delivered the following dissenting opinion :
This being a test case, on the decision of which a number of others depended, involving questions of great importance, and being the only dissentient, I feel compelled, as much by respect to my colleagues as regard for enlightened public opinion, to assign the reasons which prevent my concurring in the conclusions of the majority of the Court.
The case was submitted to the Court below upon an agreed statement of facts, reserving the right of appeal.
It appears from the record, that the ajipellant was indicted at October Term, 1874, in the Circuit Court for Caroline County, for selling spirituous liquors on the 5th of October, 1874, at Denton, in the third election district of said county, “ contrary to the Act of Assembly in such case made and provided,” etc.
• It is agreed that at December Session, 1878-74, the General Assembly passed an Act entitled—
“ An Act to enable the qualified voters of Queen Anne’s, Caroline, Dorchester and Talbot counties, to determine by ballot, whether spirituous or fermented liquors shall be sold in said counties, or in any election district thereof, or a license granted for the sale of the same.”
The Act, which was approved the 11th of April, 1874, is set out in the record, and enacts 1st, “ That the question whether or not any person or persons, or any house may be licensed in any election district of either of said counties, shall be submitted to the voters of the counties respectively, on the 2nd Tuesday of July next;” that an election shall' be held in accordance with the law governing *91the general elections of the State ; that ballots for or against such sale shall be cast, and the judges of the general election shall return the vote to the Judges of the Circuit Court of the county in which such district is situated, and if it shall appear that either one or more election districts of either of said counties, shall have cast a majority against the sale of spirituous or fermented liquors, then the Judges of the Circuit Court shall make a proclamation of the result of such election, defining therein the district or districts, or the whole county or counties, as the case may be.
Sec. 2, enacts, that if it shall be found, etc., that a majority of the votes in any district of either of said counties, or all of them, has been cast against the sale of spirituous or fermented liquors, that then it shall not be lawful for any person or persons, etc., to sell spirituous liquors in any district of either of said counties, voting by a majority against the selling of tire same.
Sec. 3, enacts, that every person convicted of a violation of the Act shall be fined not more than $300, nor less than $50, for every such offence.
Sec. 4, enacts, this Act shall take effect immediately after it shall be determined by a majority of the people, in any one or more election districts, whether or not spirituous liquors shall not be sold as provided for.
It is further admitted, that an election was held in the third election district of Caroline county, on the 2nd Tuesday of July, 1874, according to the Act of Assembly, and the judges of the election made return thereof, to the Judges of the Circuit Court, who afterwards on the 4th of August, 1874, made proclamation of the result of the election ; and in the third election district of Caroline county there were 249 votes cast for the sale of spirituous liquors, and 340 against.
It was also agreed that the appellant was a resident of the third election district of Caroline county, doing business therein as a seller of spirituous and fermented liquors, *92and that he made the sales charged in the indictment, having at the time a retail liquor license, trader’s license, and ordinary license, issued the 1st of May, 1874, under the provisions of the 5th Art. of the Code of General Laws, to continue until the 1st of May next, all of which had been paid for and the money remitted to the Treasury, upon which statement of facts, the appellant was found guilty by the Court, and from the judgment thereon appealed.
The guilt or innocence of the accused depends upon the validity of the Act of Assembly, of 1874, ch. 453.
The gist of the offence is the violation of a Public Local Law, which, it is insisted, repeals the Public General Law. The traverser relies upon the license issued by the State, pursuant to Art. 56, Code of Pub. Gen. Laws.
The questions presented are,
1st. The'constitutionality of the Act of 1874, ch. 453.
2nd. Its effect as repealing the license laws of the State.
The appellant insists, the Act under consideration is unconstitutional.
“Because the Act is not a complete law in itself, as it came from the hands of the Legislature, but is made to depend for its existence and operation as a law on the popular vote. In its terms and in effect, it is a delegation of the law-making power to the people.”
2. “Because by its terms, it is to go into effect as a law, if at all, upon a contingency not in the purview of the Constitution, and at a period of time,, not warranted by that instrument.”
The appellee maintains the converse of these propositions ; denies there has been any delegation of authority ; and relies upon the statutes and decisions of this State as conclusive. Whatever deference may be due to the judicial opinions of the Courts of other States, if the points raised have been directly decided by our predecessors, we are bound to submit to the latter, unless very cogent reasons .exist to the contrary.
*93Before attempting to review adjudged cases in other States, or to weigh their comparative merits as authority, we must endeavor to ascertain whether the question has been decided by this Court.
The cases referred to by the appellee' are Burgess vs. Pue, 2 Gill, 11 and 254, and Hammond vs. Haines, 25 Md., 541. The cases of Burgess vs. Pue were decided in this Court in 1844, and arose out of certain proceedings, adopted to enforce the payment of taxes, imposed by the inhabitants of a school district, in Howard District of Anne Arundel county, by virtue of an Act for the public instruction of youth in Primary Schools and its supplements.
The 29th and 30th sections of the Act, provided for the submission of the question of its adoption, to the voters of the several counties, and if the majority of said voters should be in favor of the establishment of primary schools as therein provided for, then the said Act should be valid for said county or counties, otherwise of no'effect whatever; and “ e converso,” if a majority should be against the establishment of primary schools, then the said Act should be void.
