dissenting: The General Assembly of 1917, ch. 101, Public-Local Laws, authorized the “commissioners of Bladen County to levy and collect a sufficient tax to maintain six-months school in said county, and not to exceed 10 cents, to meet the current expenses of the county.” On 8 July, 1918, the commissioners duly made the tax levy for the ensuing year: “Pursuant to chapter 101, Public-Local Laws 1917, the board of commissioners of Bladen County, at its regular *455monthly meeting on the first Monday in June, examined the tax abstracts and it having appeared that the taxes which the board was authorized to levy, after deducting 81% cents on the $100 worth of property for general State purposes, pensions, and schools, including 15 cents special school tax, there will not be sufficient funds to meet the current and necessary expenses of the county, a special tax of 5 cents on- the $100 worth of property, and 15 cents on every poll within the county is levied.”
The Constitution, Art. Y, sec. 1, provides that, “The General Assembly shall levy a capitation tax, which 'shall be equal to the tax on property valued at $300 in cash.’ ” If this was the absolute limit the property tax, State and county, could under no circumstances ever exceed 66% cents on the $100. But the increase in the expenses of government was foreseen, and Art. V, sec. 6, reads as follows: “The taxes levied by the commissioners of the several counties for county purposes . . . shall never exceed the double of the State tax except for a special purpose, and with the special approval of the General Assembly.” Without this last provision the county governments throughout the State from time to time would have ceased operations, for the margin between the taxa-’ tion for State purposes and 66% cents would hardly permit a single county in the State, at the present time, to pay its current expenses, with the result that the necessary county institutions would cease to exist, the jurors and the expenses of the courts would go unpaid, and all other necessary expenses, to the extent that county paper would sell at a heavy discount. Yet these would have to be paid at some future day, at a vast loss, because a large quantity of depreciated county scrip would necessarily be issued to carry on the county government.
For this reason, the Constitution, Art. Y, sec. 6, permits the commissioners of the county to levy taxes in excess of the 66% cents “for a special purpose and with the special approval of the General Assembly.”
This has been done for years and for nearly every county in North Carolina, as it has been done for Bladen County by the above chapter 101, Public-Local Laws 1917. For “other than necessary expenses” no county can levy a tax without the approval of a popular vote. Const., Art. YII, sec. 7.
These county expenses must be paid some time, and as the county certainly cannot pay its necessary current expenses, with the steadily recurring deficits, some such act as this will have to be passed by the General Assembly in some future year, and if such act will be valid then, why is not this act of 1917 valid? For what reason must the deficit be allowed to grow until some future Legislature shall pass an act, exactly like the one now in question, to permit the payment of the necessary expense of the county? Necessary county expenses is the sole special *456purpose for wbicb the General Assembly can give its approval. For any other purpose a vote of the people is necessary.
This act was passed for the special purpose of meeting this deficit and paying the current expenses of the county, which is as much a special purpose as to pay a note incurred for past indebtedness or to build a bridge. Martin County v. Bank, at this term, or to make public roads, Hargrave v. Comrs., 168 N. C., 626, and Surry County and Wilkes County cases at this term, or for public schools, Davis v. Lenoir, at this term. It is the only method which the commissioners have of raising funds to meet the necessary expenses of the county. It is found as a fact that it was necessary to levy this tax to meet the necessary expenses of the county.
The deficit was caused by matters over which the commissioners had no control. If the General Assembly, by this act, had power to authorize the necessary special tax of 15 cents for the schools, it has the same power to authorize the levy of a special tax of 5 cents to pay the deficit in the . county revenue as a special purpose. This act specified and authorized the levy of the 15 cents for the schools and the 5 cents for the other necessary county expenses.
Cui bono permit the deficit for necessary expenses to run up, thus requiring the issue of county scrip at a heavy depreciation, and then permit the aggravated deficit to be collected by exactly such act as this by styling that a special purpose when the General Assembly has authorized this levy of 5 cents for current expenses as a special purpose? John Randolph said good finance and honesty required government to “Pay as you go.”
