express Co. v. Cornell, 59 Nebr., 364, 81 N. W. Rep., 377.
This question being out of the way, we will give attention to the arguments touching the authority of the defendants to inquire into the business of the plaintiff; and to reduce its charges in case the same are found to be excessive or unjust.
On behalf of the company it is contended that the act of 1887 (Session Laws, ch. 60), creating the board of transportation and defining its powers, is in conflict with section 26 of article 5 of the constitution, which in terms forbids the creation by the legislature of any executive state office. It is also claimed that the act clashes with section 2 of article 5 of the constitution, which declares that none of the state officers of the executive department shall be eligible to any other state office. These questions are not now presented to this court for the first time. As early as 1883 they were considered by the learned judges who at that time constituted the court. In an advisory opinion then given, at the request of the house of representatives, it was declared by those judges that legislation of the character now under consideration would not trench upon the supreme law. See In re Railroad Commissioners, 15 Nebr., 679. We are aware that this case is not a decision in the technical sense of *747the term. But it represents, nevertheless, the best judgment of the members of the court upon a matter likely to come before them at some time for adjudication. It has been acquiesced in and accepted by every department of the government, and by the people, as a guide of conduct and a rule of action. To discredit it now would be to open Pandora’s box, and turn loose a brood of evils, without the means at hand to cope successfully with them. This court on several occasions has taken jurisdiction of causes and decided controversies involving large interests on the assumption that the act of 1887 was a valid and enforceable law. See State v. Fremont, E. & M. V. R. Co., 22 Nebr., 313, 23 Nebr., 117; State v. Missouri P. R. Co., 29 Nebr., 550; Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. State, 50 Nebr., 399.
In the recent case of Pacific Express Co. v. Cornell, supra, the question was directly presented for decision, and it was there held, in an opinion by Harrison, C. J., that the board of transportation was a lawfully constituted body invested Avith poAver to inquire into the business of express, telegraph and telephone companies, and to regulate their rates. That' decision avus made in the light of the arguments hoav before us, and, upon the point Avhich Ave have been considering, must be accepted as final.
Another contention of the appellant is that the powers conferred on the ‘board of transportation by the act of 1887 were entirely wiped out by the act of 1893 (Session LaAvs, ch. 24), knoAvn as the “Maximum Rate Luav”; and that, therefore, the act of 1897, giving the board jurisdiction over express, telegraph and telephone companies, is incapable of enforcement. The act of 1887, as construed by this court, invested the board of transportation Avith authority to establish rates for the carriage of freight by railroad companies from one point to another within the state.
By the act of 1893 the legislature fixed maximum rates for the transportation by rail of commodities within the *748state. The effect of this act was to permit the railroads to charge the prescribed maximum rates, unless the board of transportation should exercise the power conferred upon it by section 6, which, so far as material to the present inquiry, is as follows: “That the board of transportation is hereby empowered and directed to reduce the rates on any class or commodity in the schedule of rates fixed in this act, whenever it shall seem just and reasonable to a majority of said board so to reduce any rate; and said board of transportation is hereby empowered and directed to revise said classification of freight as hereinbefore in this act established, whenever it shall appear to a majority of said board just and reasonable to revise said classification.”
The power of the board to regulate freight charges was not, we think, materially changed by the act of 1893. That act authorized a reduction of rates whenever it should seem to the board reasonable and just. In other words, it conferred upon the board authority, Avithin the limits of the law, to fix reasonable rates. The carriers may, of course, reduce their rates below the statutory schedule; and the board of transportation may undoubtedly order a further reduction, if, upon investigation, such rates are found to be excessive. The power granted to the board by each of the acts Avas power to fix reasonable rates. The act of 1893 condemned all rates in excess of the maximum limit therein prescribed, as extortionate and unjust; and thus narrowed the field of inquiry open to the board. But the power given by the act of 1887 to reduce excessive rates and make them reasonable remained as before. If, therefore, there is an irreconcilable conflict between the two statutes so far as they relate to the regulation of freight rates, the repeal effected by the later act would still leave the board with undiminished power.
In this connection we have occasion to refer again to the case of Pacific Express Co. v. Cornell, supra. It was there in effect held that the act of 1893, the “Maximum *749Eate Law,” never became operative and is not now in force. The act was adopted in accordance with established procedure, and, presumably, was from the beginning a constitutional and valid law. This court has never decided that it was invalid or unenforceable; and there is certainly nothing in the record now before us upon which to ground such inference. We know as a matter of history that the circuit court of the United States decided in the case of Smyth v. Ames that the enforcement of the law of 1893 would have been, under circumstances then existing, a confiscation of property of the companies which were parties to that action. We also know of the affirmance of that decision by the federal supreme court; and understand that it is at present a binding adjudication between the parties to the suit. See Smyth v. Ames, 169 U. S., 466, 171 U. S., 361. It is not, however, of any force as to other railroad corporations. It may be that the law at the time of its enactment was enforceable against some of the companies, but not against all. Those whose lines are wholly within the eastern part,of the state, where the population is comparatively dense and business generally prosperous, may have had no just reason to complain of the maximum charges established by the act of 1893. But, however that may be, it is perfectly clear that we are not warranted in holding, in this case, that the law did not become immediately operative. We could not reach that conclusion without having first determined that the legislation was confiscatory as to all railroads doing business in the state. There is, on the face of the act, nothing whatever to indicate that its execution would deprive freight carriers of their property without due process of law, or deny them the equal protection of the laws; and we are not authorized to take judicial notice of the facts, which it is claimed would establish such deprivation and denial. Neither can we, in pronouncing upon the validity of the statute, be influenced in any way by the judgment in Smyth v. Ames. We do not presume *750to question the correctness of that judgment. But we can not take it for granted that the evidence will be the same in every other case, in which the constitutionality of this legislation may be challenged. But if it were true that the law did not become effective in 1893, it would not at all follow that it is still forceless and inert. It ought rather to be presumed that it has been vitalized by prosperity and that, under improved business conditions, its once dormant energies have been quickened into action. The statement contained in the seventh point of the syllabus to the case of Pacific Express Co. v. Cornell, supra, is obviously unsound and is disapproved.
