State v. Johnson

Mr. Justice Yeegee.

delivered the following opinion in the ease.

While I concur most fully in the opinion of the court,, pronounced by the chief justice, 1 deem it proper to express-my individual opinion upon the questions presented by 'the record, and to give some of the reasons which have influenced the formation of that opinion.

The importance of the questions in controversy will justify, if they do not require, this course. Every member of the court has given to this case an attentive and careful examination. The important and interesting questions arising in it, and which were presented in a novel and unusual manner, were well calculated to evoke a most patient investigation.

On the one hand, a private individual presented himself before the judicial tribunals of the State, alleging that he had a just and legal demand against the State, the payment of *770which bad been refused; that this demand consisted in the bond of the State, sealed with the great seal, signed by the governor and treasurer, and executed and delivered to him, pursuant to an act of the legislature, by which the faith of the State was pledged for its payment and redemption.

On the other hand, the State of Mississippi denied the validity of this bond, alleging that it was sealed and delivered by the governor without authority, and that the act of the legislature, from which he pretended to derive his power, was unconstitutional and void, and that no contract or agreement made under it created any valid obligation binding upon the State.

We are not unaware of the unusual • interest which these questions have excited for many years, and that they were at one time the subject of an animated political controversy.

But sitting here as judges to administer the law, under the solemn sanction of our oaths, we have endeavored to discard from our minds every extraneous and improper influence, and to address ourselves without bias, to the candid examination of the legal questions presented by the record. As judges, it is our duty to declare the law, not to make it. Reasons of State policy or political expediency should not influence our judgment. It is our duty to decide the law of the case as it appears upon the record, regardless of all consequences. Entertaining these views, and having formed my opinion in accordance with them, I am only anxious to explain the grounds on which I have proceeded, so as to satisfy the mind, that the judgment given in this case, is the only one which could have been given in accordance with the rules of law.

The first question presented for our examination, was the right or power of the court to entertain jurisdiction of the case.

In all governments it is a fundamental maxim, that no suit can be instituted against the State without its own consent; but, as a distinguished writer upon international' law has observed, “ as the promises, the conventions, all the private contracts of the sovereign are naturally subject to the same rules as those of private persons, if any difficulties arise on the *771subject, it is equally conformable to the rules of decorum, to that delicacy, of sentiment, which ought to be particularly conspicuous in a sovereign, and to the love of justice, to cause them to be decided by the tribunals of The State; and such, indeed, is the practice of all civilized States that are governed by settled laws.” Vattel, Laws of Nations, 226.

Under the influence of such just and proper sentiments, the State of Mississippi has declared, that “the legislature shall direct, by law, in what manner, and in what courts, suits may be brought against the State.” Constitution, Art. 7, §10.

In obedience to this requirement of the constitution, it was enacted by the legislature, by an act passed 15th February, 1833, that “ hereafter, it shall be competent for any person or persons deeming him, her, or themselves, or body politic, to have a just claim against the State of Mississippi, to exhibit and file a bill in equity, in the superior court of chancery, against the State,” &c. Hutch. Code, 769.

Since the enactment of this statute, many suits have been instituted against the State in accordance with its provisions, and decrees in many instances have been rendered against the State. The present suit was brought pursuant to these provisions, and a doubt cannot, therefore, exist, that under the constitution and laws, we have jurisdiction of it, and are bound to render judgment in the premises.

In this matter we have no discretion: the path of duty is plain and obvious. ' As the constitution and laws have authorized suits to be instituted against the State, it is the duty of the court to pronounce judgment in them, as in all other cases that may come before it.

As the plaintiff has appealed to the judicial tribunals of this State, the matters in controversy must be decided according, to the constitution and laws of Mississippi, and to those rules of law which regulate and govern alike the contracts of States as the agreements of private individuals.

It is a principle of international law, applicable to all nations, and recognized by every civilized community, that every treaty, compact, contract, or agreement, entered into by the proper *772authority, in the name and on behalf of the State, is binding and obligatory upon the State; and every principle of equity and good faith requires its performance and fulfilment. This general rule, however, must be understood with this qualification or limitation, that is, wherever the constitution of the government, or the fundamental law of the State, has limited the power and authority of those authorized to contract in the name of the State, no compact or agreement made by them, will bind the State, unless made in accordance with the provisions and requirements of the fundamental law. "Whoever, therefore, undertakes to deal with a party purporting to contract in the name of the State, must look to the power and authority ■of that party to bind the State, according to the constitution and laws of the same.

As a general proposition, it may be stated to be a fixed rule of law, that every sovereign and independent State has the ■right to borrow money, to create debts, and to pledge the faith of the State for the payment and redemption of the same. It may be also stated, as an equally fixed rule, that the legislature ■of every State in this Union has full power and authority to ■contract loans in the name of the State, and to pledge the faith of the State as a security for the payment and redemption •of the same, and may exercise this power, unless its exercise has been prohibited by the constitution of the State. This right pertains to the legislature as a usual and ordinary power ■o-f government belonging to every independent political community. It is a right possessed fully by the legislature of the ¡State of Mississippi, 'but one which must be exercised by it, pursuant to the provisions o'f the constitution. These provisions are as follows: “ No law shall ever be passed to raise a loan of money on the credit of the State, or to pledge the faith ■of the State for the payment or redemption of any loan or ■debt, unless such law be proposed in the senate or house of representatives, and be agreed to by a majority of the members of each house, and entered on their journals, with the yeas and nays taken thereon, and be referred to the next succeeding legislature, and published for three months previous to the next regular election, in three newspapers of this State, and unless *773a majority of each branch of the legislature, so elected, after such publication, shall agree to and pass such law.” Constitution, Art. 7, § 9.

It will thus be readily seen, that the constitution does not prohibit the power of the legislature to pass laws to bind the State for the payment or redemption' of a loan of money. On the contrary, the power exists in the amplest degree, but it can only be' exercised in the mode and manner prescribed by the constitution.

The object had in view by the framers of the constitution is obvious. It was not to take away from the legislature the power of passing laws to borrow money in the name of the State, but. to provide against hasty, inconsiderate, and ill-advised legislation, by means of which heavy burdens might be cast upon the people of the State.

It is frequently argued, that this provision of the constitution refers to the people of the State the question, whether, or not, the law shall be passed. But this is a mistake. The law is to be passed by one legislature, and then “referred to the next succeeding legislature,” not to the people; and if passed by a majority of each branch of the legislature, to whom it is thus referred, and approved by the governor, it then becomes the law of the State; and contracts made under it are obligatory and valid.

It is true, that a publication of the law is required to be made for three months “ previous to the next regular election,” but the law itself is not submitted to the people, for their ratification or approval. It may, indeed, be presumed, that members of the legislature will be selected with some reference to their opinions upon the propriety of passing the law; yet .the people themselves never vote upon the law itself.

Indeed, as the government of the State is organized under the constitution, it may be that a majority of the people voting would be in favor of the passage of the law, while a majority of the members elected to the legislature would be opposed to it, and thus prevent its enactment. So, too, it might happen, that a majority of the people were, in fact, opposed to the passage of the law, while a majority of the legislature were in *774favor of it, and would have full power under the constitution to pass the law, and bind the State against the will of the actual numerical majority of the people of the State.

It is proper that these views should be borne in mind, as this ■question is frequently argued upon the assumption that the ■constitution refers a la-w by which it is proposed to pledge the faith of the State'for a loan of money or the redemption of a loan or debt, directly to the people for their approval; and that the law when reenacted by the second legislature, becomes a •compact or agreement, made by the people, instead of a law of the State, passed by the legislature of the State under the provisions of the constitution, and, therefore, subject to repeal, ■alteration, and amendment, by the legislature, in the same ■manner, and to the same extent, as all other laws, the enactment of which is authorized by the constitution.

It is alleged on behalf of the complainant, that the bond on which this suit is founded, was executed by the State as a security for the payment of a loan of money made to “the Mississippi Union Bank,” and that the faith of the State was ■pledged for the payment and redemption of the same, by a law passed in the manner prescribed by the constitution. This is denied by the State, which contends that the statute, by virtue ■of which the governor executed and delivered the bond, was not passed in accordance with the requisitions of the constitution, and that the State is not, therefore, bound to pay the ■same.

From the facts which are agreed in this case, and from the •general laws of the State, it appears, that on the 21st day of January, 1837, an act of the legislature, entitled “ An Act to Incorporate the subscribers of the Mississippi Union Bank,” was passed and approved.

By the first section of this act it is provided, “that an institution shall be established under the title of ‘ the Mississippi Union Bank,’ with a capital of $15,500,000; which said capital shall be raised by means of a loan, to be obtained by the directors of the institution.”

The fifth section declares, “ that in order to facilitate the said Union Bank, for the said loan of $15,500,000, the faith of this *775State be and is hereby pledged, both for the security of the capital and interest, and that seven thousand five hundred bonds, of $2,000 each, bearing interest at the rate of five peí-cent. per annum, shall be signed by the governor of the State, to the order of the Mississippi Union Bank, countersigned by the State treasurer, and under the seal of the State.”

The forty-seventh section of the statute provides, “that the fifth section of this act, whereby the faith of the State is pledged for the payment and redemption of the loan contemplated by this act, be referred to the next legislature of this State, in pursuance of the ninth section of the seventh article of the constitution, and that this act be published under the direction of the governor, in at least three newspapers of this State, for three months previous to the next regular election, and that this act, with the yeas and-nays thereon, be entered on-the journals of the senate and house of representatives.”

On the 5th day of February, 1838, this statute was reenacted by the legislature and approved by the governor, and it is admitted in the “ agreed facts ” of the case, that every requirement of the constitution was complied with, so as to make the same a valid law, pledging the faith of the State, in the manner and for the purposes therein contained.

On the 15th February, 1838, an act of the legislature was passed, entitled “ An Act supplementary to an act to incorporate the subscribers to the Mississippi Union Bank.” “ The Mississippi Union Bank” was organized and went into operation pursuant to the provisions and enactments of the foregoing statutes, and the bond in suit was executed and delivered by the governor, under a supposed power and authority conferred upon him by them. The fact is also agreed, that the “ act supplementary ” was not passed by two legislatures.

