Dissenting Opinion by
Judge Winn.I dissent from the opinion herein.
The General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, at its regular session in 1912, enacted a statute creating the 36th circuit judicial district, providing that it should consist of the county of Franklin alone. James Andrew Scott, a citizen, resident and taxpayer of the county of Franklin, conceiving that the act was in conflict with and forbidden by certain provisions of that fundamental ground work of the laws and institutions of *798our Commonwealth, its Constitution, instituted in the Franklin Circuit Court an action seeking an injunction against the Governor of the Commonwealth to prohibit him from appointing a judge of the circuit court in Franklin county, a power given to and devolving upon the Governor by the express terms of the act in question. The Governor of the Commonwealth, the appellee here, interposed a demurrer to the petition; and upon consideration thereof the demurrer was sustained, the petition dismissed, and the plaintiff appeals here. While the action was brought in nature to restrain the Govern- or from appointing a circuit judge in the district, the true issue and effort of the action was to determine whether. or not in the creation of a separate circuit judicial district of Franklin County the Legislature had violated any section of the Constitution or had exercised any power not delegated to or inherent in it. The case has been ably argued and ably discussed in briefs by the Attorney General, representing the tax paying people of the Commonwealth in opposition to the legality of the legislation in question, and by counsel represening the Governor, the executive discharging the legislative will, seeking to uphold the legislation. In my judgment the discussion has assumed a latitude much broader than is demanded by the somewhat narrow, yet plain, constitutional interpretation which seems to me to be inescapable and decisive of the case.
The provisions of the Constitution of the State involved directly or indirectly in the determination of the question before us are as follows:
“Section 128. At its first session after the adoption of this Constitution, the General Assembly, having due regard to territory, business and population, shall divide the State into a sufficient number of judicial districts to carry into effect the provisions of this Constitution concerning circuit courts. In making such apportionment, no county shall be divided, and the number of said districts, excluding those in counties having a population of one hundred and fifty thousand, shall not exceed one district for each sixty thousand of the population of the entire State.
• “Sec. 129. The General Assembly shall, at the same time the judicial districts are laid off, direct elections to be held in each district to elect a judge therein. The first election of judges of the circuit courts under this *799Constitution shall take place at the annual election in the year eighteen hundred and ninety-two, and the judges then elected shall enter upon the discharge of the duties of their respective offices on the first Monday in J anuary after their election, and hold their offices five years and until their successors are elected and qualified. At the general election in eighteen hundred and ninety-seven, and every six years thereafter, there shall be an election for judges of the circuit courts, who shall hold their offices for six years from the first Monday in January succeeding their election. They shall be commissioned by the Governor, and continue in office until their successors shall have been qualified, but shall be removable in the same manner as the judges of the Court of Appeals. The removal of a judge from his district shall vacate his office.
“Sec. 130. No person shall be eligible as judge of the circuit court who is less than thirty-five years of age when elected, who is not a citizen of Kentucky, and resident of the district in which he may be a candidate two years next preceding his election, and who has not been a practicing lawyer eight years.
£ £ Sec. 131. There shall be at least three regular terms of circuit court held in each county every year.
“Sec. 132. The General Assembly, when deemed necessary may establish additional districts; but the whole number of districts, exclusive of counties having a population of one hundred and fifty thousand, shall not exceed, at any time one for every sixty thousand of population of the State according to the last enumeration.
“Sec. 133. The judges of the circuit court shall, at stated times, receive for their services an adequate compensation to be fixed by law, which shall be equal and uniform throughout the State, so far as the same shall be paid out of the State Treasury.
“Sec. 134. The Judicial Districts of the State shall not be changed except at the first session after an enumeration, unless upon the establishment of a new district.
“Sec. 135. No courts, save those provided for in this Constitution, shall be established.
“Sec. 136. The General Assembly shall .provide by law for holding circuit courts when, from any cause, the judge shall fail to attend, or, if in attendance, cannot properly preside.