Other sections required the counties to be laid off into school districts, and authorized the taxable inhabitants of said districts to vote a tax on the assessable property in said districts, to build school houses, etc.
The appellee resisted the payment of the tax, on the ground among others, that the law was unconstitutional, being dependent for its validity and operation upon the votes of a majority of the voters of each county, and because it authorized a tax to be levied by one or more of the taxable inhabitants of the school district, on the assessable property of the district.
In support of these objections, it was urged bjr the appellee, that the reference to the people of the counties, for the sanction or obligation of a law, was no where recognized or warranted by the Constitution.
*94It was insisted that the counties had no separate political existence• they were not recognized hy the Constitution as municipalities, with power of self-government, hut as political divisions of the territory and were hut component parts of the State, with no exclusive legislative powers within their own limits.
That the legislative power of the State was vested in a G-eneral Assembly, consisting of a Senate and House of Delegates, elected by the counties and cities, to the benefit of whose collective wisdom every citizen of the State was entitled in the enactment of laws and the imposition of taxes ; and the delegation of the power to adopt the law to the voters of the counties, and of the power to tax, to an indefinite number óf taxahles, destroyed the responsibility of the delegate to the constituent, and abolished all the guarantees of representative government, contrary to the Bill of Rights and the Constitution.
The learned Judge who delivered the opinion of the Court in the first case, took no notice directly of the first point — the submission of the law to the voters of the counties.
With regard to the second, he said :
“We think there was no validity in the constitutional question which was raised by the appellee's counsel, in the course of his argument relative to the competency of the Legislature to delegate the power of taxation to the taxable inhabitants for the purpose of raising a fund for the diffusion of knowledge and the support of primary schools. The object was a laudable one, and there is nothing in the Constitution prohibitory of the delegation of the power of taxation in the mode adopted to effect the attainment of it. We may say that grants of similar powers to other bodies, for political purposes, have been co-eval with the Constitution itself, and that no serious doubts have ever been entertained of their validity. It is therefore too late at this day to raise such an objection.” ' 2 Gill, 19. Replying to the *95argument that such legislation destroyed the relation of representative and constituent and the accountability of the former to the latter, the Court said : “It is not perceived how the Act in question can be deemed a violation of either of those principles of the fundamental law. The tax was certainly levied by the consent of the Legislature, because the power to impose it emanated from the legislative department of the government, and was expressly given by a law passed for that purpose, and there is nothing in it which can be considered as in the slightest degree impairing the responsibility of the law-making power to their constituents, for the due and faithful execution of the trust confided to them, because if deemed to be unwise or inexpedient, an expression of the popular will to that effect, was all that was necessary to procure its repeal.” 2 Gill, 19.
This is an emphatic assertion, that the act of the voters is the Act of the Legislature, for which they are as responsible as if done directly by them ; adopting or applying to legislation, as broadly as in transactions between man and man, the common law maxim “ qui faeit per alium facit per se,” and disregarding totally, the other axiom, “delegatus non potest delegari.”
Again, the power to delegate, is said to belong to the Legislature, because there was nothing in the Constitution prohibiting its exercise, and as a power which had been often exercised (although no instance was cited), from the foundation of the government without objection.
If these positions are correct they sanction all the delegation of legislative power which can be made, without regard to the character of the deputy. The Court in the case cited made no distinction between the delegation of legislative or taxing power to the inhabitants of counties, cities, municipal corporations, or school districts; all seemed in their opinion equally capable of being the depositories of the legislative will.
*96In the second case of Burgess vs. Pue, although the same objections to the constitutionality of the Primary School law were relied on, and more minutely, the Court assumed they had been dispósed of by the decision of the first, and decided the case upon other grounds. It is suggested in some of the cases that the delegation of the power to tax for local purposes is the deputation of an executive or ministerial duty, and not the exercise of a legislative function. This view seems to be taken by Judge Sharswood in Loche’s Appeal, and other cases. No such distinction, however, was adverted to by this Court in deciding Burgess vs. Pue; they justified it upon the grounds that it emanated from the Legislature, was done with their assent, and was sanctioned by contemjmraneous usage.
In this aspect of the case, in the passage of the Primary School law, there was a double delegation of the legislative will; first, in submitting the law for adoption by a majority of the voters of the county ; secondly, in the levying of taxes, by the taxables of the school districts. By the decisions of this Court, in Burgess vs. Pue, both of these delegations of power were affirmed, and the payment of taxes levied under them enforced by legal process.
A more solemn sanction of the exercise of authority after judicial examination can scarcely be imagined or produced.
In the interval between the decisions in 2 Gill, (1844,) and 25 Md., (1866,) a number of cases had occurred in other States, involving the validity of laws submitted to the voters of counties, cities, towns and municipal corporations, in the course of which conflicting conclusions were reached in some instances, and refined distinctions adopted in others; so.that in the decision of the latter case, this Court had the benefit of the views of other tribunals, and therefore in its opinion was careful to distinguish between Acts of legislation, which had previously been deemed homogeneous. ■
*97In the case of Hammond vs. Haines, 25 Md., 541, the appellant insisted that this Court had decided in Burgess vs. Pue, that the Primar}' School law was constitutional, notwithstanding the 29th and 30th sections; they being in the nature of conditions subsequent, which being void, left the law to operate independently of them, “per se,” and that the delegation of the power to tax, was granted to the taxable inhabitants as members of a quasi corporation. The appellee controverted these positions, relying on Burgess vs. Pue, as conclusive of the constitutional power of the Legislature to delegate its authority, as in that instance.