By inspecting the original act, it will be seen that various provisions were made in it for the organization of the bank, and for the security which should be given to the State by the stockholders, as an indemnity against ultimate liability on account of the bonds. It is alleged, that this original law was altered and changed in many essential particulars by the “supplementary act,” and that, in consequence thereof, no contract *776could be made under them which wou.ld bind the State, until the supplement was also enacted by two legislatures, according to the provisions of the ninth section of the seventh article of the constitution. The argument in behalf of the State is substantially as follows: “ The Mississippi Union Bank ” was not organized under the original act, approved on the 21st of January, 1837, and 5th February, 1838, but under that act and the “supplementary act,” approved 15th February,. 1838; that the “supplementary act” made many important changes in the original act; that all the provisions of*the original statute constituted “ the law,” by virtue of which the faith of the State was pledged; that this pledge was entirely conditional, dependent upon the provisions and requirements of that statute; and that as the “supplementary act” altered and repealed the original act in many important particulars, by virtue of which the ultimate liability of the State was increased, and her security greatly lessened, the State was thereby absolved from any obligation under the original act; that no material change could be made by the legislature in the original law, without absolving the State, unless the law making such change was passed by two successive legislatures, in the same manner that the original law was passed. The original statute is said to have been materially changed by the “ supplementary act,” in the following particulars: —

1. By the fourth section of the original act, “ the owners of real estate, situated in the State of Mississippi, and who are citizens thereof, shall be the only persons entitled to subscribe: Provided, however, to secure the capital or interest of said bank, mortgage shall be given on property of a sufficient character and of an imperishable nature.”

It is alleged, that by the first section of the supplementary act the above provision was changed, and the State was admitted as a stockholder for one third of the capital stock.

2. By the eighth section of the original statute, the subscribers for stock were bound “ to secure the capital and interest of the bonds by mortgage on property, to be in all cases equal to the amount of their respective stock.” This, it is said, was repealed by that section of the supplemental act which author*777ized the State to become a subscriber for stock, and thus materially impaired the security provided by the original law for the State’s ultimate indemnity.

3. It is said, the 11th section, requiring a payment of ten dollars per share, to be paid in cash at the time of subscribing, was altered by the nineteenth section of the supplement authorizing the payment to be made in current bills of solvent banks, and lessening the amount to be paid to two and a half per cent.

4. It is said, the nineteenth section of the original act, which entitled the State to one tenth of the whole profits of the bank, and the thirty-first section, entitling it to a credit of two hundred thousand "dollars, were repealed by the eighteenth section of the supplement.

5. It is likewise argued, that other alterations and changes were made, which had the effect to increase the responsibility of the State and to lessen her security.

In the opinion of the court, delivered by the chief justice, he has shown that, by a fair construction of the original and supplemental acts, no change materially altering the liability of the State, as provided in the original statute, was made by the supplement.

In the examination I now propose to make, I shall take it for granted that the supplemental statute did alter and repeal the original, in the manner alleged by counsel, and so treating it, the following questions are presented for consideration: —

First: Did all the provisions of the original act, chartering the Mississippi Union Bank, enter into and form a part of “the law ” by which the faith of the State was pledged, or did the fifth section alone constitute that law ?

Second: If the whole of the original act constituted “the law” by which the faith of the State was pledged, could a single legislature repeal any of its provisions, so as to change or diminish the security required by it to be given to the State by the subscribers for stock ?

Third: Could a single legislature authorize any other persons to become subscribers for stock except those mentioned in the *778original act, and continue the liability of the State for the loan of money contemplated by it ?

First: Did all the provisions of the original act enter into and form a part of the law by which the faith of the State was pledged for the loan of money, to be made by the “ Mississippi Union Bank ? ” It will be admitted, that if the “ Mississippi Union Bank ” had been an existing corporation, it would have been competent for the legislature, by a statutory provision, to have pledged the faith of the State for a loan of money to be made by it, without making the charter of the bank a part or portion of the law by which the faith of the State was pledged. And I presume no one would contend for a single instant, that if such a law had been passed, it would not have been in the power of a single legislature, with the consent of the stockholders, to have made any alteration in the charter without affecting the liability which the State had agreed to assume. It will also be admitted, that if, at the same session of the legislature, two separate acts had been passed, one of them pledging the faith of the State generally for a loan of money, to be made by an existing corporation, and the other providing for the security, which that corporation should give as an indemnity for the liability the State had agreed to incur, these two acts could not be said, in a legal sense, to constitute a single “ law,” so that the repeal of the one, providing for the security to be given to the State, would have altered or repealed that by which the State had pledged her faith. If these premises be admitted, and of their truth there cannot be a doubt, will the mere fact that the law, by which the faith of the State was pledged, formed a section in a statute which provided for the incorporation of a bank, and for the security to be given to the State for the loan of its credit, necessarily make all the various provisions, touching the organization of the bank, and the manner in which the State shall be secured, parts and parcels of the law by which the faith of the State was pledged. A law enacted by the legislature, is but the expression of the legislative will in the manner prescribed by the constitution, establishing a rule' of action in reference to a given subject; and in a single statute *779may be found many laws- upon distinct and different subjects. It is very certain that the legislature of 1837 might have made provision by several statutes. First: for the charter and organization of the Union Bank. Secondly: to pledge the faith of the State for a loan of money to be made by the bank, when organized. And thirdly: for the security which the subscribers for stock in said bank should give to the State as an indemnity against ultimate liability. These are three several, separate, and distinct subjects of legislation. The passage of two of them by a single legislature would have given them the force and validity of laws; but the other required the action of two successive legislatures to make it obligatory. If three separate acts of this kind had been passed, it would never have been contended that they entered into and formed a single law by which the faith of the State was pledged, and that no change could have been made in either of them, without absolving the State, unless such change had been agreed to by two successive legislatures. Nor in my opinion does the fact that these three distinct subjects of legislation were joined in one statute, alter the rule of construction which should be applied to them. It is certainly competent for the legislature to incorporate in one statute many and different laws upon distinct subjects, and such legislation is not unusual, and when so joined, though contained in the same statute, they are different laws, regulating different things, one of which may be repealed without affecting the validity of the other. Nor can it be said in legislation of this kind, that there is a tacit, binding condition, that no part of the statute shall be enforced unless all is, or that no part shall be repealed without repealing the other. I may illustrate this view by reference to the proceedings in congress, touching the bill reported at the session of 1850, usually known as the “ omnibus bill.” In this bill provision was made for the admission of California, the settlement of the boundary between Texas and New Mexico, the organization of territorial governments for New Mexico and Utah, for the recapture of fugitive slaves, and the abolition of the slave-trade in the District of Columbia. Now, if this bill had passed, although it is very probable that many members would have been induced to vote *780for it, because of the various subjects joined in it, yet it could not be said in a legal sense, that the law for the recapture of fugitive slaves was any part of the law by which the boundaries of Texas and New Mexico were established, or that the validity of the law, admitting California, depended upon the condition that the law abolishing the trade in slaves in the District of Columbia, should not be repealed. If, then, it be conceded that the legislature possesses the power of embracing within one statute various provisions, regulating different subjects, each forming an independent law capable of enforcement without reference to the other, it was certainly within the power of the legislature in 1837, to include in the statute by which the Mississippi Union Bank was chartered, a law by which the faith of the State could be pledged for a loan of money, without making all the provisions of the statute, touching the organization of the bank, portions of such law.

The whole question in the point of view I am now considering it, is one of legislative intent. If the legislature intended that all the provisions of the statute, touching the organization of the bank, and the security to be given to the State for the loan of its credit, should form a part of the law, by which its faith was pledged, then such intention would prevail, and they would all form parts of one and the same law. But if such was not the intention of the legislature, then the mere fact that these several provisions were included in one statute, would not make them all parts of the same law, which it became necessary to pass by two successive legislatures. The question, then, arises, What was the intention of the legislature on this subject?

If we look at the act itself, that intention is obvious. By the constitution it is provided, that'the legislature which in the first instance passes a law, pledging the faith of the State, shall refer that law to the next succeeding legislature for its approval. Now, in looking at this act, it will be seen that the 5th section alone was referred by the legislature of 1837 to the succeeding legislature ; that section, therefore, and that alone, was intended by them to contain the law by which the faith of the State was pledged. It was the only section of the statute which required *781the action of two legislatures to give it validity. The remainder of the statute became the law, when it was passed by the legislature of 1837, and approved by the governor. It is true the 5th section may have been passed with reference to the other provisions of the statute, but those other provisions were not referred to the next succeeding legislature, and therefore formed no part of the law by which the faith of the State was authorized to be pledged. By looking at the 5th section, it'1 will be seen that it is general, absolute, and unconditional, that in order to facilitate the said Union Bank, for the said loan of $15,500,000, the faith of the State be, and is hereby pledged, both for the security of the capital and interest,” &c. The 47th section of the act declares, “ that the 5th section of this act, whereby the faith of the State is pledged for the payment and redemption of the loan contemplated by this act, be referred to the next legislature of this State, in pursuance to the 9th section of the 7th article of the constitution,” &c. As it was then the 5th section which the legislature of 1837 referred to the next succeeding legislature in accordance with the requirements of the constitution, it was that section by which the faith of the State was pledged, and that section, therefore, contained the law ” pledging it; so the legislature have declared ; such they have announced as their intention, and that intention makes the law. The pledge of the faith of the State made by the 5th section is general. It is unconditional and absolute, and was made in order to facilitate the Union Bank in obtaining the loan provided for in the first section of the act. The various sections contained in the charter by which • provision was made to indemnify and secure the State-for the liability which she had agreed to assume, were not made-conditions precedent, the performance of which were necessary to give validity to the law pledging the faith of the State.. They were not conditions precedent to the passage or enactment of the law itself. At best, they can only be considered as conditions which were to be performed subsequent to the passage of the law, before the governor was authorized to issue the bonds for which the 5th section had made provision.

*782As, therefore, these various provisions touching the security to be given by the stockholders, were not conditions incorporated in the law by which the faith of the State was pledged, which were to be performed, before the law itself was constitutionally enacted, their repeal or modification might be made by a single legislature, without invalidating the law previously passed in pursuance of the constitution, pledging the faith of the State generally as a security for the loan of money to be made by the Union Bank.

Secondly: But if it be conceded that the whole of the original act by which the Union Bank was chartered, and all of the provisions thereof, constituted the law by which the faith of the State was pledged, the question then arises, Could not a single legislature repeal or modify any of the provisions of that law, touching the security and indemnity to be given to the State, without affecting those provisions of the law which pledged the faith of the State for the loan of money to be made by the bank. The solution of this question depends upon the powers which have been conferred upon the legislature by the constitution.

In this country it is a political axiom, that all political power resides in the people; that the aggregate community, the collected will of the people, is sovereign. But while this is admitted, it is nevertheless true, that the aggregate community is not the sovereignty which exercises daily the sovereign power. The aggregate people cannot act daily in their capacity as sovereigns; and hence, they assemble in convention, and organize and establish a government, investing it with so much of the sovereign power as the case requires. This sovereign power, thus delegated and placed in the hands of the government, acts for, and in the name of, the State. But the government thus established, though it possesses sovereign power, does not possess the absolute and entire sovereign power of the State. The people still retain that portion of the sovereignty which they have not delegated to the government, but as to such portions which they have delegated, the government is sovereign, as representing the aggregate will of the people.