The Const., Art. Y, sec. 6, allowing the county commissioners “for county purposes to levy in excess of double the State tax by the special approval of the General Assembly” is an absolute nullity, if such permission does not allow the county and State tax combined to exceed 66% cents, for it has been many a year since the State tax was less than 22% cents. For years every tax for county purposes authorized by the special approval of the General Assembly, without a vote of the people, has necessarily been to exceed the 66% cents limitation. The summary as to the constitutional provisions in regard to taxation is thus laid down in Herring v. Dixon, 122 N. C., 420.
1. For necessary expenses, the county commissioners may levy up to the constitutional limitation without a vote of the people or legislative permission.
2. For necessary expenses, the county commissioners may exceed the constitutional limitation, by special legislative authority, without a vote of the people. Const., Art. V, sec. 6.
*4573. For other purposes than necessary expenses, a tax cannot be levied either within, or in excess of, the constitutional limitation except by vote of the people under special legislative authority. Const., Art. VII, sec. 7.
Tbe above summary and analysis first laid down in Herring v. Dixon, 122 N. C., 420, bas been quoted verbatim and incorporated in Tate v. Comrs., ib., 815; Smathers v. Comrs., 125 N. C., 488; Cotton Mills v. Waxhaw, 180 N. C., 298; R. R. v. Comrs., 148 N. C., 251, and Pritchard v. Comrs., 160 N. C., 477.
In Connor and Cheshire on Const., p. 281, it is said: “Tbe equation and limitation placed upon taxation by Art. V, sec. 1, bas no application to taxes levied hereunder for a special purpose, when levied with tbe special approval of tbe General Assembly,” citing Board of Education v. Comrs., 137 N. C., 310; Jones v. Comrs., 107 N. C., 248; Street v. Comrs., 70 N. C., 644; R. R. v. Holden, 63 N. C., 410; R. R. v. Comrs., 148 N. C., 220. This bas always been tbe necessary, and, indeed, tbe only resource when a county bas gotten in debt for necessary expenses. There is no other way for tbe county to redeem its credit. This deficit was for tbe necessary expenses of tbe coünty, whi'ch not being able to levy over 19 cents by reason of tbe State tax of 47% cents could not pay tbe necessary expenses of tbe county unless allowed by tbe Legislature "under Art. V, sec. 6, to exceed 66% cents limitation.
Tbe tax here in question is authorized for a- special purpose “to provide for any deficiency in tbe necessary expenses and revenue of said -respective counties,” and received tbe special approval of tbe General Assembly, chapter 101, Public-Local Laws 1917. This levy, therefore, is exactly within the constitutional authority of tbe General Assembly. Art. V, sec. 6.
In Guire v. Comrs., 177 N. C., 518, Allen, J., quoted from tbe above analysis in Pritchard v. Comrs., and said: “Tbe county may contract a debt and exceed the limitation on taxation for necessary expenses with the approval of the General Assembly, with or without a vote of tbe people as tbe General Assembly may determine,” and Walher, J., in Parvin v. Comrs., 177 N. C., 508, said that the General Assembly may authorize tbe county to exceed tbe constitutional limit upon taxation to pay tbe interest on, or to create a sinking fund for, bonds issued for ■public roads, with tbe approval of tbe Legislature, without a vote of tbe people, “this being a necessary county expense.” Both .these decisions were at tbe succeeding term after tbe OheroTeee case, and necessarily overruled it.
. If tbe special approval of tbe General Assembly is sufficient to allow "the county (as held in the Parvin case) to exceed 66% cents to pay interest on past indebtedness, or as in tbe Martin County v. Bank, at this *458term, to build a bridge, and in the Lenoir County case for schools, and in the Surry County and Wilkes County cases, also at this term, to provide for public roads, the Legislature could certainly authorize the county of Bladen in this case to levy 5 cents in excess of such limitation “to provide for a deficiency in necessary'county revenue and expenses.”'
Any limitation in Art. V, sec. 1, whether it is 66% cents, or not to exceed “double the State tax,” is subject to the permission of the General Assembly, whenever that body shall adjudge that it is necessary for the county to exceed that limit “for necessary county purposes,” else Art. V, sec. 6, is an absurdity and a nullity — without any meaning whatever.
