dissenting.
I am not quite able to agree with the majority opinion. It is said in the syllabus of that opinion that the identical questions presented were presented and argued in McShane v. State, 93 Neb. 54, and that this case is controlled by the decision in that one. Oh referring to that case I find it stated in the syllabus that- “The question decided-therein was identical with the one determined in State v. McShane, ante, p. 46.” On turning to that case, I find the statement in the syllabus that “So much of chapter 53, laws 1907, as authorizes the county board of counties having-more than 100,000 inhabitants to contract with the lowest and best bidder for feeding prisoners in the county jail is violative of the provisions of section 11, art. Ill of the constitution.” It may be well to run over these cases, with a view to ascertaining what has been decided.
In the first case (State v. McShane 93 Neb. 46) it is said that the relator brought the action in the district court for-Douglas county for a writ of mandamus to compel the respondent as sheriff of that county, to allow the relator and the firm of Garnipee & Flanagan admission to the jail of Douglas county in order to furnish meals to the prisoners confined therein for and during the year 1912, under a-contract entered into for that purpose between the county commissioners and said firm under the provisions of section 5, ch. 28, Comp. St. 1905, as amended by chapter 53, laws, 1907. The respondent filed an answer to the alternative writ, which the district court held stated no defense, and the writ of mandamus was allowed as prayed, and the-respondent appealed. The appellant in that case con-~ tended that so much of the amendatory act of 1907 as provided that “it shall be the duty of the board of county com*704missioners to advertise on or before December 1,1907, and annually thereafter, for proposals for furnishing meals to prisoners in the county jail according to specification^ set forth in said advertisement, and on or before the first day of January in each year to contract with the lowest and best bidder for feeding prisoners in the county jail,” is unconstitutional and void. It was the contention in that case that the part referred to was unconstitutional because it was in violation of section 11, art. Ill of the constitution, providing: “ ‘No bill shall contain more than oné subject and the same shall be clearly expressed in its title.’ Second. The amendatory act is broader than its title. Third. The act, both .directly and by implication, amends several sections of the general laws of the state relating to the powers and duties * * * of the sheriff, without expressly repealing such sections and re-enacting them. Fourth. That the act is local and special legislation, and is violative of section 15, art. Ill of the constitution, which provides: ‘The legislature shall not pass local or special laws. * * * Where a general law can be made applicable, no special law shall be enacted.’ On the first proposition it may be said that the act in question purports-to amend section 5, ch. 28, Comp. St, 1905, entitled ‘Fees,’ and, in so far as it treats of that subject, it might be said to be germane to the section amended. It appears, however, that the act provides that for boarding prisoners the sheriff shall receive 50 cents per day; ‘provided, that in counties having by the last preceding national or state census a population in excess of 100,000 the sheriff shall receive for boarding prisoners, including jail supplies, 39 cents per prisoner per day until January 1, 1908, and it shall be the duty of the board of county commissioners to advertise on or before December 1, 1907, and annually thereafter, for proposals for furnishing meals to prisoners in the county jail according to specifications set forth ih said advertisement, and on or before the first day of January in each year to contract with the lowest and best bidder for feeding prisoners in the «ounty jail; provided, further, that the sheriff shall, on the first Tuesdav in January, April, July and October of *705each' year, make a report to the board of county commissioners or supervisors under oath, showing the items of fees, except mileage, collected or earned, from whom, at what time, and for what service, and the total amount of fees collected or earned by such officer since the last report, and also the amount collected or earned for the current year, and he shall then pay all fees earned to the county treasurer.’ It must be said that section 5, ch. 28, Comp. St. 1905, dealt exclusively with the subject of sheriff’s fees, and fixed the amount of fees he was to receive for official acts performed by him, that that part of the proposed amendment which is claimed to be unconstitutional does not deal with the subject of fees but deals with matters entirely foreign to the subject matter of the original section, and refers specifically to the powers and duties of the county board. It attempts to take the control of feeding prisoners away from the sheriff and place it with the county board, which is a matter regulated by a distinct section of the statute. The subjects are not closely' related, and are not germane to each other.” Many cases are then cited, with a view to showing the correctness of the contention made. We quote from the opinion. “It may be fairly said that the part of the section above quoted was not within the title to either the original or amendatory acts, and was not germane to the subject of either of those acts. We are, therefore, of opinion that so much of the amendatory act as refers to the powers and duties of the board of county commissioners is unconstitutional and void. * * * A careful reading of the amendatory act satisfies us that, after eliminating the unconstitutional portion of it, the remainder of the act is complete in itself, and capable of enforcement. It has been repeatedly held that, if the unconstitutional and constitutional provisions of an act can be separated and leave the remainder of it capable of enforcement, the unconstitutional provisions will be stricken out, and the constitutional provisions will be preserved.” Here follow citations. It is then said: “From the foregoing, it follows that the contract upon which the *706relator bases its right to the writ of mandamus was not- authorized by law, and the district court erred in overruling and disregarding the respondent’s answer and awarding the writ as prayed.” There is then a provision in the opinion for an order that the judgment of the district court be reversed and the action dismissed.