The next contention of appellant is that the act of 1897, by its express terms, limits the power of the board of transportation to the regulation of charges for “messages sent.” The section of the statute bearing upon this point is in these words:
“Sec. 2. That the powers of the board of transportation to regulate charges by corporations, companies and persons herein referred to, shall apply only to charges by express, for transportation from one point to another in this state, and messages sent by telegraph and telephone from one point to another in this state.”
This provision was intended, we think, to limit the jurisdiction of the board to intrastate business, and to exclude the possible inference that regulation of interstate commerce was within the contemplation of the lawmaking body. It is said by counsel for the company that the defendants are asserting the right to regulate rentals and not charges for “messages sent.” In view of the manner in which telephone companies conduct their business, it is not perceived how it would be practicable to regulate charges for messages sent without at the same time regulating rentals. The business of a telephone company is to Transmit messages from one place to another. That is the purpose for which it is brought into existence; it is the only business it is authorized to do; it is the only business it professes to do. The *751only service required of it by its customers is the transmission of messages sent to them and by them. All the instrumentalities employed by the company have for their ultimate object the carrying of messages. The real thing, and the only thing, for which the customers pay is the transmission of messages, whatever may be the forms in which the charges are made. In our opinion the legislature did not intend to give the board of transportation jurisdiction over telephone companies for the purpose merely of regulating specific charges for messages sent.
It is finally contended that the act of 1897 is amendatory legislation and as such is violative of section 11, article 3, of the constitution, which provides: “No law shall be amended unless the new act contains the section or sections so amended, and the section or sections so amended shall be repealed.” This contention can not be sustained. The law is, in substance, an act to regulate the rates of express, telephone and telegraph companies: and it might, with propriety, have been enacted under that title. For the accomplishment of the object in view it was in the first section provided: “That from and after the passage of this act, all companies or persons owning, controlling or operating, or that may hereafter own, control or operate, a line or lines of express, telephone or telegraph, whose line or lines is or are, in whole or in part, in this state, shall be under the control of the board of transportation of this state, who shall have the same power to regulate the prices to be charged by any company or person or persons owning, controlling or operating any line or lines of express, telephone and telegraph, for any services performed by such company, person or persons as they may have over railroad companies and other public carriers; and all the powers given to said board of transportation over railroads in this state by law are hereby declared to be of force against corporations, companies or a person or persons owning, controlling or operating a line or lines of ex*752press, telephone and telegraph, doing business in this state, whose line or lines is or are, wRolly or in part, in this state, so far as the provisions of said act can be made applicable to any corporation, company, person or persons owning, controlling or operating a line or lines of express, telephone and telegraph.” The second, and only other section, has been already noticed. Clearly the act does not profess to do that which is inhibited by the constitution. It does not assume to amend the law of 1887 or any other law; it purports to be, and it is, an original and independent statute. The title of the act of '1887'is: “An act to regulate railroads, prevent unjust discrimination, provide for a board of transportation, and define its duties, and repeal articles 5 and 8 of chapter 72, entitled ‘Railroads’ of the Revised Statutes and all acts and parts of acts in conflict herewith.” This legislation had for its object the regulation of railroad rates. As a means to that end, a board of transportation was created, and its jurisdiction defined. The act of 1897 relates exclusively to.express, telephone and telegraph companies, and touches in no way the subject of railroad regulation. Indeed, it is quite evident that, if the act of 1897 had been given the form of an amendment to the act of 1887, it could not be regarded as amendatory; for it would be neither embraced within the title of the earlier statute nor germane to its subject. Since it could not be regarded as amendatory legislation, if it had assumed that character, how can it be said to be amendatory, while professing to be an original and independent measure? It is legislation like that conferring jurisdiction on county courts in other than probate matters (Compiled Statutes, 1899, ch. 20, sec. 2), and like that creating the office of county attorney, and providing for the prosecution of criminal cases by information instead of by indictment. See Code of Criminal Procedure, ch. 51. It is valid legislation, because it does not modify or change in any respect the pre-existing law on the subject of railroad regulation, and, therefore, does not offend *753against the clause of the constitution quoted. If it were decided to be invalid, the principle of the decision would condemn a very considerable part of our statutory law. The question was considered and decided in Pacific Express Co. v. Cornell, supra, and with the conclusion there reached we are entirely satisfied. Campbell v. Board of Pharmacy, 45 N. J. Law, 241; State v. Hibernia U. R. Co., 47 N. J. Law, 43; People v. Banks, 67 N. Y., 568, and Curtin v. Barton, 139 N. Y., 505, are instructive precedents on this branch of the case. The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
NorvaL, C. J., toot no part in above opinion.