delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this ease an injunction was obtained by the appellees to restrain the appellants from selling, through their collector, the property of the appellees for payment of a proportion of “ special tax,” for paving two hundred and forty-live feet of North-East street, in the city of Annapolis. The power is claimed by the appellants under the Act of 1867, ch. 240. That Act, so far as pertains to this case, in the printed volume of Laws, is in the following words : “ to impose and appropriate fines', penalties and forfeitures for the breach of their by-laws and ordinances, and to levy and collect taxes, not exceeding one per centum, on all the property of the citizens of said city; to pass ordinances for the prevention and ex-tinguishment of fires, for paving and keeping in repair the streets, lanes and alleys in said city, and for extending and widening the same to any particular part or district of the city, for- paving the streets, lanes and alleys therein, or for sinking wells, making pumps, water-pipes, fountains, hydrants *477and water-plugs, which may appear- for the benefit of each particular part or district.” The Act, as printed, is correctly taken from the copy which was recorded in the office of the Court of Appeals, in conformity with the provisions of the Constitution of 1864, which was in operation when it was passed. The appellants insist that the Act, as recorded and printed, did not contain all the provisions which it contained when it was, in fact, passed by the two Houses, and they produce a copy certified by the chief clerks of the Senate and House of Delegates respectively, to be a true copy of the Act as passed, with contents different from those above quoted, and they offer to prove that the difference was occasioned by mistake of the clerk in engrossing the same, after its final passage, preliminary to its examination by the committee on engrossed hills, and to the affixing of the great seal, signature by the Governor and recording. The Act, as printed, the appellants admit, was duly examined by the committee, sealed, signed and recorded, and the question is whether it is competent, by extrinsic evidence, to prove the contents of an Act of Assembly to he different from those set out in the copy, which has been attested in all the forms prescribed by the Constitution. The Act of 1867, was to take effect from its passage.
Although this question did not arise in the Court below, yet, as it might be raised in the course of further proceedings in the canse, and has been fully argued by the counsel of the appellants, we will consider and determine it.
The 29th section of Article 3, of the Constitution of 1864, provides that “every bill, when passed by the General Assembly, and sealed with the great seal, shall be presented to the Governor, who shall sign the same in the presence of the presiding officers and chief clerks of the Senate and House of Delegates. Every law shall be recorded in the office of the Court of Appeals, and in due time be printed, published and certified under the great seal to the several Courts, in the same manner as has been heretofore usual in this State. The *478object of these careful provisions was to guard against controversy in respeet to the contents of laws. To attest the verity of the contents of a law' all these solemnities are invoked. Not only must it be sealed with the great seal, and signed by the Governor, but it must be so signed in the presence of those officers of the two Houses, who are best qualified to know whether the contents of the paper, being signed, are the identical contents of the law which passed their respective Plouses. Then it is to be recorded, and from the Record Office is to be again certified under the great seal, printed and published. We cannot perceive on w'hat principle the Court could be justified in going behind evidence so fully presented by the Constitution, and inquiring, on extrinsic proof, into the verity of the contents of an Act of Assembly so attested.
The claim of the appellants against the appellees was made on the 11th of March, 1869, and on the 17th of the same month, the bill was filed. When the controversy originated, therefore, the Act of 1867 had passed through all the forms of attestation prescribed by the Constitution, and it is manifest, from the answer of the appellants, that they claimed the power in virtue of the Act as printed in the Statute boob. There is in the answer no averment of error or mistake in respect to the contents of the Act. We are informed by the counsel of the appellants, that the suggestion of error was first made in the argument in the Court below. But however the question may have arisen, or how'ever it might be raised in the course of further proceedings, the result must be the same. We think that the Court cannot go behind the proof prescribed by the Constitution in inquiring into the contents of statutes. A similar question arose in the case of Fouke vs. Fleming & Douglass, 13 Md., 392, where the Court said, “seeing that the engrossed bill and the published copy of the law correspond, we do not feel authorized to assume they áte erroneous, and decide the law to be according to the evidence of the proceedings of the Legislature, as furnished by the journals of the two Houses.” Whilst it is not said in *479terms that no evidence would be admissible to prove the contents of an Act of Assembly to be different from the engrossed and printed statute, yet as the journals would be the next best evidence, a refusal to consider them would indicate the opinion of the Court to be that no extrinsic evidence could be admitted. In the case of Dowling vs. Smith, 9 Md., 242, in which the Judges delivered separate opinions, Le Grand, C. J., and Eccleston and Mason, Judges, concurring in the judgment, though not taking the same grounds, Judge Mason said that the Act in question, in that case, became perfected law from its final engrossment. It was passed by the House on the 7th of March, by the Senate on the 8th, and was engrossed on the 10th. It was argued that the engrossment of an Act of Assembly is the copying, after all amendments, preliminary to their reading and final passage, but this view is not sustained by a reference to the dates of final passage and engrossment of the Act in question in the case of Smith and Dowling. By the practice of our General Assembly there is a final engrossment, after the passage of a bill, made for examination by the committee on engrossed bills, sealing with the great seal, &c. To that final engrossment the Court referred in Fouke vs. Fleming & Douglass.
