It does not seem practicable nor advisable to attempt to arrange tbe multitude of propositions submitted by tbe eminent counsel, wbo bave contributed to lighten our labors in tbis important case, so as to treat all of tbem in detail and in logical order. It is not out of place to say, at tbe outset, tbat tbe careful preparation of tbe case for our consideration on tbe part of appellant merits tbe bigbest commendation, and tbat sucb preparation on tbe part of respondents is meritorious as well. It is gratifying to members of' tbe court to bave those whose duty it is to co-operate with tbem, in tbe administration of justice, evince proper appreciation of tbe dignity of important questions to be solved, and their duty in respect thereto. Most especially is tbat so when questions of sucb supreme importance as those before us are involved; questions as far reaching, as to tbe welfare of tbe people throughout tbe state and interests of great magnitude to tbe -parties immediately concerned, as any tbat bave been heretofore decided by tbis court. It is due to counsel to say tbat they merit tbe distinction of having fully appreciated sucb far-reaching importance of tbis litigation and so risen to tbe occasion tbat they may well rest satisfied of having *587legitimately laid the full responsibility for the result upon those who must assume it.
As said before, it does not seem ,best to attempt to treat in detail all the major, and minor questions as well, drawn to-our attention by counsel. All may well be grouped under a few grand divisions, as it were, and thus viewed more understandingly than in any other way. The first one in order relates to the scope and meaning of sec. .1, art. VIII, of the constitution.
I.
It seems quite unaccountable, after the lapse of nearly sixty years since the constitution was framed, and half a century since that feature of the article in question was first considered by this court, notwithstanding the seemingly clear decision then made on the point at that time primarily involved,, followed soon thereafter’ by a second decision covering the precise matter now in hand, that we should find ourselves at this late day face to face with a controversy as to the precise meaning of the words of our organic law: “The rule of taxation shall be uniform, and taxes shall be levied on such property as the legislature shall prescribe.” That language seems-plain, this court, as we shall see, early said it was very plain, and yet it has been treated time and again as ambiguous, and still seems to be so regarded, notwithstanding all that this-court has in fifty years said on the subject. And so it must be regarded, especially since men of the highest attainments,, lawyers, jurists, and learned laymen, have read different meanings out of it, having regard, as it has been thought, to-the object of state constitutions and the broad powers possessed by the people, unrestrained by a charter on the subject. No better object-lesson, perhaps, could well be presented to illustrate the rule that ambiguity requiring judicial construction may as well arise through the apparent consequences of applying words in their literal sense to the sub*588ject with, which they deal as from uncertainty of sense in the words themselves, than by the matter in hand. By such application, especially in the light of the varying views entertained of what this court has decided, the words of the constitution speak one way, seemingly, to some and another way to others. It is to be hoped that by the treatment of the subject in the three cases now before us all obscurities may be cleared up.
The following propositions may be stated as covering all •questions that have arisen under the section in question:
(1) Did the fathers of the constitution intend, by sec. 1, art. VIII, thereof, that all taxes on account of property should be direct thereon, the owners being obligated to pay because of ownership, but the taxes to be in form as though the property were to pay the tax ?
(2) Did they intend that all property should be taxed, and taxed equally so far as practicable ?
(3) Did they design, by such section, to deal with any ■other form of taxation than that on property ?
(4) Did they intend that all property taxed should be affected by the taxing burden equally so far as practicable, there being but one rule applying equally so far as practicable to each member of the one class, as contradistinguished from several rules for as many classes, the rule of uniformity being satisfied by uniformity within each class ?
(5) Did they contemplate the establishment of a legislative rule for the taxation of property that should be uniform in that it should bear as equally as practicable on every species ■of property prescribed for taxation, and each member of each ■such species?
(6) What is meant by the rule of property taxation which the constitution requires to be uniform ?
(a, b) The first proposition is ruled in the affirmative, and the second in the negative, by the repeated decisions of this 'court: they are not now in controversy. Milwaukee & M. R. *589Co. v. Waukesha Co. 9 Wis. 431, note; Wis. Cent. R. Co. v. Taylor Co. 52 Wis. 37, 8 N. W. 833; State v. Railway Cos., ante, p. 449, 108 N. W. 594, and Nunnemacher v. State, 129 Wis.-, 108 N. W. 627. There may be privilege-taxes, a§ indicated in the cited cases, for revenue only, such as taxes on tbe business of insurance companies, and tbe former system of railway license taxation; there may be regulation taxes, with incidental revenue features, or for revenue-only, sucb as tbe inberitanee taxes; there may be license taxes for police purposes only, or for sucb purposes primarily with incidental revenue features, as to subjects within tbe field of police regulations. None of sucb taxes fall within tbe provisions of sec. 1, art. VIII, of tbe constitution, though they are, of course, under tbe limitations of other equality clauses of tbe constitution and tbe XIVtb amendment of tbe federal constitution.
(c) Tbe third proposition, it would seem, has been quite as decisively settled in tbe negative, by á long line of decisions commencing with Milwaukee & M. R. Co. v. Waukesha Co., supra, as held in tbe cases decided herewith. Tbe first case went, in tbe main, as we shall show, upon tbe ground that tbe tax was not one on property within tbe meaning of tbe constitution, but was an exaction in lieu of sucb taxation. Tbe mistake subsequently made, at times, of speaking of a tax of a sort other than one on property, but in lieu thereof,- as a tax on property, seems so plain that tbe wonder is that any sucb process of reasoning could have been indulged in. Privilege taxes elsewhere, under constitutional provisions similar to ours, have been uniformly held not to be taxes on property, and so not to be tested by sucb provisions when otherwise they would be condemned under tbe requirement that taxation of property shall be laid by a uniform rule, or on a rule of equality. The constitution of South Carolina provides that taxes on property shall be uniform, and it has been held that it refers only to such taxes as are *590■commonly understood to be direct on property, not to any other form of taxing the same, though it, in the ultimate, reaches the property and in both cases the owner must make the payment. Charlotte, C. & A. R. Co. v. Gibbes, 21 S. C. 385, 4 S. E. 49. The same court held that in all cases where taxes are assessed on property they fall under the constitutional rule of uniformity. State v. Hayne, 4 S. C. 403. The constitution of Alabama contains a similar provision, and thereunder it is held that it is referable only to direct property taxation and is not a limitation upon any other'form of taxation. Capital City W. Co. v. Board of Revenue, 117 Ala. 303, 23 South. 970. Such holdings in large numbers, under similar constitutional provisions, might be given, but we will cite only the following few additional cases: Jersey City G. L. Co. v. United G. I. Co. 46 Fed. 264; Standard U. C. Co. v. Att'y Gen. 46 N. J. Eq. 270, 19 Atl. 733; State v. State Board of Assessors, 47 N. J. Law, 36; Union T. Co. v. Wayne Probate Judge, 125 Mich. 487, 84 N. W. 1101; Stale v. Philadelphia, W. & B. R. Co. 45 Md. 361; Delaware Railroad Tax, 18 Wall. 206; Comm. v. Provident Inst. 12 Allen, 312; Coite v. Society for Savings, 32 Conn. 173. Consideration of this branch of the case might be carried to a very great length by referring to the numerous state constitutions and decisions under them, but we shall forego saying more on that line than to record that from a careful review of the entire field it is our conclusion that the term “tax on property,” and similar expressions in such constitutions,, has been uniformly held to stand for what such term is commonly understood to signify.
It is useless to press upon the attention of courts, as is often done, the idea that all taxes are really on the owners of property, either because of such ownership alone or the use of the property, in some way, so that in practical effect whatever be the form of the tax, let it be direct or indirect, in the ultimate it is on the property respecting the real basis *591thereof and on the person respecting the instrument that must necessarily discharge it, and that regardless of the form, the mere shadow of the matter, in substance the exaction should be regarded as'a tax on property. All such methods of reasoning, however philosophical they may appear to be, have been met over and over again by the courts with the uniform result that the term “taxes on property,” as used in the organic law, means taxes on things tangible or intangible, as distinguished from taxation on the right to use or transfer things, or on the proceeds of business in which the use of things is essential, and that is because such meaning is the common, ordinary meaning and so the one which, nothing appearing to the contrary, it must be presumed was intended in framing the constitutional provision. We will not further pursue this subject, since it is more distinctly involved in Nunnemacher v. State, 129 Wis. -, 108 N. W. 627, and the position of the court has been there so clearly stated by our brother Wiwsnow that it is thought there will be no need in the future to rediscuss the matter.
(d) The fourth proposition suggested is the one’of greatest significance, in view of the reasons which moved the learned court to pronounce the judgment complained of, and the attitude of counsel in respect thereto. The former held that the constitutional requirement that property shall be taxed by a uniform rule does not mean that all taxes on property shall be at a uniform rate and by one rule; that there may be classification, and that the rule of uniformity is satisfied by uniformity within 'each class. That idea is the real basis upon which the judgment complained of was rendered. In a very elaborate opinion tire circuit judge marshaled many decisions of this court supposed to support it.
While it did not appear, upon the oral argument, that the trial court’s theory, as indicated, was relied upon with any great degree of confidence-by counsel for the state, we find by their brief that they do not by any means intend to treat *592it with indifference. They stand for it with such apparent confidence as to require, if anything other than the trial court’s laborious opinion were necessary, careful consideration thereof. If the trial court’s position be sound it would certainly be very difficult to escape, if it could be done at all, the conclusion that the judgment appealed from is right.
Counsel for appellant contend that the doctrine that uniformity. within each of several classes of property satisfies the calls of an equality provision in a state constitution dealing with the subject has no application to such a constitutional provision as ours; that the only classification permissible thereunder is the separation of property into that to be taxed and that not to be taxed, and such subclassification of the former as may be reasonable, having regard to methods of applying the one rule of uniformity to the one general class so as to work out, as to all, equality so far as practicable.
The trial court started with the idea that this court, in Milwaukee & M. R. Co. v. Waukesha Co. 9 Wis. 431, decided in 1855, which for convenience we will call the first case, adopted the doctrine that classification of property for direct taxation: for the application of different rules to different classes, is legitimate. The basic question there, as we shall see, was whether the railway license taxing law of 1854 was one imposing taxes on property within the meaning of the constitution. The result, in effect, was that if it were such a law it satisfied the rule of uniformity, since the taxes imposed were made uniform as to all property of the class, but that it was not a law taxing property. Here is the way the decision was phrased, the propositions being numbered for convenience of future reference in this opinion:
(1) The imposition upon railroad property by the act of 1854 does not violate that provision of the constitution of Wisconsin which provides a uniform rule of taxation, provided like property pertaining to railroads, or all property of that class, is alike taxed or alike exempt, as it appears to be.
*593(2) Rut the court does uot think: that the. law of 1854 does impose a tax within the meaning of the constitutional pro-visions,, and therefore the law of 1854 is valid, so far at least as the government is concerned.'
It is quite unmistakable, from the phrasing of the decision, that the first proposition was not necessarily decided, since the final conclusion was that the constitutional provision was not involved. However, the unnecessary conclusion was judicial; it was the law for that case and a rule for the future under the doctrine of stare decisis, so long as it stood. So the trial court-, in tracing the judicial history of the matter, made a well-grounded commencement.
In Knowlton v. Rock Co. 9 Wis. 410, which for convenience we will hereafter generally refer to as the second case, the question as to whether the constitution permits classification of property for the purposes of applying different rules of taxation was presented for decision. The circumstance giving rise thereto-was the existence of a law providing that, in levying taxes in the city of Janesville, farming lands situated within its boundaries should not be burdened to the extent of the burdens on other property of equal value. The tax on such farming lands was limited to one half of one per cent, for current expenses, for the maintenance of roads and bridges and for the support of the poor, and not more than one half that levied on other property, and for all other purposes such lands were entirely exempted. The decision of the court, Justices DixoN and Paute concurring, was that the law was invalid because (reciting from the syllabus, which is an accurate epitome of the opinion) “the constitution has fixed one unbending uniform rule of taxation for the state, and property cannot be classified and taxed as classed by different rules. The provision of the constitution that taxes shall be levied upon such property as the legislature shall direct does not sanction a discrimination which provides for taxing a particular kind of property for the support of gov-*594eminent by a different rule from tbat by wbicb other property is taxed; for when the kind of property is prescribed the rule of taxation must be uniform. All kinds of property must be taxed uniformly or be absolutely exempt.” Tbat is, certainly, no less emphatic than the language used by the chief justice in his opinion, as the following will show: “There can be no medium ground between absolute exemption and uniform taxation.” The theory advanced would permit “different rules of taxation to the number of which there is no limit except that fixed by the legislative discretion, while the constitution established but one fixed, unbending, uniform rule upon the subject.” If such theory is adopted “it will afford a direct and solemn constitutional sanction to a system of taxation so manifestly and grossly unjust that there will not be found an apologist anywhere, at least outside of those who are recipients of its favors.” The mandate of the constitution, “it is true, is very brief, but long enough for all practical purposes, long enough to embrace within it clearly and concisely the doctrine which the framers of the constitution intended,' that of equality. The rule of taxation shall be uniform, that is to say ... it shall in all cases be alike; the valuation must be uniform, the rate must be uniform.” “Uniformity . . . becomes equality. There can be no uniform rule, which is not at the same time an equal rule,-operating alike upon all the taxable property throughout the territorial limits of the state, municipality or local subdivision of the government within and for which the tax is to be raised.” That doctrine, so vigorously proclaimed, has never been overruled or criticised or even supposed to be open to question in this court so far as we are aware.
It will be seen that the second case overruled most distinctly the conclusion unnecessarily made in the first case. The full scope of the former decision was not definitely known, because the written evidence thereof was not then *595at band. A full history of that is given in State v. Railway Cos., ante, p. 449, 108 N. W. 594. No attempt to overrule the ultimate conclusion reached in the first case, or occasion therefor, existed, 'because of the fact, as said in the court’s opinion, that the imderstanding was, as was the fact, that it did not involve the taxing power under sec. 1, art. VIII.
Justice Cole dissented, being more impressed, as plainly appears from his dissenting opinion, with the former conclusion unnecessarily reached than by the dominant one that the case did not fall under the constitutional provision. He evidently was of the opinion that property could be classified for different rules of ad valorem taxation, and that the court so formerly decided. Manifestly, the first case did not involve a direct tax on property, and the second had no necessary or logical connection with the first, except in that case the two forms of taxation were confused somewhat, when only one was referable to sec. 1, art. VIII, of the constitution.
The circuit judge further reasoned that the questions in the Knowlton Case were again passed upon in State ex rel. Att’y Gen. v. Winnebago Lake & F. R. P. R. Co. 11 Wis. 35, which we will call the third case, it again being held that in the first case the conclusion was that property could be classified legitimately for different rates or rules of taxation. In this third case the source of disquieting differences as to the matters in the first decision is very clearly stated. This language of Justice PaiNE as to the attitude of the court in the second case and Justice Cole’s then remembrance of the first is significant:
“It was there said that the court held (1) that the amount required to be paid by the railway company was not a tax, (2) that if it was a tax the constitutional requirement of uniformity was complied with, inasmuch as all railroads were taxed alike. Mr. Justice Cole, however, who was then on the bench,.placed his decision upon the last ground, and does not understand that the court relied very strongly upon the first.”
*596It should be observed that the order of the decision was reversed in Justice PaiNe’s statement; a circumstance, however, emphatically indicating what he and Chief Justice DixoN regarded as the turning matter in the first case. The written decision, under the hand of Justice Smith, when recovered, showed very distinctly that the dominant, the governing, idea, at least with Chief Justice WiiitoN and Justice SMITH, was the one that Justice Cole so thought, years after the decision was rendered, was not “very strongly relied on.” Only by adhering closely to the dominant idea of the first case, as evidently viewed by the majority of the court then and thereafter, and that in the second as so viewed, laying aside expressions in dissenting opinions, can this matter be set at rest.
When we speak of the first proposition in the first case as having been unnecessarily decided, we do not mean that the solution of that alone would not have, effectually, disposed of the case; but it would not have so terminated the litigation as to settle the controversy as to whether the tax in question was one referable to sec. 1, art. VIII, of the constitution, which was the basic matter of dispute.
Now, while the second case involved the question only sub-junctively decided in the first case, and not the one necessarily decided at all, the third involved subjunctively the question necessarily decided in the second case, and necessarily the turning question in the first. That is, while the first case dealt with a privilege tax, not a tax on property within the meaning of the constitution, the second dealt with the latter, not with the former; and the third dealt with the one, but not with the other, — a tax on property. The decision in the third, so far as the second overruled the decision subjunctively made in the first case, followed it as hypothetically necessary to the result reached, and as to- the matter necessarily decided in the second case it was subjunctively affirmed, and as to the turning question in the first decision, *597in. tlie latter it was overruled. Thus, the second was left reaffirmed as to there being no room under the constitution 'for classification of property for different rules or rates of taxation, and the first was left wholly overruled. Justice Cole preserved consistency in his record by adhering to his former view that classification of property for taxation by different rules or rates is legitimate. ' He stood alone on that at first, as it seems, as he did in the second and the third cases.