*800“Sec. 137. Each county having a population of one hundred and fifty thousand or over, shall constitute a district, which shall he entitled to four judges. Additional judges for said districts may, from time to time, be authorized by the General Assembly, but not to exceed one judge for each increase of forty thousand of population in said county, to be ascertained by the last enumeration. Each of the judges in such a district shall hold a separate court, except when a general term may be held for the purpose of making rules of court, or as may be required by law: Provided, no general term shall have power to review any order, decision or proceeding of any branch of the court in said district made in separate term. There shall be one clerk for such district, who shall be known as the clerk of the circuit court. Criminal cases shall be under the exclusive jurisdiction of some one branch of said court, and all other litigation in said district, of which the circuit court may have jurisdiction, shall be distributed as equally as may be between the other branches thereof, in accordance with the rules of the court made in general terms or as may be prescribed by law.
“Sec. 138. Each county having a city of twenty thousand inhabitants, and a population including said city of forty thousand or more, may constitute a district, and when its population reaches seventy-five thousand, the General Assembly may provide that it shall have an additional judge, and such district may have a judge for each additional fifty thousand population above one hundred thousand. And in such counties the General Assembly shall, by proper laws, direct in what manner the court shall be held and the business therein conducted. ’ ’
As will be seen as a matter of first impression the provision as to counties in the State which may have a population of as much as one hundred and fifty thousand individuals, is not involved in this litigation save only in so far as it may shed light upon the question here. The first provision of the Constitution to be noticed is that portion of section 128, which provides that the Legislature shall not have the power to create districts (outside of counties having a population of one hundred and fifty thousand) exceeding in number one district for each sixty thousand of the population of the entire State. It is not complained in the case at bar that the creation of the additional district of Franklin County causes the *801entire number of districts to exceed one for each sixty-thousand of. the State’s population.
If we next read all the above sections of the Constitution down to section 138 it is clear that there is no prohibition against legislation by the General Assembly erecting any single county into a separate circuit judicial district. The only prohibition as to any single county is that no county shall be divided into separate districts. Beyond this prohibition the Legislature was left to exercise its entire freedom of will and judgment in the creation of districts, subject alone to the demand that the General Assembly should have due regard to territory, business and population, and subject to the provision of section 132, supra, that additional circuit judicial districts might be established when deemed necessary by the General Assembly. In other words (excluding aL ways counties having a population of one hundred and fifty thousand), the Legislature was given carte blanche to establish as many circuit court districts as it might deem necessary, in the exercise of a due regard to territory, business and population, so long as it did not so far extend the exercise of this judgment as to create more districts than one for each sixty thousand of the State’s population. In the enactment of so enduring, dignified and formal a document as that of a Constitution, the basic law of a self-governing people, it is not to be assumed that any words written into the instrument were there written lightly or without some definite and pre-' cise purpose. The words in section 128, “having due regard to territory, business and population” and the words in section 132, “when deemed necessary,” which latter words of necessity refer back to the standard or measure to be regarded by the Legislature in the creation of new districts, must be given the formal weight which all words in a Constitution are entitled to receive. The standard erected and declared in these words is the standard which the Legislature must needs follow, and is the standard which must govern us unless there be within the Constitution itself some other declared standard limiting or narrowing the intent of these .words.
This brings us to section 138, upon which the plaintiff grounds his cause of action in the case at bar and upon which the majority opinion exclusively rests. We quote again that section:
“Each county having a city of twenty thousand in*802habitants, and a population including said city of forty thousand or more, may constitute a district, and when its population reaches seventy-five thousand, the General Assembly may provide that it shall have an additional judge, and such district may have a judge for each additional fifty thousand population above one hundred thousand. And in such counties the General Assembly shall, by proper laws, direct in what manner the court shall be held and the business therein conducted.”
At least three distinct views are argued in the case at bar as the intent of this section. One is that the use of the word “may” is permissive; another is that the use of the word “may” is imperative, and that its true sense is “must;” while yet the third is founded upon the maxim “Expressio unius, exclusio alterius” arguing that when the framers of the Constitution said that a county having a city of twenty thousand inhabitants, and a population including said city, of forty thousand, might constitute a district, they meant to exclude all other counties singly from becoming districts unless they met this requirement of population, both as to city and as to county. The plaintiff’s petition alleged, and upon demurrer the allegation stood confessed, that Franklin County had not forty thousand population, nor within it a city of twenty thousand population.