The result of holding invalid the act of the Legislature, which authorizes the levy of this 5 cents per $100 for the special purposes of meeting necessary county current expenses, will be the return to this railroad company of $533.04, and the court costs, which will be added to the deficit while other taxpayers have paid their pro rata. Next year this sum will be added to the burdens of all the other taxpayers who have had no return made to them of-the taxes they have paid, and the railroad company, probably the largest property owner in the county, will thus obtain from year to year a 'special exemption of 5 cents per hundred on all its property, which burden will be added to the taxes ultimately paid by all the taxpayers in taking up'the deficit.
It is true that the same ruling, as in this case, was made in R. R. v. Cherokee, 177 N. C., 87 (in which case, also, I dissented), with exactly the same result that the Southern Railway Company, with property in the county assessed at $1,024,000, recovered $275, and a heavy bill of costs, which had to be defrayed by the other taxpayers of the county, thus increasing the deficit, which, piling up, must sometimes be paid by virtue of an exactly similar act, whenever the deficit shall be large enough to entitle it to be called by the courts “a special purpose.” The General Assembly adjudged the levy to prevent a deficit 'in Cherokee and to prevent this deficit in Bladen, “a special purpose.” It is certainly as much a special purpose for the General Assembly to authorize a levy for necessary county expenses to prevent a deficit as later to authorize a levy to pay off a deficit largely aggravated by the nonpayment of depreciated county paper.
There is no other means by which the county can pay its current expenses except by the levy of taxation, and if it cannot exceed, as commonly held, 66% cents, without the .’special approval of the General Assembly, the protection contemplated by the Constitution is that the Legislature will not give its approval unless it deems the special purpose' a necessary one, and its decision as to that should be binding on the Court.
*459It may not be amiss to call attention to the fact, wbicb Mr. Justice, Walker, in R. R. v. Cherokee, 177 N. C., 93, bas already done, that the Constitution, as written, does not limit State and county taxation to 66% cents, though the Court has often so said. The language of the Constitution, Art. V, sec. 6, is as follows: “The taxes levied by the commissioners for county purposes . . °. shall never exceed the. double the State tax, .except for a special purpose, and with the special approval of the General Assembly.” Walker, J., in Collie v. Comrs., 145 N. C., at pages 181 and 182, has elaborated the same statement in a conclusive demonstration, and has repeated the same in Moose v. Comrs., 172 N. C, 452.
As the State taxation authorized by the Laws of 1917, ch. 231, sec. 3, was 47% cents on $100, the county would be authorized to levy, without requiring legislative permission, “not to exceed double that sum,” i. e., 95% cents, besides the 15 cents for schools authorized by said chapter 101, Laws 1917, which is herein construed to be a special purpose. This would more than validate this 5 cents .levy, to prevent a deficit for necessary county purposes.
For a long time it was held that schools were not a necessary purpose. Now, by reversal of former opinions, Collie v. Comrs., 145 N. C., 170, they are held, and very properly a necessary expense, but it is a strange condition that those other expenses, which have always been held to be necessary, are now held to be of such inferior dignity that the Legislature cannot authorize the levy of a special tax to pay them.
It is true that the Constitution, Art. Y, sec. 1, provides that the General Assembly may levy a capitation tax on the poll, which shall be equal to property valued at $300 in cash, and that the State and county capitation tax shall never exceed $2 on the head, but that is a limitation on the capitation tax which the Court has repeatedly held does not apply to the restriction of the property tax when it is necessary to exceed 66% cents.
Besides, Art. Y, sec. 1, provides that “the State and county capitation tax combined shall never exceed $2 on the head,” and by sec. 2, “shall be applied to the purpose of education and the support of the poor.”
