The opinion of the court was delivered by
Porter, J.:The city claims that the act of 1870 (Laws 1870, ch. 21) authorizing the issuance of its *244bonds in aid of the state university is void, and that the act of 1883 (Laws 1883, ch. 42) relieving it from further liability thereon is valid. The state contends that the act of 1870 is valid, and that the compromise act of 1883 is void. The whole controversy, therefore, turns upon the validity of these two acts of the legislature. '
The first objection to the act of 1870 is that it violates section 1 of article 11 of the constitution, which requires the legislature to provide for a uniform and equal rate of assessment and taxation. This is easily disposed of, notwithstanding it appears to have furnished the' legislative committee that reported in 1876 on the condition of the permanent school fund the sole basis for their conclusion that the bonds in question were void. Numerous decisions which might be referred to, upholding the authority of the state to impose special burdens upon counties, townships, school districts and other municipalities, proceed upon the theory that this provision of. the constitution is in nowise affected. The constitution only requires a uniform and -equal rate throughout the territory in which the tax is levied, and the principle of equality is fully satisfied by making local taxation equal and uniform as to all property within the limits of the taxing district. (Comm’rs of Ottawa Co. v. Nelson, 19 Kan. 234, 27 Am. Rep. 101; Loftin, Treasurer, v. Citizens National Bank, 85 Ind. 341; Williams v. Cammack, 27 Miss. 209, 61 Am. Dec. 508; American Union Express Co. v. City of St. Joseph, 66 Mo. 675, 27 Am. Rep. 382; Daly v. Morgan et al., 69 Md. 460, 16 Atl. 287, 1 L. R. A. 757.)
The city of Lawrence is required by the act to pay taxes for the support of the university which are not imposed upon the citizens of other parts of the state, but only to the extent which in the opinion of the legislature the city of Lawrence reaps a special benefit by the location of the university. In Railroad Company *245v. County of Otoe, 83 U. S. 667, 21 L. Ed. 375, the supreme court of the United States sáid:
“It is true the burden of the duty may thus rest upon only a single political division, but the legislature has undoubted power to apportion a public burden among all the taxpayers of the state, or among those of a particular section. In its judgment, those of a single section may reap the principal benefit from a proposed expenditure, as from the construction of a road, a bridge, an almshouse, or a hospital.” (Page 676.)
The bonds, if otherwise valid, were the obligations of the city of Lawrence, and section 1 of article 11 of the constitution only requires that any taxes levied for their payment be assessed at a uniform rate upon all property in the city liable to taxation.
The main contention is that the act is repugnant to sections 1 and 5 of article 12 of the constitution, which read:
“Section 1. The legislature shall pass no special act conferring corporate powers. Corporations may be created under general laws; but all such laws may be amended or repealed.”
“Sec. 5. Provision shall be made by general law for the_ organization of cities, towns and villages; and their power of taxation, assessment, borrowing money, contracting debts and loaning their credit, shall be so restricted as to prevent the abuse, of such power.”
The act is, in form, special, and it may be conceded that in a certain sense it confers corporate powers upon the city—the power to incur indebtedness and to issue bonds in payment thereof. It would be difficult to conceive of a more important corporate power than this. Is it a special act conferring corporate powers in the sense contemplated by section 1 of article 12? The constitution, like ■ any other written instrument, must be construed as a whole, and effect given to all its provisions. One part is as binding as any other. This is elementary.
“It can not be presumed that any clause in the con*246stitution is intended to be without effect; and therefore such construction is inadmissible, unless the words require it.” (Marbury v. Madison, 5 U. S. 49, 67, 2 L. Ed. 60.)
Article 6 of the constitution embraces the general subject of “Education.” Section 2 reads:
“The legislature shall encourage the promotion of intellectual, moral, scientific and agricultural improvement, by establishing a uniform system of common schools, and schools of a higher grade, embracing normal, preparatory, collegiate and university departments.”
Section 7 of the same article declares:
“Provision shall be made by law for the establishment, at some eligible and central point, of a state university, for the promotion of literature, and the arts and sciences, including a normal and an agricultural department.”
While section 1 of article 12 prohibits the legislature from passing a special act conferring corporate powers, article 6 of the constitution, which is equally binding on the legislature and on the courts, is mandatory, so that it is apparent that the one must be construed with reference to the other. In construing the prohibition which seemingly conflicts with the mandate, it is proper to consider the mischiefs which the one was designed' to prevent and the purpose which the- other was intended to accomplish. (Cooley’s Const. Lim., 7th ed., 100.) Now, what were the evils which the prohibition against conferring corporate powers by special act sought to prevent? The framers had the same purpose in view that actuated them in prohibiting special laws where general laws could be made to' apply. In addition to the general prohibition, this particularizes and ordains in express terms that no special law shall be enacted conferring corporate powers. In the experience of the older states the enactment of this character of special acts was in a large measure respon*247sible for a condition of affairs which had become a grave menace to the general welfare. Towns and cities everywhere were continually seeking and obtaining from the legislature grants of corporate privileges or powers by means of special or local acts, which were passed by the legislature with the same indifference with which special legislation is generally accompanied. The result was a lack of uniformity in the powers enjoyed by the different municipal corporations of a state, without any basis or reason for a difference. In one town or city the inhabitants were governed by laws different in many respects from those by which the people of other municipalities were governed. The evil consequence of this class of legislation was commented upon in Anderson v. Cloud County, 77 Kan. 721, 95 Pac. 583.