It is suggested that when the matter was presented to this court later, in Kneeland v. Milwaukee, 15 Wis. 454, which we will designate as the fourth case, Justices Dixon and Pacte receded from their position in the second and third cases on all points and indorsed the views of Justice Cole, restoring to full validity the decision in such first case, both on the question there subjunctively decided and the one necessarily determined, and also indorsed the views of Justice Cole as to the point necessarily decided in the second case as well. That is plainly a mistake. In the last opinion filed, the one which rehabilitated, so to speak, the decision in the first case, Justice Pacte prefaced the final conclusion reached by stating as the understanding of the court that a difference had existed as to what was decided in the first case, in that while the final writing under the hand of Justice Smith showed that the court held that the law of 1854 did not “impose a tax within the meaning of the constitutional provision,” Justice Cole’s remembrance was that the court did not hold that the law “did not impose a tax in the just and proper sense,” “but,” said Justice Pacte, “the difference is wholly immaterial inasmuch as both statements show the court held that even if it was a tax it was no violation of the rule of uniformity ; both show that the law was decided to be no violation of the constitution. This is all that is material for us to know in giving effect to the decision as an authority requiring us to sustain the validity of the law, and that is all the effect we give to it.” In that, by necessary implication, there *598is a distinct negation o-f any intention to overrule anything said in the second case or the third, or anything said in the opinions on the first two hearings in the fourth, except as was necessary to so far restore the decision in the first as to recognize as valid the law of 1854. That covered the point, and that only, as to the law not being referable to sec. 1, art. VIII, of the constitution, because it “did not impose a tax within the meaning of the constitutional provisions.” The point subjunctively decided in the first case, and overruled in the second, was plainly left where the second case left it, namely, that there can be no classification for different rules of taxation under sec. 1, art. VIII, of the constitution.
Following along the mistaken line we have indicated as having been taken by the circuit court and maintained by counsel for respondent, it is suggested that this court, in distinctly affirming the Knowlton Case in Hale v. Kenosha, 29 Wis. 599, overlooked the fact that the former was expressly repudiated in the Kneeland Case. Instead of such repudiation there was the most emphatic affirmance thereof, as we have seen, as to the question under consideration here. So the fifth case, on that, is in perfect harmony with the dominant, with the ruling, feature of the second. It is hardly reasonable to suppose that the justices concerned in making so important a decision as that in the second case where they divided, finally united in overruling it in the fourth, and, so soon as the fifth case was decided, united in going back to the position taken in the second and concurred in reinstating it and re-intrenching it in a most decided manner.
The sixth case in order is Wis. Cent. R. Co. v. Taylor Co. 52 Wis. 37, 8 N. W. 833. It is referred to apparently as finally intrenching in our system the idea of classification of property for taxation of it by varying rules, in a subsidiary sense. That seems to be based in part on the very accurate history there given of the treatment, here, of the railway license tax law, dignifying the first decision as regards points *599there "necessarily decided” as tbe law of this state, and stamping as “mere dicta” all said subsequently inconsistent with “what was so necessarily decided.” It also seems to be based, in part, on some general discussion of the subject of classification leading up to the decision of the real question at issue, not involving the subject of controversy here.
When what was said in the sixth case is considered in the proper light, it will be seen to be in harmony with the point necessarily decided in the Kneeland Gase as well as the one necessarily decided in the first case, leaving the position of jhis court as to what was necessarily decided in both where it had stood for twenty years or more. The only subject involved was that of the power of the legislature to exempt some property from taxation and tax other property. The power, generally speaking, was not in controversy. The contention was as to whether it extended so far as to permit subdivision of property of the same general class so as to tax part and exempt the rest. No question of the classification of property for the purpose of applying thereto different rates or rules as regards equality of burden of taxation was suggested. The court held, under the peculiar circumstances of the case, Justice OetoN dissenting, that there could be such classification. The land in question was in the nature of trust property for public purposes. It had been formerly held by the state, and was then necessarily exempt. Although transferred to the railway company in execution of the trust, it was held that its trust character was not so wholly changed but what it might be still exempted in further execution of the trust. The situation was peculiar, as indicated, the decision was expressly confined thereto, and it has never been extended.
One should not be misled by the course of the discussion in the sixth case, by reason of citations justifying classification, dealing only with different methods of applying the same rule or rate of taxation to all property so as to effect equality, *600so far as practicable, such as Missouri River, Ft. S. & G. R. Co. v. Morris, 7 Kan. 210; Louisville & N. A. R. Co. v. State, 25 Ind. 177, and the like; nor citations justifying classification for exempting property from general taxation and imposing in lieu thereof a privilege tax, such as Portland v. Portland W. Co. 67 Me. 135; Kittanning C. Co. v. Comm. 79 Pa. St. 100, and the like; nor such as were shown to justify classification for police regulation, such as Youngblood v. Sexton, 32 Mich. 406, and the like; nor those relating to constitutions expressly or impliedly providing or permitting classification for purposes of taxation, and only requiring, uniformity within each class, such as New Orleans v. Kaufman, 29 La. Ann. 283; Kittanning C. Co. v. Comm., supra, and the like, — many constitutions differ from ours in that important particular; nor those dealing with classification by exempting from general taxation and imposing contract taxes, such as People ex rel. St. Mary's Falls S. C. Co. v. Auditor General, 7 Mich. 84; or referring to mere manner of and situs for taxation, such as State v. Runyon, 41 N. J. Law, 98. All such should be read with reference to the particular questions and conditions involved in them respectively, and the question under discussion in the Wisconsin Central R. Co. Case, that of whether property may be classified as between property to be taxed and property not to be taxed.
As to the four previous decisions of this court, ending with the Kneeland Oase, it was said in the sixth case, as seen, that the decision in the third “was overruled and all points necessarily decided by the affirmance of the order in the first case were followed,” and thereby that all the court’s “utterances inconsistent with the points so ‘necessarily decided' by the united court November 17, 1855, became henceforth as mere dicta.”
While the quoted language brought into clearer light than existed before the validity of the first decision, since what was said was not accompanied by a plain statement of what *601points were, in fact, "necessarily decided in the first case ” perhaps the way was left open for a claim that the first of such points, indicated in the written decision under the hand of Justice Smith, was one, and perhaps the dominant one, as had been claimed by Justice Cole, but which the court, as we have shown, had in effect held was not. That this court ■did not regard it as such in the sixth case seems plain, from the fact that neither the second case nor the fifth was even criticised.
There is nothing in State ex rel. Baraboo v. Sauk Co. 70 Wis. 485, 36 N. W. 396, or Battles v. Doll, 113 Wis. 357, 89 N. W. 187, or State v. Whitcom, 122 Wis. 110, 99 N. W. 468, inconsistent with the foregoing. Rightly considered, they do not deal with the subject here in hand at all. The first two concerned the matter of creating taxing districts and the last the-subject of police regulation governed solely by other equality clauses of our constitution than sec. 1, art. VIII, and by the XIVth amendment to the federal constitution, which permit classification. True, it is there said that the taxation of railroad companies upon gross earnings is a mode of levying taxes upon the property of the corporation, and the idea of classification is treated in that connection as indicated thereby. But a mode of taxing property, as certainly all indirect methods are, is not taxing of property.
We do not overlook the circumstance that in State v. Whit-com, after referring to the constitutional limitation for the taxation of property (sec. 1, art. VIII, Const.), and following that with language to the effect that on the exercise of the police power there are like equality limitations, citing sec. 1, art. I, of the state constitution and the XIVth amendment to the national constitution, this was said:
“Such command does not require that all property or all persons shall be treated exactly alike, but permits separation of either into classes of property or of persons similarly con■ditioned or situated, having characteristics legitimately dis-*602tinguisbing the members of one class from those of another in respects germane to such general and public purpose and object of the particular legislation.”
If one were to follow the line of thought which the learned circuit judge did from the beginning, one would be quite liable to view the above quoted language as recognizing a classification of property for direct taxation by rules, uniform as to each class, under sec. 1, art. VIII, as legitimate. Without special reference to such language, the effort here to clear up obscurities as regards the constitutional provision would be incomplete; not because there is obscurity in fact in such language, rightly viewed, but because of the tendency, as we have seen, not to rightly view it. The court did not intend thereby to indorse the doctrine of classification of property for direct taxation with reference to uniformity merely within each class. It had no thought of overruling or saying anything inconsistent with the Knowlton Case or the Hale Gase on that subject. The term “classification of property” was used, as was thought, with reference to such as had been uniformly recognized in this state as proper: division of property into that to be taxed and that not to be taxed at all; division of that to be taxed and that not to be taxed within the meaning of sec. 1, art. VIII, of the constitution, but taxed indirectly ; division of property to be taxed directly, and so referable to sec. 1, art. VIII, into classes with reference to situs and in other respects, in aid of applying one rule to all so as to affect the different kinds of property with as great a degree of equality as to all as practicable. Classification for different rules resulting in different rates and unequal taxation, in that one class might not be made to bear the public burdens proportionately with other classes, was not thought of, and the case should not be regarded otherwise. The language was carefully and appropriately chosen in respect to the point to be decided. Read with reference to the settled law, it is in “perfect harmony therewith. Head with refer-*603eu.ce to tbe line of thought upon which the judgment was based, candor compels us to say it would appear consistent therewith.
In discussing questions in a legal opinion leading up to a final result as to some particular controversy, one can hardly be expected to so guard everything written but that another may, readily, mistakenly misapply it, viewing the same without accurate appreciation of its particular bearing in the given case.
The foregoing covers the entire process of reasoning by which the result was reached below that in this state there may be classification of property for different rules and consequently different rates of taxation. The start was not wholly illegitimate, but the force and'scope of the intervening decisions was not appreciated, and a wrong conclusion was the result. If the judgment depended upon such process of reasoning for its support a conclusion that it is erroneous would be most likely to follow.
Before passing from this subject we should refer to Slauson v. Racine, 13 Wis. 398, which was not noticed in its order of date, because it was thought best to treat, throughout, the line pursued by the trial court and counsel for respondent. In the Slaiuson Gase the precise question was presented treated before and after, as will be seen. The law under consideration classified property for taxation as regards whether agricultural lands within the city limits of Racine or other lands therein. It was construed as unconstitutional, Justice Cole, consistent with his position on numerous other occasions, dissenting upon the ground that classification of property for taxation under sec. 1, art. VIII, was permissible. The court referred to the previous occasions of so deciding, and Justice Cole to the previous occasions of his dissenting from the views of his brethren.
To recapitulate briefly: Eor the direct method of taxing property, taxation on property so called, as to the rule of uni*604formity, there can he but one constitutional class. All not included therein must be absolutely exempt from such taxation. All within such class must be taxed on a basis of equality so far as practicable. In that respect Knowlton v. Rock Co. and Hale v. Kenosha are, and have been since they were decided, the doctrine of this court. Expressio unius est exclusio alterius does not apply to sec. 1, art. VIII, of the constitution so as to limit the taxing power of the state exclusively to property, since when the provision is read in connection with its history as found in the journal of the constitutional convention it is not ambiguous in that regard. Whatever limitations there are on other forms of taxation than that on property must be found in other equality clauses of the constitution than the one under consideration. Eor the direct method, the constitution puts all property chosen therefor into one class, leaving all other property outside thereof, and contemplates one rule and, so far as practicable,. one rate of taxation, as said in the Kroeeland Case. Privilege taxes, though indirect taxes on property, are not taxation of property, and so are not referable to sec. 1, art. VIII, of the constitution. Eor the clear understanding thereof looking to the words themselves, one, with the common meaning of the term “taxation of property” in mind, should read such words as suggested in the Wisconsin Central R. Co. Case, namely: “The rule of taxation shall be uniform . . . upon such property as the legislature shall prescribe.” The court in the Knowlton Case said that those words are perfectly plain, but if there were any doubt about the matter, the history thereof found in the journal of the constitutional convention would strongly aid in removing it, in harmony with the position of this court, early most decidedly taken, as we have indicated, and since consistently maintained.
(e) The next stated proposition, in short, is: Does the constitution contemplate that the legislature shall make the rule *605of taxation, limited by tbe requirement as to uniformity? Tbe answer to that will be a long step towards solving tbe last proposition.
Tbis last subject bas fallen into-some little, tbougb not serious, confusion. It may be belpful'to briefly state tbe bistory of it as treated in tbe constitutional convention. Tbat bis-tory is sEort. Tbe proceedings entire, as to art. VIII, occurred during an hour or two’s time at one sitting of tbe committee of tbe whole, and about tbe same length of time during one forenoon session of tbe convention. Tbey are reported on about seven pages of tbe official journal, and tbat part relating to tbe particular matter on about four.
Tbe subject was taken up in committee of .tbe whole as it came from tbe committee which framed tbe article, there having been no discussion 'in tbe meantime, in tbis form: “All taxes levied in tbis state shall be as nearly equal as may be.” Probably if no change bad been made therein it would be said, at once, tbat tbe “rule of taxation” is to be found in tbe constitution itself, only requiring action on tbe part of tbe legislature to give it vitality. After brief discussion as to tbe second section of art. VIII dealing with tbe subject of exemptions, it was agreed to report the second clause of tbe first section as it now stands, evidently supposing tbat would leave tbe matter wholly to tbe legislature as to what property should be taxed and what should not be taxed. It was then agreed, substantially without debate, to recommend substituting tbe word “practicable” for tbe words “may be.” Next it was agreed to recommend striking out tbe section on exemptions: tbat being done apparently because such section would be rendered useless by adopting tbe proposed second clause for. tbe first section. Then, without debate, tbe first clause of the section as we now have it was agreed to as a substitute for tbe words “All taxes levied in tbis state shall be as nearly equal as practicable.” After some further discussion and effort to reverse the action as to omitting the sub*606ject of exemptions, it was agreed to report the article with the subject in hand covered as indicated, namely, “The rule of taxation shall be uniform throughout the state, and taxes shall be levied on such property as the legislature shall prescribe.”
On the succeeding day, as before indicated, after brief proceedings, all recommendations of the committee of the whole were adopted. The article was then ordered engrossed. Without further change it was adopted and sent to the committee on revision, by recommendation of which the words “throughout the state” were stricken out.
When the report of the committee of the whole was acted upon by the convention, renewed efforts were made to add a section on the subject of exemptions, but the convention persisted in leaving the whole matter to the legislature under the second clause of sec. 1. It was during the discussion on this subject that the convention was admonished that the completed work, in case of its specifying property for taxation and property to be exempt from taxation, would be construed by the rule, expressio unius est exclusio allerius. Likewise on the floor of the convention several unsuccessful efforts were made to change the first section in the following order and form:
(a) All taxes levied in this state shall be uniform and equal and shall be assessed upon a just value of real and personal property.
(b) All taxes to be levied in this state shall be levied upon all property, both real and personal, according to value.
Thus it will be seen that the convention considerately refrained from tying the hands of the legislature in art. VIII as to any sort of taxation except that on property, or from placing any limit on legislative power as to what particular property to tax or exempt from taxation, or from even specifying, expressly, whether property taxation should be according to valuation. It is quite evident, however, that these two *607ideas were at the start intended to be covered by the language of the first section: (a) all taxes shall be on a basis of equality throughout the state; (b) all taxation of property shall be according to value.
During the brief debates the two ideas suggested were voiced time and again, expressly or impliedly, and were universally conceded, as is indicated by expressions used, to be necessarily fundamental. Nevertheless, it would seem that the rule of taxation, so called, was not in the end so definitely and exclusively confined to the constitution, itself, as at first.
The idea is not without reason that, notwithstanding the entire ehange in language of what became, by the first amendment, the first clause of sec. 1, there was no purpose to change the meaning. The better view, it seems, is that the final adoption of a clause so materially differing from that at first proposed, and the rejection of an expression, modeled after a form used for a similar purpose in many constitutions, was not wholly the result of a mere choice of words to express the one purpose in mind. If the only idea was to make the section as concise as practicable, such an adept in that line as Justice Whitor would have phrased the matter something like this: “Taxation shall be uniform on such property as the legislature shall prescribe,” thus cutting the number of words down one third.
It will be noticed that the second clause of sec. 1 was added and the first perfected by the substitution of the word “practicable” before the first clause as we now have it was substituted for the original. Obviously, in the beginning the section referred to all taxation. It covered value as a basis where only value was usable, and other bases to fit the necessities or proprieties of each case. But when the second clause was added, it impliedly prescribed value as the basis, since, as said by Justice BheweR in Cleveland, C., C. & St. L. R. Co. v. Backus, 154 U. S. 439, 14 Sup. Ct. 1122, “the rule of property taxation is that the property is the basis of taxation. *608It does not mean a tax upon the earnings which the property mates, nor for the privilege of using' the property, but rests solely upon value.” The same idea was pretty clearly expressed in Knowlton v. Rock Co. 9 Wis. 410.
The idea of taxation on a value basis being necessarily embodied in the second clause of sec. 1, all that was necessary to the first was the idea of uniformity. If it had been intended therein to confine the “rule of taxation” in its broader sense to the constitution, the first clause would have been changed so as to merely express the idea, “Taxation shall be uniform on such property,” etc. The use of the significant, the peculiar language, “The rule of taxation shall be uniform,” etc., suggests, to some extent at least, the making of a rule in conformity with the constitution, and not wholly by the organic law itself, as is commonly done. Had the latter idea been in mind there were plenty of models at hand, as, for example, that adopted in Michigan and several other states, “The legislature shall provide a uniform rule of taxation” or “uniform and equal rate of taxation;” and that adopted in Pennsylvania, Missouri and other states, taxation “shall be uniform,” etc.; and that adopted in other states, taxation “shall be uniform,” etc., and by “the fair market value;” and more concise still, that adopted in Virginia and other states, taxation shall be “equal and uniform;” and that in Ohio, taxation of property shall be “according to its true value in money.”
So, looking at the matter as an original proposition, it would seem that the basic idea of the rule of taxation, the real principle thereof, was placed in the constitution. It ex-, pressed this: All taxation on property, as near as practicable, shall bear thereon, relatively equally as to value, throughout the state. To that extent we are to look to the constitution, itself, for the “rule of taxation.” But in a broad sense, in that which gives vitality to the basic principle, it was left to the legislature to make the rule; no legislation to be deemed *609a part thereof, strictly speaking, except that essential to such vitality. The body of the rule was made by the organic law, it was left to the legislature to breathe into it the breath of life.