This Court, through Weisel, J., delivering their opinion, referring to the argument in the case just cited, said: “ The cases of Burgess vs. Pue, 2 Gill, 11 and 254, were strongly relied upon by the appellee in the argument of this case, as settling the question in this State, and establishing the validity of the Taw. Those cases arose under the operation of the Primary School Law above referred to (1825, ch. 162,) and the provisions of the 29th and 30th. sections of that law, submitting it to the votes of the people of the several counties, with a view to its adoption and operation in such as would vote accordingly, were urged in the argument as not .warranted by the Constitution, and as avoiding the law. This Court, however, held the law to be constitutional, but not distinctly upon the ground that there was no force in the objection taken to those sections, but that it was competent for the Legislature to delegate the power of taxation to the taxable inhabitants for the purpose of raising a fund for the support of schools.” 25 Md., 560.
Without adopting or dissenting from the views expressed in Burgess vs. Pue, except by inference as heretofore indicated, the Court declining to regard Burgess vs. Pue, as conclusive on the point, assimilated the Act of 1864, ch. 348, then before them, to the Act of 1846, ch. 112, *98prohibiting the clerk of Washington County, from issuing licenses within ten miles of St. James’ College, without an order from one of the Judges of the Court — (an Act under which one Lancaster was convicted and fined, and which judgment was afterwards affirmed on appeal.) This law (1846, ch. 172,) the Court said, repealed all laws inconsistent with it, but left the license laws operative within the interdicted limits, if the Judge was satisfied of its propriety and necessity. Comparing the principal cases with that of Lancaster, the Court said :
“In the town of North East, a majority of its qualified voters, speaking through the ballot-box, was declared to have the effect of suspending the operation of the law within its limits. The effect was, or is, the same in both, one operating affirmatively, the other negatively; the mode of expressing the assent or dissent only being different. We regard both laws as virtually involving the same principle,” etc.
After affirming the constitutionality of the Act of 1864, ch. 348, concluding their opinion, the Court significantly adds: “In deciding this law to be constitutional, this Court is not to be understood as embracing within its views 'the character of a law which would, in a broader or more enlarged sense, submit its passage or existence to the popular vote. Law (as has been most aptly defined) is the result of the legitimate action of legislative power. * * * The Greneral Assembly, composed of the Senate and House of Delegates, is, in this State, the only law-making power.”
In deciding the case of Hammond vs. Haines, this Court emphasized the fact-that the privilege of deciding bj' ballot, whether any licenses to sell liquor should be issued by the clerk, was granted to the qualified voters residing in the borough of North East. They carefully guarded against the announcement of a general rule, which would sanction as constitutional, “a law which would, in a broader or more enlarged sense, submit its passage or its existence to *99the popular voto.” Hence, whatever conclusions might have been drawn from the action of this Court in the cases of Burgess vs. Pue, standing alone, when they are considered as interpreted and qualified by the opinion in Hammond vs. Haines, it is clear the judicial mind of this Court is not precluded from being governed by the force of -principles or weight of authority which may preponderate on either side of this question.
It may further be said, that the subject which in the cases of Burgess vs. Pue, was “res integra,” and decided upon general principles almost without the citation of authority, has been since so thoroughly discussed in other tribunals, that it would be no disrespect to our learned and venerated predecessors to yield to the authority of more recent decisions.
Whether a law is constitutional or not must depend on the powers conferred on the Legislature by the Constitution under which it is organized, and by which it acts.
Although great similarity prevails in the provisions of the Constitutions of the several States (all of them, being republican,) yet in a portion of them a democratic element more or less exists, which originated in their colonial necessities, and has heeu recognized and continued by their State Constitutions.
Thus, in the New England States, and perhaps in some of the Western, founded upon their model, a system of towns or townships is established, which is thus briefly described by a recent essayist: “The entire area of the county is divided into a convenient number of towns, with boundaries definitely ascertained, and positively fixed by law, somewhat like our ‘ election districts,’ but generally of smallar extent. Each of these towns is a body corporate, with all the powers necessary to a legal corporation. Every voter living within the boundaries of the town is, by virtue of his residence, entitled — as a stockholder in any ordinary corporation — to a voice in the management *100of the business of the town. Certain things are required of these town corporations in conformity to general law. The mode of meeting the requirements is determined, and the town officers through whom it shall he done, are selected hy the voters assembled, in general town meeting, and acting as a pure democracy.” * * * “The public interests confided to the town administration are: the ascertainment of the value of property; the levying, assessment and collection of all taxes ; the highways and bridges, the schools and general educational interests, the police of the town, and the direction and management of all elections.” — Stickney’s Township System, 7.
Wherever the township system exists as a part of the machinery of the State government, the powers of the voter resident within the town are much broader and more comprehensive than otherwise.
