Opinion by
Judge LassingReversing.
The General Assembly passed the following act, which was approved March 24, 1904:
“An act relating to revenue and taxation, providing for license taxes on compounded, rectified adulterated or blended spirits, known and designated as single stamped spirits, and providing penalties for violation of its provisions.
“Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the commonwealth of Kentucky:
“Section 1. That every corporation, association, company, co-partnership or individual engaged in this State in the busines or occupation of compounding rectifying, adulterating or blending distilled spirits', known and' designated as single stamped.spirits, shall pay to the commonwealth of Kentucky a license tax therefor.
“Sec. 2. The license tax imposed by the first section of this act shall be based upon the amount of distilled spirits compounded, rectified, adulterated or blended, viz: Fifty cents for each barrel so rectified, compounded, adulterated or blended distilled spirits, to be of standard measure. Twenty-five cents for each package containing less than one barrel of such compounded rectified, adulterated or blended distilled spirits.
“Sec. 3. It shall be the duty of each corporation, association, company, co-partnership or individual engaged in this State in the business or oeupation of compounding, rectifying, adulterating or blending *746distilled spirits, known and designated as single stamped spirits, to make and deliver to the Auditor of Public Accounts, on the 31st day of December, 1904 (or within ten days), and at the end of each six months thereafter, a report, sworn to, showing ■ the number of barrels, standard measure, and the number of packages containing less than one barrel, of compounded, rectified, adulterated or blended distilled spirits, known and designated as single stamped spirits, sold during the six months then ended, and at the same time pay into the state treasury, through the Auditor, ■ the amount of taxes due the State, as imposed' by this act.
“.Sec. 4. Any compounder, rectifier or blender, liable for the taxes imposed by this act, or embraced by its provisions, who shall willfully fail or refuse to make and deliver to the Auditor sworn reports required by section 3 of this act, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction, shall be fined five hundred dollars ($500) for each offense, to be recovered by indictment in the Franklin circuit court.
‘‘Sec. 5. The provisions of this act shall apply only to such corporations, companies, associations, co-partnerships or individuals actually engaged in compounding, rectifying, adulterating or blending distilled spirits.
“Sec. 6. All acts and parts of acts inconsistent or in conflict with this act are hereby repealed.”
See acts 1904, p. .255, c. 104.
Appellants failed to file the reports with the Auditor as required by the act, and, being indicted therefor in the Franklin circuit court, demurred to the indictment, and, their demurrer being overruled, excepted. They pleaded not guilty, and, the case being heard and judgment having been entered against them, they" appeal.
The chief ground for reversal is that 'the act is *747unconstitutional, because it is shown, by the clerk’s memorandum thereon and by the legislative journals, it originated in the Senate. Section 47 of the Constitution of the State is as follows: “All bills for raising* revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives, but the Senate, may propose amendments thereto ; provided, no new matter shall be introduced, under color of amendment, which does not relate to raising revenue. ’ ’ This is practically the same as section 30, Art. 2, of the third Constitution, section 29, Art. 2, of the second Constitution, section 26, Art. 1, of the first Constitution, and section 7, Art. 1,. of the Constitution of the United States. Thus the law now is, and has ever been, not only in this State, but in the United States, that all bills for raising revenue' shall originate in the House of Represenatives. It is admitted that the bill in question in this case originated in the Senate. It follows that if it is a bill for raising revenue, or if it has the two-fold purpose of raising revenue and incidentally to regulate the business from which the revenue is derived, with revenue as its primary purpose, it is in violation of the provision of the Constitution, and is therefore unconsitutional and void. If, on the other hand, its purpose is' to regulate the manufacture and use of rectified spirits, with revenue as a mere incident, then it is not in violation of the Constitution, and should be upheld.