True, it might well be said that the foregoing is not in entire accord with all the previous expressions of this court on the subject. When we look ta Knowlton v. Rock Co. it would seem that the first idea here was that the constitution solely prescribes the rule, and the legislature solely prescribes the property to which the rule shall be applied. Chief Justice Dixow, for the court, there spoke of “the rule of uniformity prescribed by the constitution.” ITe summed the matter up thus: “The very moment that the legislature say that a specific article ... of property shall be taxed . . . from that very moment the first clause of the section takes effect, and it must be taxed by the uniform rule. The legislature only can prescribe,” then “the first clause of the section governs the residue of the proceeding.”
True, the court suggested, on the occasion referred to, that the term “the rule of taxation shall be uniform” means “the course or mode of proceeding in levying or laying taxes shall be uniform, that it shall in all cases be alike, each step uniform.” Manifestly, however, it was not -intended to say that every , detail as to all kinds of property under all sorts of conditions must be the same. That would be an impossibility; it has never been attempted, here or elsewhere. Practical construction of the constitution from the time it was adopted, common sense, and all authority is to the contrary.
Our taxing laws are not now, and never have been, uniform as to mere methods of imposing taxes. Property of the same general class is, and generally has been, taxed under some circumstances where the same is located, under others where the owner resides or has his principal office in this state, and under still others where his agent is located therein; some kinds of movables of a tangible character are taxed *610where tbe owner resides, while other kinds of such movables are taxed where they are located, or in use, notwithstanding the owner resides in this state; in some cases property of the same general class is divided, part being taxed where located on the 1st day of April in the year the tax is levied, and part where located on the 1st day of May in such year. There are many other instances that might be given of radical differences in treating different kinds of property, and different parts of the same general class, none of which have ever been supposed to violate the constitutional rule of uniformity. All have been supposed to be valid so long as they were uniform within the general or subclass and reasonably calculated to promote the constitutional object as to the whole. State ex rel. Holt L. Co. v. Bellew, 86 Wis. 189, 196, 56 N. W. 782; State ex rel. Milwaukee St. R. Co. v. Anderson, 90 Wis. 550, 568, 63 N. W. 746; Wis. Cent. R. Co. v. Lincoln Co. 57 Wis. 137, 15 N. W. 121.
The language in the, Knowlton Gase was doubtless used with reference to matters so closely connected with the real principle of the rule as to necessarily be a part thereof. That is evinced by the explanatory clause with which the language as to the proceedings being required to be uniform was closed, namely, “the valuation must be uniform, the rate must be uniform.” In Hale v. Kenosha, 29 Wis. 599, the idea that the constitution makes the rule was somewhat emphasized in that, without reference to details of imposing taxes, the language of the Knowlton Gase, that “the legislature only can prescribe the subject of taxation, and then the first clause of sec. 1, art. VIII, takes hold and governs the rest of the proceeding,” was most clearly, it would seem, indorsed as a “sound construction of the constitution.”
In Wis. Cent. R. Co. v. Taylor Co. 52 Wis. 37, 8 N. W. 833, without referring to either of the foregoing cases, it was said, substantially, the rule of taxation is the law of taxation, and the legislature makes the law ancl therefore prescribes *611the rule; and further, “a denial of the power of the legislature to determine and fix the rule of taxation, subject to the limitation of the rule of uniformity, and attempt to ingraft it [the rule] on the constitution itself, as had been done by apt words in other constitutions, has led to much diversity of opinion if not confusion of terms.” The idea that the rule of taxation is the law of taxation was suggested in the opinion of Judge Htjbbelb in Milwaukee & M. R. Co. v. Waukesha Co. 9 Wis. 431, and it was there grounded on the idea that the constitution, sec. 1, art. VIII, permits various rules of taxation, and as many as there are different legislative classes of property prescribed for taxation, which, we have seen, was only subjunctively considered and decided on the appeal, and was held to be erroneous in numerous cases thereafter.
It might be thought, if not repudiated, that the language quoted from the Wisconsin Central R. Co. Case refers to the Knowlton, Slauson, and Hale Oases. We make the disclaimer, since if there had been, on so important a question, any considerate purpose to overrule or even criticise a line of decisions by which the subject refeiTed to had been supposed definitely settled for some eighteen years, that fact would doubtless have been made plain by special reference to such cases.
There are other expressions in the Wisconsin Central R. Co. Case, in their literal sense, suggesting that mere details in laying taxes on property are necessarily part of the rule of taxation, and that they themselves must be uniform, such as “manifestly it [the rule of taxation] is the act of levying a tax or imposing taxes,” “it is the measure of individual duty in support of the public burdens and the means of enforcing the same.. The rule . . . must be prescribed by the legislature.” It “could be applied to rate, or valuation, or mode, or means of assessment or collection, . ’. . or to all property, or to certain subjects, or to certain classes, or kinds, or species of property.” ' We quote thus at length in aid of harmonizing *612up on some clear conception, if practicable, of tlie rule of uniformity and the source of it, by which the law in question must be tested.
Two years after the first Wisconsin Central R. Co. Case was decided, in Wis. Cent. R. Co. v. Lincoln Co. 51 Wis. 137, 15 N. W. 121, a case where the subject involved appropriately suggested the expression, Justice Lyow, for the court, evidently speaking advisedly, used the term “the uniform rule of taxation ordained by the constitution, art. ,VIII, sec. 1.”
Enough has been said to indicate that the court, in the language quoted from the first Wisconsin Central R. Co. Case, could not have intended that the mere mode or manner of assessment of property for taxation or collection of taxes, or assessment of taxes on property, of themselves are parts of the rule of taxation, or that one rule can be applied to one class of property and another rule to another, except in respect to the one being taxable and the other not. True, as the court said and evidently intended, the rule may be applied to details in that details may be provided inconsistent with the constitutional rule or principle. True, the legislature “fixes the rule of taxation:” passes laws subject to the rule of uniformity of the constitution. In other words, the legislature, having regard to the basic principle of uniformity, the real rule in the abstract, must needs pass laws giving vitality thereto and necessarily in conformity therewith. So in a sense the constitution prescribes the basic principle, the real rule of uniformity in the abstract; the legislature prescribes the rule in the concrete: in the sense of creating a union of constitutional principle and such laws as are necessary to give vitality thereto. Those laws are the essentials, as indicated: those for the ascertainment of values and fixing rates and applying the latter to the former so as to effect the constitutional equality, must necessarily be uniform throughout the state, having regard to the varying conditions as to taxing' districts requiring varying amounts to be raised in them re-*613speetively for tbe needs of tbe special localities. Laws as regards mere details, designed to be aids in applying tbe rule, may or may not violate it according as tbey reasonably are in furtherance of it or are manifestly otherwise.
As to tbe legislature prescribing tbe rule of taxation in any other sense than above indicated, it 'is considered that cases cited which might be taken, in some nonessentials, as out of harmony herewith, and also State ex rel. Sanderson v. Mann, 76 Wis. 469, 476, 45 N. W. 526, 46 N. W. 51; Black v. State, 113 Wis. 205, 216, 89 N. W. 522, are to be read in such harmony.
(f) As anticipated, little more need be said on the last proposition suggested at the outset: on what is the uniform rule of taxation; the one by which the law in question must be tested.
It is the rule prescribed by the constitution vitalized by the legislative essentials (no particular law or laws by themselves, but the legislation as a whole) which, in general effect, appropriately provides for imposing upon and collecting from or on account of the property throughout the state prescribed by the legislature for taxation, an equal proportion, as near as practicable, relative to values and taxing districts, of the whole burden of such taxation. Such' essentials include the ascertainment of values in the ultimate, not necessarily every instrumentality to that end, and the rate and the application of the latter to the former so as to secure the final object as near as practicable. Mere differences in methods as to non-essentials in applying the rule itself to a particular class or subclass of property, so long as the same is reasonably calculated to promote such ultimate object, is within the rule because within the principle. All legislation outside of such essentials, or not so promoting, are outside the rule and are condemned thereby.
So it is seen that the constitutional rule looks, as it were, always to the object to be attained, not, necessarily, to the *614mere maimer or means of reaching it. That object is equality; that equality relates to tbe burdens of state taxation, county ■taxation, city taxation, and so on down to tbe smallest and least important governmental subdivision authorized to incur expense to be discharged by taxation or by money previously so provided to that end. In other words, there must be that uniformity, which is essential to equality, throughout each taxing jurisdiction, as to tax burdens imposed on property therein. Lund v. Chippewa Co, 93 Wis. 640, 647, 67 N. W. 927; State ex rel. New Richmond v. Davidson, 114 Wis. 563, 577, 89 N. W. 596, 90 N. W. 1067; Jones v. Memphis, 101 Tenn. 188, 47 S. W. 138; 1 Cooley, Taxation (3d ed.) 333.
Practical equality is constitutional equality. As it is said, “mathematical equality of taxation being unattainable, an approximation, reasonably exact, as nearly proportional as possible in consideration of'the difficulties of the subject, and sufficient for the practical purposes of substantial justice, is all that is required.” Boston, C. & M. R. Co. v. State, 60 N. H. 87; Plumer v. Marathon Co. 46 Wis. 164, 50 N. W. 416; Wis. Cent. R. Co. v. Lincoln Co. 57 Wis. 137, 142, 15 N. W. 121; Kirby v. Shaw, 19 Pa. St. 258, 260; 1 Cooley, Taxation (3d ed.) 257; Burroughs, Taxation, § 26.
The idea expressed in the language quoted from the New Hampshire court is found here very distinctly illustratively applied in the opinion of LyoN, J., in Wis. Cent. R. Co. v. Lincoln Co., supra, which is substantially as follows: Absolute uniformity in every detail in the assessment of property is impracticable, if not unattainable. It is sufficient to satisfy the constitution, in the case of the assessment of real and personal property, that the law provides for the valuation of real property at its full value, and, though a different method and time are provided for valuing personal property, the difference is immaterial since the law requires that to also be appraised at its full value.
*615The result, as above, is believed to be universally sustained, especially by decisions in recent years. If we were to undertake to demonstrate it by reference to constitutions elsewhere and decisions under them, this opinión would necessarily be drawn out to a very great length, and probably without its purposes as to the case in hand, or future situations to which ■the principles may apply, being promoted. It is sufficient, it would seem, that we have shown that it has been the doctrine of this court, without serious disturbance, for some fifty years, that the constitutional requirement is not as to nonessentials, uniformity of methods of taxation, but uniformity in results, within the scope of the rule as stated.
The following citations seem to go to the full extent of what has been said, and cover every phase thereof: Chamberlain v. Walter, 60 Fed. 788; Kentucky Railroad Tax Cases, 115 U. S. 321, 337, 6 Sup. Ct. 57; State Railroad Tax Cases, 92 U. S. 575, 611; Boston, C. & M. R. Co. v. State, 60 N. H. 87; Boston & M. R. Co. v. State, 63 N. H. 571, 4 Atl. 571; Wagoner v. Loomis, 37 Ohio St. 571; State ex rel. v. Jones, 51 Ohio St. 492, 37 N. E. 945; State Board v. Central R. Co. 48 N. J. Law, 146, 4 Atl. 578; State ex rel. Prout v. Aitken, 62 Neb. 428, 87 N. W. 153; State ex rel. Morton v. Bach (Neb.) 100 N. W. 952; State ex rel. K. C., St. J. & C. B. R. Co. v. Severance, 55 Mo. 378; Pittsburgh, C., C. & St. L. R. Co. v. Backus, 133 Ind. 625, 33 N. E. 432; Baltimore & O. R. Co. v. Koontz, 77 Va. 698; Shenandoah Valley R. Co. v. Clarke Co. 78 Va. 269; Comm. v. Brown, 91 Va. 762, 21 S. E. 357; Missouri River, Ft. S. & G. R. Co. v. Morris, 7 Kan. 210; Cent. Iowa R. Co. v. Supers, 67 Iowa, 199, 25 N. W. 128; Louisville & N. A. R. Co. v. State, 25 Ind. 177; Applegate v. Ernst, 3 Bush, 648; Franklin Co. v. Nashville, C. & St. L. R. Co. 12 Lea, 521; Chattanooga v. Nashville, C. &.St. L. R. Co. 7 Lea, 561; Dayton v. Coal & Iron Co. 99 Tenn. 578, 42 S. W. 444; Pacific Nat. Bank v. Pierce Co. *61620 Wash. 675, 56 Pac. 936; Adams Exp. Co. v. Ohio State Auditor, 165 U. S. 194, 17 Sup. Ct. 305; Adams Exp. Co. v. Ohio State Auditor, 166 U. S. 185, 17 Sup. Ct. 604.
Having now set tbe standard by wbicb tbe most important questions on tbis appeal must be tested, before taking them up we will consider those of lesser importance, but wbicb are material, in some aspects of tbe controversy. Tbat will leave, with all tbe more significance, tbe chief subsidiary points of contention for tbe last subject to be discussed.
II.
(a) Counsel for appellant contend tbat tbe assessment was unjust in tbat railroad property was valued on one basis: tbat of including as a distinct element of great value tbe franchise in this state, while, generally speaking, the local assessors omitted from their considerations similar elements, as to ordinary corporations, and did not consider tbe business done, the amount, character, market price, or actual value of tbe corporate stock or funded indebtedness of such corporations or of joint-stock companies, nor tbe good will of business as to persons or firms, only valuing the physical property in use in business enterprises; and tbat tbe omitted matters would, in tbe aggregate, bad they been considered by such local assessors, have added largely to tbe assessed value of such general property, and tbat the state board in determining tbe value of such property and in arriving at tbe rate to be applied to railway property did not add thereto anything for such omitted matters. Tbe findings to tbat effect were all excepted to by counsel for respondents.
Tbe evidence is quite lengthy on tbis branch of tbe case. It is not only unnecessary, but hardly advisable, to refer thereto, except in a general way. Many assessors testified, in words, as found by tbe trial court, but to our mind tbe inference tbe court drew therefrom is unsound. The reasons leading up to such wrong conclusion seem quite plain. As *617tbe witnesses were interrogated, they were impressed with the idea that it was thought that franchises, good will, and similar elements are property in that they are separable from physical things used in a going business, when one is valuing the latter in the business in which they are used, as is of course true in one sense. In that view they testified uniformly that they did not appraise the intangible elements except as to certain public service corporations which, as they conceived, the state requires to be so separately considered and a definite sum added to the value of physical things on account thereof. On the other hand, all testified, when interrogated in respect thereto directly, that they valued the property in all cases at what the same was worth in their judgment, taking the market value as a standard.
Now, the statute does not contemplate that franchises of any sort of corporations, private or public, or good will, or prospects in business, or any such matters shall be considered by the assessor and valued as separate elements; that any definite sum shall be added to the value of the physical things on account thereof. It only contemplates valuation of such physical things under the circumstances of each particular case. The value of the physical elements of corporations, or business property, is made up largely of those which are invisible. Sometimes the value of the latter exceeds that of the former in that, were the two separated, the visible things in the disorganized condition would be worth less than half the value of the property in use as an organized enterprise. State ex rel. N. C. Foster L. Co. v. Williams, 123 Wis. 61, 68, 100 N. W. 1048. In valuing such property, looking only at the visible elements, one would unconsciously include the invisible. No one would think, in valuing a factory of any sort with an established business, of its value as a disorganized piece of property. In appraising it in the former condition at what it would be thought to be worth in money, and without specially taking into consideration the elements giving *618thereto, perhaps, its chief value, such elements -would he in fact included. As a going institution it might he worth all which it originally cost, or more; as a disused piece of property it would he quite likely to he of much less value than it cost, and it might he practically valueless except as mere wreckage, as is illustrated in the case cited.
To our minds, when the witnesses, oh the trial of this case, said they valued the' property of business corporations and companies, observing only the things visible, fixing the value upon those things as they found them, whether they specially thought of the other elements and considered the same or not, they were in effect included. That would he the necessary inference in the absence of very clear evidence to the contrary. There is no such clear evidence in the record before us.
The statute (sec. 1037a., Stats. 1898) referred to as requiring assessments of franchises in certain cases makes no such requirement in any other sense than as above indicated. Before the passage of the statute it was well settled by the decisions of this .court that, there being no written law requiring the separation of tangible elements from intangible ones, such as rights, franchises, and privileges, in assessing the property of a corporation no attempt should be made to do it; that the assessment of the one should be included in that of the other by assessing the -visible elements at what they are worth in money under the circumstances. State ex rel. Milwaukee St. R. Co. v. Anderson, 90 Wis. 550, 63 N. W. 746. The statute did not change the law, but merely made that written which was before unwritten. Monroe W. W. Co. v. Monroe, 110 Wis. 11, 19, 85 N. W. 685; Washburn v. Washburn W. W. Co. 120 Wis. 575, 98 N. W. 539.