When the people of Mississippi assembled in convention to *783organize a government, they declared in the constitution which they then established, that “ the powers of the government of the State of Mississippi shall be divided into three distinct departments, and each of them confined to a separate body of magistracy, to wit: those which are legislative to one, those which are judicial to another, and those which are executive to another.” Constitution, Art. 2, § 1.

Again, they declare, that “ the legislative power of the State shall be vested in two distinct branches,” both together constituting “ the legislature of the State of Mississippi.” Art. 3, § 4.

Out of the general powers of government thus delegated, the constitution declares, that all of the first article, known as the “ declaration of rights,” shall be excepted. It also declares, that all laws contrary thereto, or to the provisions of the constitution, shall be void.” It therefore appears, that, according to provisions of the constitution, the legislature possesses the whole law-making power of the State, and may pass any law which does not contravene the provisions of the State constitution, pr the constitution of the United States. With these exceptions, the legislature has the absolute, unlimited sovereign power of making laws. These laws, when made, although in the opinion of the court they may be unwise, impolitic, unjust, and oppressive, yet, if they do not contravene the provisions of the constitution of the United States, or of the State constitution, are imperative and obligatory, and it is the duty of the court to enforce them. If the legislature pursue the authority delegated to them, their acts are valid. If they transgress the boundaries of that authority, their acts are invalid. But the wisdom, the policy, the justice of their acts, within the pale of the constitution, can never be impeached or inquired into by the court.

Among the general powers of legislation, and one which is exercised at almost every session, is the power of enacting laws to absolve parties from the performance of contracts made by them with the State, to release debts due to the State, and also to release mortgages made to the State to secure those debts. This is an ordinary, usual, and general subject of legislative action, in which the power of the legislature is full, sovereign, *784and unlimited. In the exercise of this power, the legislature can release any and every debt due to the State; they can release all mortgages, or other security taken or received- by the State for any debt due to it. They can dispense with the performance of all contracts made with the State, and absolve the parties from all penalties and forfeitures; and these powers they frequently and ordinarily exercise.

If, then, such be the ordinary power of the legislature, and that they are, cannot be disputed, it follows, that if the subscribers for stock to the Mississippi Union Bank had executed the mortgages provided for in the eighth section of the original act, to secure the payment of the State bonds, the legislature would have had full, ample, and unlimited power to have released, vacated, and discharged those mortgages, and to have absolved the subscribers for stock from the payment of the same, and from all liability to the State. I do not say that the legislature ought to have exercised this power, or that it would not have been unwise, and impolitic, and injurious to the people for them to have exercised it. But they possessed the power, and in their wisdom and discretion they might have exercised it, and the State would still have been bound to pay the bonds for which its faith was pledged. If, then, the legislature possessed the power to have released the mortgages after they were executed, and to have absolved the subscribers from liability to the State, it follows, as a corollary necessarily deducible from this proposition, that the legislature could by law dispense with the performance of the condition or the execution of the mortgages, in the first instance. But, again, the constitution only requires the action of two legislatures to pass a law pledging the faith of the State. It nowhere provides that such a law when made shall not be repealed, altered, or modified, by a single legislature. As remarked in a former part of this opinion, when a law is passed in the constitutional manner whereby the faith of the State is pledged, it does not become a contract or compact made by the people, and, therefore,- only to be changed or modified by them. But it is merely a law of the State, made by the law-making power of the State, with more deliberation and solemnity, it is true, than *785ordinary lalvs; but still, under the provisions of the constitution, necessarily subject to repeal, alteration, and amendment, by the legislature, as all other laws.

But it is said, although this may be true, yet, as the constitution has declared that no law shall be passed pledging the faith of the State for a loan of money but by the concurrence of two successive legislatures, it cannot be repealed in any other manner. This proposition, though plausible, is not tenable under the provisions of the constitution. By looking at that instrument, it will be found that the legislative power has not been so restricted; and unless restricted by that instrument, the power to repeal, alter, or amend a law by which the faith of the State is pledged, exists, and may be exercised in the same manner that it is exercised in repealing all other laws. As before shown, the whole legislative power of the government is vested in the legislature. That power they may exercise over every subject in which they do not come in conflict with the constitution of the United States, or which is not prohibited by the constitution of the State. By looking to the constitution, it will be seen that it has prescribed the general rule by which all laws shall be enacted. This rule will be found in article 3, § 23, and in article 5, § 15, in which it is declared, that “bills may originate in either house, and be amended, altered, or rejected by the other; but no bill shall have the force of a law, until on three several days it be read in each house and free discussion allowed thereon, unless four fifths of the house in which the bill shall be pending shall deem it expedient to dispense with this rule; and every bill having passed both houses, shall be signed by the president and speaker of their respective houses;” and “ shall be presented to the governor for his approval,” &c. To pass a bill in each house requires only a majority thereof, and every bill passed in the foregoing manner by a single legislature, and approved by the governor, becomes the law of the State, with two, and only two, exceptions. One of those exceptions is found in article 7, § 8, in relation to appropriations of money from the treasury to objects of internal improvement, to pass which requires the approval of two thirds of both branches of the legislature.”

*786The other is contained in section 9, of article 7, and relates to the manner in which laws shall be passed to raise a loan of money on the credit of the State, or to pledge the faith of the State for the payment or redemption of any loan or debt.

With these two exceptions, every act of thedegislature which does not conflict with the constitution of the United States, or some provision of the State constitution, if passed and approved in the manner designated in article 3, § 23, and article 5, § 15, becomes the law of the land, and is valid and obligatory.

The supplemental act under consideration makes no appro-' priation of money from the treasury to objects of internal improvement, neither does it pledge the faith of the State for any loan of money, or for the payment or redemption of any loan or debt; it is not, therefore, an act of the legislature coming within either of the above named exceptions. Nothing, therefore, was requisite to give it validity, but its passage and approval, according to the general rule prescribed in the constitution for the enactment of laws. It is true, the first section of the supplemental act empowered the governor to subscribe in the name of the State for stock in the bank, but it provided for th'e payment of this subscription out of the proceeds of the bonds which he had been directed to issue under the original act, and for the payment of which, when issued, the faith of the State had already been pledged by that law. In this connection, the question may be asked, whether the entire law by which the State had agreed to pledge her faith might not have 'been repealed before any contract was made under it, by a • single legislature, or would it have required the concurrence of ’two successive legislatures to effect such repeal? The latter ;proposition will certainly not be contended for. No one, certainly, &ould insist, that if to-day a law were passed by which the faith of the State was pledged for a loan of money, to be made by the New Orleans, Jackson, and Great Northern Railroad Company, that a single legislature would not have power to repeal this law before any contract was made under it, if it became manifest that that company was insolvent, and would, therefore, be unable to pay the debt at maturity. To deny such power to the legislature, and to require the action of two *787successive legislatures to make such a repeal, would place it in the power of the company, before a second legislature could act on the subject, to contract for the loan according to the provisions of the original statute, thus rendering the State liable for the debt, although one legislature might have previously repealed the entire law. Such a position could not be successfully maintained; yet, no proposition can be clearer than this. If a single legislature can repeal an entire law, pledging the faith- of the State, in order to save the State from irreparable loss, the same legislature must possess the power,to alter or repeal any portion of that law, which in their wisdom they may believe the greater interests of the State demand, provided such alteration or repeal does not amount to the enactment of a new “ law, pledging the faith of the State for a loan of money, or the payment or redemption of a loan or debt,” different from that provided for by the law: thus repealed or altered. A power to repeal the whole of a law, necessarily includes the power to repeal a part. Again: Let it be supposed, that by the act of 1837 it had been declared that the subscribers for stock in the Union Bank should deliver to the governor, as a security for the payment of the money to be borrowed on the credit of the State, the stock of incorporated banking companies, and had made it the duty of the governorto issue the State bonds when such stock was delivered to him, would it be seriously contended, if this bank stock had become worthless, and totally inadequate as a security before the bonds were issued, that a single legislature would not have had the power so to alter and modify the law, as to require other and better security to be given before the issuance of the bonds?

Yet, if they could make any alteration in the law by which the security to the State was changed, they certainly might have repealed the entire provision, requiring security to be given, if in their opinion the true interests of the State required such action, upon their part. Some analogous provisions of the constitution may serve to illustrate these views. By section 8, article 7, it is declared, that: “ No money from the treasury shall be appropriated to subjects of internal improvement, unless a bill for that purpose be approved by two thirds of both *788branches of the legislature.” If, under this provision, an appropriation were made to the Southern Railroad Company, with a proviso that the treasurer should not pay the money until the company gave bond and security to repay the State, no one would contend that it would require a majority of two thirds to repeal this proviso. Why? Because a majority of the legislature may pass any law where the constitution has not otherwise provided, and it has nowhere provided that a law releasing a party from an obligation or penalty in favor of the State, shall not be passed by an actual majority of a single legislature.

In looking to the constitution, it will be seen that there is but one law which requires enactment by two successive legislatures to give it validity. That is, a law by which the faith of the State is to be pledged for a loan of money, or, for the redemption or payment of any loan or debt. All other laws may be passed by a single legislature. Now it is obvious, that a law which merely releases or dispenses with a security which had been required as an indemnity to the State for the loan of its credit, is not in any sense a law pledging the faith of the State either for a loan of money, or the redemption of any loan or debt. It is not, therefore, a law which the constitution requires to be passed by two successive legislatures,' in order to give it validity.

This brings me to the third question which I proposed to investigate. Did the fact, that the supplemental act authorized other persons than those named in the original act to become subscribers for stock, make it necessary that the supplemental act should be passed by two legislatures in order to render the State liable for a loan of money, made by the corporation organized under the provisions of both acts ?

