(dissenting).
The court, to escape an embarassing situation, falls into grievous error. Both the opinion and the conclusions reached by the court in this ease are wrong. Error is multiplied; but the most important and the most grievous error is the position which the court now for the first time takes and announces to the effect that a previous decision by an equally divided court “is a judicial precedent and should be followed.” This announcement is contrary to the history of the doctrine of stare decisis and is opposed by reason and authority. Such a declaration is unsupported by any decision in the United States except the Supreme Court of South Carolina, and I shall undertake to show later that the conclusion which the South Carolina court reached was based solely upon the special provisions' of the Constitution of South Carolina, and not upon reason and precedent.
• As stated, there is more than one error in the majority opinion. In the first place the court holds that the judgment which this court rendered in the former case of Robertson, Revenue Agent, for the Use of the State, of Mississippi and Yalobusha County v. Mississippi Valley Co., 77 So. 253, is a precedent which should control and direct the judgment in the case at bar. This, in my judgment, is erroneous: First, because no opinion was rendered by the court in the case mentioned, and a judgment of this court rendered without a written *167opinion is practically worthless as a controlling precedent. In disposing of the case which the revenue. agent brought for the state and county, a short per curiam opinion was written simply anouneing that the judges of this court were equally divided in opinion on the question whether the judgment appealed from should be reversed or affirmed, “consequently it must be and is affirmed.”. It was furthermore there stated:
“Any opinion delivered herein other than this memorandum expresses only the individual views of the judge delivering or concurring therein.”
The writer wrote an opinion expressing individual views on the main points argued; that is, as to the proper method for the assessment and taxation of corporations. My Brother Ethridge wrote an opinion expressing his individual views, and the opinion of Judge Ethridge was concurred in by my Brother IIoldek. The court, as a court neither discussed'nor decided any legal principle invólved in the litigation. The judgment of the lower court was necessarily affirmed for the simple reason that it could not be reversed without- the combined action and vote of four members of this court. There is an unbroken line of authority holding that a decision by a divided court does not have the force and effect of judicial precedent. This is so clearly the law that I would feel a degree of embarrassment in discussing the proposition at all were it not for the fact that the court now for the first time assumes a different position. It must be remembered that the present action is a proceeding for the benefit of the city of Water Valley, which was not a party to the- former proceeding, and so it is that we have a case involving a different demand for taxes and involving different parties. Had there been a written' opinion in the former case of the revenue agent suing for the state and county, such opinion, attempted to be written by three members of the bench, would not be controlling in the present pro*168ceeding. This is an important question, and much could be written on the subject. In justice to myself I shall discuss to some extent the authorities.
The court has evidently been influenced in establishing a rule of convenience, a rule whereby litigation may be easily disposed of. But this court is not responsible for the unfortunate fact that we have an even number of judges and the fact that the views of the judges are at times in conflict. This does not justify our adopting a rule of chance. The court quotes with approval 'the language of Judge Cooley in State Tax Cases, 54 Mich. 444, 23 N. W. 189, and the inference is erroneously conveyed that Chief Judge Cooley spoke the sentiments of. the Michigan Supreme Court. Judge Cooley spoke his'individual views, although these views seem to have been concurred in by ChampliN, J. But in that particular case contrary views were expressed by other members of the Michigan court, and subsequent decisions of the Supreme Court of Michigan show that the views of Judge Cooly on this point never became the law in Michigan, and that, on the contrary, the Michigan court has , expressly decided that a decision by a divided court is not a precedent. I cannot appreciate the quoted declaration of Judge Cooley that there is nothing “ improper or opposed to good morals in a judge ■ yielding his opinion when the proper administration of justice requires it.” I prefer the view that the judges of this court are commissioned and' sworn to vote their best judgment and conscientious convictions in all cases according to .the best of their “ability and understanding, agreeably to the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution and laws of the state of Mississippi.” The best judgment and vote of three judges on this bench ought to have and does have as much force as the combined judgment and vote of the other three members of the bench. It is not unusual for judges to have opposing views on legal *169questions and to reflect these views does not in any. wise hamper, hut on the contrary, promotes, the administration of justice. Under our constitutional scheme there can always he a decision in every case and„a speedy trial of all appeals! As stated by Judge Sherwood in the very case in which Judge Cooley was expressing his views:
“I cannot accept the suggestion of counsel for appellant that it is the duty of those members of this court who do not believe the law to be constitutional to unite in a decision that it is, when the members of the court are equally divided upon the question, on the ground that they have doubts or should have doubts, when in fact they have none. I do not believe the position sound either in law or morals'. I know of no provision of the Constitution or of our statutes, nor' of any practice, requiring any such thing to be done; but, on ±he contrary, the law anticipated just such a condition of things as now occurs in this case, and* directs just what judgment shall be entered by this court, without requiring any member of the court to stultify himself in the manner suggested.”