The constitution prohibits the conferring of corporate powers by special legislation, not because it was deemed improper or inexpedient that corporate powers should be conferred by the legislature, but because it was desired to place all corporations of the same class upon a perfect equality, and this purpose could best be accomplished by requiring uniform laws with respect to them. Again, it was deemed for the best interests of the state that such powers should not be conferred except by a general law “applicable to all parts of the state, and thereby securing the vigilance and attention of its whole representation.” (Atkinson et al. v. The M. &c. R. R. Co., 15 Ohio St. 21, 35.)
In Atchison v. Bartholow, 4 Kan. 124, it was said:
“Before the adoption of the constitution, the practice was to create corporations and organize cities and towns by special laws. . . . The organization of cities and towns, by special enactment, is demonstrably equally impolitic. The members from a certain city or town, for purposes of individual aggrandizement or immunity, might desire a change in their organic law. A bill is framed and submitted, and when action is to be taken thereon the body is informed that it expresses *248the views-of the representatives of the locality immediately affected; whereupon no objection is made, and the work is done. ... To prevent just such abuses, and others equally meretricious, the twelfth article was inserted in the constitution.” (Pages 144, 145.)
There can be no misunderstanding as to the purpose of the prohibition. How it was intended to operate is equally well understood; namely, by the requirement that all laws relating to subjects embraced within the prohibition snould be enacted by the legislature as a whole, and not by a few interested persons and the members from a single locality.
If the question were res nova, strong reasons might be suggested for holding that section 1 of article 12 was intended to refer only to private corporations. A similar provision of the New Jersey constitution was held, in Pell v. Newark, 40 N. J. Law, 71, 29 Am. Rep. 266, to have no application to municipal corporations; and the fact that in the same article express provision is made in'section 5 with respect to municipal corporations furnishes grounds for a strong inference that the intention was that section 1 should apply only to private corporations. However, since the decision in the Bartholow case, which followed the supreme court of Ohio in Atkinson et al. v. The M. &c. R. R. Co., supra, the question is no longer an open one in this state. Section 1 of article 12 therefore applies to municipal corporations, but the purpose of the prohibition contained in both sections was to prevent certain recognized evils which followed the granting of corporate powers to cities, towns and villages, to the end that the laws governing all cities of the same class should be uniform in their operation.
It may be contended that it was a part of the purpose of article 12 to prevent the legislature from conferring upon cities just such corporate powers as the act of 1870 purported to confer upon the city of Lawrence—the power to vote bonds in aid of state institu*249tions; but it would seem that the likelihood of this practice becoming general, or being carried to excess, was so remote as not to have challenged the attention of the framers of the constitution. This is the more obvious when we consider the limited number of state institutions, and that usually their location is determined upon other considerations than that of local assistance; and especially when we keep in mind the existing evils at which the prohibitions were directed. It seems obvious that a law like that of 1870, the sole purpose of which was to provide funds for the erection and equipment of a state institution of such importance to the whole state as the university, was not the kind of a law the framers of the constitution • had in view as likely to be enacted by a few persons specially interested or by the votes or influence of the members of a single locality. Although it referred to but one city, it related to a matter of state-wide concern, and necessarily challenged the attention of the entire membership of the legislature as much as any general law. It is inconceivable that it was “a thing done in a corner.”
Section 1 of article 12 in plain terms prohibits the enactment of a special law conferring corporate power. If it is to be given its exact literal meaning under all circumstances and in all cases there is an end of the discussion. But we have declared that this section “has no application to legislation with reference to the university.” (The State, ex rel., v. Regents of the University, 55 Kan. 389, 396, 40 Pac. 656, §57, 29 L. R. A. 378.) In that case it was contended that the act' creating the board of regents of the university a corporation (Laws 1889, ch. 258, § 6) was repugnant to this same section. In the'opinion the doctrine was announced that section 7 of article 6 of the constitution, declaring that provision shall be made for the establishment of a university, not only authorizes but requires special legislation for the purpose, and that in *250order to give effect to that provision it necessarily follows that section 1 of article 12 could not have been intended to apply to legislation respecting the university. The regents case settles the doctrine that the language of this section is not in all cases to be given a literal interpretation; that where such a construction would prevent the legislature from obeying the direct mandate of another provision the two must be construed together and harmonized. The decision rests upon solid reasons. The court considered the mandate of section 7 of article 6, which requires the legislature to establish and maintain a state university; it considered the necessity which exists that an institution of this kind must possess certain corporate powers— the power to take and hold property, to accept and receive donations, to enter into contracts, to sue and be sued; it recognized the obvious impossibility of enacting a law with reference to the university which is not a special act, at least in form, because there is but one university; and, lastly, although the opinion does not mention it, the court doubtless considered, as we must consider here, the manifest purpose of the constitutional prohibition against conferring corporate powers by special law. These prohibitions, so far as they relate to municipal corporations, were intended to prevent the conferring of special privileges on such corporations in the management and conduct of their local and internal concerns—the things for which they were primarily created.