The second McShane case being McShane v. State, 93 Neb. 54, is a second reversal of the judgment of the district court, and is said to cover the same question, except that the item under consideration was : “Board of prisoners from date of conviction, August 27, 1912, to August 30, 1912, 4 days, at 50 cents a day, $2.” Time seems to be the main difference. The county is always Douglas county, except that in the last case (McShane v. State, 93 Neb. 54), there was a trial in the district court for Lancaster county, but it was the consideration of an appeal from a judgment of the district court sustaining the action of the auditor of public accounts in disallowing a portion of a claim presented by the plaintiff in that case to the auditor for allowance against the state. It was for “board of prisoners from date of conviction, August 27, 1912, to August 30, 1912, 4 days, at 50 cents a day, $2.” This particular claim was allowed “at only 19 cents a day.” In that case it was stipulated that the question presented for determination was identical with the one decided “in State v. McShane, 93 Neb. 46, and the two cases have been consolidated and argued as one.” In that case it was said that “the provision contained in chapter 53, laws 1907, by which the legislature attempted to authorize the county commissioners in counties having more than 100,000 inhabitants to let contracts for feeding prisoners in the county jail to the lowest and best bidder, is unconstitutional and void.” It was said, therefore, that, as the plaintiff had “furnished the meals in question to a state’s prisoner, *- * he was clearly entitled to the compensation mentioned in that part of chapter 53 remaining in force, by which it is declared that the sheriff shall receive the sum of 50 cents a day for furnishing meals to such a prisoner.” It will be seen that the legislature adopted the sum of 19 cents a day, *707and that the court, by declaring the act of the legislature unconstitutional, has made 50 cents a day possible, something that the legislature did not contemplate when it reduced the price to 19 cents a day. Unless we have to do so, I do not wish to substitute the will of this court in lieu of the intention of the legislature. It is the legislature which has power to fix the compensation. I do not want to fix it. It is true that the result is the effect of a ruling. The ruling knocks out and nullifies the intention of the legislature, and revives the fee fixed at a former and different time. The instant case proposes to follow the cases cited and make the sum 50 cents a day. That may not be exorbitant, but it is not the Avill of the legislature that such a sum shall be paid, and I do not want the supreme court of our state to be encumbered with legislative duties and responsibilities, which it will be unless it is very careful how it handles this case.