The majority opinion frankly recognizes that all the courts of last resort except the English House ;of Lords and the Supreme Court of South Carolina have held that a judgment rendered by a equally divided court does not decide any applicable principle of law, but, says the court, “the reasons given therefor do not commend their decisions to our approval.” But the court does not go further and say that the reasons given by the House of Lords of the South Carolina court commend themselves to our approval. The House of Lords act both in a judicial and a legislative capacity, and, when sitting as a court and equally divided upon the question whether a judgment should be affirmed or reversed, naturally speaks with much, more authority than would a Supreme Court of any state of the Union *170wiien disposing of a particular appeal. This court has no voice in legislation, and an erroneous decision has frequently been cured by legislative^ enactment. It would hardly be probable that a judicial decision of the House of Lords could be done away with by an act of Parliament. The reason assigned by the Supreme Court of South Carolina was the peculiar provisions of the South Carolina Constitution expressly providing that “if the four justices divide in an opinion the judgment below shall be affirmed. ’ ’ In construing this provision the court by a process of reasoning held that a decision in pursuance of this constitutional provision would not only become the law of the particular case in which it was rendered, but a precedent to guide the future; the court holding:
“These provisions which we have been considering were no doubt inserted in the Constitution with the view to secure an authoritative decision of every case brought before this court.”
In evidence of this intention the court directs attention to an amendment which was offered in the constitutional convention and voted down expressly declaring that an opinion by an equally divided court “shall not be binding authority upon any of the courts of the state, except in the particular case thus determined.” This court is neither the House of Lords nor the Constitution of South Carolina, and accordingly the reason underlying the only two authorities relied upon has no application in the case at bar.
In 15 Corpus Juris, par. 326, the text reads ^
“Where the judgment of a lower court is affirmed by reason of an equal division of opinion in the appellate court, the judgment, while binding in the particular case as fully as 'a decision rendered by a unanimous court is not binding as a precedent, between other parties, it is treated as an open one, and the fomer decision is not. to be invoked as stare *171decisis; and, even though the court was not equally divided, it seems to he generally considered that the principles “established by a decision rendered by a majority of the judges sitting will be more readily reconsidered that if there had been unanimous concurrence in the prior decision. ’ ’
The early position of the courts was that upon an equal division of the judges no judgment whatever could be rendered. Ency. of Pleading & Practice, vol. 7, 44. But this, says the author of the text referred to, has now been changed, and upon equal, division of the judges of an appellate court the judgment of the lower court must necessarily be affirmed. On page 47 the same authority declares:
“Where the judgment of the lower court is affirmed upon an equal division of opinion in the appellate court, such judgment stands only as a' decision in the case in question, and not as an obligatory precedent.”
In 4 C. J., p. 1123, it is stated that such a decision “bars another suit for the samé cause, but is not obligatory, as a precedent in other cases.” In Cyc. vol. 3, pp. 406, 407, the text reads:
“A judgment rendered by an equally divided court is as binding and conclusive on the rights of the parties as if rendered upon the full concurrence of all the judges, and bars another suit for the same cause. But such judgment stands only as a decision in that particular case, and not as a precedent.”
So likewise in Cyc. vol. 11, p. 746, it is declared: _
“A decision rendered by a divided court is not generally considered an obligatory precedent.”