There is nothing in the language of the section named from which justly and fairly can be deduced any implied purpose of the framers of the Constitution of a negation or denial of the right of the General Assembly to create into separate districts counties which have less than forty thousand population, or which have not in them cities having twenty thousand population. If this provision of the Constitution stood alone there would -be much in the argument that in thus setting up a standard the Constitution makers had meant to make it, not only a permissive or mandatory, but as well an exclusive, standard; but such is not the condition presented. Section 138 of the Constitution must be considered in connection with the other sections preceding it. The other, sections, as above pointed out, provide that the General Assembly, in the creation of districts, should have chm regard to territory, business- and population, and that it might create new districts when deemed necessary, subject alone to the prohibition against the division of any county, and the other provision that the total num*803ber of districts should not exceed one for each sixty thousand of the State’s population.- The spirit or intent of the Constitution makers should be' gained, therefore, not from section 138 alone, but from all the provisions of the sundry sections quoted. The true meaning seems to me not difficult of ascertainment; and that intent, in so far as the present action is concerned, need not involve the ascertainment of whether the word “may” in section 138 is permissive or mandatory. Section 138 means neither more nor less than that a county having forty thousand of population, and a city within it of twenty thousand of population, may or must (depending upon which should be the proper intent of that section) constitute a separate district, without the “due regard to territory, business and population” demanded to be exercised by the General Assembly in the creation of districts generally. In other words, section 128 of the Constitution denied to the General Assembly in the exercise under their oaths of this legislative governmental function entrusted to them, the right to create new districts generally, unless the legislators shduld first investigate or in some manner satisfy themselves that a due regard to the territory, business and population of the proposed new district justified the erection of such a district. But the Constitution, in section 138, went somewhat further. It gave to the General Assembly the right, or imposed the duty (the one way or the other as its language may be read) to constitute a district of any county of forty thousand of population, with a city of the requisite size within its borders, without any regard whatever to the territory and quantity of legal business within such county. By section 128 the Legislature, in the general creation of districts, was required to have regard to territory and business. This discretionary standard was set as the guide to the General Assembly in its general creation of districts; but an entirely different and arbitrary standard was fixed as to counties having a population of forty thousand, with cities within them of twenty thousand. In other words, the Constitution itself fixed such a standard for counties meeting this requirement and did not exact of the Legislature to exercise any regard to territory or business in such counties before one of them might alone constitute a district. The makers of the Constitution, practical men in the exercise of sound good sense, took it upon themselves to say that in counties of the character described *804in section 138 a circuit court might exist upon the natural premise that its business would of necessity justify it; but it did not take away from the General Assembly the general pdwer and the general right to constitute any other single county, having due regard to territory, business and population, into a separate district, so long as the total number of districts did not exceed one for each sixty thousand of population. This construction of the Constitution’s intent makes the whole of it upon the subject of circuit districts harmonious. It leaves to the General Assembly the right to create a district of a single county when, with due regard to its territory and business, it might deem the creation of the district proper, necessary or beneficent to the expedition of the litigation of the people of the Commonwealth. It is not charged that the business of Franklin County does not' justify the erection of it into a separate judicial district, and that the act of the General Assembly creating it was arbitrary or without regard to the territory or the business of the county. Indeed, when it is considered that the entire fiscal business of the State and its matters of public litigation are conducted through the circuit court of Franklin county it is difficult to conceive that any such position could have been sustained.