Local legislation is the inherent and distinguishing feature of this form of government, and wherever it exists, there can he no question as to the constitutionality of laws, which are made to depend on the assent or dissent of such organized communities.
Hence, it will he found that in those States where this peculiar system prevails, local option laws are generally recognized as valid.
As far as inferences may he distinctly drawn from the action of the two .last Constitutional Conventions of this State, the township system, or the investing the voters of election districts with the powers necessary for the management of their public local concerns, was deliberately withheld from the General Assembly by the Convention of 1867.
The Convention of 1864, hy Art. X of the Constitution, entitled “Counties and Townships,” section 1st, authorized the General Assembly to provide for organizing new counties, and by section 2nd declared “the General Assembly shall provide by general law for dividing the *101counties into townships, or permanent municipal corporations, in place of the existing election districts, prescribing their limits and confiding to them all powers necessary for the management of their public local concerns.”
The Convention of 1867, in their revision and amendment of the Constitution, retained the first section of Art. X (which now constitutes section 1 of Art. XIII of the Constitution,) and omitted section 2 referring to townships entirely, virtually refusing to convert election districts into municipal corporations.
It may, perhaps, he insisted that this express grant of power was unnecessary, as, according to the rules of con-struction as to State Constitutions, the Legislature possesses all powers not prohibited or expressly reserved to the people, but this rule must be subject to the implied limitation imposed upon all delegations of power requiring the exercise of discretion, that such powers must be exercised by the delegate, and cannot he subrogated.
In the United States, the legitimate powers of government are all exercised by agents specially designated and entrusted with them by the Constitution, for the benefit of the whole. The elective franchise, or right of suffrage, although often spoken of as an inherent original right, is a trust committed to a special body for the benefit of the whole. An eminent writer on constitutional law says :
“ In most modern governments, including our own, there are four distinct branches or departments, to which are confided the powers delegated by the sovereign. Of these, the first is the electors, whose function is that of choosing out of their own number the functionaries employed in the other departments, to which, in the United States, is added that of enacting the fundamental laws. The electoral body is the most numerous in the State charged with an official function. It comprises the suffrage holders, or voters, or, in a qualified sense, the people, and differs from the other three departments in that it consti*102tutes a body which never assembles, but acts in segments of such convenient size as not to render conference and cooperation impracticable. The other three departments are familiar under the names of legislative, executive, and judicial departments, charged with the duties indicated by those terms respectively.” — Jamison’s Constitutional Convention, p. 23, sect,ion 24.
“ By the term electors, according to the'American Constitution, generally, with which alone we are now con cerned, is meant that body of citizens, who, by the Constitution or laws of the State, have been invested with the rights, first, of choosing the most important administrative officers of the government, and secondly, of determining by its direct vote the expediency of constitutional changes, and of enacting them. The electoral body, as already observed, is by far the most numerous corps of functionaries in the State. It never assembles in a single body, as does the Legislature, but exercises its prescribed functions in determinate subdivisions of the public area, each of which constitutes an electoral circle, where alone the electors resident within it can exercise their franchise. Beyond the limited sphere of duty laid down for them in the fundamental law, this most important body has no power or official character whatever. It cannot pass an ordinary statute, or render a judgment, or execute a criminal. Its individual members, except in the simple act of casting their vote, in the cases prescribed by law, represent nobody, and hence, theoretically are entitled to no more weight than the still more numerous body of non-electors comprising the residue of the people. But, although while acting within their proper province, the electors, by their vote, are deemed to utter the voice of the sovereign, it is only the aggregate vote of the State, or what I might describe as the result out of all the separate votes of its individual electors, which can be thus characterized, not 'the vote of the individual, or of the subordinate circle which as such, has generally no official validity whatever.”
*103Counties are the units of our State political organization, and of municipal government. As counties, we are represented in the Senate and House of Delegates of the General Assembly. As counties, we constitute portions of the several judicial circuits of the State. As counties, we elect our clerks, sheriffs, registers and commissioners. As counties, we assess our property and levy our taxes.
Election districts have no separate municipal existence, and in the language of the foregoing extract, the vote of the individual or of the subordinate circle has generally no official validity whatever.
Without a municipal organization there can be legally neither majority nor minority; the right of a majority to control the minority is a political right belonging to a community, or body politic.