The true doctrine has been clearly- stated by the Supreme Court of United States speaking through Mr. Justice Lurton, in Hertz v. Woodman, 218 U. S. 205, 30 Sup. Ct. 621, 54 L. Ed. 1001, as follows:
“"When this court, in the exercise of its appellate powers, is called upon to decide whether that which has *172been done in tlie lower court shall be reversed or affirmed, it is obvious that that which has been done must stand unless reversed by the affirmative action of a majority. It has therefore been the invariable practice to affirm, without opinion, any judgment or decree which is not decided to be erroneous by a majority of the court sitting in the cause. The earliest precedent is that of Etting v. Bank of United States, 11 Wheat. 59, 78, 6 L. Ed. 419, 432. Chief Justice Marshall said at the conclusion of the opinion: ‘In the very elaborate arguments which have been made at the bar, several cases have been cited which have been attentively considered. No attempt will be made to analyze them, or to decide' on their application to the case before us, because the judges are divided respecting it. Consequently the principles, of law which have been argued cannot be settled; but .the judgment is affirmed, the court being-divided in opinion upon it.’
“In Durant v. Essex Co., 7 Wall. 107, 110, 19 L. Ed. 154, 156, Mr. Justice Field, for this court said, in repeat to the effect of the affirmance by a divided court: ‘There is nothing in the fact that the judges of this court were divided in opinion upon the question whether the decree should be reversed or not, and therefore ordered an affirmance of the decree of the court below. The judgment of affirmance was the judgment of the entire court. The division of opinion between the judges was the reason for the entry of that judgment; but the reason is no part of the judgment itself.’
“To the same effect are Westhus v. Union Trust Co., 94 C. C. A. 95, 168 Fed. 617; Hartman v. Greenhow, 102 U. S. 672, 676, 26 L. Ed. 271, 273. A different rule seems to have been sanctioned in the English courts. Catherwood v. Caslon, 13 Mees. & W. 261; Beamish v. Beamish, 9 H. L. Cas. 274.
“Under the precedents of this court,.and as seems justified by reason as well as by authority, an affirmance *173by an equally divided court is, as between the parties, a conclusive determination and adjudication of the matter adjudged; but the principles of law involved not having been agreed upon by a majority of the court sitting prevents the case from • becoming an authority for the determination of other eases, either in this or in inferior courts.”
I shall now refer briefly to. some of the more prominent decisions of the state courts. In State ex rel. Hampton v. McClung, 47 Fla. 224, 37 So. 51, it is stated in the opinion of the court by Caster, J.:
“As no matters of law are decided so far as the question upon which the court is' equally divided is concerned, the judgment possesses no dignity as a judicial precedent. It carries upon its face a badge which precludes any application of it. in future under the doctrine of stare decisis
In the case of City of Kalamazoo v. Crawford, 154 Mich. 58, 117 N. W. 572, 16 Ann. Cas. 110, paragraph 1 of the headnotes reads:
“A decision by a divided court is decisive of that case, and does not settle the law for other cases.”
• The court, by Hookeb, J., discusses some of the leading authorities, and shows conclusively that the quoted reflections of Chief Judge Cooley never became the law in Michigan. This is further reflected by the case of Gourlay v. Insurance Co., 189 Mich. 384, 155 N. W. 483 ; a very recent case decided in 1915. In Bratt v. Cornwell, 68 W. Va. 541, 70 S. E. 271, the court repudiated a conclusion of law stated in the syllabus of a prior West Virginia case because the decision was the result of an equally divided court. Paragraph 3 of the headnotes states:
“The last clause of point 2 of the syllabus published in Billingsley v. Clelland, 41 W. Va. 234, 23 S. E. 812, is not the law of this state, since decision in that case was by an equally divided court. ’ ’
*174In Town of Durham v. Richmond & D. R. Co., 113 N. C. 240, 18 S. E. 208, the opinion of the North Carolina Supreme Court declares:
“Following the uniform practice of appellate courts in such cases, the judgment below stands, not as a precedent, hut as the decision in this case” —citing among others the decisions of Chief Justice Marshall. in Etting v. Bank, 11 Wheat. 59, 6 L. Ed. 419, and Chief Justice Taney in Benton v. Woalsey, 12 Pet. 27, 9 L. Ed. 987.