Those who maintain the affirmative of this proposition, assume as a fact, that the corporation so organized was another and different corporation than that referred to in the law, by which the faith of the State was pledged. They seem entirely to overlook the essential nature and character of a corporation, to wit, its continued existence as the same artificial being, notwithstanding the individuals who compose it may repeat*789edly change. They also overlook the additional fact, that when the law was passed pledging the faith of the State for a loan of money to be made by the “ Mississippi Union Bank,” no such corporation was then in existence, but that it was thereafter to be organized, pursuant to the authority conferred by law for that purpose. The first section of the act declared, that an institution should be established under the title of ‘ The Mississippi Union Bank,’ with a capital of $15,500,000, to be raised by means of a loan, to be obtained by the directors.” The 5th section declared, that the faith of the State should be pledged both for the security of the capital and interest of said loan. The loan contemplated by this act was not to be made to or by any particular individual, who might subscribe for stock in the bank. Neither was it to be made to, or by all those persons who might become subscribers for stock. But the loan was to be made by the bank'itself, in its corporate capacity. The credit of the State was, therefore, but to the corporation, not to the individual members or subscribers. The- bonds of the State were to be made payable to the corporation, and were lent to it, not to the subscribers for stock. The contract of guarantee on the part of the State was' made for and on account of the corporation, and not the individual subscribers or stockholders. The faith of the State was, therefore, to be pledged for the performance of a contract to be made by the corporation itself, and not by the subscribers for stock. But, as before stated, when the law was thus passed pledging the faith of the State for the loan of money to be made by the bank, no corporation had been organized, the bank was not in existence, but was thereafter to be organized and formed. The principle of law is undeniable, that a law authorizing the creation of a corporation does ’ not of itself create one; such a law is a mere authority or power conferred by the legislature; a privilege granted that a corporation may be formed and created. It is also undeniably true, that until the charter thus proposed is accepted by the parties to whom it is proposed, until the stock is subscribed and the corporation organized, pursuant to its provisions, the legislature possesses *790full and unlimited power to repeal the entire law authorizing its formation, or to modify or change any of the provisions of that law. Under this general power they may increase or limit the number of subscribers. They may give authority to others than those named in the original act to become subscribers, and empower them to accept and enjoy the benefits of the proposed incorporation, and they may modify or alter the qualifications to be possessed by those who shall become subscribers. Under this general power thus possessed by the legislature, they had unquestionable authority to change and modify the 4th section of the original act, which required subscribers for stock to be citizens of the State, owning real estate therein, and to confer upon any other person the right or privilege of subscribing for stock in the company thus to be created. We must, therefore, conclude that the law pledging the faith of the State for a loan of money to be made by “ The Mississippi Union Bank,” a corporation not then in existence, but to be organized at a future day, was passed with reference to the general power thus belonging to the legislature, under which general power the legislature could increase or diminish the number, or change the qualifications of those who might become subscribers for stock until the corporation was organized.

The legislature, by the supplemental act authorizing the State to subscribe for stock in the Union Bank, only exercised one of the legitimate powers of legislation, known to exist in it at the time the law was passed, pledging the faith of the State for the loan of money to be made by that inchoate corporation, and the law thus passed, can receive no other proper construction than such as leaves to the legislature the privilege of exercising those powers of legislation conferred upon them by the constitution, and which they were not bound by any contract to refrain from exercising. It must be treated as a law by which, in legal effect, the State agreed to facilitate by means of its credit, a loan of money to be made by the directors of The Mississippi Union Bank,” whenever that corporation might be organized and formed according to the provisions of the original act, and such amendments and modi*791fications thereof, as the legislature by virtue of their general legislative power were authorized to make, in order to carry into effect the great purpose for which the original act was passed, to wit, the establishment of a bank with a capital stock to be raised by means of a loan of money to be negotiated by the directors of the institution.

But it is said that the bank, organized under the original and supplemental acts, is a different institution from that referred to in the law, by which the faith of the State was pledged. This result, it is said, has been produced by the admission of the State as a stockholder under the provisions of the supplement. This position is not tenable. It is evidently founded upon the assumption, that the introduction of a new member into a corporation changes the corporate body. This principle when applied to unincorporated companies is correct, but it does not apply to corporations.

A distinguishing characteristic of a corporation is the very fact, that “the body continues the same, notwithstanding the change of the individuals who compose it; so that new members may be introduced at any time, without changing the corporation.” Chief Justice Marshall says: “ The great object of an incorporation is to bestow the character and properties of individuality on a collective and changing body of men.” 4 Peters, R. 562. Judge Story says : “ It is certainly true, that a corporation may retain its personal identity, although its members are perpetually changing; for, it is its artificial character, powers, and franchises, and not the natural character of its members, which constitute that identity.” This position is fully illustrated by the government of the United States, which being a moral and not a natural person, possesses the attributes of a corporation. The United States at this time is a body politic composed of thirty-one separate and independent States. New States may be admitted into the Union from time to time, but their admission does not create a new or different confederacy. The body politic remains unchanged; the moral being known as the United States preserves its identity, and is bound by its contracts in the same manner, and to the same extent, as if the original *792members composing the Union bad remained unchanged. All debts due to it remain, all contracts made by it exist, and all liabilities incurred for, or on account of it, subsist, to the same extent as if new members had not been introduced. Tested by this principle, applicable to all corporations, it is clearly obvious, that if the “ Union Bank” had actually been organized and gone into existence under the original act, the admission of the State into it as a member, according to the provisions of the supplemental act, would not have changed the identity of the corporation.

Inasmuch, then, as it is not the natural character of its members which constitutes the identity of a corporation, but its artificial character, power, and franchises, which determine that fact, it is impossible to resist the conclusion that “ The Mississippi Union Bank,” organized under the original and supplemental acts, is the identical corporation referred to in the law pledging the faith of the State. The name is the same; “the artificial character, powers, and franchises,” are essentially the same; the objects and purposes of its creation are the same; and the State was admitted as a member, in order to promote and effect the original intents and purposes with and for which the bank was to be established.

But it is said, that the State, by the original act, was only liable as a guarantor, and that, by the supplement, she became liable as a principal debtor. This is a mistake. It is true, that by the supplement, the State was authorized to subscribe for stock. But the supplement also provided, that this stock should .be paid for out of the proceeds of the bonds, the issuance of which had already been authorized; and both the original and supplemental acts provided, that the “ bank ” should be held primarily liable for the payment of the bonds. The supplemental act did not change, in this particular, the relative position of the State and the bank. The State, under both- acts, as between it and the bank, always occupied the position of a guarantor or surety, having the right to subject the entire assets of the bank to the payment of the bonds, or any part of them.

There are two other points made on behalf of the State, which I will briefly notice, before concluding this opinion. It *793is due to the attorney-general to remark, that, although he called the attention of the court to them, he did not seem to rely with any confidence upon their sufficiency to defeat the right of the complainant to a recovery.

It is said, that the commissioners who sold the bonds violated the provision contained in the 9th section of the supplement, which declares, that “ said bonds shall not be sold under their par value.”

The commissioners, in a report made by them on the 17th August, 1838, to the president of the Union Bank, and which will be found in the report of the joint committee of the legislature, appointed to examine the affairs of the bank, in January, 1839, use the following language in relation to the sale: “ The sale was made at par value, part in specie or its equivalent, in five instalments, on the first days of November, January, March, May, and July next.”

The term par value,” used in the 9th section, is not of dubious import. The commissioners were empowered “to sell the State bonds in any market within the United States, or in any foreign market, provided said bonds should not be sold under their par value.” Each of said bonds was for the sum of $2,000, and its value in the State of Mississippi was^ the amount for which it was made payable. Plence, the “par' value ” of each bond, at the place where it might be sold, would be such an amount of money as would be equivalent or equal' to $2,000 in the city of Jackson, where the bank was located', and to which place the money was to be transmitted. Mc-Culloch, in his commercial dictionary, says, “the par of the currency of any two countries, means, among merchants, the equivalency of a certain amount of the currency of the one in the currency of the other, supposing the currencies of both to be of the precise weight and purity fixed by their respective mints.” As the currency of every State in the Union is the same, if the rate of exchange between them was at par, the owner of a sum of money deposited in any city in the Union, could obtain for it precisely the same sum in any other city. This state of things, however, rarely if ever exists, because, to produce it, it is necessary that the debts reciprocally due by *794each State to the other should be equal. It appears from the agreed case, that in 1838 and 1839, when the several instal-ments for which the bonds were sold fell due, and were paid in New Orleans, according to the contract, that the rate of exchange between the cities of Jackson and New Orleans was from five to eight per cent, in favor of New Orleans. It therefore follows, that every million of dollars paid to the bank in the city of New Orleans, was equivalent to a payment of one million and fifty thousand dollars in the city of Jackson, because the bank was enabled to realize that sum in the city of Jackson, by reason of the difference -in exchange between the two places.

It will thus be seen, that the sale made by the commissioners of the bonds for $5,000,000, was equivalent to the bank to the sum of $5,250,000. But as the State bonds bore interest from their date, at the rate of five per cent, per annum, which the bank had to pay, the amount of interest accruing on the bonds till the payment of each instalment would have to be deducted, to show the actual sum which the bank realized from the sale made by the commissioners. A simple arithmetical, calculation will show, that this accruing interest paid by the bank did not equgj.1 the premium received for exchange, and that the bank, therefore, realized from the sale of the bonds a sum greater than the actual amount of the bonds, and the interest due on the same, when the payments were made. The sum thus received was greater than the “ par value ” of the bonds, which would only have been a sum equal to the actual amount of the bonds, and the interest accruing thereon, when the money was paid to the bank. This objection to the sale made by the commissioners is not valid, and, therefore, is no ground for reversing the decree of the chancellor.

But it is said, the agreement made by the commissioners in the sale of said bonds, that they should be paid in London, in sterling money of Great Britain, at the rate of four shillings and sixpence to the dollar, was made without authority. If this be true, I am at a loss to conceive in what respect it can affect the liability of the State to pay the bonds.

By the ninth section of the supplement, the commissioners *795were empowered to sell the bonds in any American or foreign market, “under such rules' and regulations as may be adopted by the president and directors or managers, not inconsistent with the provisions of the charter of the bank.” By the sixth section of the original act, the bonds were transferable by the indorsement of the president and cashier of the bank, to the order of any person or to bearer, and the indorsement was to “fix the place where the principal and interest should be paid.”

The bonds were delivered to the commissioners, indorsed in blank, and “ under the rules and regulations ” adopted in reference to the sale, the commissioners were authorized “ to fill up the blanks in said indorsements, by inserting therein the place of payment of the principal and interest of each, and also the name or names of the purchasers thereof.” '

It thus appears, that the commissioners had the power to negotiate and sell the bonds in any market, and to designate the place of payment of the principal and interest, so that the only excess of power that can be alleged against the commissioners, is the agreement that the principal and interest should be paid “ in sterling money of Great Britain, at the rate of four shillings and sixpence to the dollar.” I do not deem it necessary to examine whether or not the commissioners exceeded their authority in making this agreement. If they did, it is not such an act on their part as avoids the sale of the bonds. The general rule of law in relation to the execution of powers by an agent, is well established to be this: “ Whenever the agent does that which he is authorized to do, and more, it is good for that which is warranted, and void for the rest.”

Judge Story says: “ Where there is a complete execution of the authority, and something ex abundentid is added, which is improper, there the execution is good, and the excess only is void, if the excess can be distinguished from the rightful execution.” Story on Agency, 157, 158. Many examples are cited-by him to illustrate this rule. The present case, upon the hypothesis that the commissioners exceeded their power in the agreement to pay in sterling money, and fixing the rate at which it should be paid, falls directly within the above rule. They had the power to sell, and the power to designate the place of payment. To that extent their power was well exe*796cuted and the sale valid. If the additional agreement was made without authority, it is void; but as such excess of ■authority is clearly distinguishable from the part rightly executed, the excess only is void, and the sale of the bonds valid; for, to that extent the commissioners were fully empowered to act, and executed their power rightfully.