The authorities and text-writers generally recognize the twofold character of municipal corporations. In Johnson v. City of San Diego, 109 Cal. 468, 42 Pac. 249, 250, 30 L. R. A. 178, it was said:
“Municipal corporations in their public and political aspect are not only creatures of the state, but are parts of the machinery by which the state conducts its governmental affairs.” (Page 474.)
*251Judge Dillon, in the fourth edition of his work on Municipal Corporations, section 66, says
'Tt assists to an understanding of the extent of legislative power over municipal corporations proper (incorporated towns and cities) to observe that.these, as ordinarily constituted, possess a double character; the one governmental, legislative, or public; the other, in a sense, proprietary or private. ... In its governmental or public character, the corporation is made, by the state, one of its instruments, or the local depository of certain limited and prescribed political powers, to be exercised for the public good on behalf of the state rather than for itself.”
Judge Cooley, in the seventh edition of his work on Constitutional Limitations, uses this language:
“That in some cases, in view of the twofold character of such bodies, as being on the one hand agencies of state government, and on the other, corporations endowed with capacities and permitted to hold property and enjoy peculiar privileges for the benefit of their corporations, exclusively, the legislature may permit the incurring of expense, the contracting of obligations, and the levy of taxes which are unusual, and which would not be admissible under the powers usually conferred. Instances of the kind may be mentioned in the offer of military bounties, and the payment of a disproportionate share of a state burden in consideration of peculiar local benefits which are to spring from it.” (Page 886.)
In the case of The State v. Downs, 60 Kan. 788, 57 Pac. 962, the distinction between the political and corporate functions of a city, or, in other words, the distinction between the powers of a municipal corporation when employed as an agency of the state and its powers for carrying out the primary purposes for which it was created was pointed out. In the opinion Mr. Chief Justice Doster, speaking for the court, said:
“These agencies are designed to conserve and regulate those local and peculiar interests which arise and exist only in densely populated places or districts and jvith which the general public has little or no concern. They may be and often are, as special agencies, en*252trusted with the discharge of some one or more of the general functions of government, as, for examples, the establishment and maintenance of schools, the collection of revenue, the administration of justice; but the primary purpose of their creation is inclusive only of the special concerns of those agglomerations of population, the close and constant interrelation of whose units begets conditions and necessities beyond those of the general mass. Among such concerns are sewerage, the supply of water, the prevention of fires, and the like. . . . Education is an interest of the whole state; a police and fire department for a city, of the city alone.” (Pages 792, 793.)
It was therefore held that the act which provided for the regulation of the fire and police departments of Kansas City conferred corporate powers in violation of section 1 of article 12, and was necessarily void. (See also, The State v. Atkin, 64 Kan. 174, 177, 67 Pac. 519, 97 Am. St. Rep. 343, where the question arose with respect to the validity of the eight-hour law as applied to work upon city streets.)
In The State v. Freeman, 61 Kan. 90, 58 Pac. 959, 47 L. R. A. 67, the law under consideration was chapter 189 of the Laws of 1899, directing the establishment of a high school in Elk county, and requiring its maintenance by the people of the county. The law affected only a quasi-municipal corporation, and the question of corporate power was not involved, but the decision is referred to here because it recognizes the doctrine that the legislature may compel one of the subsidiary political agencies of the state to aid in the accomplishment of a state-wide purpose. The general law of 1886 authorized counties with a population of 6000 to establish county high schools upon a vote of the people, and to levy a tax' to maintain such schools. (Laws 1886, ch„ 147.) The special act of 1899 commanded the board of county commissioners of Elk county to establish a county high school, erect buildings, employ teachers, and to levy a tax to meet the expense thereof, and made *253no provision for submitting the question to a vote. In the opinion Mr. Justice Johnston said:
“The matter of education is one of public interest which concerns all of the people of the state, and is therefore subject to the control of the legislature. Municipalities and political organizations are the creations of state authority, and are all within legislative control.” (Page 91.)
In Beach v. Leahy, Treasurer, 11 Kan. 23, a statute was construed which conferred certain powers upon, a school district. It was held that, as a school district is a gmsi-corporation and not a corporation proper, section 1 of article 12 had no application. In the opinion, however, Mr. Justice Brewer, speaking for the court, used the following significant language in referring to the purposes 'of the prohibitions contained in article 12:
‘‘Giving corporate capacity to certain agencies in the administration of civil government is not the . creation of such an organization as was sought to be protected by article 12 of the constitution.” (Page 29.)