An analysis of the bill itself should determine the jmrpose for which it was enacted. Section 51 of the Constitution provides: “No law enacted by the General Assembly shall relate to more than one subject, and that shall be expressed in the title; and no law shall be revised, amended, or the provisions thereof extended or conferred by reference to its title only, but so much thereof as is revised, amended, extended or conferred, shall be re-enacted and published at length.” The legislators, in conformity with the requirements of this section of the Constitution, styled *748the bill in question “An act. relating to revenue and taxation, providing for license taxes on compounded rectified, adulterated or blended distilled spirits, known and^designated as single-stamped spirits, and providing penalties for violations of its provisions.” They evidently intended it as a measure the primary object of which was to raise revenue, for they so state in the title of the bill. But, passing from the title to the bill itself, it provides that every one engaged in the business of rectifying, compounding, adulterating, or blending distilled spirits shall pay to -the commonwealth a license tax therefor; that the tax shall be 50 cents for each barrel so rectified, compounded, adulterated, or blended, and 25 cents for each package thereof containing less than one barrel; that the rectifier shall report under oath every six months to the Auditor of Public Accounts, and for a failure to so report he shall be subject to a fine of $500 for each offense.. The tax imposed is not upon the manufacture but it is upon the sales as shown by the report. Eor what purpose is this report required? Manifestly, for the purpose of determining the amount of tax to be paid into the State treasury. It could serve no other purpose, unless it be said that it was required for statistical purposes. We do not believe that the Legislature had in view such a purpose in providing that such report should be made, but that its real purpose was to enable the Auditor to determine the amount of taxes due the State. The act does not in any wise seek to control the volume of business done, or the right to conduct the buisness; nor does, it- impose any penalty for conducting the business, or for a failure to pay the tax. The bill does not seek to control the quality of the manufactured product, or in any wise to regulate its sale; but the State, through, the provisions of this bill, is seeking but one purpose, that of collecting a tax upon the volume of the business done by the rec*749tifier. He may make any kind of liquor lie chooses, good or bad. He may sell in any way he can, to any person able to buy, and in any quantity, and in these particulars the State has no interest whatever, so far as this bill is concerned. Through this bill the State says to the rectifier: “You must pay a tax of 50 cents upon each barrel of spirits, and pay 25 cents upon each package of spirits less than a barrel, which you sell; and, for the purpose of determining the number of barrels and packages sold, you are required to report under oath to the Auditor of Public Accounts every six months the number of said sales. A penalty is imposed upon you for failure to make this report.”
Appellee insists that, while it is true that the bill raises revenue, this is an incident merely, and that the primary purpose of the bill is to regulate the business of the rectifier, and, being such, was not passed in violation of section 47 of the Constitution, and is, as a police regulation, in full force and effect. We are aware that the police power of the government has been, for the good of the public, so extended that it now covers a much broader field than formerly; that it can be so extended in its scope as to reach and affect, not only large interests, in which many are engaged, but small concerns as well. In extending its power and broadening its field of operations, one main object is sought to be attained — one purpose is kept in legislative view: The betterment of society; the advancement of the public good; to secure to the individual citizen all his constitutional rights. No police regulation, we take it, will ever be exercised over any business which does not in some way affect the general public or the private citizen in the enjoyment of their constitutional rights, But that regulation comes only in those cases where the business itself, or the product which it manufactures, is calculated to take from the public the *750rights guaranteed by the Constitution, or to disturb the public in the enjoyment of these rights; and in such cases the bill thus regulating must, and does, throw around the business those restrictions and regulations under and through which it may be conducted. For instance, a bill to regulate the operation of a fertilizer factory or a powder mill would confine them to a territorial limit where the population was small; in the one case because the odor arising from the material used in the manufacture of its goods would be offensive, if not injurious, to the people living near, and in the other case because the danger from explosion of the product manufactured would be a constant menace to the lives of those living-in the vicinity of the mill. And, while a bill regulating either of the above •businesses would not designate the place or places where • they might be operated, it would designate the character of place where they might not be operated. In other words, a bill by which it was proposed to regulate the operation of fertilizer factories or powder mills should, and would, set forth the particulars in which the government proposed to regulate the business. And so it is with all measures which have been held to be police regulations. They define the limitations thrown around the business sought to be regulated. As for example, acts to regulate the retailing of liquors: The applicant, before he may engage in the business, must give notice by publication in a certain way, must successfully meet any objection coming from the “neighborhood” where the business is proposed to be conducted, must show himself a fit and •proper person to conduct the business, and must, in some cases, show that he is prepared to entertain the •traveling public in a proper and reasonable manner. These and kindred regulations are, and properly may be, required; but in each instance the bill sets forth ex-*751plieitly the regulations or rules under which the business may be conducted, and the rules and requirements with which and to which the applicant must conform before he can engage in the business,, and when he has complied with the requirements, he receives a license or authority from the government, or granting power, showing that he has complied with the provisions of the law.
