Appellee is a road improvement district created by a special statute enacted by the General Assembly of 1919, embracing certain territory in Marion County and for the purpose of improving the public highways in that district. Acts 1919, vol. 2, p. 1631. In the first section of the statute the boundaries of the district are designated by the description of the lands to be embraced therein, and the second paragraph of section 1 describes the roads to be improved as follows:
‘ ‘ That said road improvement district is hereby created and organized for the purpose of making improvements on the public highway leading from a point on Searcy County line where Road District Number One (1) of Searcy County intersects the Marion County line near Salgado, thence to Rush, thence to Yellville, and Summit, and thence following Ridge road by way of Lee’s mountain to the Boone County line west of Dodd City, Arkansas, to build, improve, widen, straighten and repair all public highways within the boundaries of said district which have heretofore been dedicated as a public highway, by tbe county court of Marioxi County, or by the town council of the incorporated towns of Rush, Yellville, and Summit, and for that purpose shall have the right by its board of commissioners hereafter provided for to condemn right-of-ways for the purposes herein mentioned, to sue axxd be sued, to plead and be impleaded and to constitute a body politic, for the purposes of carrying out the intention of this act.”
Section 4 of the statute reads as follows:
“The said board of commissioners shall have, axxd they are vested with, power and authority, and it is hereby made their duty, to build, construct, maintain and repair said roads within said district, and all public highways therein as they deem necessary and proper, as herein contemplated, axxd in doing so shall expend all necessary sums of money authorized to be levied and collected under authority of this act, and as herein provided. ’ ’
The remainder of the statute, whiclx contains 24 sections, outlines a comprehensive scheme for the construction of the improvements and for the levying of assessments oxx the benefits to real property in the district axxd the enforcement of such assessments, and also for the borrowing of money in advance to pay for the improvement. Axxthority is conferred for the appointmexxt of assessors to “make an assessxnexxt of all bexxefits to be received by the lands ixx said district. ’ ’
Appellant is the owner of real property in the district. axxd instituted this action attacking the validity of the statute on the ground, among others, that in providing for the improvement of all the highways in the district, including the streets in the three incorporated towns, the Legislature had attempted to join together as a single improvement, projects which are necessarily separate and distinct.
The argument of counsel for appellee in seeking to sustain the validity of the statute is that the term “public highways” in the statute was not intended to refer to streets in incorporated towns, but referred only to country roads. It therefore becomes necessary in the first place to construe the statute to determine what it meant by its language describing the'improvements to be made.
It is clear that the first part of the paragraph describing the improvement refers to an established public highway beginning at a point on the line between Searcy and Marion counties, near Salgado, and running north to Yellville, the county site, and thence northwesterly to a point on the boundary line between Marion and Boone counties. This much of the description is clear and definite, and if there was nothing more in the statute there would be no grounds for attack upon it. But the descriptive words used with reference to the contemplated imwould form a part of the general highway to be improved, widen, straighten and repair all public highways within' the boundaries of said district which have heretofore been dedicated as a public highway by the county court of Marion County, or by the town council of the incorporated towns of Rush, Yellville, and Summit.”
Section 4 makes it the duty of the board of commissioners “to build, construct, maintain and repair said roads within said district, and all public highways therein as they deem necessary and proper, as herein contemplated. ’ ’ The term ‘ ‘public highway ’ ’ in its generic sense includes streets and alleys as well as rural roads (Webster definition, “highway”), though it is not always so understood in the popular sense. Texarkana v. Edwards, 76 Ark. 22. There is usually enough, ambiguity in the use of the term to warrant the examination of the context, wherever used, for the purpose of determining the precise meaning, and when that is done in the present case we think that it is clear that the framers of the statute meant to include the public streets of the three incorporated towns mentioned. If that was not the intention of the lawmakers, no reference would have been made to the dedication of public highways “by the town councils of the incorporated towns of Rush, Yellville and Summit.” The word “dedicated” was not correctly used, but it is clear that the framers of the statute meant by the language used to refer to streets opened by authority of the respective town councils of the incorporated towns mentioned as well as the country roads established as public highways by the county court. If streets and alleys had not been intended to be embraced there was no occasion whatever for making reference to highways ‘ ‘ dedicated’ ’ by the town councils. It may be argued thatv the framers of the statute had in mind main thoroughfares through each of the incorporated towns which would form a part of the general highway to be improved, and that it was not necessary to designate this part of the highway which ran through the incorporated towns. There is much reason to believe this to be so. But, when it is conceded that any of the streets through any of these incorporated towns formed, under the language used, a part of the general public highway to be improved, then it necessarily follows from the other language of the statute that the improvement was not to be limited to those streets, but that all of the public highways, including streets and alleys, were to be improved. In other words, the same description which would embrace the particular streets forming a part of the general highway designated necessarily embraces all other streets and .alleys in the towns.
We see no escape from the interpretation of the language used that it embraces all of the streets and alleys of the incorporated towns mentioned. This may have come about by inadvertence, but such is the only reasonable interpretation which can be given to the language used. Such being the proper interpretation of the statute, our conclusion is that it is invalid because it joins together as a single improvement the improvement of all of the streets and alleys of three different incorporated towns in the same county, but widely separated from each other.
We do not mean to hold that the inclusion of that portion of the streets of the towns which formed a part of the general highway to be improved would be invalid. Our previous decisions on that subject lead to the contrary. Nall v. Kelley, 120 Ark. 277; Conway v. Miller County Highway & Bridge District, 125 Ark. 325; Bennett v. Johnson, 130 Ark. 507. 'But it is different where all of the streets and alleys of different municipalities are attempted to be grouped together as a single improvement. They are necessarily separate, and the improvement of the streets and alleys of one municipality as a whole cannot possibly inure to the benefit as a local improvement to the real property in another municipality distantly removed. It is an obviously demonstrable error to join them together as a single improvement to be constructed by a single assessment on all the property in the district. This statute only provides for one assessment of the benefits and that of the benefits arising from all of the designated improvements considered as a whole. Under the terms of the statute it is the duty of the board of assessors to ássess the benefits of the whole improvement on the different pieces of real property in the district, and the assessments to pay for the improvements are to be levied on the benefits thus appraised. It necessarily follows that under this scheme the improvement in a given municipality would have to be paid for by contributions from assessments levied on property in the other municipalities as well as on the rural property. If we had a case where each of the improvements in the district were treated as sepárate ones, and authority was conferred to assess separately the benefits arising from each improvement, then it would be different, but here the necessary result from the proposed scheme is to levy assessments on all the -property in the district to pay for improvements which are obviously distinct and separate.
We are of the opinion that this feature of the statute renders it invalid, and it is unnecessary to discuss the other grounds for attack on the validity of the statute.
.At the recent special session of the G-eneral Assembly another.statute was enacted correcting the defects in this one. which we, have discussed by omitting the general authority to improve all the highways in the district, but that statute was also invalid for the reasons stated in the case of Booe v. Road Improvement District No. 4 of Prairie County, ante p. 140.
An express amendment to a local statute falls within the requirements of the Constitution with reference to notice of the introduction of bills for local statutes.
Reversed and remanded with directions to enter a decree granting the prayer of the complaint.