Other cases in point are: The State, ex rel., v. Stormont, 24 Kan. 686; The State, ex rel., v. Comm’rs of Shawnee Co., 28 Kan. 431; The State, ex rel., v. Hunter, 38 Kan. 578, 17 Pac. 177; Koester v. Comm’rs of Atchison Co., 44 Kan. 141, 24 Pac. 65; Eichholtz v. Martin, 53 Kan. 486, 36 Pac. 1064; In re Dalton, 61 Kan. 257, 59 Pac. 336, 47 L. R. A. 380; Williams v. Eggleston, 170 U. S. 304, 18 Sup. Ct. 617, 42 L. Ed. 1047; Mayor and C. C. of Balt. v. Reitz, 50 Md. 574;
The case last cited upholds an act of the legislature compelling a city to condemn and acquire a particular tract of land for park purposes, on the ground that the matter pertained to the public rather than the private functions of the municipality. , ■
The question of the relation which municipal corporations bear to the state and the power of the legislature over them is exhaustively discussed in the notes tp the case of the State ex rel. Bulkeley et al. v. Will*254iams, Treasurer, 68 Conn. 131, in 48 L. R. A. 465. The authorities are not harmonious, and some apparently turn upon the right of local self-government. A few of the cases seem to make no distinction between the public and private character of municipal corporations, but the courts are substantially agreed that the legislature may require a municipal corporation or other constituent political agency of the state to perform any public duty which the state itself may perform. The only limitations on this power are that the state can not require a municipal corporation to perform a duty in which the state has no concern, nor to assume an obligation wholly outside the functions for which municipal corporations are created. The limitation is recognized and commented upon in the case of Kimball & Slaughter v. Mobile, 3 Woods (U. S. C. C.) 555, 14 Fed. Cas. (No. 7774) 489. In that case an act of the legislature of Alabama was held to be valid which imposed upon the county of Mobile the duty of issuing bonds of $1,000,000 for the purpose of improving the harbor and bay of Mobile. In the act the county authorities were directed and required to levy and collect a sufficient tax to pay the interest and retire the bonds. In the opinion it was said:
“On the question of the power of the legislature to pass the act under discussion, it may be conceded that the legislature has no power against the will of a municipal corporation to compel it to contract debts for local purposes in which the state has no concern, or to assume obligations not within the ordinary functions of municipal government. This seems to be the extent to which the authorities cited by defendants go. But the work for which the county of Mobile was required to issue bonds was one in which the state, and especially the county of Mobile, were [was] interested, and it was clearly within the scope of the purposes for which the county was organized.” (Page 560.)
The argument is made, however, that conceding the power of the legislature to compel or authorize a municipal corporation to aid in establishing and maintain*255ing the university, nevertheless the prohibitory language of section 1 of article 12 restricts the power; that the constitutional obligation to establish a university was not intended to be met by the enactment of a law which plainly violates the other constitutional provision ; and that there were open to the legislature various ways by which a university might have been provided for by the enactment of general laws or by special laws conferring no corporate power. In our opinion, this construction gives to the prohibition against conferring corporate power an intention wholly foreign to the purposes for which it was' designed, and it can not be held to limit or restrict the power of the legislature in selecting the agencies it might deem appropriate to accomplish a purpose of this kind. In other words, the secondary purpose for which cities are created is to make them mere arms of the state government, and to confer upon them corporate powers to be employed solely .in carrying into effect a governmental purpose is something which does' not fall within the prohibitions of article 12.
The powers conferred by the act upon the city of Lawrence, therefore, were not corporate powers to be employed in the management and control of its local and internal concerns, which the city was primarily created to perform in common with all other cities of its class, and in the performance of which it is the policy of the state to require a certain, uniformity. On the other hand, they were to be employed solely for the accomplishment by the state of a general purpose in which the people of the whole state were and are vitally interested. The city was authorized to act, not for itself, but as an arm of the state government in the doing of something expressly enjoined upon the legislature. The legislature was free to employ any agency of the state government in carrying out its purpose. Incidentally, the act of 1870 conferred corporate power, but its main purpose was to carry out the mandate con*256tained in sections 2 and 7 of article 6 requiring the legislature to make provision for a state university. It was therefore a university law, and not a law for the purpose of conferring corporate powers on the city of Lawrence.
A similar question was before the supreme court of Illinois in Fuller v. Heath et al., 89 Ill. 296. The constitution there prohibits the legislature from passing any special or local laws for incorporating cities, towns or villages, or amending the charters thereof. It was held, however, that the legislature might confer upon cities the power to levy and collect taxes for the support of common schools. The syllabus reads as follows:
“Such laws, wherever found, are a part of the school laws of the state, and not strictly a part of the charter or law of the city.. In such case the city officers are mere agencies of the public to carry into effect the objects and purposes of the general school system.”
It was said in the opinion:
“In construing these provisions of the constitution, this court (in Speight v. The People, 87 Ill. 595) held that there is no limitation in the constitution as to the agencies the state shall ádopt in providing this system of free schools, and that the general assembly has full power to select or prescribe the agencies by which school taxes shall be levied, collected, held and disbursed for school purposes, and that all laws, whether in city charters or elsewhere, designed to affect free schools, may be regarded as school laws.” (Page 313.)