In discussing the maxim stare decisis the Supreme Court of Illinois, in Hopkins et al. v. McCann, 19 Ill. 113, declared:
“In a solitary case, and by a divided court, upon a disputed or doubtful point, the maxim should not and does not apply, but courts are left free to revise and reverse a former ruling, if found, on more critical examination and more mature deliberation, to be erroneous. ’ ’
The Supreme Court of Arizona, in Territory v. Gaines, 11 Ariz. 270, 93 Pac. 281, by a unanimous decision-reached the same conclusion, stating, among other things:
“The affirmance being by a divided court, it does not have the force of a cogent precedent. . . . Wherefore we will inquire into the matter involved as if it were a matter of.novel impression.”
The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in Re Griel’s Estate, Appeal of Will, 171 Pa. 412, 33 Atl. 375, expressly ruled on the point; paragraph 1 of the head-notes in 33 Atl. 375, reflecting and stating the views of the court as follows:
“A decree of the lower court, affirmed by a divided court, is not a decree or judgment of the Supreme Court in support of which'the rule of stare decisis can be invoked. ’ ’
*175It will be noted that the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania perhaps goes a step further than most of the courts in holding that a judgment rendered by a divided appellate court is not in reality the decision of the Supreme Court, hut of the trial court from which the appeal is prosecuted. And the Supreme Court of Iowa, in the City of Dubuque v. I. C. R. R. Co., 39 Iowa, 56, employs this language:
“None of the opinions, considered alone, has the force of a decision of the- court, because no one of them is concurred in by a majority of the justices; taken collectively, they - cannot be regarded as binding upon us in the character of a precedent.”
But we .need not go outside of our own state for precedents. In the very early case of McNutt v. Lancaster et al., 9 Smedes & M. 570, Mr. Justice Thatcheb, having been of counsel, took no part in the decision. Mr Justice Claytopt and Chief Justice Shabkey could not agree upon the judgment to be rendered; Judge Clay-toN being of the opinion that a -judgment should be entered by the Supreme Court “for the penalty of the bond.” The Chief Justice was of the opinion that no 'judgment should be rendered, but both agreed that the judgment appealed from should be reversed. The situation is described in the language of Judge Claytoy :
“My own opinion is that a‘judgment should here be entered for the penalty of the bond. The Chief Justice thinks that no judgment should be rendered. The other judge was counsel in the court below, and can give no opinion. This is a state of things not provided for in the law. If we differed in opinion, the judgment would be affirmed. How. & Hutch. 537:' But we agree that the judgment must be reversed, but cannot agree as to the judgment which should be then rendered. In this exigency the cause must be remanded, to be determined by the court below,-upon such prineiplés as it may deem right. We cannot agree upon any instructions to guide *176it, but differ upon every material point in the cause. Judgment reversed, and new trial awarded.”
This case reflects the uniform holding that, where a majority of the judges of any appellate court cannot agree upon the principles of law to be announced, no principle of law is in fact decided. In Brickell v. Lightcap, 115 Miss. 417, 76 So. 489, an opinion was prepare ~ expressing, the view of four members of the court. On suggestion of error Judge Cook changed his views, leaving the judges equally divided. Thereupon this court by per curiam opinion said:
“It follows from the foregoing that the opinion heretofore rendered herein affirming the decree of the court below is no longer the opinion of a majority of this court, and therefore is no longer the opinion of the court, but expresses only the views of the judges now concurring therein.”
This shows conclusively that the present attitude of the court as announced in the majority opinion is a complete innovation and a complete reversal of the position taken by the court in Brickell v. Lightcap, supra.
I also take issue with the declaration of the court that: A “precedent is made not by the opinions delivered by the judges, the primary purpose of which is to set forth the reasons which influenced them in reaching their conclusions,, but by the judgment which the court rendered.”
The court refers to Adams v. Railroad Co., 77 Miss. 302, 24 So. 200, 317, 28 So. 956, 60 L. R. A. 33. I do not think our court in the Adams Case’ made any such declaration or announced any such principle. The text-writers, in discussing the mgxim stare decisis, speak of decisions of the court, and not judgments. The rule is stated in Corpus Juris as follows:
“It is a well-established general rule that, where a principle of law has become settled by a series of *177decisions, it is binding npon the courts and should be followed. This rule, which is usually known and referred to as the rule of stare decisis is founded largely upon the consideration of expediency and the sound principle of public policy.” 15 C. J. -304..
