After stating the ease,
Glauk, J.The two indictments are in law, to be treated, says State v. Perry, 122 N. C., at p. 1020, “as in effect two counts in the- same bill, State v. McNeill, 93 N. C., 552; State v. Johnson, 50 N. C., 221; and if either is good, the good count will support a verdict, State v. Toole, 106 N. C., 736, and numerous cases there cited;” and of course, if either is good, the judgment quashing the bill was error.
The defendant renews in this Court his motion to- quash for insufficiency of the indictment, as its refusal was not brought up by the appeal of the State. This he can do. Rule 27 of this Court, 119 N. C., 939. The second count in the bill is so full and explicit as to need no discussion. It is in substance the same as that upon which a conviction for this offense was sustained in State v. Southern Railway Co., 122 N. C., 1052. Though not discussed in the opinion, the same motion was made and argued before us in that case, and the judgment sustaining the conviction necessarily implied that the objection to the validity of the bill was overruled.
The first count alleges that the defendant, a common carrier * * * unlawfully and willfully did give undue and unreasonable preference to one T. N. Hallyburton by giving said T. N. Hallyburton a free pass over the road of the defendant company. This is defective, in that it fails to allege that by virtue of such free pass, said Hallyburton received free transportation, which would be an undue preference, forbidden by the statute, equally, whether it was given upon a free pass from an official, or by a verbal order, or upon a ticket or mileage book not in truth paid for, but donated bv *671tbe company. It is the fact of discrimination, and not the method by which it is done, which constitute sthe offense, though the method of violation may, and doubtless should be, charged in the indictment, to the end that the common carrier may be more fully prepared to meet the charge.
There are discriminations which require more explicit allegation, as for instance, illegal rebates upon freight charges, and the like, (U. S. v. Hanley, 71 Fed. Rep., 672), but as the common carrier carries for hire, the allegation that it gave a person named undue preference by transporting him free ex vi termini alleges discrimination. There are sections of the act creating this offense, which authorizes common earners to grant free transportation in specified cases, but not being within this section it is not necessary in the indictment to make the negative averment that Hallyburton did not belong to one of the excepted classes. State v. Harris, 119 N. C., 811; State v. Bynum, 117 N. C., 749. If he did, it would be matter of defense. State v. Downs, 116 N. C., 1067; State v. George, 93 N. C., 567.
If the short form set out in the first count had not been defective in the particular indicated, we are inclined to think (though we do not now pass upon it), it would have been sufficient. It would be no benefit to the defendant to require the Solicitor to exhaust time and labor in drafting the long and tedious instrument which constitutes the second count, if a shorter allegation can express “the charge against the defendant in a plain, intelligible and explicit manner,” which is all the statute exacts. Code, sec. 1183. The General Assembly has authorized the English form of indictment for murder (chap. 58, La.ws 1887), which can be sufficiently and fully set out in tlrree lines, State v. Arnold, 107 N. C., 861, 863; and all other indictments are greatly simplified, State v. Ridge, at this term. Certainly information can be con*672Veyed to a common carrier, employing intelligent servants and attorneys, that it is charged with violating the law against undue preference and discrimination, byicarrying-a passenger free, without using the above prolix form, covering two and a half printed pages — more than a thousand words.
Counsel argued to us that it must be charged and proved that at the same time and on the same train there were other passengers paying fare. We do not so understand the law (though this, in fact, is explicitly charged in the second count), for as the common carrier carries for hire, it would have been equally a preference and discrimination against the public if this had been a special train carrying a solitary dead-head, or a train composed entirely of that class whirled .away, possibly, to some political convention. In fact, either of these cases would be an aggravation of the offense instead of an excuse. As the common carrier is dependent for its profits upon its receipts, the carrying of those free who should pay (not being in the class excepted by law) necessarily adds the cost of their transportation to the charges exacted of those who pay, and such cost would be increased if the train, on a given occasion, carries all its passengers free, whether it is one man only in solitary and lonely state, or a car or train load, and this would equally violate another purpose of the law, which is to prohibit the many evil results which must be the necessary consequence of quasi public corporations having the power to discriminate in their charges.
The subject need not be further treated from this standpoint, as the purpose and constitutionality of the statute have been fully and carefully considered by MoNtgomeey, J., upon a previous indictment against the same defendant, 122 N. C., 1052.
The other point, and the one principally relied on by the *673defendant is that, the statute under which the indictment was drawn, Laws 1891, chap. 320, see. 4, is repealed by chap. 506, Laws 1899, but it was held at this term, in. Abbott v. Beddingfield, that chap. 164, Laws 1899, creating the Corporation Commission, which was enacted on the same day as chap. 506, in effect re-enacted and continued in force chap. 320, Laws 1891. It necessarily follows, therefore, that this indictment has lost none of its vitality by virtue of an act which merely amended and continued in force the statute under which it was drawn.
Nor, indeed, would the condition of the defendant be any bettor if the Court had adopted the view presented in the dissenting opinion in Abbott v. Beddingfield. That went upon the ground (so far as this matter is concerned), that the two acts taken as a whole were not the same. But there was, and can be, no controversy, that sec. 4, of chap. 320, Laws 1891, under which the defendant is indicted, is precisely the same, in lotidem verbis, with sec. 13 of chap. 164, Law's 1899, which was enacted on the same day at which the former statute was repealed, and it was held in State v. Williams, 117 N. C., 753, as follows: “The re-enactment by the Legislature of a law in the terms of a former law at the same time it repeals the former law, is not, in contemplation of law, a repeal, but it is a re-affirmance of the former law, whose provisions are thus continued without any intermission. Bishop Stat. Crimes, sec. 181; State v. Sutton, 100 N. C., 474.” To same effect, State v. Gumber, 37 Wis., 298; Code, see. 3766. Whatever difference of opinion there may be as to the essential identity of the two acts as a whole, there Í3 none as to the section creating the offense for which the defendant is indicted. The provision that the former act should go out of existence after April 5, and that the new act should take effect after April 6, is not a break in the *674continuity of the existence of sec. 4, now sec. 13, but merely a suspension for one day of its operation. It had no effect upon this section, which was identical in both acts, other than to make April 5 a dies non, and the defendant could not have been convicted of this offense if committed on, that day. Indeed, the decision of the Court in, Abbott v. Beddingfield is that this is true of the entire act of 1891, and, as the greater includes the less, it would necessarily embrace the single section of the act for the violation of which the defendant stands indicted.
The judgment quashing the indictment is set aside. This will be certified direct to the Western Criminal Court of Burke County, that it may proceed according to law.
Reversed.