It is said; however, that the state has the same general interest in roads and streets and bridges that it has in education or in the university, and that we are bound by former decisions (Atchison v. Bartholow, 4 Kan. 124; Gilmore v. Norton, 10 Kan. 491) holding special acts void which conferred corporate powers upon cities in reference to streets and roads, and that these decisions prevent any distinction from being made in favor of the validity of a special act in reference to the university. While it is unnecessary to decide the question here, in the opinion of the writer the *257direct mandate of the constitution requiring the establishment of a university conferred upon the legislature no greater power in the selection of its agencies for that purpose than it would have for carrying into effect any governmental purpose in which the whole state is concerned. There can be no question of the authority of the legislature to impose upon a county the duty of constructing bridges and highways, because they are of public interest. (The State, ex rel., v. Comm’rs of Shawnee co., 28 Kan. 431; The State v. Freeman, 61 Kan. 90, 58 Pac. 959, 47 L. R. A. 67.) An act which limited the hours of labor of persons employed by or on behalf of the state or of any city, township, or any other municipality of the state was held to be a direction of the state to its agents, and constitutional and valid. {In re Dalton, 61 Kan. 257, 59 Pac. 336, 47 L. R. A. 380.) In the opinion in the latter case it was said:
“Indeed, everything relating to the management of counties, cities and townships not defined and limited by the constitution may be taken away by the state acting through its legislature, and as to these political divisions and their agents the legislature has the same power that it possesses over state officers.” (Page 264.)
It is insisted that section 1 of article 12 is the limitation. The answer is this: In the sense that a municipal corporation is a body of individuals created for the purpose'of controlling its local affairs, the legislature is prohibited from granting it favors or privileges by special law, but in the sense that it is a public agency it is at all times subject to the command of the state by special or general law. The state is the sovereign power, and cities, towns and all other municipalities are its subsidiary agencies for governmental purposes. And notwithstanding the decisions referred to, holding special acts in reference to city streets invalid for the reason that they conferred corporate powers upon cities, it may well be that the state has the power, if necessity should arise, to require a city to *258erect a bridge or to construct a road, or to assume a part of the burden of the cost thereof, and that the form of the legislative act would not affect its validity. Indeed, it would not be difficult to suppose a case in which the general interests of the state would so far override the local interests as to authorize the state to act in its governmental capacity.. It is true that streets, roads and bridges are subjects of public interest and of statewide concern, but more truly speaking they are local in character. Besides, there are one hundred and five counties, thousands of townships, tens of thousands of road districts, and innumerable roads, streets and bridges. General laws are easily made to apply to these subjects, so that special laws with respect to them are usually unnecessary. On the other hand, there is but one university; no law general in its terms can be made to apply to its management or control. Every act in reference to it must be a special act. (The State, ex rel., v. Regents of the University, 55 Kan. 389, 40 Pac. 656, 29 L. R. A. 378.) The authorities agree that whether an act is general or special is to be determined by its substance, not by its .form. (City of Topeka v. Gillett, 32 Kan. 431, 436, 4 Pac. 800; San Francisco v. S. V. W. W., 48 Cal. 493; People v. Central Pac. R. R. Co., 83 Cal. 393, 23 Pac. 303.)
“Thus, no intention of the legislature, even if directly expressed, that an act be regarded as general, will make it such if it be not so in substance. On the other hand, an act which, is special or local in terms is really general if it apply to an. entire and distinct class.” (Binney’s Sp. Legis. 39, and cases cited.)
It must be conceded that if the legislature were to pass an act in relation to “all state universities” the fact that the law was general in its form would make, it no less special in its application, since there is only one university.
All the legislative power possessed by the people is vested by the constitution in the legislature. It must have been contemplated ‘that the legislature in carrying *259out the mandate to establish and maintain a university would find it necessary to confer corporate powers upon the city where the university is located. The prohibition against conferring corporate powers by special act was designed solely to the end that all corporations of the same class should be governed by uniform laws. The reason of the prohibition is absent when we look at the purpose to be accomplished by the act of 1870. The framers of the constitution could not have contemplated that all cities of the same class should have the same corporate powers conferred upon them in this respect, or that the legislature should be powerless to confer it upon one city unless it conferred it upon all cities. If it be true that the legislature possessed authority to impose a part of the burden of the cost of the university upon the city where it is located, it necessarily follows that the legislature could do this without imposing a like burden upon all other cities. In order to impose the burden upon the city where the university is, a law had to be enacted which conferred corporate powers. The law was special only in the sense that it affected one city instead of all cities, but as there is and can be but one city where the university is located, and as any attempt to make the law apply to other cities would have necessarily defeated its purpose, the law was not special in the sense contemplated by the constitution. Either of these reasons is sufficient: First, no general law can be made or imagined that would accomplish the purpose; second, the one city where the university is located is a class of itself and always will remain such, so that the law applied to all cities of the class mentioned, and therefore to call it special is merely to sacrifice substance to form, and to lose sight of the purpose and object of the constitutional provisions in respect of special laws.