In any point of view in which I have been able to consider this case, the conclusion has forced itself upon my mind, that nothing contained in the provisions of the supplemental act, nor any act of the commissioners relating to the sale, has ■absolved the State from the liability assumed by the fifth sec-lion of the original act.

I have thus given, at considerable length, but in as brief space as possible, some of the reasons which induced me to concur in the opinion of the court, delivered by the chief justice. It cannot be said that the case is one entirely free from 'difficulty.

The arguments of the attorney-general, and his associate 'counsel, are very able; presenting the case in favor of the State, in a point of view which entitled it to much consideration. Every member of the court has bestowed upon it the most anxious investigation, and the result has been an entire concurrence of opinion, affirming the decree of the chancellor.

Fisher, J., concurred in the foregoing opinions and decision.

Petitions for a reargument of this case were refused by the court.

Petition for a reargument, by T. J. Wharton, for the State.

Before proceeding to notice in detail the various points reviewed by your honors, I desire to consider, very briefly, the question, For what purpose, to whom, and upon what terms, did the original act propose to pledge the faith of the State ? 2d. Whether the supplemental act conforms to the original act in these particulars ; and 3d. What is the legal effect of a departure therefrom.

I am well aware that I am presuming to tread upon ground over which others, incomparably my superiors, have passed, *797and which have not been overlooked by your honors in the opinion already delivered. At the risk of subjecting myself to the charge of inexcusable vanity, I shall, however unsuccessful the effort may prove, undertake to vindicate the positions assumed, and so ably maintained on behalf of the State by the attorney-general, in his brief on file, and in his argument before the court. The apology I offer will be found in the interest and novelty of the questions themselves, and the importance of the case, both as to the amount involved and the attitude which the State has heretofore taken and steadily maintained in the face of the world.

1. For what purpose, to whom, and upon what terms did the original act propose to pledge the faith of the State ? In this inquiry, I shall not pause to consider the contemporaneous history of the country, though the court may be judicially advised of it, or the reason or necessity which may be supposed to have existed to authorize or to justify the attempt to pledge the faith of the State, at the time, in the manner, and for the purpose it is insisted in argument by counsel for the holders of the bonds, it was done.

My business is rather to consider what was designed to be done, and what was actually done, in regard to a pledge of the faith of the State, by the legislature as shown by the acts. On the 5th of February, 1838, an act was passed by the legislature chartering the “ Mississippi Union Bank.” The same act had been passed at the session immediately preceding, and submitted to the people, in conformity with the requirements of the 9th section of the 7th article of the constitution, which is in these words : No law shall ever be passed to raise a Joan of money upon the credit of the State, or to pledge the faith of the State for the payment or redemption of any loan or debt, unless such law be proposed in the senate or house of representatives, and be agreed to by a majority of the members of each house, and entered on their journals, with the yeas and nays taken thereon, and be referred to the next succeeding legislature, and published for three months previous to the next regular election, in three newspapers of this State, and unless a majority of each branch of the legislature, so elected after *798such publication, shall agree to and pass such law; and in such case the yeas and nays shall be taken and entered on the journals of each house.” The first section of that act declares “ that an institution shall be established under the title of the Mississippi" Union Bank, with a capital of fifteen millions five hundred ■ thousand dollars, which said capital shall be raised by means of a loan, to be obtained by the directors of the institution.”

The 2d section provided for opening books of subscription at Jackson, for f15,500,000, the stock to be divided into shares of $100 each, “ intended to secure the loan of said sum ; said books to be opened within twenty days after the promulgation of said act, and to continue open for six months then next ensuing, at the termination of which period they were to be closed; immediately after wfoich the directors provided for in subsequent sections of said act were required to m&ke a correct statement of said subscriptions, and in the event the whole sum subscribed .for amounted to more than $15,500,000, it was made the duty of said directors to deduct the amount of such excess, 1st, from the stock, of which sufficient security was not offered, and 2d, from the largest subscriptions, &c. The 3d section, after naming the commissioners to receive stock in the various counties of the State, (whose duties were to continue for three months after opening books), provided, that at the expiration of that time, the said commissioners or managers under whose inspection said books were opened, should transmit to the managers of the parent bank, the books of subscription so opened by them, together with all the titles and other documents that may have been deposited with them, in order that the board of directors of the mother bank may finally decide on the validity and sufficiency of the titles so transmitted by them, before the subscribers should be declared to be stockholders, as provided for in another section.

Who are authorized to become stockholders ? The 4th section informs us “ The owners of real estate, situated in the State of Mississippi, and who are citizens thereof, shall be the only persons entitled to subscribe, and shares so subscribed, shall be transferable only to such owners, until after five years, *799when they may be transferred to any owner of real estate in this State, whether citizens or not, provided, however, to secure the capital or interest of said bank, mortgage shall be given on property of a sufficient character, and of an imperishable nature.”

The 12th section provided, “ that after the closing of the books, and when it shall appear that at least $500,000 shall have been subscribed, and paid in on the original stock of the capital of said bank, the said institution shall go into immediate operation, under the provisions hereinafter mentioned.” The 11th section provided, that those who should be declared stockholders should be required to pay, in cash, the sum of ten dollars over to the commissioners or directors, on every share subscribed for by them, when required by the directors, which said sum, by the 44th section, was to be refunded to the subscribers to the capital stock of said bank after the bonds were sold, and the proceeds thereof realized by the said bank.

The 26th section provided, “that the board of directors shall be judges of the sufficiency of the mortgages offered for stock and loans, and shall have power to reject the same if not sufficient, and in such case require other security, and if it is not given, reduce the shares to the amount sufficiently secured.”

The 8th section declares, “ that to secure the payment of the capital and interest of said bonds,” (referring to the bonds to be issued under the 5th section,) “the subscribers shall be bound to give mortgage,to the satisfaction of the directors, on property to be in all cases equal to the amount of their respective stock, which mortgage may bear on cultivated lands,” &c.; “and that no 'one shall be permitted to subscribe until he shall deliver to the commissioners a valid act of sale, or patents, or certificates of confirmation from the land commissioners of the United States, or partition sales, and adjudication' by a decree of a court, verified according to law, or such other evidence of title to the property proposed as a guarantee to the bank, as may be deemed satisfactory to said commissioners or directors,” &c.

The 14th section provides “ that so soon as 5,000 shares *800shall have been subscribed in the manner herein provided for, the governor of the State shall provisionally appoint thirteen directors, who shall serve for twelve months,” &c.

The 5th section declares, “that in order to facilitate the said Union Bank, for the said loan of fifteen millions five hundred thousand dollars, the faith of this State be, and is hereby pledged, both for the security of the capital and interest; and 7,500 bonds, of $2,000 each,” payable in specified instalments, “ shall be signed by the governor of the State, to the order of the Mississippi Union Bank, countersigned by the State treasurer,” &c., enumerating in their order the various instalments of bonds. #

The 7th section provided, “that both the capital and interest of the said bonds shall be paid by said bank at the times they shall severally fall due.”

The 30th section provides, “ that as soon as directors are appointed, as hereinbefore provided for, they shall proceed to the election of a president, and the same shall be notified to the governor of the State, who will thereupon execute to the said bank, from time to time, bonds in amount proportioned to the sums subscribed, and secure to the satisfaction of the directors, as required by the charter, until the whole amount of fifteen millions five hundred thousand dollars shall be furnished in bonds, as hereinbefore provided for.”

The 29th section provides, “ that the bonds, with the privileged mortgages, for the sum of fifteen millions five hundred thousand dollars, subscribed by the stockholders of said bank, according to their shares, for the purpose of securing the loan of fifteen millions five hundred thousand dollars, shall be deposited in the office of said institution, as security for the reimbursement of the capital, as well as interest of said bonds, granted by the State.” '

The 47th section provided, “ that the fifth section of this act, whereby the faith of the State is pledged for the payment and redemption of the loan contemplated by this act, be referred to the next Legislature of this State, in pursuance of the 9th section of the 7th article of the constitution.”

The 19th section provides, “ that the whole of the profits of *801the said Union Bank shall remain with, and be employed by the directors as a part of its capital, until the fall payment of that portion of the bonds of the State specified in the 5th section, which will be payable in twelve years, after which one fourth of the profits then realized shall be divided among the stockholders in the proportion to which they shall be entitled respectively ; and the whole of the remaining and subsequent profits of the bank, shall be employed by the bank until the full payment of the bonds of the State which will be payable in fifteen years,” and so continuing until all the bonds are paid in the order they mature, after which, “ in consideration of the bonds of the State, in addition to a voice in its direction, the State shall be entitled to one tenth part of the whole profits of the bank,” to be paid into the treasury of the State.

The 31st section provides, that the State shall be entitled to a credit of $200,000 on furnishing notes or obligations for such sum as may be required to be used, and paying the usual interest in advance, &c.

We have thus, at very great length, collected such portions of the original act as pertain immediately to the point under consideration. It being admitted in the pleadings that said act was passed, in strict conformity with the terms and conditions prescribed in the 9th section of the 7th article of the constitution, we were desirous to ascertain precisely to whom, to what extent, and upon what conditions this pledge of the faith of the State, contained in the 5th section, was made. We knew of no better way, in the first instance, of doing that, than by extracting such portions of said act, as bear upon those points, and presenting them in connection. And now having done so, aud having made ourselves acquainted with the various relations they sustain to each other, the light which each reflects upon the other, no matter how widely legal minds may differ as to the question of the liability of the State on other grounds in the case, if it were res integra, I apprehend all could very nearly agree in regard to the extent of the liability created by the act now under consideration.

Upon the hypothesis, that the bond in suit was issued under the original act, and that, at present, is the one to which we *802will confine ourselves, let us see how the case stands. Out of the various sections of that act which we have quoted we deduce the result, that the State agreed to pledge its faith to facilitate the Union Bank in effecting a loan of $15,500,000, the amount of its capital as aforesaid in the charter, that the only persons who could be stockholders in said bank are declared to be citizens of, and owners of real estate, situated in the State of Mississippi, who shall execute mortgages on cultivated lands, plantations, and slaves in said State, in value equal in all cases to the amount of their respective stock, that the title to the property thus mortgaged shall be satisfactory to the directors of said bank, until the execution of which mortgages they could not be declared to be stockholders, that as soon as 5,000 shares had been subscribed in the manner provided for, the governor was authorized to appoint a provisional directory, that those who should be declared to be stockholders, in the manner prescribed, should pay in cash the sum of ten dollars to the directory or commissioners on every share of stock subscribed for by them, that the governor should issue bonds in amount proportioned to the stock secured by mortgages, as aforesaid, in consideration of which bonds so issued, the State was to be entitled to one tenth part of the whole profits of the bank after the bank had paid off and discharged all the bonds issued to it, and also to a credit of $200,000 in the shape of accommodations, that the bonds, with the privileged mortgages for securing the loan of $15,-500,000, were to be deposited in said bank. Such were the terms and conditions, and such the purposes upon which, and for which, the faith of the State was pledged. If these be the declared restrictions, no others will be implied. Upon them, and them only, can the liability of the State be fixed. They constitute the law of the contract. I care not whether it be in a matter of controversy growing out of the issuance of the bonds, as between the bank and the State, or an assignee of the bank. They were part of — nay, the very consideration upon which the State agreed to pledge her faith. We cannot, by any legal casuistry, escape the conclusion, that she consented to the pledge of her faith upon all the limitations, secu*803rities, and advantages proposed in the act. The act was an entire thing, as well in the advantages and indemnity it offered to the State, as in the liabilities it proposed to bring her under, in case she consented to the loan of her faith. The undertaking of the State being special, and limited to the very terms upon which the pledge was asked, the same are to be taken as the criterion of liability. But we are anticipating the argument on another branch.