It will be noted that the statute merely declares that all property of certain public service corporations mentioned, used in their business, shall be assessed as one body of personal property, which shall include the franchise. It merely recognizes that the visible things, necessarily, in their value, *619include the franchises. Notwithstanding statements here and there in opinions, as to the feasibility of appraising one separate from the other, the better and the prevailing idea is that it is practically an impossibility to do so, without destruction of value:
This court has held that the franchise is the principal, the' visible things the minor, part of an organized business machine, in a corporate organization, though the franchise is seen only through the physical part and its use; that the intangible part is personal property and draws to it, and so impresses the physical thing with its own character as to give to the whole the character of personalty. Yellow River Imp. Co. v. Wood Co. 81 Wis. 554, 51 N. W. 1004; Chapman Valve Mfg. Co. v. Oconto W. Co. 89 Wis. 264, 60 N. W. 1004; Fond du Lac W. Co. v. Fond du Lac, 82 Wis. 322, 52 N. W. 439; State ex rel. Milwaukee St. R. Co. v. Anderson, 90 Wis. 550, 63 N. W. 746; Washburn v. Washburn W. W. Co. 120 Wis. 575, 98 N. W. 539. In the latter case it was. supposed that this particular subject would be definitely set at rest for all purposes of administration of public affairs in this state, this language being used for that particular purpose:
“The separate value of the parts in the aggregate would not necessarily approximate to or be any legitimate measure-of the value of all the parts, viewed as one complete machine, so to speak. The franchise by itself would be valueless. The plant in its parts as realty and personalty according to the-character thereof, irrespective of the combination of all into-one entire thing, might be of little value, and probably would be, as compared to what they would represent in the new form, produced by the union of many parts into one. The great value is produced by the combination of parts into one complete working machine, adapted in a high degree to the service of man. . . . So, in order to deal justly in the distribution of public burdens, the entire property in use and for use in the exercise of the public franchise, for the purposes of taxation, should be regarded as realty, the franchise- *620and movables being viewed as appurtenant to tbe lands, or the intangible element regarded as personalty, and the physical elements, consisting of lands and movables, be regarded as appurtenant thereto and partaking of its character. The latter ... is the most consistent with, and really demanded by, the constitutional method of imposing public burdens in the form of taxation, as regulated by the legislation of this state. . . . The system in vogue here contemplates that everything of value constituting a subject of private ownership and wealth, whether tangible or intangible, which the legislature shall select for the purpose, may be included in the aggregate of property to bear the public burdens of taxation, and in the manner best calculated to take account of values produced by the combination of franchises and other things of value; which can only be attained, as regards the former, which in their very nature are inseparable from the latter without destruction, so to speak, of the body in which inheres the great value, by appraising them as integral parts of the combination, to be viewed in its entirety only, every element being impressed with the character of the one from which springs the public duty and the necessity for inseparable union with it of tangible things consisting of lands and movables, in order to perform it.”
Viewing the evidence in the light of the law as thus settled, our conclusion is that the inference drawn therefrom by the trial court is not warranted. Notwithstanding the testimony of witnesses that they did not consider intangible elements in viewing corporate or other business property in use, the evidence that they valued the property as they saw it, at what it was worth in their judgment, by necessary implication states that they valued the intangible elements in the only way the statute contemplates they shall.
(b) The companion finding to the one above considered, to the effect that 'the state board did not add anything to the aggregate valuations made by local assessors on account of elements omitted from their considerations, while in valuing the railway property such elements, particularly the franchises, were considered, and the value of the whole placed at *621millions of dollars higher than the value placed upon' the physical property, suggesting that the franchises and the physical property were separately valued, seems to he unsupported by the evidence. The mere circumstance that the board made some sort of an estimate of the value, so called, of physical property, — the instrumentality to that end, making the valuation on the basis, it would seem, of what the physical things would cost less, probably, any diminution in value on account of use, — was regarded by the court as an assessment, a valuation of that part of the whole property separate from the other elements, when it was evidently regarded by the board, as it in fact was, merely as an aid in arriving at the value of the one thing to be appraised. . The statute does not require any such procedure as the appraisal of physical property separately from the other elements, and judicial policy condemns it. The board, of its own'motion, and in aid, as was thought, of reaching the ultimate object of placing a value upon the railroad property in this state, in its wisdom did the thing which seems to have confused the trial court somewhat, and which furnished the foundation for the claim,, now pressed upon our attention, that millions of dollars were added to the legitimate valuation of the visible part of the railway property on account of a separate valuation placed on the franchises. It were better, as it seems, to have proceeded along the lines of the statute and the doctrine of this court, that there can be no such separation of tangible and intangible elements which will furnish any legitimate basis for the valuation of one or the other. As neither, strictly speaking, is required to be valued, but only the thing which the two in combination make, why attempt to do what lays the very basis for claims which are illegitimate though embarrassing % The departure from the needful, trying to do the impracticable, would seem to be worse than useless. One might as well try to value the life-blood of a horse, or his capacity to breathe, as try to place a value upon the visible part *622■of railroad property separate from its rights, franchises, and privileges.
Probably no one appreciates the foregoing better than the ■eminent gentlemen composing the state board of assessors. They knew the law and their duty. They had a wide discretion in respect to the mere elements to be considered in making the valuation. If they thought the so-called valuation of physical property would aid them, they were permitted to procure evidence of that sort. We find, however, no satisfactory indication that they arrived at the value of the railroad property by adding together a valuation of visible things and one of other elements, or that they did anything else other than just what they were required to do by the statute, determine the value of the railway property in this state; that included the visible things and the franchise, not as separate things-any more than the horse’s blood, frame, internal machinery, and other elements are separate things; all taken together constitute the horse; remove any one of the things essential to life and action, and all conception of the animate thing, the horse, disappears.
To our minds the only reasonable inference is that the board, from all the evidence before it, performed the duty ■that it was required to perform. The evidence as we read it is to this effect. The board considered the report of the person who, as before suggested, performed the feat of separating and valuing the physical property, tire market price as to each company of its bonds and stocks for a period of ■five years, reports of the engineers of the railway companies as to the physical property, the gross and net earnings of each company, both in the whole and in this state, and other elements, and fixed the value 'of the entire property of each ■company in this state at its due proportion of the value of the entire system, not giving to any particular factor of the evidence any particular weight separate from the other, nor placing any particular value upon any particular element of *623the property separate from the rest. We see no infirmity in that in any respect. The board did not attempt to value the visible things at one sum and the franchise or any other intangible elements, separately or in combination, at another. The evidence given by the president of the commission is unmistakable as to what was done. He said:
“The board never made any estimate of the value of the physical property of the road.” “The board did not have any other evidence of the value of the property, physically considered,' than the reports of Prof. Taylor and of the railroad engineers. The board considered the entire property of the railway company, including its franchises and other property, to be of the value stated, being influenced in that consideration by all the matters that related to that subject of valuation.” “Those matter’s of stock and bond prices, the gross earnings, franchises, and the net earnings were under consideration. The board had no-reason to doubt the report of Prof. Taylor. These data, price of stock and bonds, gross and net earnings, were considered as evidence of the value of the company’s franchises, to help the board in arriving at the value.” "The properly was valued as an entirety. No separate treatment was given to franchises from that which was given to the problem of valuing the property as a whole. It was valued as a whole, and in the valuation of the whole all these methods that I have enumerated were -considered.”
That seems plain. We are unable to see anything therein to warrant finding that the board placed a value on the physical property and another on the franchise element and added the two together, or making any finding susceptible of being so construed.
The trial court, seemingly, was led to phrase the findings so as to give ground for the idea of physical property and franchise values separately considered in arriving at the value of the whole, by the persistent use of the term “value of the physical property,” all through the trial, while it is -evident that, so far as the assessing board was concerned, the *624term Rad reference to physical condition and situation only. It does not appear that the value, strictly speaking, of the things visible separate from other elements was considered, much less determined.
(c) The trial court’s conclusion does not show clearly the manner in which the board valued the general property of the state. One might think, from reading the findings, that it was thought the local assessors, acting in good faith, omitted giving the dignity, as to value of franchises and, some other intangible matters affecting that of tangibles used in corporate and other business, which they should, -and that the board, also acting in good faith, adopted their errors. The board was not expected to and did not consider the work of the local assessors in any other way than as evidence to be considered with all other legitimate evidence. They were required not to merely pass upon the work of such assessors, but upon certain specified proofs and upon all the other evidence, proofs, statistics, and information obtained from all sources, “according to their best knowledge and judgment, to ascertain and determine the true cash value of all the general property of the state assessed and to be taxed in the year in which their determination should be made.” The finding does not show whether it did or did not perform that duty, except by way of inference. Such finding is to the effect that the board considered all the evidence it was required to consider, and assessed the value of the property, but without adding anything specifically to local valuations for franchises, only considering them as affecting the value of corporate property, and did not add anything for other intangible elements mentioned as having been omitted by local assessors. Whether the trial court thought the board committed error in that does not, anywhere, appear. The inference would be that it was so thought, because of the significant finding acquitting it of having acted in bad faith.
Now, if the board valued the general property of the state *625upon, a legitimate basis, it is wholly immaterial wbat errors were committed by tbe local assessors. Obviously tbe basis of tbe rate of taxation applied to railway property in that case would be in no wise affected by any sucb error.
So, tbe board did not commit any error in not adding specifically for tbe value of franchises; they avoided committing error by not so doing. In considering franchises of public service corporations only in connection with visible property they followed tbe statute and tbe settled law independently thereof. In omitting to add specifically for any other omitted elements mentioned, or'specially considering them, particularly of considering the corporate franchises of mere private corporations and assessing other property any different on account thereof than the same property would have been assessed if the same belonged to an individual or individuals, they committed no error.
(d) A very important fact, going to the justice of the tax, appears by the evidence, which might well have been made a part of the findings, since it was within the issues and was distinctly covered by the evidence. While it does not appear that the board made any specific determination as to any particular kind of personal or other property omitted from the local valuations or valued too low locally, it does appear that it considered, in a general but well grounded way, that there were such omissions and undervaluations, and on account thereof it made its valuation of personal property $215,000,000 more than the aggregate of local valuations, or nearly twice thereof; and likewise it made a very substantial increase to the local valuations as to realty.
Then let it be assumed for the purposes of the case, as counsel for respondent suggests, that the law under which the state board acted did not require it to value any general property except that which was valued by the local assessors; that it was. not required to hunt up omitted property and make its valuation larger than it otherwise would have been *626on that account, if it erred in that respect, largely diminishing the burdens that would otherwise have been cast upon railroad companies, they can hardly be heard to complain of it, especially in a court of equity. On the whole, as to this branch of the case, the respondent and all taxpayers similarly situated seem, in the painstaking efforts of the state board to do justice in the matter, to have been given the most distinguished consideration.
(e) The board, in endeavoring, as before indicated, to remedy the supposed mistakes of the local assessors as to omitting to assess property at all, perhaps assumed authority not clearly accorded to it. However, there is no proof that such omissions, if there were any, occurred otherwise than as the result of mere ignorance or error of judgment in a good-faith attempt to administer valid laws. Such circumstances furnish no good ground for complaint on the part of a taxpayer to avoid his tax. Weeks v. Milwaukee, 10 Wis. 242; Smith v. Smith, 19 Wis. 522; Semple v. Langlade Co. 75 Wis. 354, 44 N. W. 749; Green Bay & M. C. Co. v. Outagamie Co. 76 Wis. 587, 45 N. W. 536. The law is well settled, here and elsewhere, that mere unintentional discriminations occurring through error of judgment, and mere differences between different assessors or assessing boards having equal discretionary authority as to evidentiary circumstances to be considered in valuing property for taxation, are not to be classed with intentional or fraudulent discriminations, or discriminations made by the law itself. In that counsel seem to have misapplied such authorities as Hale v. Kenosha, 29 Wis. 599; Knowlton v. Rock Co. 9 Wis. 410; Pelton v. National Bank, 101 U. S. 143, and similar cases, and also overlooked the limitations placed upon Marsh v. Clark Co. 42 Wis. 502, 509, quoted from at considerable length by counsel; Fifield v. Marinette Co. 62 Wis. 532, 22 N. W. 705; Hixon v. Oneida Co. 82 Wis. 515, 531, 52 N. W. 445; Wells v. Western F. *627& S. Co. 96 Wis. 116, 120, 70 N. W. 1071; Hayes v. Douglas Co. 92 Wis. 429, 444, 65 N. W. 482.
The doctrine, as above expressed, is supported generally by the authorities. In Cooley on taxation the subject is covered thus, using as the text, mainly, the language of this court in Weeks v. Milwaukee, credit being duly given:
“It has been decided in a number of cases that incidental omissions from taxation of person or property that should be taxed occurring through the negligence or default of officers to whom the execution of tbp taxing law is intrusted would not have the effect to vitiate the whole tax. . . . The ^execution of these laws is necessarily entrusted to men, and men are fallible, liable to frequent mistakes of fact and errors of judgment. If such errors on the part of those who are attempting in good faith to perform their duties were to vitiate the whole tax, no tax could ever be collected, and therefore, though they sometimes increase improperly the burden of those paying taxes, the rule which holds the tax not thereby vitiated is absolutely essential to the continuation of the government. . . . Indeed, where the omission has occurred through no purpose to evade or disregard official duty, the occasion which produced it seems wholly immaterial.”
Spear v. Braintree, 24 Vt. 414; Watson v. Princeton, 4 Met. 599, are to the same effect. In the last, Chief Justice Shaw said that the final remedy for mere ignorance or want ■of judgment of assessors, the inhabitants believing “that their assessors are acting on erroneous principles, is to elect others in their places.” To the same effect are Wilson v. Wheeler, 55 Vt. 446; Burlington & Mo. R. R. Co. v. Seward Co. 10 Neb. 211, 4 N. W. 1016; Levi v. Louisville, 97 Ky. 394, 30 S. W. 973; Davis v. Newark, 54 N. J. Law, 144, 23 Atl. 276; State v. Lakeside L. Co. 71 Minn. 283, 73 N. W. 970; People v. McCreery, 34 Cal. 432; Georgia M. & G. R. Co. v. State, 89 Ga. 597, 15 S. E. 301.
■ It should be said in passing that there are some authorities *628Folding to a more strict rule than the one indicated, but they are not to be followed in tbis state.
III.
We are favored witb a very lengthy and interesting argument by counsel for appellant, presenting tbe idea tbat tbe law in question is a delegation of legislative power, and void under sec. 1, art. IV, of tbe constitution, limiting sucb power to tbe senate and assembly.
Tbe situation before us being tbe same as tbat presented to tbe supreme court of Michigan (Board of Ed. v. State Board, 133 Mich. 116, 94 N. W. 668) and tbe federal circuit court (Michigan Railroad‘ Tax Gases, 138 Fed. 223), and tbe federal supreme court as well [Mich. Cent. R. Co. v. Powers, 201 U. S. 245], and being supported here by tbe same argument, as we were told by counsel, as was presented on tbe former occasions, witb tbe result tbat tbe position now taken was held to be unsound, we might rest tbe matter on tbe authority of those decisions, especially in view of tbe recent discussions in tbis court of tbe principle involved, particularly tbat in State ex rel. Milwaukee Medical College v. Chittenden, 127 Wis. 468, 107 N. W. 500. However, through abundant precaution, and a desire to do full justice to tbe efforts of counsel to aid us in arriving at tbe right of tbe matter, we have made a reasonably careful study of all tbe aspects thereof suggested, examining all of tbe more than fifty authorities cited to our attention, witb sufficient particularity to discover, as is thought, their bearing and importance; though, for tbe reasons stated, we shall not discuss tbis branch of tbe case to tbe extent which we otherwise would.
It seems tbat counsel have assumed tbat tbe law in question authorizes tbe state board to levy taxes or determine tbe rate of taxation, in tbe sense of determining tbe basic question of bow much money shall be raised by taxation for public *629purposes from a particular class of property, instead of as the fact seems to be, that it merely authorizes the board, partly by the exercise of merely ministerial powers,’ and partly by those ordinary qmrí-judicial powers commonly exercised by administrative boards, to ascertain certain facts, •and from those facts, by mere mathematical work, to determine the amount of tax to be paid as a direct imposition on railway property, pursuant to a previous exercise of legislative authority by the duly constituted authorities to that end. Starting with the assumption indicated, it is not to be wondered at that the multitude of authorities presented to our view should have been thought to have a bearing on the question to be decided.
No one need argue to this court that the legislature cannot' delegate to any mere administrative board power to determine how much money shall be appropriated, “levied,” as the term is used, for state expenses, but we must not confuse the term “levy” in the sense of voting a tax, or determining in gross how much shall be raised by taxing a particular class or general property, with the term' “levy” in the sense of merely performing the administrative duty of laying, on a legitimate basis, taxes previously levied, appropriated, or voted by the legislature. Manifestly, without that distinction in mind one would make but very little real headway in the examination of authorities; many would be found stating in terms or in effect that levying of taxes and fixing the rate of taxation are legislative duties, referring, of course, to levying in the sense of determining how much money shall be raised by taxation, fixing the rate in the sense of determining it with reference to the public needs. If there is anything of that sort in the law in question we are as unable to ■discover it as were the courts that have previously been called upon to consider the similar question in regard to the Michigan law.
It is advisable, in endeavoring to establish the legal status *630of a particular matter, to first fix by accurate analysis the exact nature of that to which the legal principles are to be applied. If one starts with a mere assumption in that regard he may easily delude himself into the idea of having arrived at a correct solution of the question at issue, when, in reality, he has not yet helpfully entered upon a discussion of it.
The foregoing is well illustrated by the following authorities, cited in the brief before us. In Houghton v. Austin, 47 Cal. 646, we read in the syllabus: The law, “in so far as it delegates to the state board the right to fix the rate of taxation, is void.” Looking to the law referred to we find that it gave to the board authority to determine in gross the amount of money to be raised for public purposes, and on that and other data to fix the rate.
In Board of Directors v. Houston, 11 Ill. 318, it is said: “It was not in the power of the legislature, under the constitution, to confer upon private persons or private corporations power to levy . . . taxes.” Laying aside the element of private instrumentality, the defect in the law was that of levying by the board, in the sense of determining the amount to be raised by taxation.
In McCabe v. Carpenter, 102 Cal. 469, 36 Pac. 836, the-subject of the decision on the point here is stated thus: “The power to levy a tax is purely legislative.” In that connection the opinion is to the effect that state taxes must be levied by the legislature, and taxes of sub-public corporations by the people thereof, or the duly constituted governing authorities therein. The circumstance giving rise to the case was a law permitting a mere executive officer to determine the amount of money to be raised for a particular purpose, and requiring the municipal board, without the exercise of independent judgment as to the right or wrong of the matter, to execute the will of such officer. The distinction between such a law and the one here was indicated by this language of the court: “The legislature imposes the tax when it requires an officer *631to make certain computations, the result of which must fix the amount to be raised.” We might proceed to analyze in detail a large number of other authorities placed before us, which number might have been greatly increased, with the result indicated by those specially referred to.