Suppose conditions should arise creating an imperative necessity for the state to confer upon the city in which the university is located certain corporate pow*260ers; suppose the university should have an attendance of 5000, a condition likely to obtain in the near future; suppose the state should establish, as it doubtless will sometime, dormitories for housing this great body of students; suppose an epidemic of disease should break out, such- as frequently occurs at institutions of this kind, and that the state should find it necessary to exercise authority over the sanitary conditions surrounding the university—that it should become of paramount necessity to require that a system of sewerage be built through the streets of the city and precautions taken to obtain a supply of pure water. Sewerage and water are subjects over which the state at large has no special interest. They are matters of local concern. The power to make provision for them is included in the primary purpose and object for which municipal corporations are created, and not in the ‘other branch of the twofold character of such corporations. The literal construction which we are asked to place upon the provisions of the constitution would lead to the absurd result that the sovereign state—confronted by conditions such as those suggested, requiring prompt action—must halt at the outskirts of the city where the university is located, powerless to interfere because of the constitutional prohibition against special laws and the impossibility of enacting a general law which would apply. The power of the legislature is not confined to authorizing a municipal corporation or other political agency of the state to assume a burden of this character. As was declared in The State v. Freeman, 61 Kan. 90, 58 Pac. 959, 47 L. R. A. 67, the legislature may direct as well as authorize. In carrying out .the mandate of .article 6 of the constitution the legislature might have compelled the city of Lawrence, as one of the governmental agencies of the state, to lend its credit for the purpose of establishing and maintaining near its limits the state university, and to issue its bonds for that purpose, and to levy a tax to pay the same. It *261was not only legislating upon a subject of state-wide concern, like education, but it was at the same time performing a duty enjoined by the constitution. If the legislature possessed the power to compel the city of Lawrence to furnish such aid, it necessarily follows that it could authorize the matter to be submitted to a vote of the people. The greater power includes the lesser. It is in the power of the legislature to determine what is to the best interests of the university, and when this law was passed the legislature may very reasonably have concluded that the welfare of the university required that any local aid furnished toward its maintenance should be accompanied by the expressed approval of the citizens of the community.
In determining the purpose of the act of 1870 we must consider the entire act itself, and with it all other acts in pari materia. By chapter 32 of the laws enacted at the same session the school-fund commission was authorized to purchase the bonds provided for in the former act. Chapter 67 of the Laws of 1863 and chapter 105 of the Laws of 1864 provide for the permanent location of the university. These are all parts of the same legislative plan, the apparent purpose of which was to make provision by law for the establishment of a university, and to erect, complete and equip buildings for that institution. It must be apparent that the act would never have been passed for the mere purpose of conferring corporate powers upon the city of Lawrence. It was a university law, just as a law under consideration by the supreme court of Illinois was held to be a school law. {Speight v. The People, 87 Ill. 595.) We conclude, therefore, that the act of 1870 was a valid exercise of legislative authority.
This brings us to the act of 1883. Was it valid, and, if so, what was its effect? It is true there was a dispute concerning the validity of the bonds, and the city paid a considerable sum as interest in. the belief that thereby all further claim against it was compromised. *262But the bonds were valid obligations from the beginning; and there never was any basis for the claim that the act under which they were issued was void for the reason that it failed to provide for a uniform rate of taxation. The state raises the contention, therefore, that there was no consideration for a compromise, because when the city paid the $6500 interest it only paid what it was already bound to pay. But there are abundant authorities holding that where a claim of this kind is doubtful,, in fact or law, the payment of any sum, however small, in satisfaction of the demand will support a compromise and satisfy the claim. (See note to Fuller v. Kemp, in 20 L. R. A. 785, 795.) In Farmers’ Bank of Amsterdam v. Blair, 44 Barb. (N. Y.) 641, it was said:
“It is not admissible to go behind the settlement with a view to determine which of the parties was right. Compromises are to be encouraged, because they promote peace, and when there is no fraud, and the parties meet on equal terms and adjust their differences, the court will not overlook the compromise, but will hold the parties concluded by the settlement.” (Page 652.)
To the same effect is Comm’rs of Labette Co. v. Elliott, 27 Kan. 606, where it was said:
“A bona fide though doubtful controversy pending in the courts has always been considered a sufficient consideration for an agreement in compromise and settlement of such doubtful controversy, although in fact and in law one or the other side must ultimately be beaten if the litigation is continued until a final judgment is reached upon the merits. And it is generally said that compromises and settlements are favored in law.” (Page 613.)
The validity of the act, however, does not depend upon whether there was a consideration for the compromise, for the reason that if the legislature had the power to impose the burden it had the same power to remove it. All the legislative power is vested in the legislature. In 1870 the resources of the state were *263limited. The legislature required the city of Lawrence to lend its credit in order to erect and equip permanent buildings for the university. In 1883 the legislature, keeping in view the best interests of the university, might have determined that the city should be relieved of the debt so far as the state is concerned. It is unnecessary to suggest all the reasons which might have justified the legislature in so determining. It might have concluded that the financial condition of the city was such that the burden was excessive and that the best interests of the university required that the city pave its streets, maintain better sidewalks, or provide a water and sewerage system, and that with the burden of the university debt upon its shoulders the city would be prevented from doing these things. The legislature had the absolute power to relieve the city of the burden, regardless of any consideration moving from the city to the state, so long as the rights of third parties did not intervene, and so long as in doing so it violated no other constitutional provision.