Appellee has cited numerous authorities of this and other States illustrative of the extent to which the police power of the State has been carried by legislative enactment. But he has not cited any authority in point in which the law in question did not require the granting of a license as a condition precedent to engaging in the business; such as the sale of liquor by retail- or by barrel-house men, the peddling of goods, the operation of foreign insurance companies through local agents, and the licensing of lawyers, The courts have held, and we think properly so, that all such acts are police regulations, and the revenue derived from their enforcement is a mere incident — ■ the main purpose and -object of the acts in question being the protection of the people in their health and morals, and against impostors and fakes; and in each and every instance there was required, as a condition precedent to engaging in the business, the payment of a license fee and the granting of a license, as an evidence to the public that the holder had complied with the requirements of the law. It is this feature which requires of the applicant compliance with certain rules and regulations as a condition precedent to engaging in any particular line of business that is characteristic of all the measures which may properly be designated as police regulations. Mr. Justice Story, in United States v. Mayo, 26 Fed. Cas. 1231, thus lays down the rule for determining a revenue bill: “The true meaning of revenue laws in these clauses is such *752laws as are made for the direct and 'avowed purpose of creating and securing’ revenues or public funds for the services of the government.” And in United States v. James, 13 Blatchf. 207, 26 Fed. Cas. 577, the rule is thus stated: “Certain legislative measures are unmistakably bills for raising revenue. These impose taxes' upon the people, either directly or indirectly, or lay dues, imposts, or excises for the use of the government, and give to the personsl from whom money is exacted no equivalent in return, unless in the enjoyment, in common with the rest of the citizens, of the benefit of good government. It is this feature which characterizes bills for raising revenue. They draw money from the citizen. They give no direct equivalent in return.”
Tested by these rules, which are sound in principle, the bill before us cannot be regarded in any other light than as a bill for revenue. It does not seek to regulate in any way, shape, or form the manufacture or sale of liquor. It seeks nothing of the manufacturer but the payment of the tax. The identical question raised in this case was passed upon by the Supreme Court of Alabama in Perry County v. Railroad, 58 Ala. 546. In that case the bill was entitled: “An act to amend an act entitled ‘An act to establish revenue laws for the state of Alabama.’ ” The Constitution of that state was practically the same as the Constitution of this State, in that it required that all bills for raising revenue should originate in the House of Representatives, but that the Senate might amend or reject them, as other bills. It was contended in that case that a bill to amend a revenue act or system of laws in existence was permitted by that part of the Constitution which confers upon the Senate the power to amend or reject a revenue bill. But this contention was denied by the court, and, after reviewing the history of like constitutional provisions, the *753court said: “We think the only safe rule for interpreting clauses of the Constitution which command certain things to be done or certain methods to be observed in the enactment of statutes is to hold that, when it is affirmatively shown by legal evidence that in the attempt to legislate some mandate of the Constitution has been disregarded, such attempt never becomes a law.” And continuing in that case: “These provisions clearly show that the law we are considering was one to raise revenue; and, as the bill originated in the Senate, it is unconstitutional, and never had a legal existence. ’ ’
It is insisted by appellee that it is a delicate duty for the court to declare an act unconstitutional; that, in case of doubt, the doubt should be resolved in favor of the validity of the act in a case of this sort; that, if the House had deemed the act an infringement of its prerogative, it might have refused to consider it when] it came to it from the Senate; that, if the Governor-, had deemed it unconstitutional, he might have vetoed it after it had passed both houses; and that after the act has been concurred in by both houses, and lias been approved by the Governor, if there is any construction of it, which may reasonably be adopted, rendering it constitutional, that construction should be followed. This is true. A legislative act should never be held unconstitutional, if its validity can be, by .any reasonable construction, upheld. But, in the case before us, the only construction that can be given the act in question is that it is an act for revenue, pure and simple; and, eriginating, as it did, in the Senate, it was passed in violation of the plain provision of the Constitution.
As the case must be reversed for this cause, we do not deem it necessary to pass upon the other questions raised upon this appeal.
For the reasons given, the judgment is reversed, *754with instructions to the trial court to sustain the demurrer to the indictment.