So far as we can see, every feature of the work required of the state board under the law in question is in the line of executing, not making, the law. It is required to value the property upon which the tax is to be laid. It is required to determine, as mere matters of fact, the average rate of taxation on general property in the state. It is then required to apply that rate to the value, as determined by it, of the railway property pursuant to the previous determination of the legislature to raise, by taxation, the amount such rate, so applied, will produce.
The Michigan court said of the same feature we have here in its system:
“The board has imposed on it the duty, ministerial in character, of determining, by computation and data which the law provides for placing in its hands, the rate of taxation which other property in the state is subjected to, as it appears by assessment rolls, which are supposed to contain accurate and true assessments of all property at its true value. . . . The language is . . . the board shall ascertain and determine the average rate levied upon other property, but the general tenor of the act clearly indicates the meaning in which that determination is to be made.”
Any further treatment of this branch of the case would be wholly unnecessary.
IV.
This provision of the constitution is referred to as condemning the law:
“The legislature shall provide for an annual tax sufficient to defray the estimated expenses of the state for each year, and whenever the expense of any year shall exceed the income, the legislature shall provide for levying a tax for the *632ensuing year sufficient, with, tbe otber sources of income, to pay tbe deficiency as well as tbe estimated expenses of tbe ensuing year.” Sec. 5, art. ,VIII.
(a) These ideas are advanced for consideration in respect to tbat provision: Tbe legislature must determine in advance tbe amount required to be raised for tbe particular public purposes, and provide for levying a tax therefor. It cannot legitimately provide for raising a certain indefinite sum by taxation, tbe sum to be fixed by tbe action of otber bodies over wbicb it exercises no control. As a basis for levying a state tax tbe legislature, by tbe constitution, must decide: (1) Tbe question of bow much revenue tbe state needs, tbat to be determined by its probable expenses; (2) what will be a just distribution, tbat is apportionment, of tbe burden.
Many ideas are advanced illustrative of tbe main propositions. We shall not follow in detail tbe reasons by which counsel reach the conclusion tbat tbe law in question does not successfully stand tbe constitutional test suggested.
(b) There are these fundamental infirmities in tbe position of counsel at this point: (1) In tbat they assume tbat tbe constitution requires tbe legislature, in providing for state revenue, to determine for each year tbe amount of money required to be raised by taxation, and tbe purpose making tbe use of such amount necessary or proper; (2) in tbat they assume tbat tbe enactment in question provides for a state tax, strictly speaking, and tbat alone.
If tbe first assumption were sound, all laws we have for indirect taxation, by wbicb tbe state obtains a large propor-' tion of its revenue, would be invalid. It will be noted tbat the language of tbe constitution is general. It does not say tbe legislature shall provide for an annual tax on property, etc. If counsels position were correct, tbe legislature íl providing for tbe raising of money by any sort of taxation would have to,- annually, first determine tbe amount necessary to be raised, tbe proportion thereof to be obtained by *633direct and indirect taxation, and the basis for levying the tax, in order to produce the required result. It does not seem that such a construction of the constitution would he reasonable. The common way of laying taxes, state and national, is to provide for an annual tax sufficient to meet the annual expenses, having regard to the experience of the past and the probabilities of the future, and to appropriate from the fund so accumulated, or to be paid therefrom when accumulated, such sums as seem for the fiscal year necessary for the particular purposes. The raising of the revenue is one thing; the appropriation of the money to' proper public purposes is another. The last is covered by sec. 2 of art. VIII, “No money shall he paid out of the treasury except in pursuance of an appropriation by law.” : Taking the two together it will be seen that one section provides for accumulating the public fund out of which appropriations for public purposes may be made; the other provides for devoting the same to the specific public purposes.
So when the legislature determines upon supplying the public treasury in any legitimate way of annual taxation and the extent required for the annual public needs, in its judgment, and provides a form or forms of taxation the results of- which can only be estimated, together with or without one that will produce a sum certain, all in the aggregate supposed to be sufficient to meet the estimated wants, it satisfies the requirement of the constitution. The only limitations are, it cannot exercise the power of taxation for any but public purposes, and having exercised such power it can only devote the money accumulated thereby to public purposes, and by some reasonably proper way of appropriating the same, so that legislative action can be referred to as authorizing payment of the money out of the public treasury. State ex rel. New Richmond v. Davidson, 114 Wis. 563, 88 N. W. 596, 90 N. W. 1061; State ex rel. Garrett v. Froehlich, 118 Wis. 129, 94 N. W. 50.
*634The two clauses of the constitution, as indicated in the cases cited, are to he read together as limitations upon the purposes of exercising the power of taxation and the power to use the money accumulated hy its exercise. Expressio wvius est exclusio alterius. There is no limitation upon the method of determining the needs, calling for the exercise of the taxing power, in that it is confined to determining hy annual or biennial legislative action in advance the precise amount of money required for all or any of the public purposes. True, sec. 5 contemplates that the legislature shall,, in imposing direct tax burdens, do so with reference to the 'public needs, and with reasonable regard for the amount of revenue that will probably be derived from other forms of taxation, so that in the aggregate there will be money produced to the public treasury enough to meet the estimated expense, but not estimated expense in the sense that there must' necessarily be a schedule prepared by the legislature, or by any person or persons for its guidance, and that the power of taxation shall be exercised with reference to producing the amount of money suggested thereby. The judgment of the legislature as to what the public needs will be need not be' express. It is to be implied, necessarily, from what is done,, in the absence of the clearest of indications to the contrary.
It will not do to set up a judicial standard as to the best method of determining the amount of money to be raised by taxation and of framing laws to put the taxing machinery in motion to that end. Probably the annual budget method is the most businesslike way, both with reference to the' amount to be raised by taxation and the division thereof to' the particular public purposes. But the constitution leaves-the way open for the legislature to exercise the widest discretion in that matter. It can proceed by various forms of taxation for raising public revenue, all or most of which may leave the amount that will be produced thereby somewhat indefinite, so long as the legislative idea is an annual *635income sufficient for the annual needs, and it would be difficult to see how a court could determine that such legislative idea was not involved in the passage of any law relating to the matter, unless the law itself expressly indicated to the contrary, by way of making an appropriation for a particular purpose not public, or providing for the raising of a tax for such a non-public purpose.
(c) It does not seem that the law in question should be regarded as a mere enactment to raise money for state purposes. It is called one to provide for the taxation of railroad companies. The manifest purpose thereof is to tax the railroad property in the state upon the same basis that all other property is taxed; tax it by the same system (the ad valorem way), at the same rate, and for the same purposes. Whether the plan of the legislature be reasonably calculated to effect such purpose we need not enlarge upon at this point. If necessary to the validity of the law, and the idea would be reasonable, we must assume that such was the legislative design and read it out of the law if it is there in any way expressed. It was thought, seemingly, that the amount of money which would probably annually be required to be raised by direct taxation, so far as the same could well be determined when the law was passed, with the amount which would be obtained annually from all other sources of state revenue, would probably equal or exceed the amount of direct tax burdens that would fall on railroad property, if it were burdened, in effect, the same as if it were taxed, proportionally, in all the taxing districts of the state, on an equality with general taxable property therein, the value of the former being, for that purpose, apportioned thereto, in the proportion which the value of .such general taxable property in such districts, respectively, would bear to the total value of such property throughout the state, or, perhaps, if such special property were taxed on a similar basis of distribution in all of the taxing districts of the state through which the roads run. It was fur*636ther, doubtless, tliougbt that the average rate provided for by the law would, as near as the same could be practicably determined, be equivalent to such taxes as would, upon such a distribution, be imposed on the special property. It was further, and within reasonable probabilities, thought, as it would seem, that by applying to the value of special property the average rate of taxation imposed on general property throughout the state, and appropriating all of the results for state purposes, in practical effect each taxing district, while proportionally more heavily burdened for local purposes than it would be under some such method of distributing the value of the railway property for taxation as mentioned, would be correspondingly, as to every dollar of taxable property therein, relieved from state taxes; thus making all property taxed directly, in fact though not in form, bear its relative proportion of all taxes upon a basis of equality. That would satisfy all the requirements of the section of the constitution under consideration.
V.
The validity of the law in question is challenged under see. 1, art. I, and sec. 13, art. I, of the state constitution, and the XlVth amendment of the national constitution. Special consideration thereof is omitted because of what is said in respect thereto under other heads.
VI.
We turn now to that branch of the case involving the principles laid down at first relating to sec. 1, art. VIII, of the constitution. The treatment of that by counsel is under several important subheads. Some of them fall, legitimately, under other equality provisions than sec. 1, art. VIII, as has been indicated. There is little or no difference in the result as to whether they are viewed together or separately. The *637first one we will take up is so within the particular class of real or supposed interferences treated .in numerous federal cases under tbe XIVth amendment, that such cases furnish a very fruitful source of illustrations as to whether it does or does not fatally invade the constitutional rule of equality.
(A) Ratal discrimination in the assessments, as between railway property and general property, is claimed in that, as shown by finding 21, under ch. 378, Laws of 1903, mortgage interests in real estate, except as to railway property, were generally assessed to the owners thereof as realty, the residue of the value only being assessed to the mortgagors.
The nature of so much of ch. 378 as is necessary to have in view in this discussion is indicated by the following abridgment:
(a) The term “mortgage” shall include every conveyance or contract lien on realty intended as security for the payment of money and the indebtedness secured to be paid by such mortgage.
(b) Any such interest shall be regarded as(lrealty and, subject to the next provision, be separately assessed for taxation in the taxing district where the land is located, the value of the equity being assessed to the mortgagor, such value to be regarded as the balance between the whole value and that of the mortgage interest.
. (c) At the option of the mortgagor the mortgage interest and the value of the equity shall be assessed together, without separate valuations, the same as if the land were unin-cumbered, such combined valuation not to exceed the just value of the land as unincumbered property.
(d) Any taxpayer, in furnishing to the assessor of his district his statement of credits over liabilities subject to taxation, shall exclude mortgage interests in realty.
(e) Exemptions in favor of the mortgagor of debts owing by him shall not be allowed on account of the mortgage, nor offsets on account thereof allowed in favor of the mortgagee.
*638(f) Existing laws exempting mortgages of realty from taxation shall not be affected by this act.
(g) This act shall apply only to mortgages on realty subject to direct taxation, and within the foregoing limitations.
Under the last subdivision no diminution of value of railroad property could be or was made by the state board because of incumbrances thereon of a mortgage nature.
Under subdivision (c) it is claimed that regardless of the amount of the credits, whether less or many times the value of the land, in form securing the same, the value of such land must necessarily be the measure of the possible assessment as to both land and credits, and so it is within probabilities that large amounts of property in the nature of credits, not in any legitimate sense representing interests in lands, might escape taxation under the form of law, while like property of the railway companies and others no better situated would be assessed directly or indirectly, and that it is within probabilities that such result occurred as to the assessments in ■question. Ijiat idea is readable out of the act, looking at the words themselves; but such a meaning would make the legislation so very absurd that no one, much less any court, would considerately adopt it if any other which is reasonable can fairly be read from the language used.
It seems that the whole scheme of the act is that the land value, so far as it will go for that purpose, shall stand for the mortgage indebtedness and be assessed to the mortgagee or mortgagor, at the latter’s option,' and to that extent that the mortgage indebtedness shall not be regarded as matter receivable owned by the mortgagee, and so subject to be diminished in his favor in arriving at his taxable property, by ■charging against the same debts owing by him, or regarded as matter payable from the standpoint of the mortgagor and usable by him to diminish his credits in arriving at the amount of his taxable property, and that in case of the value *639of the land being less tban ,tbe indebtedness secured in form thereby, the excess shall’be regarded the same as any other matter of money demand as to the mortgagee, or money payable as to the mortgagor.
Taking subdivisions (a), (c), and (e) together, having regard for the evident purpose of the law, the meaning suggested cannot only be read therefrom, but is quite unmistakable. We could not think of convicting those who had to do with the legislation with being 'the authors of so mischievous a measure, and guilty of such stupid blundering, as would be implied by indorsing the construction thereof contended for.
It will be observed that it is the mortgage, not the mortgage indebtedness, that is made by the act an interest in the land; it is that interest which is required tobe, separately or in combination with the equity, assessed at the option of the mortgagor. That interest carries the mortgage indebtedness to the extent of the value of the land representing it, and no further. Subdivision (e), relating to the status of the mortgage indebtedness as regards.being the basis for exemption on the one hand, or offset on the other, uses the word “mortgage” consistently with the use thereof in subdivisions (a) and (b), and clearly in a way to only carry just so much of the mortgage indebtedness as will correspond to the value of the mortgage interest in-the land. True, subdivision (a) declares that the term “mortgage” shall include the mortgage indebtedness secured to be paid by such mortgage, but that, fairly, means, shall include it to the extent secured thereby. The idea that a mortgage on a parcel of realty worth $1,000 may, under the act, include a mortgage indebtedness named in a mortgage thereof, say of $10,000, so that the value of the former will, in contemplation of law, be the measure of the value of both for the purposes of taxation, does not appeal to us with any favor. The term “se*640cured to be paid by such mortgage,” looking at the substance of tilings, is seen fairly to be limited by the extent to which the mortgage would pay the indebtedness.
As a model for careful legislation the act is not to be, very highly, at least, commended. Nevertheless, the legislative idea intended to be incorporated therein is not particularly obscure; it is well within the scope of the language used, as we have indicated.
(B) Begardless of the proposition already discussed, it is contended that the effect of ch. 378 is to relieve owners of real estate, generally, incumbered by mortgages, of tax- burdens thereon to the extent of the incumbrances, while owners of railway property are not so favored, and that such discrimination invades the constitutional rule of uniformity. That is hardly accurate. The effect is, in view of the railway property not being regarded as realty, to relieve the owners of mortgaged lands generally, at their option, in form, from the burden of taxation, except as to the value of their respective equities, while owners of incumbered personalty, including railway companies, are not so favored, and to exempt all credits secured on realty, generally, to the extent of the value of the security, from taxation, while credits secured on personalty are not so exempt, and to take all indebtedness secured on realty to the extent of the value of .the equity out of the list of .debts owing by the mortgagor chargeable against his credits in determining the amount of his taxable property of the latter sort, while debts of others, whether secured on personalty or not secured at all, are not so treated.
Counsel for appellant, in their view, refer, as worthy to control, to San Mateo Co. v. Southern Pac. R. Co. 13 Fed. 145; Railroad Tax Cases, 13 Fed. 722, and Santa Clara Co. v. Southern Pac. R. Co. 18 Fed. 385, and some other federal cases, but none decided in the federal supreme court, recognizing the doctrine first laid down definitely by Justice Field in the Santa Clara Case, as sound. Such doctrine, if *641given tbe force counsel accords thereto,-would condemn tbe law bere under tbe XIVtb amendment.
Counsel for respondents assume to break tbe force of appellant’s position as above, by referring to Cent. Pac. R. Co. v. State Board, 60 Cal. 35, and Germania T. Co. v. San Francisco, 128 Cal. 589, 61 Pac. 178, where similar legislation to ours was sustained. That does not meet tbe case, since tbe constitution of California expressly negatives any limitation upon legislative power in respect to tbe matter. Counsel for respondents further suggest that, if tbe law be unconstitutional, that fact is immaterial, since then all mortgage indebtedness, like other indebtedness, would be taxable to tbe creditors, citing Kneeland v. Milwaukee, 15 Wis. 454. Here, again, no real advance is made as regards furnishing a basis for solving tbe question in band, since tbe theory suggested as supporting the taxability of mortgages or mortgage indebtedness, if adopted, would present tbe question anew as to whether tbe valuation of general property for taxation be not fatally defective by reason of tbe omission of large amounts of property, or a strong probability in that regard, not through any mistake of judgment or mere inadvertence, but because of tbe local assessors being required, in form, by an invalid law, not to assess tbe omitted property. On that tbe decision in Kneeland v. Milwaukee, 15 Wis. 454, has not, as appears, been overruled. Tbe theory thereof is that if a law good in form but invalid in fact commands tbe assessors to violate the rule of uniformity, and they do so in good faith, prejudicially to taxpayers, it is not one of those mere mistakes said not to affect tbe tax.
Again, tbe decisions in California are of little help, in face of tbe fact that a state law which violates tbe fundamental right of equal protection of tbe laws falls under tbe condemnation of tbe XlVth amendment, whether it is or is not in harmony with tbe state constitution. Tbe state constitution itself may violate such fundamental rights. Nash*642ville, C. & St. L. R. Co. v. Taylor, 86 Fed. 168. That is tbe basic principle -upon which jurisdiction was taken in the San Mateo Case. Independently of that principle, as said, commonly, in the federal cases, in terms or in effect, what invalidates the equality provisions of the federal constitution depends so much upon the circumstances of each particular situation and upon the constitutional guaranties, immunities, and privileges in the organic .law of the state where the question arises, that the result in one instance does not furnish any very certain guide as to any other situation, particularly one under a different constitutional system. «,
In the last idea expressed is the chief infirmity of the position of counsel for appellant. It seems to be assumed that the case arising in California, decided by Justice Field and an associate, should be controlling here. No differences in the two situations are recognized by counsel, while there are -such, and of quite a radical nature.
It would take a pretty clear case to warrant a court in con■demning the law of its own legislature under the equality provisions of its constitution on the faith of a decision in the highest tribunal of the land upon a somewhat different situation. To do so merely on the strength of a decision of a lesser federal tribunal, even when pronounced by so eminent a jurist as all recognize in Justice Field, would not be warranted at all.