In the instant case it is said that the claim is 3,045 days at 50 cents a day. There was a small credit for gas and water of $42.43. The claim in the majority opinion is alleged to be “a net claim of $1,480.07.” “The defendant answered, pleading that chapter 53, laws, 1907, purporting to amend section 5, ch. 28, Comp. St. 1905, was void; that it violated section 11, article III of the constitution; that a portion of said chapter 53 had been declared unconstitutional by the supreme court, and that the said portion was a material inducement to the adoption of the remainder, and that the legislature would not have passed the law had the part rejected not been included therein; that the sheriff’s fees are fixed by section 5, ch. 28, Comp. St. 1905; that the meals furnished by the sheriff were not worth to exceed 7% cents a meal; that defendant has equipped a new jail with all the modern conveniences, and that the only expense incurred and service rendered by the plaintiff had been in the supplying, preparing and serving food to the prisoners, using the rooms and equipment of the defendant.” The majority opinion in the instant case recites the fact that “previous to April, 1907, the statute governing the compensation of sheriffs for feeding prisoners was *708as follows: ‘For boarding prisoners per day, not exceeding seventy-five cents per 'day, nor more than $3.50 per week when the prisoners are confined more than six days.’ Section’5, cb. 28, Comp. St. 1905.” It is alleged in the majority opinion that the legislature of 1907 passed an act amending the foregoing section so1 as to read: “Section 5. (Sheriff.) Serving capias with commitment or bail bond and return one dollar. * * * For boarding prisoners, fifty cents per day; provided, that in counties having by the last preceding national or state census a population in excess of 100,000 the sheriff shall receive for boarding prisoners, including jail supplies, thirty-nine cents per prisoner per day until January 1, 1908, and it shall be the duty of the board of county commissioners to advertise on or before December, 1907, and annually thereafter,' for proposals for furnishing meals to prisoners in the county jail according to specifications set forth in said advertisement, and on or before the first day of January in each year to contract with the lowest and best bidder for feeding prisoners in the county jail.” It is said: “The validity of the provisions authorizing the board of county commissioners to contract with the lowest bidder for feeding prisoners in the county jail was assailed in the case of State v. McShane 93 Feb. 46, for the reason that the provision was not within the title either of the original or the amendatory act, and was not germane to the subject of either. This view was taken by the court and it was said in the opinion: * * * ‘After eliminating the unconstitutional portion of it, the remainder of the act is complete in itself, and capable of enforcement.’ ”
It may be said with a good deal of force that, if this court sees fit to do so, it may say that part of an act is unconstitutional, and that the part of the act which is unconstitutional is no inducement to the passage of that part of the act which is constitutional, and it may further say that the part remaining is complete in itself, and capable of being-enforced. It is the opinion of the writer that we are on very dangerous ground whenever a court condemns part of an act as unconstitutional, and then proceds to say that *709that part was no inducement to the passage of the other part, and that the part remaining is to be considered complete and capable of enforcement by itself. The danger is that, if the court does not like what is declared unconstitutional, it will have no trouble in rejecting it, but, if it likes wha.t is left, it will want to keep it, and there is no rule by which it can be told with certainty what the opinion of the court will be. It may like what is left and, if so, it will retain it. If the court desires to defeat the whole act, it is so easy for it to say that the unconstitutional part was an inducement to the passage of the other part. If it wants to keep the other part, it will say that the unconstitutional part was no inducement. The whole matter is pure speculation. It will dislike what it declares unconstitutional, and, if so, it will put it out. This doctrine is objectionable, no difference how many times this court in the past has said that it could be resorted to. The fact is one of personal preference of the judge or judges which determines their action. The attempted rule is as fleeting and intangible as the end of a rainbow. This sort of rule makes the court a lawmaker. It gives it legislative powers. Whenever it concludes to go in and nullify part of an act upon the ground that it is unconstitutional, it can keep the remainder, or put it out, just as it pleases. If it puts the whole act out, the effect is to revive a discarded law, like the 50 cents a day in this indentical case. Here' is a case where the legislature contemplated one thing and attempted to do it. It declared for the lowest bidder. The supreme court declares for a law that the legislature had pronounced repealed. It may be argued upon humanitarian grounds that it is a bad thing to let the contract to the lowest bidder. It may be said that he would All the prisoners with diluted and dangerous food. But that is a matter which might be met in some other way; perhaps by the employment of an intelligent and humane inspector.
Of course, it can be further said that it might be made the duty of the sheriff to run a boarding house of this size in a clean, capable and. efficient manner, so that the prisoners would get good food. The sheriff should be pro*710vided for; if not by fees, then by a liberal salary; but our court should not be required to render any decision likely to be misunderstood as a juggling or sleight of hand performance. Any one capable of analyzing the cases referred to might come to that conclusion. There is no. way to avoid this sort of thing as long as the whim of the individual may become the law of the court.