In the discussion of this case it has not seemed necessary for me to go into any elaborate treatment of the sundry arguments and authorities ably presented by the lawyers who have argued and briefed the case. The intent and meaning of the Constitution seems to me to be clear from the document itself. When the document makes the meaning clear it is unnecessary to search extraneous authority for the intent. The general rule, where the constitutionality of legislation is to be ascertained by the courts, is that any reasonable doubt must be resolved in favor of the legislative action, and the act sustained. And where it is not clear that,the Constitution has been invaded the courts will rarely, if ever, interfere to arrest the operation of legislative enactments. A court must start with the fundamental principle that the statute is constitutional; and it is not permitted by any decree of ours to nullify a statute unless it is clearly against the Constitution. Under the views I have expressed the legislation in question, upon the record presented here, not only does not run contrary to any prohibition of the Constitution, but is in full accord with a *805right delegated in express terms to the. General Assembly.
The court’s opinion disposes of the position I have taken by remarking that the framers of the Constitution viere practical men; that it could not reasonably be inferred that they contemplated that under section 13P the Legislature would have the right to erect a single county of forty thousand souls with a city of twenty thousand within it, into a circuit district, without regard; to whether the business justified it; that these same practical men did not intend to permit the Legislature to lose sight of the necessities of business; and that such a construction would leave the section meaningless and eliminate it from the Constitution. Let us see. These same men, the Constitution makers, did provide under section 137 that a county with a population of one hundred and fifty thousand should have four judges, an arbitrary standard without any regard to the necessities of business in such counties.' This would permit a judge for each thirty-seven thousand five hundred of population, without regard to business — a fixed and definite standard set up by these same men. Wherein, then, is it unreasonable to say, or in derogation of the practicality of the minds of these men to say, that they have provided a like arbitrary, fixed and definite standard for counties of forty thousand people, a judge to forty thousand; without regard to business?
Becurring again to this subject of business, which, according to the court’s opinion, had always to be considered; how far should the necessities of business be considered? Under the court’s opinion a county which might have a hundred thousand of population, and a business of prodigious proportions could not constitute' a separate district unless it had within it a city of twenty thousand. The county of Pike, for instance, under the enumeration of 1910, had a population of 31,679, a population which in all probability will have increased to 50,-000 by 1920. It has in it no town of as much as 3,000 population. The nature of its development, a widespread coal-mining industry, naturally locates its citizens over the entire "area of the county; and it is improbable that there will be a city of twenty' thousand people in the county for many years to come. And yet, no matter how much the legal business from the titular troubles prevalent in that section of our State, mining accidents, and *806the various commercial transactions oí an awakening and industrious new era, it can never have a court of and within itself, under the Constitution as interpreted by the majority opinion. Nay, is it not more reasonable to say that the Constitution makers were practical enough to see just such a possibility, and, therefore, by section 128 left it to our General Assembly to create a district of a single county whenever a due regard to its business should justify it? To portray the extremity to which the opinion leads us, let us trace this Pike County illustration somewhat further. Under the facts as I have pictured them the court says that the Legislature could not erect a district of Pike County; but the same General Assembly could divide Pike county into two counties, possessing precisely the same business, precisely the same population, and precisely the same area, and with due regard to these conditions make a district of the two counties. The courts of the two counties, maintained at a largely increased burthen to the taxpayers, would be constitutional courts, while according to the majority opinion, the circuit court of the single county as a district would not be a constitutional court. The members of the constitutional convention did not, in my judgment, mean to make possible any such a condition. And whatever they may be held to have meant to say, it is certain that they did not anywhere say that a single county should never constitute a district unless it had a population of forty thousand, inclusive of a city of twenty thousand within it. What they did say was that such a county might constitute a district without regard to its business, just as they said that a county of one hundred and fifty thousand should have four judges without regard to its business. As said in the court’s opinion, “the Legislature has all power unless restricted by the Constitution. ’ ’ When added to this general power I find in section 128 an express grant of power to them to exercise their general legislative will in the creation of districts under the conditions imposed in that section, I am unwilling to read into section 138 a lopping-off of that power which the framers of the Constitution did not put there.
I dissent with great reluctance from the view of the able and experienced majority; but it seems to me to be a clear duty. The majority opinion destroys the deliberate act of a co-ordinate branch of the government, done, *807in my judgment, in the exercise of a power expressly accorded to the General Assembly by our Constitution.
Judge L.assing concurs with me.