An eminent jurist and writer on Constitutional Law declares : “Ho position is better established in American law than that ordinary legislation belongs exclusively to the Legislature proper, and cannot be delegated even to the people, or electors, who are in one sense superior to both Legislatures and Conventions. Thus the Supreme Court of Delaware, in a case where the question arose as to the constitutionality of an Act of the Legislature entitled ‘ An Act authorizing the people to decide by ballot whether the license to retail intoxicating liquors shall be permitted among them,’ upon that question said: ‘It is clear that neither the legislative, executive nor judicial departments separately, nor all combined, can devolve on the people the exercise of any part of the sovereign power with which each is invested. The assumption of a power to do so would be usurpation.’ •* * ‘ The powers of government are trusts of the highest importance, on the faithful and proper exercise of which depend the welfare and happiness of society. These trusts must be exercised in strict conformity with the spirit and intention of the Constitution, by those with whom they are deposited ; and *104in no case whatever can they be transferred o.r delegated to any other body or persons ; not even to the whole people of the' State, still less to the people of a county. * * * If the legislative functions can be transferred or delegated to the people, so can the executive or judicial power/ * * * ‘All will admit that in such cases the people are totally incompetent to decide correctly. Equally incompetent are they to exercise with discernment and discretion collectively, or by means of the ballot-box, the power of legislation ; because, under such circumstances, passion and prejudice incapacitate them for deliberation/ ” Rice vs. Foster, 4 Harr., (Del.,) 479. See also the following cases in which the same rule is maintained : Bradley vs. Baxter, 15 Barb., 122; People vs. Collins, 3 Mich., 343; Case of the Borough of West Philadelphia, 5 W. & S., 281; Barto vs. Himrod, 4 Seld., 483; Maize vs. The State, 4 Porter, (Ind.,) 342; Barker vs. Com., 6 Barr., 509; Jamison on Constitutional Conventions.
The general principles announced in these cases seem to be conceded by the counsel on each side, but the difficulty consists in their application to particular instances of legislation, in view of the conflicting decisions on this subject in different States, and sometimes in the supreme judicial tribunals of the same State.
“It is,” says Paley, “a perversion of language to assign any law as the efficient operative cause of anything. A law presupposes an agent, for it is only the mode according to which an agent proceeds; it implies a power, for it is the order according to which that power acts. Without this agent, without this power, which are both distinct from itself, the law does nothing, is nothing.”
In the language of this Court, in the case of Hammond vs. Haines, was the passage or existence of the law now under consideration, dependent on the popular vote? Much ingenious reasoning has been exerted to prove that whatever the Legislature directs shall or may be done *105upon a certain contingency (although that contingency is the vote “aye or no” of local constituencies,) is done by the Legislature. The act of the Legislature being the primary cause, all the intermediate agencies, it is argued, are but legislative machinery, and the final result is the legislative will. It is logically true that if the Act of Assembly had not been passed, the voters of the election districts would not have had the power of suspending or repealing the license laws, or of prohibiting the sale of liquors within their respective districts ; the Legislature is therefore the remote, and the electors are the proximate cause of the result.
Are the electors the agents of the Legislature in deciding the question of sale or no sale, license or no license ? Or are they principals, whose will ultimately determines when the Act shall take effect?
In the words of the 4th section: “This Act shall take effect immediately after it shall have been determined by a majority of the people in any one or more election districts of Queen Anne’s, Caroline, Dorchester, and Talbot counties, whether or not spirituous or fermented liquors, shall not be sold as before provided for.”
The purpose of the Legislature to subordinate their will and judgment, to the wishes or will of the voters of the several election districts, in the counties named in the A.ct, is impressed upon all its parts.
The Act is entitled, “An Act to enable the qualified voters of Queen Anne’s, Caroline, Dorchester and Talbot counties to determine by ballot whether spirituous or fermented liquors shall be sold in said counties, or in any election district thereof, or a license granted for the sale of the same.”
Section 1st directs “that the question of whether or not any person or persons, or any house may be licensed in any election district” of either of said counties, “by whom, or in which, spirituous or fermented liquors may *106be sold, shall be submitted to the voters of said counties, respectively, on the second Tuesday in July next,” and prescribed the manner of holding the election and proclaiming the result.
Section 2nd enacts, that if it be found that a majority of the votes in any district of either of said counties or all of them, has been cast against the sale of spirituous or fermented liquors, “that then it shall not be lawful for any person or persons, or body corporate, to sell spirituous or fermented liquors in any district of either of said counties voting by a majority against the selling of the same.”
Section 3rd imposes a penalty for violation of the Act in selling spirituous liquors, in any of the election districts where a majority has been cast against the sale.
Section 4th declares the Act shall take effect immediately .after it shall have been determined by a majority of the people, in any one or more election districts, etc., whether or not spirituous or fermented liquors shall not be sold as before provided for.
It is obvious from this analysis of the Act that its modal provisions, operated under the .general provision of the Constitution, from and after the first of June, so far as to authorize the holding of the election; but its penal and prohibitory clauses, (if constitutional,) took effect at the time prescribed in them respectively. Regarding these latter clauses, however, not as to the time of their oj)eration, but as evidence of the source or will which was to put them in motion, as a rule of conduct, the animus or will is that of the voters, not of the Legislature.
There is a material variance in the language of the second and fourth sections, as to the body of the majority, ■who are to act; in the former, if a majority of the votes in any district is cast against the sale, it is enacted, it shall not be lawful to sell; in the latter, it is declared, the Act shall take effect after it shall have been determined by *107a majority of the people in any one or more election districts.
Assuming the words “ voters” and “people” to be used as synonymous, their determination or decision makes that unlawful, which was before legal, and subjects the violator of the law to prosecution and punishment.
It is urged on behalf of the State, that there is no substantial difference between the Act of 1864, (known as the North East Act,) and the Act of 1874.
“ They both submit the question, whether there may be a license to any person, or any house, by whom or wherein spirituous liquors are sold.”