It sufficiently appears from, the section quoted, that the object of the State, in the pledge of its faith, was to facilitate the Union Bank in obtaining a loan. It was for that purpose and to that bank the 5th section proposed to the people to pledge the faith of the State in the manner contemplated by the 9th section of the 7th article of the constitution, and to no other and different purpose or bank. We have already answered the latter clause of the inquiry, upon what terms did the original act propose to pledge the faith of the State, by quoting the sections bearing on that point, and by enumerating the privileges and disabilities contained in them. If, then, the bond in controversy was issued to the Mississippi Union Bank as organized by said act, and for the purpose and on the terms prescribed in said act, the liability of the State is clear and indisputable.

In the agreement of facts signed by the counsel for the State and the holder of the bond in suit, it is admitted that the mortgages required to be executed, as provided in the 8th and 30th sections, had not been given when said bond was issued and was delivered to said bank.

Having seen for what purpose, to whom, and upon what terms the original act proposed to pledge the faith of the State, we proceed to inquire in the second place, whether the supplemental act conforms to the original act in those particulars.

The supplemental act was passed on the 8th day of February, 1838, in the house of representatives, in the senate on the 13th day of the same month, and was approved by the governor on the 15th day of February, 1838, that is, ten days after the original act was finally passed. It is admitted, that this act was never submitted to the people or passed by two *804legislatures. We will observe the same order in considering the provisions of the various sections of this act, which we did in regard to the first act.

The 1st section provides, “ that as soon as the books of subscription for stock in the said Mississippi Union Bank are opened, the governor of this State is hereby authorized and required to subscribe for, in behalf of this State, fifty thousand shares of the stock of the original capital of the said bank, the same to be paid for out of the proceeds of the State bonds, to be executed to the said bank as already provided for in the said charter, and that the dividend • and profits which may accrue and be declared by the bank on the said stock subscribed for, in behalf of the State, shall be held by the said bank subject to the control of the State legislature, for the purposes of internal improvement and the promotion of education.”

The 6th section provides, “ that subscribers to the stock in the said Union Bank, or-their legal representatives, may at any time transfer their respective shares to any citizen of this State with the approbation of the directory of the mother bank, and that no person, not a citizen of this State, shall ever own any stock in this bank.”

The 8th section, after other specifications not necessary to be mentioned,, declares that the “ portion of the stock of the said Union Bank to be subscribed for on the part of the State, as provided for in the 1st section of this act, shall be taken from the whole amount of the capital stock of said bank, and the subscriptions to stock at the mother bank, and the several branches of said bank, shall be so graduated as to reduce the amount of stock to be_ subscribed for by individuals in a just ratio proportionate to their capital, and that nothing in the charter of the said bank shall be so construed as to deprive the State of the amount of stock provided for in the 1st section of this supplemental act, and in no case shall this act be so construed as to allow more than five directors on the part of the State, as provided for in the original act.”

The 16th section provides, “ that so much of the original charter of the Union Bank of the State of Mississippi as con*805flicts with the provisions of this act, be, and the same is hereby' repealed.”

The 18th section is as follows: That so much of the 19th section of the original charter as entitled the State to one tenth of the whole profits of the bank, be repealed, and so much of the 31st section as entitled the State to a credit of $200,000, be, and the same is hereby repealed.”

The 19th section modifies the 11th section of the first act, in providing that the sum of $10, which the latter required stockholders to pay in cash on each share subscribed for by them might be paid in the notes of solvent banks of this State, and that not more than 21-2 per cent, on the stock shall be required to be paid at the time of subscribing.

The 20th and last section authorized any stockholder who might be dissatisfied with the graduation of his stock, to withdraw the property he had pledged, and cease to be a stockholder, &e. There are other, but not important alterations. The foregoing will suffice for the purposes of the. argument.

We have now reached the second point from which to take-an observation and make a reckoning.

Let the picture of the “ Mississippi Union Bank,” as established by the first act, and the pledge of the faith of the State;, as contained in the 5th section thereof, be brought into juxtar position with the institution created by the supplemental act,, which it is proposed shall be the beneficiary of the pledge of' the faith of the State, made to the former. In which of the tests, by which we tried the first act, does the latter agree 1 Scarcely the germ of the former is retained.

All the wise and provident safeguards thrown around the-pledge of the faith of the. State by the terms of the first act, evidencing the same jealousy and profound sagacity which suggested the adoption of the 9th section of the 7th article of the constitution, are cloven down. The whole relation which the State sustained to the bank, created by the former act, is-changed. Robbed of the advantages which it was supposed would accrue to her from the bonus of one tenth of the profits of the institution, and of the $200,000 for which she was to *806have credit in the shape of accommodations, whilst her liabilities are infinitely increased. Instead of awaiting the period, when the stock subscribed for has been all secured by mortgages on unincumbered property, and those mortgages deposited in the bank “ as security for the reimbursement of the capital as well as interest of said bonds granted by the State,” instead of awaiting the organization of the institution, the election of directors, &c., and the issuance of bonds thereafter, “from time to time in amount proportioned to the sums subscribed, and secured,” the governor is required, “ as soon as the books of subscription for stock are opened, to subscribe for fifty thousand shares for the State,” &c. Thus changing the relation of the State from a mere security or guarantor under the original act, with the most abundant and undoubted indemnity, in the mortgages of the stockholders, into a stockholder herself to the amount of $5,000,000.

But a most vital change of the first act, as was appositely noted in the brief filed on behalf of the State by Mr. Stearns, was effected by the supplemental act, in the absolute surrender, “ without the shadow of an equivalent, of the only reliable and safe indemnity provided by the first act for the security of the State, the mortgages of the stockholders. The State, by the supplemental act, being still bound to issue $15,500,000 of her bonds, for $5,000,000 of which she would have no security whatever, in the event of the failure of the bank.” But enough has been said upon the utter dissimilarity of the two institutions of the 1st and 2d acts in the point of view I am now considering the case. It was the Mississippi Union Bank created by the 1st act, to which the pledge of the faith of the State was given. It is demonstrated in the brief of the attorney-general, that the bond in suit could not, in the nature of things, have issued under, and in pursuance of the terms and conditions of that act. That act bears date 5th February, 1838; the bond was issued 5th June, 1838; the 2d section of said act required the books of subscription of the parent bank to continue open six months. No one could be declared a stockholder until the directors had passed upon and approved the title to the property mortgaged by him to secure the stock *807subscribed for by him; and this could not be done until the books were closed, the stock graduated, titles examined, mortgages executed, and stockholders declared. Were there any doubt upon this point, it would be removed by the clear and emphatic terms of the 12th section of the first act, which provides that said bank should go into immediate operation; when ? I answer in its own words: “ After the closing of the books, and when it shall appear that at least five hundred thousand dollars shall have been subscribed, and paid in on the original stock of the capital of said bank.” Both contingencies must have occurred. The books must have been closed, and then if it appears, not before, that said sum has been subscribed and paid in, said bank could go into immediate operation.

I will now proceed to review with the utmost deference, and I hope fairness, the various grounds upon which the opinion of your honors places the liability of the State.

It is conceded by your honors, that if the bonds which were issued by the governor to the Union Bank, were not issued in execution of, or under the provisions of the original act, and if the sole authority for the issuance of said bonds was derived from the supplemental act, and if the latter was a mere nullity, not having been enacted by the legislature, in conformity with the directions of the provision of the constitution already referred to, then the mere act of sealing and delivery of said bonds by the governor did not constitute said bonds a valid obligation on the State.

Let us inquire whether there is not indubitable evidence, that said bonds did not issue under the original act ?

Our time has been hitherto occupied in endeavoring to ascertain to whom, and upon what terms, the faith of the State was designed to be pledged. In pursuing that inquiry, we first considered the terms and provisions of the original charter, as though that were the only act by which it was pretended the bonds had issued. We put the Mississippi Union Bank in operation first, as it may be supposed it would have existed, if the supplement had never been passed. We had an exact drawing of the edifice intended to be constructed, *808and, though it was never built, we saw how it would have looked if it had been. We next pursued the same order in presenting a diagram of the building, the specifications of which were furnished by the supplement. We placed the two side by side, that we might be able to see in how far they resembled.

We shall not content ourselves with a mere outside view of the two edifices. We will feebly essay to thread their labyrinths, to examine their composition. In other words, we will first make a minute examination to discover whether the 'bonds were issued under the first act. 2d. If not, whether they were under the supplement; if not under either separately, were they under the two conjoined; and if under the two conjoined, did any obligation thereby devolve on the State. We will leave out of view, at this point, every other question involved in the inquiry, but the one of time when the bonds were issued. We insist, that by the terms of the first act they were forbidden to be issued before the expiration of six months from the opening of books for subscription for stock at the seat of government. It is admitted in the argument of counsel and the opinion of your honors, that they issued within four months after the final passage of said act. That act required books to be opened at Jackson, after twenty days’ notice had been given in all the newspapers of the State, immediately after the promulgation of said act.

