— This is a suit to recover $159.87 on account of taxes paid by the plaintiff to defendant as collector of Cape Girardeau county, the taxes having been paid under written protest. The circuit court sustained a demurrer to the petition, and from a judgment thereon plaintiff appealed.
The legislature, by the act of February 27, 1853, constituted certain persons and their associates a body corporate by the name of “ The President and Faculty of St. Vincent’s College.” The act gives to the corporation the right to acquire real and personal property by purchase, gift-or devise; provided, that the clear yearly value of the real estate shall not exceed the sum of $10,000. The institution is to be established in the city of Cape Girardeau, and, when so established, has conferred upon it all the rights and privileges given by an act incorporating St. Mary’s College, in the county of Perry. Acts of 1842 & 3, p. 237.
The act of February 9, 1853, entitled, “An act to exempt certain property from taxation,” provides:
“ First. All the real estate and appurtenances now belonging to the St. Vincent College and St. Vincent Female Academy, in the county of Cape Girardeau, or held by any other person in trust for the use of said college or academy, be and the same is hereby exempt from the payment of taxes for state or county purposes, *266so long as the same, or the proceeds thereof, shall be used for or applied to educational purposes.
“ Second. That six hundred and forty acres of land, and appurtenances, upon which St. Mary’s seminary now stands, in Perry county, Missouri, be and the same is hereby exempt from the payment of faxes for state or county purposes, so long as the same shall be used and occupied as a seminary of learning.
“Third. That nothingcontainedinthisactsha.il be so construed as to exempt from the payment of city taxes any property of the said college or academy that. may be situated in the city of Cape Girardeau.” Acts of 1853, p. 569.
The petition sets out these acts and it is then alleged that plaintiff was duly organized under the first act; that prior to the passage of the last act it owned certain real estate, and also certain lots in the city of Cape Girardeau ; that the institution was located upon part of said lots ; that plaintiff duly accepted the last-mentioned act and has complied with all of its terms and provisions ; that the land and lots were assessed and taxes levied thereon for state and county purposes for the year 1886, in the sum of $159.87; that to pay the taxes so assessed the defendant as collector seized certain personal property of the plaintiff and was about to sell the same, when the plaintiff paid the taxes under written protest setting forth its right of exemption.
It is insisted, on the part of the plaintiff, that the provisions of the constitution of 1875, and section 6659, of the Revised Statutes, 1879 are prospective only in their operation, and are not in conflict with, and, therefore, do not repeal, the exemption contained in the above act of February 9, 1853 ; but for all the purposes of this case we shall assume that the present constitution and statutes are inconsistent with the exemption contained in that act, and that the exemption in favor of the plaintiff has been repealed, if the state had the power to repeal it.
*267The language of the act of 1853 is clear and free from ambiguity. It exempts the real and personal property then belonging to St. Vincent’s College “from the payment of taxes for state or county purposes, so long as the same or the proceeds thereof, shall be used for or applied to educational purposes.” There can be no doubt but the legislature had the power to pass the law, for such legislation was not then prohibited by any constitutional provision; nor is it claiméd by the defendant that the state reserved the right to repeal the exemption.
Acts like the one in question, exempting corporations from taxation, constitute contracts, and the state has no power to impair the obligations of such contracts, unless that right is reserved. The right of the legislature, unrestrained by constitutional prohibitions, to grant irrevocable exemptions from taxation is no longer an open question. Mechanics’ Bank v. City of Kansas, 73 Mo. 555, and cases cited ; Cooley on Const. Lim. [5 Ed.] 340 ; Home of the Friendless v. Rouse, 8 Wall. 430; Washington University v. Rouse, 8 Wall. 439. In the case cited from 8 Wall. 430, the legislature of this state had created a corporation for the purpose of enabling female persons to establish a charitable institution for the relief of destitute and suffering females, and the act declared that all the property of the corporation should be exempt from taxation. It was held that the charter constituted a contract between the state and the corporators, and that the state could not tax the property of the corporation.
In answer to the objection made in that case, that there was no consideration expressed in the act, the court said: “There is no necessity of looking for the consideration for a legislative contract outside of the objects for which the corporation was created. These objects were deemed by the legislature to be beneficial to the community, and this benefit constitutes the *268consideration for the contract, and no other is required to support it.”
These observations meet like objections made in the present case. The legislature deemed the benefit to be derived from the application of the proceed^ of the lands to educational purposes a good and sufficient consideration for the exemption. This act of 1853, therefore, amounts to a contract, and we must hold in conformity with the cases cited that the legislature had the right to, and did, contract away the power of the state to tax the property of this corporation; for the demurrer admits that the plaintiff has and does continue to use the proceeds of the lands for educational purposes. The lands and lots were, therefore, exempt from taxation for state and county purposes.
It is insisted that the act of 1853 does not confer the immunity from taxation upon the plaintiff, because the plaintiff is not named therein. The original act of 1843 is entitled, “ An act incorporating St. Vincent College,” while in the body of the act the institution is incorporated by the name of “The President and Faculty of St. Yincent’s College ;” and the exempting act speaks of all real estate, etc., belonging to the “ St. Yincent College.” The objection is too technical to deserve much consideration; for there can be no doubt but the last act refers to the corporation created by the first one. The title of the first act is quite conclusive. The variance is immaterial, for the two names are substantially the same. International Ins. Co. v. Davenport 57 Mo. 289.
The objections to the petition are, therefore, not well taken, and the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
The other judges concur.