In R. R. v. Comrs., 148 N. C., 220, and ib., 248, the Court held that this must be observed, and that the tax on the poll for State and county purposes “shall never exceed $2,” and could be applied only to “education and the support of the poor,” and added, p. 245: “This question cannot again arise/'' Since then, the Court has overruled, by a vote of 3 to 2, in Moose v. Comrs., 172 N. C., 419, those decisions. Why should the . protection that the poll tax “shall never exceed $2” on each poll, and can only be applied to “education and the support of the poor,” be treated as. invalid, while the corporations and other large property holders in'the State are entitled to have taxes refunded to them if in excess of 66% *460cents (though there is no such limit in the Constitution), even when authorized by the special approval of the General Assembly for the purposes of defraying the necessary expenses of running the county government ?
The ruling of the Court that “the State and county property tax combined should not exceed 66% cents” is not in the Constitution, and began at a time when the State taxes did not exceed one-third of 66% cents, and though the county levied double the State tax, the whole levy ordinarily woixld not exceed 66% cents. "When the State taxes for necessary purposes steadily mounted year by year to 22 cents, and then above, till now they reach 47% cents, the always narrowing'margin between such levy and 66% cents did not leave enough to defray county expenses, and for that reason, at probably every session, under authority of Art. Y, sec. 6, the Legislature has given its special approval to some counties, as in this, chapter 101, Public-Local Laws 1917, to exceed the 66% cents by levying a special tax for the special purpose of defraying necessary county expenses. This has now become a standing necessity in probably nearly every county in the State.
The master said, “Ye make the Word of none effect through your «tradition,” Mark 7:13. The Constitution is the “Word” which abides. The word of the Constitution, as it is written, and abides with us, and can be read by all men, should govern, and not the decisions made by the courts, which can be and are changed by them at will, and should be changed always if in conflict with the Constitution.
In this case the legislative special approval of this levy of 5 cents for necessary county expenses is in exact accordance with the Constitution, and is in conflict, it seems, with no decision other than R. R. v. Cherokee, supra. In the later case, of Parvin v. Comrs., 177 N. C., Walker, J., holds (at p. 511), and also Allen, J., in Guire v. Comrs., 177 N. C., at p. 518, that the limitation in Art. Y, sec. 1, can be exceeded for necessary county purposes by permission of the Legislature under Art. Y, sec. 6.
In the Constitution, as it is actually written, there is no restriction on the property tax, State and county, for necessary purposes to 66% cents on the $100, and when, as is now the case, in probably every county this will not raise sufficient funds to carry on the county government, the strict prohibition, that the poll tax, State and county combined, can never exceed $2, prevents the Legislature from going beyond that limit on the poll, but Art. Y, sec. 6, empowers the counties to levy property taxes in excess of any limitation, with the approval of the General Assembly.
In Jones v. Comrs., 107 N. C., 248, Merrimon, C. J., says: “We are therefore of .opinion that the equation and limitation of taxation established by the Constitution, Art. Y, sec. 1, applies only to taxés levied for the ordinary purposes of the State and counties,” and this language is *461quoted and approved by Hoke, J., in Perry v. Comrs., 148 N. C.; 524, and bas been always followed. It means when taxation is beyond $2 on $300, either by legislative approval for “necessary county purposes,” or by a vote of the people, the equation (as well as the limitation) ceases as to the property tax for the poll tax, by the constitutional guarantee, “can never exceed $2 on the poll,” and all taxation beyond the limitation in Art. Y, sec. 1, must be on property and from other sources of taxation allowed by Constitution, Art. Y, sec. 6.
And, finally, for what reason should the county of Bladen be required to borrow money to refund taxes levied and collected for “necessary county purposes” within “double the State tax” (if that is the limit), or by the special approval of the General Assembly, in excess of 66% cents (if that is the constitutional limitation) ? In either case, the county debt incurred for its necessary expenses must be paid some day by a tax levy.
If the refund is made only to those suing, the plaintiffs get an exemption not allowed to all others. If the refund is to all taxpayers alike, then there is the useless return of money to be again collected another year to pay the note for money borrowed and interest.
The true remedy is by an injunction against the levy and collection of taxes, if it can be shown that it is not required “for necessary county purposes,” or exceeds the limitation without “the special approval of the General Assembly.”