In the cases referred to by the appellants’ counsel in 1 Denio, 9, 14 Ill., 297, and 19 Ill., 324, the question was, whether the Acts off the Legislature under review in those cases had been, in fact, passed in conformity with the provisions of the State Constitutions. In inquiring into that fact, the Courts held that it was proper to go behind the evidence of the statute books. Here the question is one of evidence to prove contents.
The question next to be considered is, had the appellants, under the provisions of the Act of 1867, the power to collect the assessment made on the appellees for their proportion of the special benefit to the property situate on North East street ? The power cannot be derived from the authority given “ to levy and collect taxes not exceeding one per centum on all the property of the citizens of said city,” and must be derived, *480if at all, from the power “ to pass ordinances * * * for paving and keeping in repair the streets,,lanes and alleys in said city, and for extending and widening the same to any particular part or district of the city.”
The argument is , that the power to pass ordinances for paving and keeping in repair the streets, lanes and alleys involves, by necessity, the power to charge the cost thereof on the property binding on the street, on the ground that the latter is necessary to carry into effect the former expressly granted power, and must therefore be implied.
The rules of construction applying in this case are well settled, and may be found in 10 Md., 277, and 21 Md., 91.
The words of the statute are first to be resorted to, and if these are plain in their import, must be followed, and no room is left for construction. Such powers may be implied as are reasonably incidental to the exercise of powers expressly granted. A corporation is the creature of the law, and is incapable of exercising any other powers than those conferred by the Act of incorporation,, or in any other manner than it authorizes.
The words of the Act of 1867 are plain in their import. The power to “ levy and collect taxes, not exceeding one per centum on all the property of the citizens of said city,” and the power to pass ordinances “for paving and keeping in repair the streets, lanes and alleys,” are contained in the same sentence in section 41 of that Act. The means of carrying into effect the power to pave and keep in repair are expressly granted in the power to levy and collect taxes, and no other manner of exercising the taxing power being granted by the Act of incorporation than “to levy and collect taxes not exceeding one per centum on all the property of the citizens of said city,” none other can be used.
Whether another mode might have been more expedient or had been usually granted to like corporations, was a matter to be considered by the Legislature. We think that the appellants had no authority, under the Act of 1867, to make the assessment in question on the property of the appellees.
*481The decree of the Circuit Court made the injunction perpetual. This was error, and it would be necessary to reverse the decree and remand the cause if the appellants could be benefitted by any further proceedings that could be taken. But the only question really in the cause is the power of the appellants, under their charter, to make the assessment in controversy, and, having determined that they do not possess that power, no further proceedings could change the final result, and they sustain no injury from the error in the decree.
The injunction was not granted to restrain a trespass on the ground of irreparable damage, to which point much of the argument of the appellants’ counsel was addressed, and many authorities cited. It was to restrain a corporation from selling the property of the complainant without lawful authority. In the ease of The Mayor, &c., of Frederick vs. Groshon, 30 Md., 446, the Court said: “ But there is another ground upon which the appellee is entitled to the injunction, and that is that corporations will be restrained by a Court of Equity from a gross abuse of their powers, when to the injury of individuals. That Courts will not suffer powerful corporate bodies, with whom it is always very difficult to deal on equal terms, to take, under color of authority, proceedings which are of an illegal character, or which are of doubtful legality, if, by so doing, they place those against whom they are proceeding in .a condition of peril, from which it might be difficult for them to extricate themselves.” Pinchin vs. London & Blackwall Railway Co., 31 Eng. L. & E. Rep., 252; Bonaparte vs. Camden & Amboy R. R. Co., 1 Baldwin, 231; West. Md. R. R. Co. vs. Owings, 15 Md., 204.
The rule that, in general, all defendants must answer before an injunction can be dissolved, was insisted on by the appellants’ counsel as entitling them to a reversal of the decree because Powers, their co-defendant, had not answered before decree. The injunction in this cause was continued, and the rule does not apply. But if it were otherwise, Powers was a nominal party merely. He was the agent of the appellants, *482and attempting to exercise supposed powers under them. The injunction would have been equally effective if he had not been named, and it had been directed to the appellants, their agents and servants.
(Decided 2d June, 1870.)In our opinion the decree must be affirmed.
Decree affirmed, with costs.