The borough of North East was a municipality having a local government, and constituting a community in itself, to which it was competent for the Legislature to impart, if it had not previously done so, the right of making police regulations. This class of cases is an acknowledged exception. Election districts have never heretofore been regarded as corporations, or quasi corporations ; and unless the Act of Assembly which enables them to do such acts, as the present, constitutes them “per se,” quasi corporations, there is no analogy between them.
The appellee argues that the Act of 1874 is only an instance of a law, enacted to go into effect upon a certain contingency, to be ascertained by the voters, upon which the law makes its action to depend.
Whatever is uncertain is in one sense a contingency, but it is not in that sense that the Act in this case depends for its vitality. It emphatically rests on the volition of the voters of the election districts, having no corporate character which authorizes the majority to bind the minority, by laws or ordinances. When a man becomes the citizen of a State, a city, or borough, he tacitly binds himself to be bound by the laws of the community ; but a citizen of an election district does not engage to be bound *108by tbe voices or tbe votes of a majority of such districts,because they have no political powers as such.
This mode of legislation virtually deprives him of the barriers which the Constitution has erected against popular passions, prejudice and excitement. It may be resorted to now in bebalf of moral reform, education, internal improvement, etc., but once established as a legitimate exercise of power, there is no popular pbrensy which it may not be invoked to sustain.
The Supreme Court of New Jersey, in the late case of the State, ex rel. Sandford vs. Court of Common Pleas of Morris, 38 N. J. Law Rep., 72, considered the constitutionality of the Chatham Local Option Law, and held it to be valid.
1st. Upon the ground that the Legislature, under the power to make police regulations, may prohibit the retail of alcoholic stimulants.
2d. That municipal corporations and townships may be invested with authority to regulate or prohibit the sale of intoxicating driüks.
Having set out the provisions of the Act authorizing the persons qualified to vote at the next annual town meeting, to determine by ballot, whether thereafter license to sell spirituous liquors should be granted; and if it should appear that a majority of the votes were cast for “no license,” it should not thereafter be lawful to grant any such license, until otherwise decided by a contrary vote at some subsequent town meeting, and declaring all Acts inconsistent therewith were repealed, the Court proceeds : “ The local option law is alleged to be in conflict with that article of our State Constitution, which provides that legislative power shall be vested in a Senate and G-eneral Assembly. It must be conceded that this law can have no sanction if it is a delegation of the law-making power to the people of the township. If the right to declare what the law shall be in one case, may be referred to the people, *109the right to do so may he given in al] eases, and thus the Legislature may divest itself wholly of the power lodged in it by the fundamental law, until by subsequent legislation it shall be resumed. It is also obvious it is not competent to delegate to the people the right to say whether an existing law shall he repealed or its operation suspended. To say that what is now the law shall not hereafter, or shall not for a specified time, be the law, is in effect to declare the law to be otherwise than it now is, and is a clear exercise of the law-making power. The will of the Legislature must be expressed in the form of a law by their own act. If it is left to the contingency of a popular vote to pronounce whether it shall take effect, it is not the will of the law-makers, but the voice of their constituents which moulds the rule of action. If the vote is affirmative it is law; if in the negative, it is not law. The vote makes or defeats the law, and thus the people are permitted unlawfully to resume the right of which they divested themselves by a written Constitution, to declare by their own direct action what shall be the law. The cases upon this subject, so far as they assert the principles above stated, have my entire concurrence.”
After this very clear and cogent exposition of the constitutional limitation on the powers of the Legislature, the Court declares the law in question to be complete in form and in effect, prohibiting the sale of liquor without license, and declaring lliat the license shall only be issued on the contingency that a majority of the voters in the township are in favor of license.
Distinguishing the case from Rice vs. Foster and Parker vs. The Commonwealth, the Court said :
“In those cases, the prohibition and penalty were not denounced by the law itself, but by the popular vote. The selling of liquor was not pronounced to be unlawful; it was referred to the people to determine whether it should be restrained. ” So in the law proposed to be passed at the *110last session of our Legislature: “the offence defined by the Act could not be committed, unless the voters of the town determined that license should not be granted.”
Referring to the police powers of the Legislature, the opinion declares : “If this is construed as an Act authorizing the township by a majority vote to prohibit the retail traffic in liquors it may still be supported.” * ■ * * *
“ The inhabitants of the several townships in this State are incorporated by a general law. They have heretofore, without question, exercised many powers, through a direct vote of the people.”
Without intending to intimate that the very ingenious reasoning of the Judge in this case is over refined and subtle in the extreme, it is apparent he acknowledges in their utmost breadth, the restrictions imposed by constitutional provisions upon the delegation of legislative power, and only sustains the law, after a most elaborate argument to show it does not violate them.
The case is also one of the class already recognized, as an exception to the general rule, being that of a municipality, to which police powers are necessarily granted for the better regulation of the community.
To make the constitutionality of a law, depend upon nice distinctions of language, rather than upon its actual operation and effect, would destroy all the limitations imposed by constitutional provisions, and render the fundamental principles of government nugatory and vain.
Among the most recent and well considered cases on this subject, is that of Ex parte Wall in the Supreme Court of California. 48 Cal., 279, 313.