The main objection raised to the validity of the act is that inasmuch as the bonds were purchased by the permanent school fund the legislature was powerless to relieve the city from its liability thereon. In this connection the state relies upon section 3 of article 6 of the constitution, which provides as follows:
“The proceeds of all lands that have been, or may be, granted by the United States to the state, for the support of schools, and the five hundred thousand acres of land granted to the new states, under an act of congress distributing the proceeds of public lands among the several states of the Union, approved September 4, A. D. 1841, and all estates of persons dying without heir or will, and such per cent, as may be granted by congress, on the sale of lands in this state, shall be the common property of the state, and shall be a perpetual school fund, which shall not be diminished, but the interest of which, together with all the rents of the lands, and such other means as the legislature may *264provide, by tax or otherwise, shall be inviolably appropriated to the support of common schools.”
The constitution creates a permanent schpol-fund commission, consisting of the superintendent of public instruction, the secretary, of state and the attorney-general, and declares that the commission shall have “the management and investment of the school funds.” (Art. 6, § 9.) It is insisted that this provision deprives the legislature of all control over the investment of the school funds, and, further, that the legislature has no authority over the school-fund commission. In the case of The State, ex rel., v. School Fund, 4 Kan. 261, an act of the legislature of 1868 was held to be void which provided for the issuance and sale of $30,000 of state bonds for the purpose of paying the salaries of officers and members of the legislature and. the current expenses of the state, and directing the commissioners of the school fund to invest that amount of the permanent school fund in the bonds. It was held that the act was in conflict with the constitutional restrictions on creating public debts, and with the con•situtional method of raising revenue for current expenses. The court declined to decide the question with. respect of the power of the legislature to control the action of the school-fund commission, resting the decision on the other grounds. In the opinion Mr. Chief Justice Kingman said:
“Nor must our silence upon section 9 rof article 6 be taken as indication of any opinion that that section might not have a controlling influence in this case.” (Page 272.)
When the act of 1883 was passed a portion of the permanent school fund was invested in these bonds, which were valid obligations against the city. The' legislature attempted to direct that the bonds of the university be exchanged for the bonds of the city. Although not mentioned in the answer, it is a well-*265known fact that no bonds were ever executed by the board of regents and nothing was substituted in place of the city bonds. This is not important, because if the legislature had the power to order the substitution the city could not be prejudiced by the failure of the officers of the state to obey the law. The act further provided that the interest upon the bonds to be executed by the board of regents should be paid annually out of -the income of the “university fund.” This fund is created by section 7 of article 6 of the constitution, which reads:
“All funds arising from the sale or rents of lands granted by the United States to the state for the support of a state university, and all other grants, donations or bequests, either by the state or by individuals, for such' purpose, shall remain a perpetual fund, to be called the ‘university fund’; the interest of which shall be appropriated to the support of the state university.”
It will be noticed that the interest of this fund is appropriated to the support of the state university, while the interest of the permanent school fund is “inviolably appropriated to the support of common schools.” (Const, art. 6, § 3.) The two funds have no connection with each other, except that they are both used for the broad purpose of education. The act of 1883 in substance provided that the state treasurer, instead of remitting to the university the full amount of the annual interest arising from the investment of the university fund, should retain thereof a sum sufficient to pay into the permanent school fund the annual interest on the bonds which the regents were ordered and directed to execute in lieu of the bonds of the city. (Laws 1883, ch. 42.)
Is the school-fund commission superior to legislative control? The fund of which it is given the management and investment is declared to be “the common property of the state.” (Const, art. 6, § 3.) In our opinion it was not intended in establishing the com*266mission to create an independent sovereignty which should not be amenable to the legislature. The constitution establishes the commission, just as it creates the office of governor. But it reposes the legislative power in the legislature. And notwithstanding the constitution gives to the office of governor the executive power of the state, no one would contend that the legislature is powerless to enact laws imposing duties on the governor. Can there be a doubt that the legislature has the power to declare the rate of interest at which the school fund shall be loaned, or that the fund shall be invested in farm mortgages alone, or in certain kinds of municipal securities, or that no part of it shall be invested in a certain class of securities? As all the legislative power the people possess is vested in the legislature, that body has obviously the same power over the school-fund commission that it has to direct and control any other office or commission.
The constitution expressly provides for the investment of the permanent school fund, and obviously does not contemplate that the fund shall never be diminished by losses on investments made in good faith. It is a matter of common knowledge that some of the investments of this fund have turned out badly, but they were not for that reason in violation of the constitution. Since losses from investments are bound to occur, there must be some power to authorize a compromise of doubtful claims. The power to authorize the compromise of a debt owing to the school fund undoubtedly rests with the legislature.