It also required books for subscription to' be opened at the seat of justice in each county of the State, and be kept open for three months, thirty days’ previous notice having been given through the newspapers published in said counties; at the expiration of that time, the commissioners appointed to receive subscriptions for stock in the various counties, were to transmit the books of subscription so opened by them, together with all the titles, papers, and other documents deposited with them, “in order that the mother bank may finally decide on the validity and sufficiency of the titles so transmitted by them before the subscribers may be declared to be stockholders, &e. Suppose, now, that the bonds were issued immediately after the books of subscription in the various counties had been closed, and the title papers which had been received were *809transmitted to the mother bank for approval, and the objection is still unanswered, that they issued before the'time authorized by law. Whatever difference of opinion may exist as to whether the bonds. could be issued before the expiration of six months, the time during which the books were to be kept open at Jackson, we think it clear that the shortest period of time within which they could issue, would be that during which the books are required to be kept open in the various counties, aft;er making allowance for the time of publishing notices of opening them in said counties. Now the 3d section of the original act required, that the opening of books in the various counties should not take place until after thirty days’ previous notice had been given in the newspapers published in said counties, and then they were to remain open for three months, at the 'end of which time the books for subscription, together with the evidences of title to the property proposed to be pledged, should be transmitted to the mother bank, and that the subscribers should not be considered stockholders until said titles had been examined and approved by the managers of said mother bank. If, therefore, it be supposed that all the various requirements of said act were complied with at the earliest moment they could have been after the passage of said act, how stands the case ? Why thus. The act was passed on the 5th day of February, 1838, if the publications were made in all the counties in which the books for subscription were required to be opened, on the day of the passage of the act, that would bring it to the 5th of March, 1838; then add the three months, during which they were to be kept open, and you bring it to the 5th day of June, 1838. The bonds were issued and bear date the 5th day of June, 1838. It will thus' be seen, that upon the supposition that the notices were published in all the papers of the State on the very day the first act was approved, said publications,.and the three months thereafter, during which the books were required to be kept open, would extend to the very day on which said act required said books to be closed. But something more was requisite. After said books were closed, all title papers deposited with the commissioners were to be transmitted to the mother bank, *810and be examined and approved before the subscribers could be considered and declared stockholders. For, until that ceremony were gone through, it did not appear but that all said subscriptions would be rejected by the mother bank, and books have to be re-opened. And it was not until “after the closing of the books, and when it shall appear that at least $500,000 shall have been subscribed, and paid in, on the original stock of the capital of said bank, the said institution shall go into immediate operation,” &c., section 12 ; by the governor “ provisionally appointing thirteen directors, upon the appointment of whom the power of the commissioners to receive the subscriptions and the papers to be delivered to said directors closed,” section 13. The 30th section provided for the issuance of bonds, in the language following: That as soon as directors are appointed, as hereinbefore provided for, they shall proceed to elect a president, and the same shall be notified to the governor of the State, who will thereupon execute to the said bank, from time to time, bonds in amount proportioned to the sums subscribed, and secure to the satisfaction of the directors, as required by the charter, until the whole amount of $15,500,000 shall be furnished in bonds, as hereinbefore provided for.”

But is it credible that the thirty days’ previous notice required to be given of the opening of the books, could have been given on the very day the first act was approved ? How could knowledge of it have been conveyed to the publishers of all the papers in the State on the day of its passage ? Is it likely, too, that every paper in the State was published on the same day, and that day the very day on which'said act was passed? We think this conclusive of the question. The bonds were either not designed to be issued under the first act, or were not issued at the time, and upon the terms required. So that we might safely rest here, as to that matter of fact, even if your honors should hold that this was not a law of a general nature, and, therefore, falling under the 6th section of the 7th article of the constitution, which declares, that no laws of a general nature, unless otherwise provided for, shall be enforced, until sixty days after the passage thereof.”

But leaving the question of the mere date of the bonds, as *811showing that they were not issued under the first act, we pass to other provisions of said act in support of the same proposition ; still bearing in mind that it is admitted in the “ agreed facts,” that at the time of the issuance of said bonds, the mortgages required by the 8th and 30th sections of the first act had not been executed.

It is conceded by your honors, that if the formal execution of mortgages by the subscribers for stock was a condition precedent, upon which the right of the directors to apply to the governor for a delivery of bonds, or the authority of the governor to issue them, depended, then the bonds were issued in violation of the act incorporating the bank, of which fact the purchaser was presumed to have notice.

Let us see if those supposed facts do not really exist. The 8th section provides “ that to secure the payment of the capital and interest of said bonds, the subscribers shall be bound to give mortgage to the satisfaction of the directors, on property to be in all cases equal to the amount of their respective stock,” &e. Here mutual and dependent covenants were clearly entered into. By the 5th section, the pledge of the faith of the State was made; for what purpose ? “ To facilitate the said Union Bank, for the said loan of $15,500,000, both for the security of the capital and interest.” By the 8th section, already quoted, the indemnity is provided.. Every stockholder was bound to give mortgage for every dollar of stock declared to him; and the 'liability of every stockholder, in case of the failure of the bank, is declared by the 44th section to be in proportion to his stock. What, then, is the point of time fixed for the issuance of the bonds by said act? That involves the inquiry, When and upon what terms was said bank to be organized, and put into operation ?

The 12th section declares, that when the books are closed and $500,000 at least had been subscribed and paid in, on the original stock of the capital of said bank, the said institution was to go into immediate operation. There is some ambiguity in the phrase “ stock of the capital.” But we think the meaning of it clearly revealed by the other sections of the act. It is insisted, however, that the only mode provided for in the act *812by which that sum ($500,000) could be raised, as well as the entire capital of the bank, was by a loan made upon the pledge of the faith of the State. Does not the preceding section, the 11th, provide a mode by which said sum may have been raised, by those who were declared stockholders paying in cash the sum of ten dollars on each and every share subscribed for by them, not each and every share of which they may be declared stockholders ?

It was then provided by the 14th section, that as soon as five thousand shares shall have been subscribed “ in the manner herein before provided,” (it was only by the 11th and 12th sections that any provision had been therein before made,) the governor should appoint a provisional directory of thirteen, to serve for twelve months. As soon as they were appointed and a president chosen, the powers of the commissioners appointed to receive stock ceased, and they were required to deliver to the directory all papers held by them.

Then comes the 30th section, which declares, “as soon as directors are appointed, as herein before provided for, they shall proceed to the election pf a president, and the same shall be notified to the governor of the State, who will thereupon execute to said bank, from time to time, bonds in amount proportioned to the sums subscribed, and secure to the satisfaction of the directors, as required by the charter, until the whole amount of $15,500,000 shall be furnished in bonds, as herein before provided for.” Now the argument on the other side is, that inasmuch as directors were to be appointed as soon as $500,000 (or five thousand shares) had been subscribed and paid in, and as soon as the directors were appointed and the governor notified thereof, he was required to issue bonds, as just quoted from the 30th section; it is, therefore, certain, that the execution of the mortgages required of those declared to- be stockholders was never intended to be a condition precedent to the issuance of the bonds.

The 26th section made the directors judges of the sufficiency of the mortgages offered for stock and loans, with full power to reject the same if not sufficient, to-require other security, and in default thereof, reduce the shares of such defaulters to the *813amount secured. In the exercise of this power, it might turn out that all the subscribers had failed to satisfy the directors as to the' title they held to the property proposed to be pledged or mortgaged, and .thus their entire subscriptions be rejected, whilst, according to the view of the opposite side, the bank might be in possession of the bonds of the State. Where would be the security of the State in that case ?

But how consistent with reason, and the obvious and admitted design of that act, to secure the pledge the State was asked to give, by mortgage; as provided in the 8th section, is the position of the State, to wit: That as soon as the directors were appointed they should examine the title to all property proposed to be mortgaged, require the execution of mortgages to so much as the titles were sufficient, and then, from time to time, demand of the governor “ bonds proportioned to the sums subscribed, and secure to the satisfaction of the directors,” &c.

Again, what does the cautious language of the 30th section import ? What does the phrase “ from time to time ” refer to ? Transfer one or two lines, and not only is the section itself relieved of all difficulty, but it will serve to throw much light on the general subject. That as soon as directors are appointed, as herein before provided for, they shall proceed to the election of a president, and the same shall be notified to the governor of the State, who will thereupon execute to the said bank, from time to time, bonds in amount proportioned to the sums subscribed, and secure to the satisfaction of the directors,” &c.

And thus, if the execution of the mortgages was not a condition precedent to the issuance of the bonds, they were at least to proceed pari passu. So that, as provided by section 8, to secure the payment of the capital and interest of said bonds, the subscribers shall be bound to give mortgage to the satisfaction of the directors, property to be in all cases equal to their respective stock,” &c. But if the argument on the other side is correct, and the mortgages were not required to be executed before'the bonds could be issued, why is the governor restricted by the 30th section in the issuance of the bonds “ from time to time,” in amount proportioned to the sums subscribed, *814and secure to the satisfaction of the directors, as required by the charter, until the whole $15,500,000 shall be furnished in bonds, as before required. Why could he not issue the whole amount at once, and before mortgage had been executed ?

But it is said by your honors, that the 14th section, in providing for the election of a provisional 'directory, so soon as five thousand shares had been subscribed, in the manner provided for in said act, is unmeaning and useless, if the issuance of the bonds was delayed until the execution of the mortgages. Why so ? What is there to negative the idea that their powers, for the time they were authorized to act, were not as ample as those of the directory who were to succeed them, at the end of their term ? Why could they not, under the 26th section, be judges of the sufficiency of mortgages to secure stock, and, in general, do any and every act devolving upon the latter, so long as they remained in office ? They are no more restricted by the section under which they derive their appointment, than are their successors under the section appointing them.

The 14th section is relied on to show that the bonds issued under the first act, and that it was the intention of the legislature that the issuance of the bonds should not be delayed for the execution of the mortgages provided for in the first clause of the 8th section. The 14th section provides, that “ so soon as five thousand shares shall have been subscribed, in the manner herein before provided for, the governor shall provisionally appoint thirteen directors,” &c. Before banking operations could be commenced, the charter required capital to be paid in to the amount of at least $500,000. It is argued that this could only have been raised in one way, to wit: by a sale of the bonds.

Can this be so ? The first place in which mention is made of the $500,000 to be raised before the appointment of the .provisional directory, and the commencement of banking operations, is in the 12th section, which is in these words: “ That after the closing of the books, and when it shall appear that at least $500,000 shall have been subscribed and paid in, the said institution shall go into immediate operation under the provisions hereinafter mentioned. We have already remarked that *815this sum might have been intended to be raised by the ten dollars which each subscriber for stock was required by the 11th section to pay in cash on each share subscribed to the commissioners or directors, or their agents. Now it is manifest, from the language of the 10th section, that it did not contemplate that said sum was to be raised upon the pledge of the faith of the State, or bonds issued upon that pledge. It is too clear for argument, that the $500,000 provided for in the 14th section, were not to be raised upon the bonds of the State. If they were, how is the language used explainable? “ after the closing of the books, and when it shall appear that at least $500,000 shall have been subscribed and paid in,” on what? on the original stock of the capital of said bank.” The State did not subscribe, was not authorized by said act to subscribe for stock. Besides, to suppose that it was raised on her bonds, would prove that she issued her bonds before the appointment of the provisional directory, for they could not be appointed until after the contingency provided for in the 14th section had occurred. In addition to this, the opposite side only contend, that the earliest moment when the governor could issue the bonds was after the appointment of the directory, and as directed in the 30th section.

Again, it is said that when, by the 30th section, the governor was required to “ execute bonds to the said bank, from time to time, in amount proportioned to the sums subscribed, and secure, to the satisfaction of the directors, as required by the charter,” the legislature did not refer, by the words secure to the satisfaction of the directors,” to the mortgages required to be executed by the first clause of the 8th section.