The Legislature of that State passed an Act on the 18th of March, 1874, “To permit the voters of every township or incorporated city to vote on the question of granting licenses to sell intoxicating liquors ;” under which an election was held in the Fourth Township of Contra Costa county, at which a majority of the votes was cast “against *111license and the petitioner, being afterwards convicted of an alleged violation of the law, was sentenced to imprisonment.
The Court having recognized as established law the position that the power to make laws conferred upon the Legislature cannot be delegated to the people of the State, or any portion of the people, addresses itself to the arguments used in this case, that to enact a law to take effect, provided the people shall vote in favor of it, is not to delegate the law-making power.
Admitting that laws may be conditional, or contingent, as in the case of the non-intercourse law, 7 Cranch, 382, it is insisted in that instance “ the members of Congress exercised their own judgment and simply determined that trade should be suspended, while the orders in council or edicts should continue.”
In answer to the argument that the Act may be contingent, the Court said: “It does not follow that a statute may be made to take effect upon the happening of any subsequent event which may be named in it. The event must be one which should produce such a change of circumstances as that the law-makers — in the exercise of their own judgment — can declare it to be wise and expedient that the law shall take effect when the event shall occur.”
“The Legislature cannot transfer to others the responsibility of deciding what legislation is expedient and proper, with reference either to present conditions or future contingencies. To say that the legislators may deem a law to be expedient, provided the people shall deem it expedient, is to suggest an abandonment of the legislative function by those to whose wisdom and patriotism the Constitution has intrusted the prerogative of determining whether a law is or is not expedient. Can it be said in such a case that any member of the Legislature declares the prohibition or enactment to be expedient?”
“ A statute to take effect upon a subsequent event when, it comes from the hands of the Legislature, must be a law *112‘in prcesenti’ to take effect ‘in futuro.’ On the question of the expediency of the law, the Legislature must exercise its own judgment definitely and finally. If it can be made to take effect on the occurrence of an event, the Legislature must declare the law expedient if the event shall happen, hut inexpedient if it shall not happen. They can appeal to no other man or men to judge for them in relation to its present or future propriety or necessity; they must exercise that power themselves, and thus perform the duty imposed upon them hy the Constitution. But in case of a law to take effect, if it shall he approved hy a popular vote, no event affecting the expediency of the law is expected to happen. The expediency or wisdom of the law, abstractly considered, does not depend on a vote of the people. If it is unwise before the vote is taken, it is equally unwise afterward. The Legislature has no more right to refer such a question to the whole people than to a single individual. The people are sovereign, hut their sovereignty must he exercised in the mode pointed out by the Constitution.” Barto vs. Himrod, 8 N. Y., 483; Rice vs. Foster, 4 Harr., 479.
In the cases of Alcorn vs. Harmer, and Same vs. Hill, 38 Miss., 652, all the former cases were reviewed in 1860, hy the Supreme Court of Mississippi in a very thorough and deliberate decision after an exhaustive argument.
The Court assumed as a proposition not to he disputed, that the legislative authority cannot he returned to the people, nor delegated to any other power; and that no Act can he binding as a law, unless it has received a final action from the legislative will — p. 750.
The cases of Rice vs. Foster, 4 Harr., 479, (decided in 1847,) Parker vs. The Commonwealth, 6 Barr, 507, by the Supreme Court of Pa., (decided some months afterwards) Barto vs. Himrod, decided by the Court of Appeals of New York in 1853, and Maize vs. The State of Indiana, 4 Ind., 342, announcing the same doctrine, were all approved, yet *113they distinguished the Act of the Mississippi Legislature, then under consideration, from those cases, and held it valid.
In support of the conclusion arrived at, it is ingeniously argued by the Court, “that if the Legislature have the right to enact a statute, and make it depend for coming into force upon a vote of a district, or a portion of the people, that the power is not derived from the fact that the persons who are to vote upon the proposition, are associated together as members of the same municipal body, or as inhabitants of some legal or constitutional sub-division of the territory. For in all cases of a corporation, or quasi corporation, the rights, privileges and powers of the corporators, or the body appointed to act for it, are conferred in the act of creating such corporation. And no one will maintain that by the passage of an Act creating a corporation, the legislative power has been enlarged so as to authorize it to delegate an authority to such corporation, which it was incompetent to confer in the first instance. If the Legislature possess the authority at all, it must of necessity derive it from the Constitution, the source whence proceed all of the powers of government. ’'
The creation of municipal corporations, is one of the ordinary exercises of legislative power in this country.
The right - to manage their local affairs is usually éxpressly conferred by their charters, subject to the supervision of the Legislature. All their ordinances are, of course, made with this proviso implied.
Every charter is a constitution to the community authorized ; its by-laws and ordinances are laws to its corporators.
The right of self-government, with all its guarantees, is therefore retained in the municipality, but in the case of legislation, by the mere vote of the majority of an election district, there is no pre-existing charter or constitution prescribing the mode of local government, no separate political organization, no distinct .communal existence, *114capable of acting as an unit, and no corporate powers conferred by the Act submitting the question to the people.
The power of the Legislature is not enlarged by the municipal character of the community, to which the adoption or rejection of the law .'is submitted, but it is the capacity of the community to-exercise such functions as are incident to municipal government that makes the difference.