It seems that, so far as the Santa Clara County Case is like, in its facts, to' the one before us, it runs counter to many recent decisions of the federal supreme court. Under our constitution, it must be remembered., there is the amplest power on the part of the legislature to exempt an entire class of property from taxation, and to make such class very narrow, even excluding .from the benefits accorded to the members thereof those owning property of the same general class, so long as the character of that owned by those of the subclass is so far different from that owned by others, as, with*643in tbe boundaries of reason at least, to suggest necessity or propriety, having regard to tbe public good and tbe constitutional object to be attained, and limitations in respect thereto, of substantially different legislative treatment. Few cases that can be found have gone further on that line than Wis. Cent. R. Co. v. Taylor Co. 52 Wis. 37, 8 N. W. 833. There, as we have seen, a very small subclass of real estate, a class so small as to be confined to one owner, was deemed sufficiently different from realty generally to warrant the legislature in exempting it from taxation. It is not likely, as we have before indicated, that this court will soon go further on that line than it did in that case. • Certainly there is no call therefor in the ease before us. In the particular field covered by the ultimate result there reached, the case is distinguished for definiteness, and has been frequently referred to with approval, here and elsewhere. State v. Whitcom, 122 Wis. 110, 99 N. W. 468; Black v. State, 113 Wis. 205, 89 N. W. 522; Kingsley v. Merrill, 122 Wis. 185, 99 N. W. 1044; Milwaukee E. R. & L. Co. v. Milwaukee, 95 Wis. 42, 69 N. W. 794.
We do not find the cases relied upon by counsel for appellant, though nearly a quarter of a century has elapsed since they were decided in the circuit court of California, have been referred to in any decision of the supreme court of the United States as authority on the particular question. We do not find them referred to in any decision in a lesser federal tribunal with approval in a manner sufficiently indicating that the doctrine thereof in question has been received as authority under sufficiently similar circumstances to those in hand, to make them particularly persuasive here. The principle, as thus mildly read out of such cases, has been applied commonly:
“Now, the equal protection of the laws declared by the XIVth amendment ... of the constitution, secures to each person within the jurisdiction of a state exemption from any *644burden or charge other than such as are equally laid upon all others under like circumstances.” Ajsteebsob', Circuit Judge, in Fraser v. McConway & T. Co. 82 Fed. 257, 260, citing the San Mateo Case.
The following indicates fairly the present temper of the highest tribunal on this question:
In Kidd v. Alabama, 188 U. S. 730, 23 Sup. Ct. 401, the court dealt with a state law for taxing part of a general class assumed tó be a legitimate subclass, while exempting the rest of such general class from a like burden. That was held to be proper as not violating the XIVth amendment, the court saying, “We need not repeat the commonplaces as to the large latitude allowed to the states for classification upon any reasonable basis. What is reasonable is a question of practical details.”
In American S. R. Co. v. New Orleans, 181 U. S. 277, 21 Sup. Ct. 646, a law discriminating as to taxation between two classes of refiners, exempting one and taxing the other, the only distinction between the two being that the latter were producers who did their own refining, while the former were in the business of refining only, was sustained, the court saying:
“The act in question does undoubtedly discriminate in favor of a certain class of sugar refiners, but this discrimination, if founded upon a reasonable distinction in principle, is valid.” “This court has had, repeatedly, occasion to sustain discriminations upon reasons much more obscure than this. It was not" intended by the XIVth amendment to prevent a state from changing its system of taxation in all proper ways; it may, if it chooses, exempt certain classes of property altogether, it may tax real and personal property in a different manner, may tax visible property and not tax securities, and may allow or not allow deductions for indebtedness. All such regulations, and those of like character, so long as they proceed within reasonable lines and general usage, are within the discretion of the state legislature, or the people of the state in framing their state constitution.”
*645In tbe still more recent case of Coulter v. Louisville & N. R. Co. 196 U. S. 599, 25 Slip. Ct. 342, tbe same doctrine is indorsed quite broadly, as tbe quotation from tbe former decision would indicate. Tbe following are in harmony therewith and in general indicate that tbe federal supreme court does not assume to deal with state laws, under the XIVth amendment, that fall with any fairness within tbe field of classification: Bell’s Gap R. Co. v. Pennsylvania, 134 U. S. 232, 10 Sup. Ct. 533; Adams Exp. Co. v. Ohio State Auditor; 165 U. S. 194, 17 Sup. Ct. 305; Magoun v. Ill. T. & Sav. Bank, 170 U. S. 283, 18 Sup. Ct. 594; Merchants’ & M. Bank v. Pennsylvania, 167 U. S. 461, 17 Sup. Ct. 829; Gulf, C. & S. F. R. Co. v. Ellis, 165 U. S. 150, 17 Sup, Ct. 255; Clark v. Titusville, 184 U. S. 329, 22 Sup. Ct. 382; Home Ins. Co. v. New York, 134 U. S. 594, 10 Sup. Ct. 593; Billings v. Illinois, 188 U. S. 97, 23 Sup. Ct. 272; New York v. Barker, 179 U. S. 279, 21 Sup. Ct. 121; Travellers’ Ins. Co. v. Connecticutt 185 U. S. 364, 22 Sup. Ct. 673; Turpin v. Lemon, 187 U. S. 51, 23 Sup. Ct. 20.
In view of tbe foregoing it could hardly be expected that tbe Santa Clara Co. Case and its companion case would be regarded, in tbe situation before us, as very persuasive as to condemning tbe law in question under sec. 1, art. VIII, of our constitution. If it stand tbe test of that it will necessarily pass tbe test of all other constitutional equality provisions which counsel for appellant claim condemn it.
If it were not for the great importance of this case, and tbe painstaking presentation of this particular question by counsel for appellant, we should have felt warranted in saying, with brief discussion of tbe matter, that it is ruled by tbe Wis. Cent. R. Co. Case, 52 Wis. 37, 8 N. W. 833, and Kingsley v. Merrill, 122 Wis. 185, 99 N. W. 1044. In tbe latter tbe law exempting from taxation all dues from insolvent debtors while taxing dues from solvent debtors, upon a careful study of tbe subject, was held legitimate under *646sec. 1, art. VIII, and it was shown that practical construction, in that regard, in this state, extended over a period of more than fifty years, supported that view.
The law in question, with some exceptions, specializes as to mortgages on real property. The necessary effect, as indicated, is to exempt from taxation so much of the indebtedness secured by such mortgages as is represented by the value of the security, and substitute the latter for the property exempted, assessing the same to the mortgagee or the mortgagor, at the option of the latter. The ostensible purpose, at least, of such legislation is to make the owner of the mortgage indebtedness bear, proportionally to his interest, so called, in the property, the burden of taxation thereon; hut there is no escaping the ultimate effect, as indicated, and the legislature must be presumed to have intended it. The wisdom of the enactment is not a matter for the court to deal with. Experimental and theoretical economists, and those who assume that natural laws can be turned aside by an act of the lawmaking power, have the same right to their day as other people, and, in so far as their notions shall obtain legislative sanction and do not violate the fundamental law, the court must enforce them, regardless of its view of the matter from the practical standpoint, with the same fidelity as it enforces any other enactment. The one here, within the language of the supreme court above quoted, is according to the now somewhat general usage.
In recent years the species of legislation of which the act before us is a type has had very many advocates. Some have approached the matter, favorably, from one point of view and with one motive and some from another point and with another motive. The one have thought to relieve the debtor from a burden, casting it on the creditor, while the other have thought to relieve the creditor while ostensibly relieving the debtor, believing that in the end the latter would inevitably be the one chiefly benefited. The persuasive idea, *647all the time kept in evidence, is that mortgage taxation is donble taxation and should he avoided as unjust; that to tax the mortgage, taking the value of the security from the value of the land, otherwise necessarily taxable to the mortgagor, in a measure would relieve the latter. There has been much legislation of that sort, and it has been generally sustained. The following would seem to be unmistakable evidence that classification, as between indebtedness secured by mortgages on real estate and other indebtedness for purposes of taxation, is widely recognized as proper: Firemen’s F. Ins. Co. v. Comm. 137 Mass. 80; State v. Runyon, 41 N. J. Law, 98; Common Council v. Board of Assessors, 91 Mich. 78, 51 N. W. 787; State v. Darcy, 51 R. J. Law, 140, 145, 16 Atl. 160; People ex rel. Jefferson v. Smith, 88 N. Y. 576, 585; Savings & Loan Soc. v. Multnomah Co. 169 U. S. 421, 18 Sup. Ct. 392; 1 Cooley, Taxation (3d'ed.) 272, 273.
(0) If we assiune that the mortgages, so called, of railway property are of the same general class as mortgages of realty generally, in that they are to some extent at least on lands, there would still be a veryrwide distinction between them and ordinary mortgages. The railroad, mortgages, so called, are as a rule trust deeds, securing millions of dollars in bonds distributed over a wide extent of country, and in many cases among the people in many countries, the owners, in the aggregate, numbering up into the thousands. It is easily seen that to apply such a law as the one in question to such a situation, requiring each bondholder to be regarded as the owner of so much, in value, of the railroad property as his bonds called for, and to tax him accordingly, would be more than impracticable, it would be impossible as regards producing any real beneficial results. The differences between the railway mortgage indebtedness and ordinary mortgages on realty are very marked. Moreover, it cannot be considered that the former are, in a legal sense, on real property. If the point made by counsel would be good for anything, it *648■would, apply to indebtedness secured on. personal property, generally speaking, or indebtedness unsecured, a's well as to tbe railway company indebtedness secured by trust deed.
In dealing witb tbis subject it is to be remembered, at every step, that while tbis court bas beld, and now affirms most decidedly, that there cannot be any classification of property under sec. 1, art. VIII, for different rules or rates of taxation, a latitude, under tbe constitution, stopping only at the boundaries of reason, exists for tbe classification of property as between that to be taxed and that not to be taxed, and on that branch of tbe subject tbe authorities with which tbe books, state and national, are replete are in point, whether treating of such classification as is permissible here or tbe classification for different rates and different rules, as is permissible in many jurisdictions.
(D) Our attention is called to that feature of tbe act requiring tbe rate of taxation to be applied to railway property to be determined witb reference to conditions existing tbe year previous to tbe year tbe tax is imposed, while tbe burdens imposed on general property in any year are determined with reference to tbe conditions then existing. That matter is particularly suggested as fatal under sec. 5, art. VIII. What we have said as to tbe requirements of that section leaves tbe matter now only important under tbe equality clause of art. VIII.
As we have seen, uniformity of rule looks to uniformity of burden, not to uniformity in mere methods of laying tbe burden. It was apparent to tbe legislature, in considering the subject which resulted in tbe enactment in question, that it would necessarily take so much time to fairly assess tbe railroad propeidy and determine the average rate of taxation to be applied thereto that, if tbe work was to be done witb any reasonable degree of accuracy, tbe circumstances regulating tbe rate as to general property one year would have to be applied to railway property tbe succeeding year. *649Tbe proceedings in this instance, from tbe time the state board of assessors commenced its work t till tbe rate of taxation was finally determined, covered a period of about one year and a balf. It is perfectly feasible as to general property to levy the taxes of one year with reference to tbe valuation of property and the public needs .in that year. As to railway property, if tbe burdens imposed on general property are to be taken as tbe basis for those imposed upon the latter, a delay in levying tbe tax, into tbe next year, is unavoidable. Tbe legislature may well have considered that tbe average rate of taxation throughout the state would not vary materially as between one year and tbe succeeding year, and therefore, to give tire board of assessors ample time to determine all tbe facts involved in tbe average rate of taxation on general property as to one year, with tbe highest degree of certainty attainable, and apply tbe result upon tbe value of tbe railway property ascertained as of such year tbe succeeding year, tbe result would more nearly approach tbe standard of equality required by tbe/ constitution than any other method that could be used. That tbe result falls within tbe scope of tbe discretionary authority of tbe legislature seems plain.
(E) Tbe further special argument is made under sec. 1, art. VIII, that tbe law in question is unconstitutional in that it provides for taxing railway property at a different rate than general property. In support of that Pingree v. Auditor General, 120 Mich. 95, 18 N. W. 1025, is referred to as having passed upon precisely tbe same question under precisely tbe same conditions. That case dealt with a law for taxing telegraph and telephone lines on the ad valorem plan. Tbe state treasurer, auditor, and commissioner of tbe land office were required during a stated time to value tbe property of tbe companies mentioned in tbe act, and at tbe same timeto determine tbe rate of taxation to be imposed thereon, tbe same to be tbe average rate of taxation for all purposes *650imposed on general property throughout the state the previous year, the rate to be determined from the records and files in the auditor’s office. The court condemned the law because, as was supposed, it contemplated the imposition of a state tax only upon one kind of property, the rate to be determined in a different way and to be other than that imposed on other property for the same purposes. We are not concerned with the question of whether the Michigan court properly construed the law. It proceeded to the result reached without any attempt to carefully analyze the enactment. Maybe no such analysis was needed. The result is of no consequence in our investigations unless our law receive the same construction as that given to the Michigan act. We 'may well concede that if the same construction should be given to our law, we would reach the same result as the Michigan court did. Assuming that the construction so given to the Michigan law is correct, there are such differences between it and ours as, under the circumstances, -to warrant a different meaning being read out of the latter. The two are identical in some respects; they are identical as to the basis of the rate to be applied to the special property, as to the manner, generally speaking, the value of the special property is to be determined, as to the rate to be applied to the latter one year being based on the average rate of taxation on general property the previous year, and the feature as to payment of the tax on the special property to the state treasurer. But our act is widely different in administrative features. It shows a broad, comprehensive plan, having for its evident purpose the taxing of railway property, in effect, for all state and local purposes the same as other property is taxed. If the literal sense of the law vjould suggest the meaning accorded to the Michigan law, that of itself would raise an ambiguity suggesting and warranting judicial construction.
It must be presumed that the legislature intended to make a valid law. It must be construed in the light of history, the *651manifest object in. view, and all circumstances furnishing any light as to the real legislative intent. No construction should be adopted rendering a law invalid if, under all the circumstances, a meaning can be read therefrom, reasonably, which will render it valid. As is commonly said, the intent of an act, when discovered, if found expressed in any reasonable-view of its words, is to be deemed to be as efficiently incorporated therein, by implication, as if expressed by words taken in their literal sense. To that end the terms of a law-can be given a literal or a strict construction and the literal sense of words can be violated, as may seem best calculated' to carry out the real purpose of the law-makers. Ogden v. Glidden, 9 Wis. 46; Blunt v. Walker, 11 Wis. 334; State ex rel. Heiden v. Ryan, 99 Wis. 123, 127, 74 N. W. 544; Wis. Ind. School v. Clark Co. 103 Wis. 651, 659, 79 N. W. 422; Hoffman v. Maffioli, 104 Wis. 630, 640, 80 N. W. 1032.
• We cannot be blind to the matter of common knowledge that the act in question was passed as the result of years of' agitation of the question of imposing tax burdens upon railway property the same as upon all other property; to take the former out of the class taxed indirectly, independently-of sec. 1, art. VIII, and which, as was supposed, was specially favored in that regard, and put it with property directly taxed under such section and, necessarily, to apply thereto the rule of uniformity ordained thereby. The law was not enacted for the primary purpose, as is evident, to make railway property bear a greater burden than before, or a different burden than general property, or for the mere purpose of imposing thereon strictly state taxes. Eight the-reverse, it was designed to make such property bear equally,, dollar for dollar of value, with general property throughout the state prescribed by the legislature for taxation, state,, county, city, and all other tax burdens imposed directly -on-property. That purpose, easily seen in the enactment, should prevail regardless of the mere method adopted by the legis*652lature to effect it, resulting in all taxes collected from railway property being paid to tbe state treasurer and then regarded as a substitute for state tax, levied in the ordinary way in part, and in part as an equivalent for state taxes in effect imposed on localities and there retained as a just exchange with the state, the state acting as an agency for the former and they as agencies for the latter, the results being sufficiently transferred from the one to the other, so that each would obtain its own by the constructive exchange of equivalents. s
In working out the supremely complex problem of how best to tax railway property, under the constitutional rule of uniformity, a problem which has vexed legislatures and courts throughout the country for fifty years or more, as we have before indicated, the legislature has a wide discretion. The necessity for treating railroad property differently from general property as to mere method of attaining the constitutional object, is manifest. That necessity implies more than mere permission; it implies a constitutional command. All reasonable effort to respond to that command, instead of violating the constitutional rule, promotes the very equality it was designed to secure.
(F) There was a suggestion made that the law is invalid for not providing for notice of the proceedings to determine the average rate of taxation upon general property of the state. We cannot see any infirmity in the law in that respect, either under the constitutional requirement for due process of law or under sec. 1, art. VIII, or any other constitutional provision, state or national. No judicial proceedings, or proceedings of a judicial nature, are contemplated in determining the mere rate of taxation upon gen-oral property. The duties contemplated are of a ministerial nature only. No notice is ever given as to any ordinary proceeding in respect to determining the rate of taxation on •general property in the local taxing districts. In that re*653spect the owner of special property bears the same relation to the state board as the owners of general property do to-the ministerial officers in the local taxing districts. The latter, from data previously provided for their use or which they provide by the mere ascertainment of facts, not requiring the performance of judicial duties, perform the work assigned to them by the law.
The terms of the act in question on that are plain.
“The board . . . upon returns . . . from,.county, town, city and village officers, or both, shall ascertain and determine the aggregate tax in the whole state for state, county and local purposes levied on the general property of the-state, excluding special assessments on property for local improvements, and . . . the amount thereof shall be entered on the records of the board. Erom the aggregate true cash value of the general property of the state, and the aggregate-of taxes so determined, . . . the board shall compute and determine the average rate of taxation, state, county and local consolidated, by dividing the aggregate taxes by the aggregate true cash value, etc., . . . which said rate so arrived at and determined, shall be entered upon the records-of the board and shall constitute the rate of taxation on the true cash value of the property of the railroad companies liable to taxation under this act.”
It seems impossible to read therefrom a requirement for the exercise of any judicial or legislative power.