And in paragraph 329 the same text declares: “The authority of a former decision as a precedent must be limited to the points actually decided on the facts before the court. And an opinion is not authority for what is not mentioned therein and what does not appear to have been suggested to the court from which the opinion emanates.”
The judgment entered upon the minutes is, of course, evidence of the conclusion reached by the court, but there are so many questions both of law and fact usually involved and presented in a lawsuit that it is practically impossible to determine from the mere judgment of the court the points that were argued and necessarily decided. There is a vast difference between the doctrine of re's adjudicata and stare decisis. 15 C. J. par. 305; Adams v. Railroad Co., 77 Miss. 265, in the opinion, 24 So. 200, 317, 28 So. 956, 60 L. R. A. 33.
There was a plea of res adjudicata in the case at bar,' but counsel in this case did not so much as invoke the rule of stare decisis. The court has invoked it for them. That the plea of res adjudicata is not well taken is conclusively shown by. Adams v. Railroad Co., supra. The court in the present case decides nothing, but disposes of the present appeal solely on the authority of Revenue Agent v. Mississippi Valley Co., 77 So. 253. But what did the court decide in the former case? Did the court construe our statute (section 4267) and determine whether this statute means what it says when it declares that “the capital stock of such company or corporation shall be assessed to it for taxation to the extent of the full amount of the value thereof, . . . less the aggregate value of such real estate.” *178And, if the statute means exactly what it -says, does the court hold that it was unconstitutional? What principles were announced or adopted for the guidance of revenue officers or the courts of this state hereafter? Did the court construe section 181 of the Constitution or attempt to declare its meaning? The only deelarar tion of views favorable to appellee company in the former case were the views expressed by Judge Eth-ridge. Does the court now adopt Judge Ethridge's opinion as the opinion of the court? If so, the court goes to the extent of holding that the charter of the Mississippi Valley Company,“is held at the will of the state, and its franchise certainly can have no appreciable value as a franchise. ’ ’ This declaration was repudiated by learned counsel for appellee. The voice of the court in both cases is silent as to any decision of the legal questions involved, and only the cold judgment entered upon the minutes of the court, in my judgment, thus far has spoken. This suggests to my mind the pertinent statements of the Supreme Court of Iowa in the City of Dubuque v. I. C. R. R. Co., supra, 39 Iowa. On page 79 of the the opinion it is said:
“Let us inquire what is meant by the term ‘precedent’ and what elements in a case are to be followed under the rule stare decisis. It is not the judgment which the court pronounces upon the rights of the parties involved in the suit. A judgment that A recover of B one thousand dollars is not to be cited as a precedent in a subsequent case to support the right of C to recover the same sum from D, for the judgment is simply a conclusion reached by. the application of rules of law to certain facts. We are to look farther in a case than to the judgment to find that which constitutes a precedent. It is found in the rules of law which are the foundation of a judgment." These rules constitute' the formulae by which rights of parties are to be determined. When settled by adjudication, courts, under the doctrine *179stare decisis are required to apply them to subsequent cases. Upon the authority of the decisions announcing them they are to he taken as correct. When we look to a case which is called a precedent, we search out these rules for application to the facts in dispute before use; the judgment therein constitutes a rule in no sense — it is evidence of the application of rules, legal formulae, to facts; it is the formal recognition of such rules. A case is to ho regarded as a precedent when it furnishes rules that may be applied in settling the rights of parties. These rules are to he discovered in the opinions of the judges, and constitute the reasons for the decision. Lord Makseield says: ‘The reason and spirit of cases make law; not the letter of particular precedents.’ Fisher v. Prince, 3 Burrows, 1364. And Lord Holt declares that ‘the reason of a resolution [judgment] is more to he considered that the resolution itself.’ Cage v. Action, 12 Mod. 294.