In the one case, there is no delegation of power; the authority, though derivative, is inherent and incidental; conferred by charter or by-law upon ■ a body competent to receive and exercise it. In the other;-there being no body politic in existence to exercise ' sucln functions “ per se ’ ’ they must be performed, if at all," by the voters as deputies of the Legislature.
All the cases show that the ■ distinction between conferring the power of local legislation upon municipalities, or townships, and unorganizéd bodies of the people; is too well recognized to be departed from.
In Commonwealth vs. Bennett, 108 Mass., 27, the Court said, “Many successive. statutes of the Commonwealth have made the lawfulness of sales of intoxicating liquors to depend upon licenses from the selectmen of towns or commissioners of-counties, and such statutes have been held to be constitutional. 7 Dane’s Abrid., 43, 44; Commonwealth vs. Blakington, 24 Pick., 352. It is equally within the power of the Legislature to authorize a town by vote of the inhabitants, or a city by vote of the City Council, to determine whether the sale of particular kinds of liquors within its limits shall be permitted oi’ prohibited. This subject, although not embraced within the ordinary power to make by-laws and ordinances, falls within the class of police regulations, which may be intrusted by, the Legislature by express enactment to municipal authority. Commonwealth vs. Turner, 1 Cush., 493, 495; State vs. Noyes, 10 Foster, 279; Bancroft vs. *115Dumas, 21 Verm., 456; Turner vs. Trustees of Albion, 5 Hill, 121; State vs. Simmonds, 3 Mo., 414.”
This decision was approved and re-affirmed in Commonwealth vs. Dean, 110 Mass., 357.
The most recent case conflicting with those last cited, and sustaining’ the constitutionality of local option laws, which was pressed upon the attention of the Court, was that of Locke’s Appeal, 12 Penn. State Repts., 491, decided in May, 1813.
The Act of Assembly of Pennsylvania under consideration in that case, provided, that at the next municipal election in the twenty-second ward of the City of Philadelphia * * * the voters shall decide for license, or against license, by depositing their tickets, and that a return be made to the clerk of the Quarter Sessions. Whenever the election shall go against the license, it shall be unlawful .for any license to issue for the sale of spirituous liquors, etc., in said ward.
Any person who shall be convicted of selling or offering for sale without license contrary to the provisions of the Act, was made liable to a fine of $50, and confinement in the House of Correction. The validity of this law, was assailed on account of its being a supposed delegation of the legislative power. The Court of Appeals of Pennsylvania, by a vote of three, to two judges, sustained the law, the majority conceding that the legislative will could not be delegated without violating a cardinal principle of representative government, but contending that legisla,tion in that form, was not a delegation of legislative authority.
This decision, being directly contrary to that of Parker vs. Commonwealth, 6 Barr, which had been a leading case on the subject, adopted and followed in many other States, much of the learned opinion of the majority in Locke’s case is devoted to an exposure of the error of the learned Judges who decided Parker’s in 1846.
*116It is said, in commenting on Parleer vs. Commonwealth, “it was decided by three judges to two, with a strong dissent proceeding from thp latter.” If there is-any force in this remark, it is the exact representation of the case of Locke’s Appeal, the opinion of Read, Oh. J. and Sharswood, being strongly adverse to the law. The weight of judicial authority in Pennsylvania may, therefore, be regarded as equipoised.
In addition to the objections urged against the Act of 1814, ch. 453, as a delegation of the legislative power to the voters of the election districts, in the several counties therein named ; it may be urged, that it violates the clause of our State Constitution which declares, the General Assembly shall pass no special law for any case for which provision has been made by an existing general law. Art. 3, sec. 33. There can be no doubt that the Pub. Gen. Laws- of the State had provided for the mode of issuing licenses throughout the State, a system, which it was the object of the Act in question to revise and amend, or altogether repeal; and yet the Public Local Law (if it maybe so called,) of 1814, ch. 453,.in contravention of another article' of the Constitution, does not so much as allude or refer to any pre-existing laws on the subject, or declare the same repealed. Constitution of Marylomd, Art. 3, sec. 29.
The General Revenue Laws of the State, are thus attempted to be annulled by implication, in four counties, without the slightest regard to the most solemn provisions of the Constitution. The violation of the public faith of the State, pledged by the issuing of licenses, under its seal, for a bona fide and valuable consideration, however sanctioned by a remote analogy to other cases, seems to me, wholly in disregard of the principles of natural justice, which the highest authorities insist, are as obligatory irpon legislative bodies, as constitutional inhibitions. “Jura naturae sunt immutabilia; ” they are “leges legum,’’— *117“ Nec vero per Senaium aut per populum, solvi Jicec leges possmnus,” says Cicero.
The law of nature stands as an eternal rule to all men, (says Locke,) legislators, as well as others; and the rules they make for other men’s actions must he conformable to tbe will of God, of wbicb that is a declaration. “Vast as is tlie power of an Act of Parliament, there are some things which it cannot do ; it cannot abrogate those living laws imprinted in our hearts from the commencement of our being. It can do no wrong.” — -Dwarris on Statutes, 643, 44-45.“