The same view as above is expressed in regard to precisely the same kind of a provision in the Michigan railroad tax law in Board of Ed. v. State Board, 133 Mich. 116, 94 N. W. 668, and Michigan Railroad Tax Cases, 138 Fed. 223, 233-235, the latter case being affirmed on appeal to the federal supreme court. In the federal circuit court it was said:
“The rate is fixed by the constitution of the state of Michigan and the legislature. The duty imposed by the constitution and the statute upon the state board of assessors to assess and determine the average rate levied upon other property upon which ad valorem taxes are to be assessed is ministerial, *654■and consists of mathematical calculations. There is, then, no more discretion in the state board of assessors than if the rate had been named in the constitution and statute.”
The conclusion in the cases cited, in conformity to elementary principles, is that, in the circumstances contemplated by the statute, no notice to taxpayers is required. 1 Cooley, Taxation (3d ed.) 59; Hagar v. Reclamation Dist. 111 U. S. 701, 4 Sup. Ct. 663; Spencer v. Merchant, 125 U. S. 345, 8 Sup. Ct. 921; Fallbrook Irr. Dist. v. Bradley, 164 U. S. 112, 174, 17 Sup. Ct. 56.
Moreover, the law provides, in addition to affording a hearing to owners of railroad property on the preliminary assessment, that the board shall meet at the state capítol at Madison, on the second Tuesday of November in each year, ■and continue in session from day to day unless adjourned for a longer time, for such period as is necessary, not later than the 15th day of December following, for the purpose of reviewing the valuation and assessment of railroad property and the valuation of the general property of the state, and further that during such period any railroad company interested may appear and be heard as to the value of and assessment of the property of such company and the tax to be levied thereon, and as to general property of the state. It appears by the record that such provisions were complied with in every respect. A date being thus fixed in such a law for sessions of the board, .when interested parties may appear and be heard on all questions in respect to which they have any interest, no other notice to them is required unless the written law prescribes otherwise. Kentucky Railroad Tax Cases, 115 U. S. 321, 6 Sup. Ct. 57; Pittsburgh, C., C. & St. L. R. Co. v. Backus, 154 U. S. 421, 14 Sup. Ct. 1114; Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Richardson Co. (Neb.) 100 N. W. 950.
(G) Reference is made as to the facts as to street railway property, and particularly that of interurban railroads oper-*655atecl by electricity, and some other property not belonging to railway companies, having to do with transportation of some sort, being taxed by a different method than ordinary railroad property, as violating the constitutional rule of uniformity. That seems to be sufficiently answered by what is said elsewhere in this opinion, as to the right of the legislature to classify property under sec. 1, art. VIII, some to be taxed and some to be exempt, so long as each particular class or subclass has real distinctions, reasonably specializing it as to other property. The discretion of the legislature in this field is so broad that it is not competent for the court to mark the constitutional limitations of it other than at the farthest one might go without transcending all reason. Again, we point to Wis. Cent. R. Co. v. Taylor Co. 52 Wis. 37, 8 N. W. 833, as an indication of the scope of that power as here recognized. Applying the circumstances there held to warrant specializing as to part of a subclass of property owned by a single corporation as a test here, the legitimacy of that as between electric railway property and other property mentioned, 'and ordinary railway property, becomes at once apparent.
True, the rights granted to electric railway corporations, and business, done by some of them, now approach more nearly to those of ordinary railway corporations than formerly, but there are yet quite radical differences. That is recognized in the degree of legislative regulation and control here and generally exercised over the latter, not exercised over the former. It finds its justification in the right of classification under constitutional equality clauses, by reason of there being real differences between the two kinds of property, which right, as we have seen all through -our discussion, applies to sec. 1, art. VIII, so far as relates to the division between property to be taxed and property not to be taxed. The authorities cited by the circuit judge in his opinion are quite ample on this point. Chicago & N. W. R. Co. v. Osh*656kosh, A. & B. W. R. Co. 107 Wis. 192, 83 N. W. 294; Milwaukee E. R. & L. Co. v. Milwaukee, 95 Wis. 42, 69 N. W. 794; People ex rel. Metropolitan St. R. Co. v. State Board, 199 U. S. 1, 25 Sup. Ct. 705; Pacific Exp. Co. v. Seibert, 142 U. S. 339, 12 Sup. Ct. 250; Michigan Railroad Tax Cases, 138 Fed. 223; Savannah, T. & I. of H. R. Co. v. Savannah, 198 U. S. 392, 25 Sup. Ct. 690.
It appears inadvisable to further discuss tbis branch of tbe case. No court bas yet held, and until great changes occur none is liable to hold, under any of the equality clauses of state or national constitution, that electric railway property, or any of the kinds of property suggested to our attention, must necessarily be classed with ordinary railway property in making a division between property to be taxed directly and that to be exempt from taxation entirely or taxed indirectly, or as to mere details of applying the rule of uniformity to the two classes of property when taxed directly, so as to produce practical equality in results.
(II) Much of the argument of counsel for appellant is centered on the ideas that railway property is wholly located where its visible property is situated, or at least there and where its offices are located; that it is a principle generally recognized,' and necessarily so, in fixing the situs of all property for taxation, that it must be located by the law within the boundaries of those minor subdivisions of the state where it or its owner receives, to some degree at least, in some reasonable view of the matter, the benefits of the civil government exacting the tax; and that in disregard of that principle as to railway property, the law in question violates both sec. 1, art. VIII, requiring the rule of taxation to be uniform, and sec. 13, art. I, prohibiting the taking of property for public use without due process of law, and other constitutional guaranties as to equality before the law. The discussion of the subject under this head is sufficient for all.
Counsel assume, not without warrant, that the effect of the *657law is to give to the special property a general situs. If the claim be sound, that the basis of the right to tax is benefits received by the person taxed, as to his person or property, and therefore that the latter cannot be legitimately given a situs for the imposition of tax burdens beyond the boundaries of the taxing district where the property, or the owner thereof, or his agent or office, is located,' — beyond where the property may be reasonably said to be constructively or actually located, — and as to railway property that such location is confined to the territory through which the road runs and where its place or places of business, its office or offices, are located, and the effect of the law is as claimed, that is, that it gives to railway property a situs for taxation in every district in the state in the proportion that the assessed value of the general property subject to taxation in such taxing districts, respectively, bears to, the entire assessed value of the railway property, then the conclusion that the law is void under both of the constitutional provisions specially mentioned would be unavoidable, and it would be significantly so as to violating the constitutional requirement that “the rule of taxation shall be uniform.” .
The learned circuit judge, as we have before seen, met this phase of the case, as also counsel for respondents now do, by the doctrine, supposed by them to be the law of this state, but which we were compelled to utterly reject early in this opinion, that it is competent for the legislature, under see. 1, art. VIII, to classify property prescribed for direct taxation, making a uniform rule for one class and a second such rule for another, and so on, without limitation as to number of classes except the extent of legitimate differences, resulting in different rules and different rates of taxation. If the law had no more secure foundation to rest upon than that, it certainly could not survive the judicial test. Unless it can be seen that, under the rules heretofore laid down as to the scope and meaning of sec. 1, art. VIII, the law in question con*658templates substantial uniformity, actual uniformity so far as in tbe judgment of the legislature that is attainable as between the two great classes of property prescribed for direct taxation, and that the treatment of each class by a method uniform as to that class only, but both aimed at the same general result: to make every dollar in value of the two classes, regarded as one, bear the same burden of taxation, state, county, town, and so on down to the smallest and least important taxing district throughout the state, as every other dollar of such value bears, having regard to differences and circumstances as to- taxing districts,- — then it cannot be sustained. That broad principle so strongly contended for by counsel for appellant meets with our unqualified approval, and is deemed to have been, as before said, the position of this court from the first instance of its being called'upon to necessarily deal with the question.
Prom the point of view stated the law must stand or fall. It were better that the latter alternative should occur than that the valuable safeguard against oppression so firmly intrenched in our constitution should be broken down by the tribunal especially charged with the duty of guarding it, or frittered away by following the reasoning in decisions elsewhere, under constitutions expressly, or by clear implication, providing for or permitting numerous rules and rates for taxation.
Written constitutions are the bulwarks of civil liberty. In contemplation, they are supposed to be proof against all legislative assaults upon those boundaries definitely fixed thereby, to pass which would endanger that safety of persons and property for which governments are established. However, no constitution can be stronger than the tribunal created thereby to guard it. It is not self-executing, nor is it self-protecting; the legislature must vitalize its provisions and the courts must protect it.
We may justly look with pride upon the manner in which *659tbe duty, indicated, was performed in regard to tbe important equality clause under consideration, wben its true meaning was proclaimed in 1859. Tbe vigorous language of Obief Justice DixoN on that important occasion, speaking for tbe court, was well calculated, as it was doubtless- designed, to leave no manner of doubt for tbe future as to whether the way was open to discriminate between tbe burdens to be cast upon different kinds of property. Doubtless it was seen that if such way was left open there would be constant pressure to obtain tbe advantage of it, and, in tbe struggle, tbe large and powerful would inevitably oppress tbe weak. All that is clearly manifested by tbe language of tbe chief justice in connection with that heretofore quoted in this opinion, as to tbe section under discussion contemplating but one class of property for direct taxation, and one rate of taxation, having regard only to differences in expenses peculiar to localities. He thus emphasized the position of tbe court:
“~We are of the opinion that these are the very mischiefs which they intended to guard against and prevent. Single individuals have seldom acquired such an influence over the legislative mind as to secure to themselves the advantages arising from such legislation. There was little danger to he apprehended from that sourcej hut the combined influence and efforts of corporations and classes had. Such evils had been sorely felt in many of the older states. It was against them and all other unjust discriminations that the people intended to provide.” “This principle of justice and equality which requires that each person should contribute toward the public expenses his proportionate share according to the advantages which he receives lies at the foundation of our political system anti,, in our opinion, it was to give it a greater permanency and force, and to secure its more rigid observance,, that the section above quoted was introduced into the constitution.”
If it were not for tbe significance of tbe doctrine as above *660stated, distinguishing our constitution from those permitting the very thing the framers of the former so industriously endeavored to prevent, we might rest this branch of the case, and no doubt many other phases of it, on the authority of the late case in the Michigan supreme court, and the analysis of the Michigan railroad tax law in the two cited federal cases. It is upon this difference in position, largely, as it seems, that counsel for appellant ground their hopes. So this case requires to be treated somewhat independently from those, though in principle, after all, it would seem that the latter might be well said to furnish a sure ground for the decision here.
As we have indicated, the purpose of the law was to effect the very object above said to be the only one permissible under our constitution. In the language of Judge WaNty in deciding the Michigan case in the federal circuit court, “This seems not to have been a scheme to produce inequality but a carefully devised scheme to distribute the burdens of taxation equally upon all taxpayers.” The idea was to put all property taxed, directly, on a basis of equality as to purpose and rate of taxation. Did it fail in that by treating the railway property as having a general situs and applying thereto the average rate of taxation imposed on general property prescribed for taxation throughout the state ? That is really what this case, in all its features, ultimately comes down to. The purpose being as indicated, if it legitimately fixed the situs of the special property, then most of the contentions of counsel for appellant fail with the one that it was not. In-further discussion, in the main, we will assume that the law must necessarily be regarded as an attempt to give to railway property the broad general situs counsel for appellant claim.
Counsel for respondents suggest that the law created a taxing district composed of the whole state, as regards railway property, to tax it in a different manner and by a differ*661ent rate from the manner and rate as to general property, and that the legislature had full power to do so. On that State ex rel. Baraboo v. Sauk Co. 70 Wis. 485, 36 N. W. 396, is cited. It does not seem, however, to meet the case at all, since it dealt only with the creation of taxing districts with reference to particular purposes of taxation of local interest specially, hut of general interest as well. It is also said, in the learned circuit court’s opinion, that the character of the law is as counsel for respondents so contend. There is also a suggestion that the special property was given a situs at the seat of government for the speciaLpurpose of a state tax, and for the reasons suggested that the tax is in the nature of a franchise tax. What has already been said requires the rejection of all these theories without further discussion. They are based on the mistaken idea that there may be classification of property under our constitution for direct taxation by different rules and rates.
At the outset it may be conceded, as the fact is, that the ■constitution does not permit of any wholly arbitrary, capricious location of property for taxation. The burden of effecting a strictly state purpose cannot be imposed on a particular locality or localities, nor the burden of those things which are purely local be imposed on persons or property wholly be.yond the boundaries of the municipality concerned, except in -such special cases of assumption of the burden by the people •under legislative authority. Lund v. Chippewa Co. 93 Wis. 640, 67 N. W. 927. We indorse to the fullest extent the doctrine so forcibly stated by Judge Cooley, and relied upon with so much confidence by the learned counsel for appellant, in these words:
“It can, therefore, be stated with emphasis that the burden •of a tax must be made to rest upon the state at large or upon any particular district of the state according as the purpose for which it is levied is of general concern to the whole state or, on the other hand, pertains only to the particular district.” 1 Cooley, Taxation (3d ed.) 225 — 227.
*662The law in question mnst stand the test of that very valuable principle or go down under the condemnation of the constitutional provision in question, and several others.
The nature of railway property as to whether personal, real, or mixed, has very much to do with the question of where it may legitimately be taxed. Counsel for appellant,, while recognizing that, seemingly put aside as absurd the doctrine which has become quite general, that the property of a railway corporation, as a whole, is to be deemed to be all personalty. It is quite familiar that, generally speaking, land and all things attached or appertaining thereto are realty, and all other property, tangible or intangible, with the rights connected therewith and appertaining thereto, are personalty. Those general principles have their exceptions. By intention things fixed to realty and in a sense physically a part thereof may be deemed to be personalty. By the union of land with rights granted by the public classed as personalty, forming a thing of - itself in which the personal element-predominates and which could not be separated from the other element without disintegration to the point of destruction and to the detriment of public and private interests as well, the combination may be deemed to be personalty' of an inseparable nature. So, as we have seen, while a railroad system is largely land and tangible things of a movable character attached or appurtenant thereto, the thing that gives the great value and special character to the whole is the franchise element, creating the public duty; so such special element is deemed to be the principal thing, impressing all minor parts with its character, and making the entire combination one entire machine of a personal nature. That was well settled by the decisions of this court long before the law in question was framed. So, as to giving a legislative situs to railway property, the law must be tested in the light of dealing with personalty.
There is nothing particularly novel in the doctrine above *663indicated. It is tlie generally accepted doctrine elsewhere. It has found place in statutes, hut only in recognition of judicial policy. See. 8281, Kansas Gen. Stats. 1905; sec. 1037®, Stats. 1898. It is the logical basis of the numerous decisions holding it to be necessary to justice and uniformity of rule in taxing laws, that the property of a railway corporation be assessed as a unit; the physical things being regarded as merged in that produced by union with the franchise element: the one of primary importance. State Railroad Tax Cases, 92 U. S. 515, 607; Carlisle v. Pullman P. C. Co. 8 Colo. 320, 7 Pac. 164; Dubuque v. Ill. Cent. R. Co. 39 Iowa, 56; State ex rel. K. C., St. J. & C. B. R. Co. v. Severance, 55 Mo. 378; People ex rel. Iron S. M. Co. v. Henderson, 12 Colo. 369, 21 Pac. 144; Ames v. People, 26 Colo. 83, 56 Pac. 656; Chicago & A. R. Co. v. People, 129 Ill. 571, 22 N. E. 864, 25 N. E. 5; Shenandoah Valley R. Co. v. Clarke Co. 78 Va. 269; Missouri River, Ft. S. & G. R. Co. v. Morris, 7 Kan. 210; Franklin Co. v. Nashville, C. & St. L. R. Co. 12 Lea, 521; Columbus S. R. Co. v. Wright, 151 U. S. 470, 14 Sup. Ct. 396; Missouri, K. & T. R. Co. v. Board of Comm'rs, 9 Kan. App. 545, 59 Pac. 383.
In the latter case the court said: “All property used or held by a railroad company for the purpose of operating its railroad, including its roadbed, right of way, etc., is to be appraised and assessed as personal property.” The opinions in several of the cases cited lay down most clearly the doctrine that the physical things of a railway corporation follow the franchise.
The broad discretion which the legislature has within the boundaries of the rule of uniformity in determining the situs of personal property for taxation, has already been referred to. The mere circumstance of the location of the agent of the owner is regarded sufficient to warrant assessing there large amounts of personal property located in different parts of the state, long distances therefrom and in jurisdictions *664Raving no connection, except through tRe sovereignty of tRe state, with tRe legislative situs. TRe simple circumstance of tRe location of tRe agent is deemed to satisfy tRe rule contended for by counsel. Again, tRe situs for taxation of large amounts of personal property is commonly fixed by the legislature at the principal place of business of the corporation as named in its articles of incorporation. Sec. 1041, Stats. 1898; State ex rel. Milwaukee St. R. Co. v. Anderson, 90 Wis. 550, 564, 63 N. W. 746. Again, saw-logs are given the situs of the particular mill where the owner on the 1st day of May in the year of the assessment designs to Rave them manufactured, though Re may Rave no interest in the mill whatever and Rave only formed a mental purpose to so manufacture the property. All these provisions and others of a similar character, with judicial approval, Rave existed in this state and elsewhere for years and some of them here ever since the state was organized. All are so familiar therewith that it is useless to refer to the decisions that Rave dealt with the matter. TRe situation amply illustrates the very broad limits of the principle that property can only be taxed where it is constructively or actually located, the farthest limits being where benefits reasonably appreciable of some sort are received by the person taxed, either in his person or his property.
TRe result of the foregoing is that personal property may have a twofold situs: one which is actual, tested by common-law principles, and one which is purely legislative, the latter stopping at the point where to go further would be to pass into the realms of mere caprice or arbitrary action, in that it would have no basis in the nature of the mutual exchange of benefits between the source of the taxing power and the person upon whom the burden is cast.