“It has' always been held that a decision of a court concurred in by less than a majority of the judges has not the force of a precedent. When there is an equal division of opinion in this court, the decision of the court below stands affirmed. There must he a concurrence of a majority of the judges'upon the principles, rules of law, announced in the case, before they can he considered settled by a decision. If the court he equally divided or less than a majority concur in a rule, no one will claim that it has the force of the authority of the court.”
And in Fraser v. Willey, 2 Fla. 118, it is said:
“It seems clear that the opinions of the justices as a court are tó he written, and, if there should not he. a majority of the court agreeing on one side of the question, there can he no decision. There must he something decided before the statute applies, and, if the court is divided, can there he, in-the nature of things, a decision? The lexicographers tell us that the term ‘decided’ im*180plies ‘decision’ something that is unequivocal, that puts an end to doubt. Suppose the court stand opposed two to two; are there any doubts removed; is not the case left in the same situation in which it came up, leaving the questions of law involved in it as open questions and- subject to future adjudication? Can the opinion of the court be cited as authority in any future controversy? Certainly not, because there is a perfect mathematical balance with no preponderance on either side. ’ ’
In line with the thought in the opinion just quoted from, I should say that precedents are valuable only in so far as they reflect what the law of the land is. Our search in any particular case is for the law. A legal precedent is evidence of law. These precedents must necessarily be found in official opinions of courts interpreting and expounding the law. The stability of any opinion depends upon the fact that it is the well-reasoned, matured judgment and conclusion of á majority of the court. If the court upon mature reflection As equally divided as to a rule of conduct or the application of a legal principle or the construction of a statute or a constitutional provision, surely the matter at issue has not been put at rest, at least until the legislature takes action.
There are practical considerations involved. If it becomes known that the decision by a divided court will operate as a precedent, then prospective litigants, desiring to contest a new statute, a constitutional amendment, or to seek an adjudication on any important public question, may hasten to the district whose presiding judge, it may be thought or hoped, is in sympathy with the plaintiff; and, furthermore, a favorable opinion by a trial judge thus secured might possibly be in conflict with the individual views of every other trial judge in the state. Cases involving the same law point may be appealed about the same time from different dis*181tricts and reflecting contrary decisions. If several records reach the Supreme Court involving the same point,- then in event the members of this court should he equally divided.we have in evidence a mere doctrine of chance as to which record is to he considered first..
To make a controlling precedent the court in this ease has broken a thousand -precedents, and yet it is said that “consistency is a jewel.”
■ I think also the court'is wrong on the law and facts of this particular case. By a peremptory instruction the trial court adjudged that the Mississippi Valley Company need not pay the municipality of its domicile a cent of taxes. Here we have a domestic corporation with a paid-in capital of three hundred thousand dollars domiciled in the city of Water Valley and yet not paying into the treasury of the city a cent of taxes. There cannot he any dispute about the liability of ap-pellee company to pay taxes upon its intangible property and the value of its franchise in the town of its domicile. There is only one avenue of escape, and that is for the corporation to clearly establish that its intangible property and franchises have no value. There has been much said pro and con as to the value of appellee’s capital stock, and if the jury had decided the value, ap-pellee might have some standing on this appeal. There has never been even a contention by appellee that its capital stock is worthless. On the contrary, the return of the Mississippi Valley Company for the year 1908, the first year involved in this back assessment, shows the par value of the stock as three hundred thousand dollars and actual value forty-three thousand, one hundred and twenty-five dollars. By no process, of juggling with figures could it be demonstrated that the capital stock is worthless. But, on the contrary, looking through the form to the substance, it is manifest that appellee controls the transportation business of Mississippi, and that *182the very fact that it is a holding company with a perpetual charter and does wield such an influence makes of its charter one of the most valuable ever granted by a sovereign state. Surely it ought not to monopolize the traffic and profits from the chief transportation business within our commonwealth without paying at least a few cents into the treasury of the town where it lives, moves, and has its eternal being. The assessments by the revenue officers are prima-facie evidence of correctness, and this prima-facie showing, .in my judgment, has not been overthrown by any competent testimony. On this point it is significant that the jury on the trial of the case involving state and county taxes reached a verdict, practically on the same testimony, that the total fair market value of the capital stock exceeded six million dollars. It may be that the verdict was excessive, but it was nearer right than a verdict for nothing.