Moreover, it is apparent that if the school fund was impaired at all the impairment had already taken place before the act of 1888 was passed. Part of the fund had been invested in the bonds of the city, and, in the opinion of the legislature, the city was unable to pay them. For a number of years ho interest whatever had been paid. A committee of the legislature had reported that the bonds were of doubtful validity. *267Clearly it was within the power of the legislature to make the best of a bad bargain, and secure for the school fund payment of a portion of the debt rather than to lose it all. As observed, if there was an impairment of the fund it was not caused by the act of 1883, but by the original investment and the inability of Lawrence to pay.
In construing the act every presumption must be indulged in favor of its validity. We are bound to uphold it if it is possible to do so and we are even bouhd to resolve in its favor any doubts that may arise. Before we can declare it unconstitutional we must be able to say that “the infringement of the superior law is clear beyond substantial doubt.” (Comm’rs of Wyandotte Co. v. Abbott, 52 Kan. 148, 157, 34 Pac. 416.) Some consideration should be given to the contemporaneous construction placed upon the act by subsequent legislatures and the state officers. For fourteen years it was acquiesced in as a valid law by every department of the state government. The debt at this time has more than doubled, so that it would fall upon the city as a heavy burden for which no provision has been made.
We have no right to assume a purpose on the part of the legislature to ignore the constitutional provision in respect of the permanency of the school fund, nor are we justified in overturning the act because .in the light ■of subsequent events, twenty-five years after the act was passed, the provisions adopted by the legislature for the protection of the fund were not, in our opinion, the most wise that might have been adopted, or because it can now be demonstrated that the provisions have resulted in the impairment of the fund. .
The provision of the constitution creating the school fund declares that it “shall be the common property of the state.” (Const, art. 6, §3.) The state .owns the fund, and therefore in the entire transaction was dealing with itself. The legislature merely directed one of *268the auxiliary agencies of the state to execute its bonds to aid in carrying out a governmental purpose, and provided that the bonds should be taken and held by a fund belonging to the state. Afterward, having plenary authority over the entire subject, the legislature in its wisdom saw fit to relieve the city of all liability on the bonds, and in effect assumed the burden itself. For the time being it directed that another corporation of its own creation, existing solely as an agency of the state, should execute its bonds and deliver them to the state school-fund commission, likewise an auxiliary agency of the state government, to be held in lieu of the bonds executed by the city. We are unwilling to go to the great length of assuming an intention on the part of the sovereign state to rob itself by the act of its own legislature in carrying out the mandate of the constitution requiring it to establish a state university.
It is true the act made no provision for the payment of the principal of the bonds at maturity, but the legislature had twenty years in which to make provision for taking care of the principal. When the time arrived and the bonds matured the legislature could have provided for their payment at once out of the state treasury, or have directed that the bonds be renewed. It might even have reimposed the burden of their payment upon the city of Lawrence. When the act was passed the legislature in express terms provided what it regarded as ample protection for the permanent school fund for at least twenty years, and we have no right to assume that it would not at the expiration of that period by some appropriate legislation fulfil the obligation resting upon it. For twenty years, therefore, no impairment in the school fund was possible. ' The act. provided for payment of the annual interest on the bonds out of a fund over which the legislature had full control.
Did the legislature have authority to divert a part of the income from the university fund to the payment of *269the interest on the bonds of the regents, and, if not, why not? The university is a state institution, and the legislature has legislative power and control over it. The university fund is no part of the permanent school fund. It is true the constitution declares that the interest from the university fund “shall be appropriated to the support of the state university.” (Art. 6, § 7.) But it requires a very strained construction to say that payment of the interest on the funds used for the erection and equipment of the main building, without which the university could not be operated at all, is an appropriation of funds otherwise than for the support of the university. We are aided to some extent in this construction by reference to the act of congress for the admission of Kansas into the Union, the third section of which reads in part as follows:
“Second—That seventy-two sections of land shall be set apart and reserved for the use and support of a state university, to be selected by the governor of said state, subject to the approval of the commissioner of the general land-office, and to be appropriated and applied in such manner as the legislature of said state may prescribe for the purpose aforesaid, but for no other purpose.” (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 264.)
In its wisdom the legislature directed the state treasurer, instead of remitting to the university the whole amdunt of the annual interest derived from the'university fund, to keep back $4000 thereof and pay that amount into the permanent school fund. Grant that it would have amounted to nothing more than a mere matter of bookkeeping in the account between the university and the state treasurer, the result, however, would have been that the university would receive each year $4000 less for current expenses, or, to put it another way, the legislature contemplated appropriating from year to year $4000 more toward the current expenses of the university than would otherwise be necessary. So long as the permanent school fund received the annual interest on its investment in the bonds the *270fund could not be impaired, and if all the provisions of the act of 1883 had been carried into effect the obligation to keep forever the school fund intact, and provide for the ultimate payment of the bonds, would have rested where, in our opinion, it still rests—upon the legislature.
The act, therefore, must be held to be a valid exercise of legislative authority, whether considered as in the nature of a compromise of a disputed and doubtful claim, or regarded merely as a measure designed to relieve the city of Lawrence from a burden which the legislature deemed it unwise for the city longer to assume.
The judgment of the district court overruling the demurrer to the answer of the city is affirmed.
“xith, Graves, JJ., concurring.