Sometimes it is said that property must be taxed at its situs, that meaning, of course, the actual situs unless the legislature has fixed another, acting within constitutional limita*665tions. In State ex rel. K. C., St. J. & C. B. R. Co. v. Severance, 55 Mo. 378, tlie prevailing rule on this subject is thus stated:
“It is claimed that the situs of the property is the home of .the company where its chief office is located, and there it must be taxed. The proposition is undoubtedly true that where a corporation has its residence there the property of this description is liable to assessment and taxation, if the law has prescribed no different rule or regulation on the subject. This notion of the situs of personal property ... is a legal fiction. It may be modified by the legislature.”
In State Railroad Tax Cases, 92 U. S. 575, speaking on the same subject, the court said: “It'is merely the law of the state which recognizes it.” Enlarging upon that in connection with numerous illustrative authorities it was said in Ames v. People, 26 Colo. 83: “It is entirely competent for the legislature, unless restrained by the constitution, to fix for the purposes of taxation the situs of both real and personal property.” The following are to the same effect: Chamberlain v. Walter, 60 Fed. 788; Cincinnati, N. O. & T. P. R. Co. v. Comm. 81 Ky. 492; In re Apportionment of Tax, 78 Mo. 596.
Without further discussing the fundamental principle governing the subject of situs of property for taxation, we will state this for our conclusion: In the absence of some statute regulating the situs of property for taxation, it is governed by the common law in regard to actual situs. It is competent', however, for the legislature to give thereto for the purposes of taxation any situs it sees fit, subject to the rule of uniformity and to the limitation that there must be some appreciable relation between the municipality exacting the tax and the person upon whom the burden is cast, either directly or by reference to the property taxed, from which there can reasonably be seen reciprocal duties to accord benefits on the one hand, and to respond therefor on the other. Whether that relation does or does not exist in any given circum*666stances is so conclusively a legislative question that nothing-short of manifestly capricious action, amounting to a taking of property for a public use -without just compensation, will justify judicial interference.
The franchise of a railway company originates with the-people. It is a part of the sovereignty of the state intrusted to private hands, which become thereby public agencies with appropriate and important duties of a public nature. The-answer to that, that the same is true of any public service corporation, is, it seems, beside the case, since it is universally-recognized that railway corporations, because of the great magnitude of their operations, the dominating power which they possess in the business world referable to the special franchise feature of their property, the closeness of touch between them and every inhabitant of the state and every dollar in value of property therein, by reason of which their legitimate prosperity and that of the people, individually and collectively, are inseparably bound together, are, most significantly, a class apart from all other corporations,, one much more nearly a part of the government itself, as it' were, than any other quasi-public agency. Nothing of a semi-public nature in that regard approaches near enough to such-special corporations to give any substantial opportunity, even,, for comparison. Such special organizations touch the everyday life of every member of every community from the center to the most remote parts of the state. While they thus, so supremely over all other organizations, have to do, at all points, with the well-being of the people, to the same special' degree they are dependent upon the people for support and protection. That support and protection as to an ordinary system by no means is confined to the particular counties,, cities, and other governmental subdivisions through which the road runs. It reaches, incidentally at least, far beyond the same. By traffic connections and agencies of various sorts it reaches a broad expanse of country, in some cases a single *667line covering to some extent tlie whole state. Such corporations, in a very marked degree, are interested, in excess of corporations of any other sort, in the capacity of the state, directly and through its local agencies, in promoting and compelling good order. No other class is so subject to dangers which might require the strong arm of the whole people for its protection, or so constantly requires a large part of the-time of state and local agencies in administering affairs in-respect to matters upon which its welfare, depends. •
True, some railway corporations are small and so do not as significantly fill the picture thus presented as, others, but they are of the same general class, have the same rights, and have the fullest opportunity the state can give them to enlarge the sphere of their operations. As a rule they connect in a way with some large system and are affected, generally-speaking, by all the conditions which affect the larger organization.
Now, who can set the boundaries which shall accurately define the uttermost limits to which a great railway corporation extends, to some extent receiving some benefit arousing-return duty? That the mere taxing districts through which the road runs cannot necessarily he the limit seems plain. We can well say, beyond any reasonable doubt, it extends beyond their boundaries; but'who can set the limit beyond which, without any reasonable doubt, it cannot be reasonably said to extend? May not the confines of the state be-reached in exploring for such limit, under the broad power of the legislature to fix the situs of personal property for taxation? No court has yet spoken unfavorably in respect thereto. All that have spoken on the subj'ect seem to have inclined the other way.
True, the constitution of Michigan was amended after the-decision in Pingree v. Auditor General, 120 Mich. 95, 78 N. W. 1025, but the amendment was in the nature of a mere-proviso, apparently by way of construction, it would seem,. *668declaring that the method of taxation condemned in the Pin-•gree Case should be considered one for making railway property, on a basis with all other property in the state taxed by the ad valorem method, bear its relative proportion of all taxes, state and local. Other states have quite similar laws. They are referred to, in connection with ours, in the decision in the federal circuit and supreme court to which we have referred. Those mentioned are Michigan, New Hampshire, Missouri, and Wisconsin. In that connection, and as supporting the principle of the law in question, reference is made to State ex rel. Brown v. Mo. Pac. R. Co. 92 Mo. 137, 6 S. W. 862; Chicago & A. R. Co. v. Lamkin, 97 Mo. 496, 10 S. W. 200; State ex rel. Gottlieb v. Metropolitan St. R. Co. 161 Mo. 189, 199, 61 S. W. 603; Boston, C. & M. R. Co. v. State, 60 N. H. 87. Particular force was given, in the federal circuit court, to the feature of the Missouri statute requiring all school taxes for the several districts in each •county in which railway property is taxed, to be laid on the value of such property distributed to such county, on the average-rate plan. Manifestly the principle is the same, whether the average rate is applied to a county having districts where there is no railway line and others differently ■situated, as where it is applied to the whole state under the same circumstances.
In the New Hampshire case the idea which ruled the Michigan court in the Pingree Case, that an average-rate tax levied in the whole state and collected by the state and paid into the state treasury is a state tax necessarily, was not favored. It was in effect said that such a tax may or may not be wholly a state tax, according to the legislative purpose; that the matters of the assessment, levy, and collection are •evidentiary circumstances, but not necessarily conclusive ones.
The history of the subject in Michigan leads to the conviction that if the question were presented there as an orig*669inal matter, regardless of the change in the constitution since the Pingree Gáse, the average-rate law would he sustained. Such case turned wholly, as will he remembered, on the question of whether the tax was a state tax; on the construction of the law. The principle of the enactment, applied to a tax intended to he a state tax, and a local tax as well as to every taxing district in the state, on the basis of all other taxes, was quite clearly regarded to be sound. And so it was plainly regarded in the two federal decisions. In the federal circuit court every phase of the Michigan law that has to do with the constitutional rule of uniformity in taxation was examined and found not only to he consistent therewith, but significantly promotive of its object.
We are referred with confidence to Union R. T. Co. v. Kentucky, 199 U. S. 194, 26 Sup. Ct. 36, which related to the taxing of property in one state located permanently and used wholly outside thereof, where it had acquired a situs. The tax was condemned on principle, but we are unable to see how such principle affects this case, further than as we have heretofore indicated. The court said:
“If the taxing power be in no position to render any benefit to the person 'or property taxed, and such property be wholly within the taxing power of another state to which it may be said to owe allegiance, and to which it may look for protection, the taxation of such property within the domicile of the owner ... is beyond the power of the legislature, and a taking of property without due process of law.”
There is no disposition to overlook that salutary principle, but rather to recognize and confirm it. As indicated, we must assume that the legislature fully recognized that principle with reference to sec. 1, art. VIII, and all the constitutional provisions bearing on the question, and kept within such limitation, till the contrary appears beyond all reasonable doubt. In the broad, comprehensive view the legislature may, legitimately, have taken of the matter, it seems that it could *670reasonably Rave concluded, under all the circumstances, that the necessary equivalent would be rendered, or renderable when necessary, from every taxing district, to the property •or the owner thereof, to support the corresponding duty to bear proportionally with all other taxpayers in such district the local and all other tax burdens, except such burdens as relate to the subject of special assessments, which are excluded by the law under consideration.
There is another aspect of this branch of the case which we have deemed worthy of consideration. It must be conceded that the only logical way to assess railway property is to value the system as one entire thing, personal in character, and that part in this state as a proportion of such one thing, the division to be made upon a proper basis. That has come to <be accepted by all courts. Most states that have adopted that system have done so in connection with the distributive feature of apportioning the value of that part of the entire system in the state to the different taxing districts through which the road runs in the proportion which the length of main line in each such district bears to the entire length of main line in the state.' That has been repeatedly sustained under constitutions requiring- a uniform rule of taxation. Many of the cases that have dealt with the matter have been heretofore cited. The following are quite recent: Ames v. People, 26 Colo. 83, 56 Pac. 656; State ex rel. Bee Bldg. Co. v. Savage, 65 Neb. 714, 91 N. W. 716; Chicago, B. & Q. R. Go. v. Richardson Co. (Neb.) 100 R. W. 950; State ex rel. Morton v. Back (Neb.) 100 R. W. 952. To that extent the problem of taxing railway property was some years ago solved in many states, and the result came to be supposed to be the most rational and logical way discovered for reaching such.property with the hand of the tax gatherer, consistent with the constitutional requirement of uniformity.
The doctrine that classification of property along reasonable lines, — as regards methods of making the assessment of *671■different kinds of property, determining tbe rate of taxation, applying tbe same to tbe value ascertained and realizing tbe result, all tbe time working, reasonably, to tbe constitutional end of burdening, as near as practicable, eacb dollar in value of one kind of property tbe same as every other dollar in value of every other kind,- — is in conformity with the constitutional command, and that such command has reference to uniformity of burdens and to uniformity of method only ■so far as tbe latter promotes tbe former, has been generally adopted. Tbe doctrine has also been generally adopted, that what promotes tbe object of tbe rule of uniformity is primarily a legislative question and that its judgment is to prevail if possible; every reasonable intendment necessary to •sustain its enactments being given thereto.
Tbe foregoing leads up to this: If tbe distributive idea should have regard only to tbe taxing districts through which tbe road runs, may not tbe legislature have thought that to apply tbe average rate of taxation throughout tbe state to tbe value of railroad property, equalized with that of all other taxable property throughout tbe state, would be more likely, •one year with another, to reach railway property on a nearer approach to absolute equality to other property than to use the average rate in the particular taxing districts through which the road runs, on the theory of a constructive distribution of the railroad property to such districts ? The question is a very complicated one.
It must be kept in mind that the distribution plan was adopted' not as the best method of taxing railway property on an equality'with ail other property, but as a better one than that of the license fee system, or the ad valorem system executed by means of local assessment of parts of a railway sys-tejn by the various local assessors in the districts through which the road runs.
Who can say with any reasonable degree of certainty that on the distribution plan the mileage of main track in any *672particular taxing district would represent justly, as between tibie railway company and all taxing districts interested, the proportion of the entire value of the railway system which should be assessed in such district? The value of the railway property, looking at physical things, in a given taxing district might be $250,000 represented by one mile of main line, while the actual value in another district might he $100,000, represented by two miles of main line, and the value of the general property in the two districts be substantially equal, thus giving to one taxing district, apparently, five times the benefit, proportional to main track, given to the other. Many other illustrations might be suggested showing the great difficulty involved in any method as to reaching railway property for the purpose of taxation under the constitutional rule by a close approach to absolute equality. Of course, as we have seen, actual equality is unattainable. The best that can be done is to secure as near an approach thereto as practicable.
It seems that whether we regard the legislature as having treated the railroad property as having a general situs or one limited to the particular taxing district through which the road runs, we may well regard it as having kept within the boundaries of reason in determining that the average rate of taxation as to all general property in the state would be more likely to reach the special property equally with such general property than by the distribution plan.
We venture to say, there is much force in the claim that every expression of every court that has spoken on the subject, condemning as unreasonable to the point of absurdity all attempts at valuing a great railway system in small sections with regard to the particular taxing districts through which the road runs, may well be read as condemning, as a mere makeshift, the plan of dividing the value of that part of the system located in the state, having regard to the value of the entire system, into as many parts as there are such tax*673ing districts; on tbe basis of tbe length of main line in them respectively. With one accord tbe courts say, every railway system is a unit, absolutely indivisible for tbe purpose of determining tbe value of tbe parts, tbe aggregate of sucb values to be that of tbe whole; that it is a thing so utterly different “from every other species of property that tbe dis-criminations made as between them and other corporations and individuals in tbe method or _ instrumentality by which tbe value is ascertained” are justifiable. Chamberlain v. Walter, 60 Fed. 788. Commonly it is said, valuation on tbe unit theory is necessary to tbe very object of tbe constitutional requirement of uniformity. Why does not tbe same reasoning, logically, ‘require tbe value when once ascertained also to be treated as a unit, by applying thereto tbe average rate of taxation imposed upon all other property taxed by tbe ad valorem method in tbe state, instead of dividing it on an artificial basis into a multitude of parts: not much, if any, less unlikely to represent tbe actual value of tbe system in tbe respective taxing districts than valuations by local assessors, each appraising that part of sucb system found, as indicated by tbe visible part thereof, in bis district ?
The law is not to be condemned because we cannot see just bow tbe legislature viewed tbe matter. So long as it can reasonably be seen that there is a view consistent with tbe law and tbe constitution, that is sufficient. Again, tbe law is not to be condemned because tbe average rate might possibly, or even probably, in an instance now and then, exceed tbe rate in some particular taxing district where some portion of tbe main line of a railroad is located. On that we cannot agree with tbe learned counsel for appellant. If tbe plan of tbe law be reasonably calculated to accomplish tbe constitutional object, that'is sufficient. If it fails now and then in administration and yet may reasonably be said to have been designed to effect that practical equality which satisfies tbe con-stitutionaErequirement, that is enough. Uniform methods of *674treating all lands of property as regards taxation would inevitably violate tbat uniformity of rule, referable to1 equality of burdens, wbicb is tbe supreme feature of the constitutional requirement. The method of taxing railway property has for fifty years been going through a process of evolution. The problem which so perplexed those who had to deal with it at first was by them solved, temporarily, by resorting to the license fee system. That was simple and fairly fruitful, but illogical, and proved very unsatisfactory to the people. The difference in method of treating such property from that applied to property generally, was fraught with many evils, as the people came to belieye. The plan of assessing each system of the special property as a unit, and dividing the value •ascertained, between the taxing districts through which the road runs, upon some basis, generally that of length of main line, came into use in time. That rapidly gained favor till it was supposed, as it seems from judicial history, that some near approach to a fairly perfect system had at last been discovered. The states which adhered to the license system the longest, and thus had the benefit of tho experience of others with the distributive plan, appear to have seen its chief defect to be in the assumption that a railroad system must necessarily be treated as a unit for the purpose of determining the value thereof with any reasonable degree of accuracy, and yet that such unit, represented by the ascertained value, may logically be divided into a multitude of parts and apportioned uj)on an artificial basis for the purposes of taxation among as many districts as are traversed, to any extent, by the railway track.
In the natural order of development the last to adopt the ad valorem system for taxing the special property took the unit plan for valuing such properties, so universally conceded to be essential, and took it entire, rejecting the distributive feature, which seemed to be manifestly inconsistent *675■therewith. The idea indicated in the new order of laws is to value each railway property as one thing and on the same basis as other taxable property is valued, and to tax it on the same basis as such other property is taxed, throughout the state and as to each taxing district through which the road runs, as near as the same can be reasonably ascertained, keeping the results in the state treasury, upon the theory of a con-structive accounting between the state and every taxing district which, in any reasonable view, would be entitled to any part thereof under the constitutional rule of uniformity. All upon the theory that, in practical effect, by so’doing each dollar of every kind of property prescribed for direct taxation in every taxing district throughout the state would thereby be made to contribute its constitutional proportion of all taxes, state and local.
It is considered that the new method is a long step in advance of the distributive plan which counsel for appellant seem to think is the only method which is consistent with that real equality, or such near approach thereto as is practicable, which the fathers of the constitution endeavored to secure. When we appreciate the idea that mere uniformity •of instrumentalities in accomplishing the constitutional object is not required; that it is not important except in so far as may be helpful in securing such object,- — the doctrine that all property prescribed for direct taxation constitutes but a single class under the constitution,, and that such one class must be taxed by the uniform rule ordained by the constitution, vitalized by the legislative essentials and promoted by reasonable legislative aids, seems to be incorporated into the law under consideration, and vindicated by the conclusion reached in this case.
The contention of counsel for appellant that the system of assessing- each railway system as a unit, and sending to each taxing district a ratable proportion thereof, is the only proper *676way to legitimately and justly tax sucb property on the act valorem plan, that each railway company should be required to deal with the multitude of taxing districts through which the road runs, covering in some cases a large part of the state, could not be taken seriously if it were not so vigorously and so confidently, as it appears, insisted upon. There can be little doubt, it would seem, from a careful review of the decisions in the federal circuit courts, but what the system embodied in the law before us was regarded by such courts as a distinct advance from the old method, in the line of that uniformity commanded by the constitution, and that such view was approved by the federal supreme court. It appears that the better way to promote that equality and justice to all, which the constitution guarantees, is to maintain the integrity of the unit system in its entirety in treating railway property for taxation, which we find, after a most careful study of all the attacks upon it, to stand the test of the constitution at all points.
There are several matters of detail in the briefs of counsel which we have not referred to, as was suggested must necessarily be the case at the outset. The major and minor points, including the illustrations used in the argument, cover a very broad field in a most exhaustive manner. That has seemed to render it necessary to respond, in the opinion, to all such major propositions at considerable length, in order to do justice to the case and to the eminent counsel who so ably prepared it on the side of the appellant, and that of the respondents as well. To the end that it may not be thought that anything material has been overlooked, though not found specially mentioned, it should be said that the four briefs have been carefully checked, page by page, to avoid such overlooking. It is believed that every suggestion of counsel upon either side has received the attention it deserves in the preparation of this opinion.
By the Gourt. — The judgment is affirmed.