What, then, was meant by those words in the 30th section ? What was to be “ secure to the satisfaction of the directors ? ” Not the bonds of the State. What were to be the “ sums subscribed ? ” Not the amount for which bonds should issue. We do not see how a doubt can exist on this point. By the 8th section, mortgages were required to be given to the satisfaction of the directors, on property equal in all cases to the amount of stock subscribed; and by the 30th section, the governor was to issue bonds from time to time, in amount proportioned to the *816sums subscribed, and secure to the satisfaction of the directors. Clearly the two sections refer to the same securities or mortgages, else why the term from time to time, and why were the bonds to be issued in amounts proportioned to the sums subscribed and secure, &c. ? True, the 30th section does not in express terms require the execution of mortgages. It does, however, by the clearest intendment, by the most irresistible implication, when we refer to other sections relating to the same point. It does, as “ required by the charter.” An express limitation, by the' very terms of the 30th section, is imposed upon the governor in issuing the bonds. He had no discretion in the matter. He was only authorized “ to execute bonds to the bank, from time to time, proportioned to the sums subscribed, and secure to the satisfaction of the directory.”

Before the closing of the books opened in the different counties, no mortgages could be executed by the subscribers on account of stock subscribed by them. The commissioners could only receive from them such “valid acts of sale, or patents, or certificates of confirmation from the land commissioner of the United States, or partition sales,” &c., as are enumerated in the 8fch section. These they were required, at the expiration of three months after opening books, to send to the mother bank, and the directory would examine the titles; if approved, mortgages would be executed. The subscribers only delivered to the commissioners such evidences of title as they held, to -be examined, &c. The words, “ as required by the charter,” qualify and fully explain that the security referred to was the mortgages provided for, in the first clause of the 8th section. If this be not so, but the words in the 30th section refer to some form of security, taken by the commissioners before the titles were examined to the property offered to be pledged, that security might prove utterly worthless, and be rejected by the directors. The objection we make is not obviated by the argument drawn from the words, “ sums subscribed,” which, it is said, should be “ stock declared,” to support the view we urge. The terms “ subscribers,” “ stockholders,” are frequently used in the act as convertible. For example: The first clause of the 8th section says, the “ sub*817scribers shall be bound to give mortgages in all cases equal to the amount of their respective “ stock,” not “ subscription.” The 9th section declares, that the “ subscribers ” of the said Union Bank be, and they are hereby created a corporation and body politic for forty years, &c.

If the security referred to in section 30 be not the mortgages provided for in section 8, what, then, is it? Of what does it consist? Is it the only security, or is it merely cumulative to that of the mortgages, which, it is said, were not to be executed before the issuance of the bonds? We are told that it consists of the pledge of real property to be made by the subscribers to the stock, by delivery of “ title deeds, patents, certificates of confirmation by the board of land commissioners of the United States, or other evidences of title which should be deemed satisfactory security to the said commissioners or directors,” as provided in the second clause of the 8th section. But the bank had refused, or, rather, the charter prohibited her from, declaring subscribers for stock to be stockholders on the pledge of those things. They had first to undergo the scrutiny of the directors. If they were approved, the subscribers were declared stockholders. They should not be regarded as higher-security to the State for issuing her bonds.

I will not now consider the effect of the deposit of those papers with the commissioners in creating a statutory mortgage, or lien, on the property to which they related. The' words “ secure to the satisfaction of the directors,” found in. the 30th section, we think cannot relate to the title papers-deposited with the commissioners. First. Because the 3d section provides, that when the books are closed in the different, counties at the end of three months from the time they were' opened, the commissioners are required to transmit them to the-mother bank, together with all the papers relating to titles so-deposited with them, and the directors are to examine them,, and decide on the validity and sufficiency of the titles. When,, therefore, we speak of “ secure to the satisfaction of the directors,” we must mean after they have examined them, and graduated the stock in pursuance of the terms of the 26th section and this could only be done after the books had been closed at. *818the mother bank, (which were required to be kept open for six months,) for, until they were closed, the graduation of stock could not be made that was to be made when the titles were examined. As soon as that was done, the mortgages were to be executed. And then, and not till then, was the contract of subscription complete. When they were secured to the satisfaction of the directors, the “ stock was declared ” and mortgages executed. And thus, by that rule of construction, we are drawn irresistibly to the conclusion that the 30th section did refer to the very mortgages required by the 8th section.

We beg leave, therefore, to say, with all deference, we think your honors in error, in the view suggested, of the object of the legislature, in requiring security to be given by the subscribers to the stock for the performance of their contract of subscription. You say, “ if it was not intended that the bonds should be issued before the stockholders were declared, and mortgages formally sealed and delivered, the 30th section of the charter would be worse than useless. But if, on the other hand, the subscriptions to the stock secured by a pledge of real estate were designed to be the basis upon which the bonds of the State were to be issued, we perceive very clearly the object and utility of the provision, and the reason why a provisional directory was to be appointed so soon as five thousand shares were subscribed, with authority to apply to the governor for a delivery of bonds equal in amount to the sums subscribed.” It was not a subscription for five thousand shares which authorized the appointment of a provisional directory; for, although that language is used in the 14th section, which provides for that provisional directory, it is yet coupled with a qualifying term. The language is, that so soon as five thousand shares shall have been subscribed in the manner herein provided for,” &c.

The 12th section prescribes that manner. It says, “that after the closing of the books, and when it shall appear that at least five hundred thousand dollars shall have been subscribed and paid in on the original stock of the capital of said bank, the said institution shall go into immediate operation,” &c. It is not necessary, in order to maintain the position of the State, *819that it should be conceded that the entire sum of the stock of that bank should have been subscribed for and secured by mortgages, before any portion of the bonds could have been executed. I only insist that, by the 30th section, bonds could not be issued for a greater sum than the amount of stock which was, at the time, subscribed for and secured by mortgages to the satisfaction of the directors,” &c. We have now concluded the first inquiry, viz.: Were the bonds issued under the original act ? Believing that they were neither intended to be, nor were, in point of fact, issued under that act, we are to inquire, in the second place, if they were issued under the supplemental act; whether said supplement is not null and void, because not passed in conformity with the constitutional provision relating to such a bill.

We will not notice the provisions of said act at this point, further than to refer to them as already considered in the former portion of this argument. The more convenient order will be to take up the question of the constitutionality of the supplement, in the first instance.

It is admitted that that act was never referred to the people under the 9th section of the 7th article of the constitution,, and that it was passed by only one legislature.

We have noticed the points in which the provisions of that act differ from those of the original act. We have seen that the State was required by the former act, to pledge its faith as the basis of a loan which the bank was to obtain, and which was to furnish its capital; that the indemnity the bank was required to give the State, was the mortgages contemplated by the 8th section of the first act; that as an inducement to the State to make this pledge, she was to be entitled to one tenth of the whole profits of said bank, after it had paid the bonds of the State, and that the State was also to have credit in said bank to the amount of $200,000; that in addition to the indemnity afforded by said mortgages, the profits of the bank were to be applied, in the first instance, to the payment of the loan obtained on the bonds of the State, and that said bonds were to be issued by the governor, from time to time, in amounts proportioned .to the sums secured by mortgages executed by the *820stockholders. Now, by the supplement, the State is deprived of the tenth part of the profits, and the credit of $200,000; and instead of the security of the mortgages to the amount of the bonds to be issued, viz., f>15,500,000, she is required by the first section, as soon as the books of subscription for stock are ■opened, to subscribe for 50,000 shares of the stock of, the ■original capital of said bank, to be paid for out of the proceeds ■of the sale of her bonds, which were still to be issued for the whole §15,500,000, thus reducing the security of the mortgages to the sum of §10,000,000.

But it is said, that the supplement, in none of its sections, proposed to pledge the faith of the State, and, therefore, there was no necessity for any reference to the people, or for its passage by two successive legislatures.

I shall not now pause to consider the question whether it is .not competent for the legislature, in the exercise of. its ordinary ¡powers, to direct that the State shall not become a stockholder in a banking institution, or a party to a contract for the purchase of property, for the erection of public buildings, or the construction of works of internal improvements.

I do not, with profound respect, consider that those questions ■are even ineideñtally involved in the point under consideration. We freely admit, that the legislature, in the exercise of its ordinary powers, has the fullest jurisdiction of all those matters, without evoking an expression of the popular will, in the manner pointed out by the 9th section of the 7th article of the constitution. But we say its action in the premises was the exercise of extraordinary powers, only committed to it upon the express terms and conditions of said section of the constitution. The object was to obtain a loan on the faith of the State. The question at the foundation is, Did the State lend its faith ? -If so, for what purpose and upon what terms ? If the pledge was for a specific object upon specific terms, the. trust was special, could be used for no other object, nor for the same object on different terms. The object and the terms were a part of, nay, the very consideration, of the pledge; were the very law of the contract of the pledge.

If inferential reasoning is to be resorted to, we say, that not *821only was the pledge made for the specific object, and upon the very terms proposed,, but that it could have been obtained on no other and different, for the familiar rale applies, that the expression of one thing is the exclusion of another. If the pledge was made for one object, then it was not for another; and by no action of the legislature could it have been differently used, any more than an agent or trustee, acting under a limited power, can exercise general discretion.

If the pledge was made to a particular institution for a particular purpose, such, for example, as that contemplated by the first act, then it can only be applied, under a second act, to the same institution under the same restrictions. It is not a mere question of power, but one of the exercise of a power coupled with a condition.

Was the pledge asked for a specific purpose, upon specific-terms ? If so, it is idle to say that it was granted for a different purpose, and upon different terms. What does the very section which proposed to pledge the faith of the State declare to be the use which was designed to be made of it when pledged ? The 5th section provides, that in order to facilitate the said Union Bank, for the said loan of $15,500,000, the' faith of the State be, and is hereby pledged, both for the security of the capital and interest,” &c. What Union Bank? The one created by the said original act, with all the specifications provided therein. Not another to be afterwards created. But the power claimed virtually asserts-the right to appropriate that pledge, when thus cautiously made and limited, to all the restraints and safeguards thrown around it by the first act, and wholly pervert it to another and totally different object. If this can be done, lost to us for ever will be all the promised benefits of that wise provision of the constitution. If this be so, no restriction has been thrown around the legislature. Its discretion, and not the popular will, controls in the use of the pledge. If this be so, it was useless labor and idle consumption of time and of money, for the legislature, which passed the first act, to have digested, with so much care, the various sections of that act.

Why not content themselves with simply passing the 5th *822section ; refer that to the people and at the next session seize the pledge of the faith thus made, and use it for any and every purpose they thought proper. But these things cannot be. That great conservative sovereign power, which the people of Mississippi reserved to themselves by the express terms of the constitution, of being the sole judges of the time when, person to whom, and the purposes and conditions upon which they would pledge that which is more sacred than chastity to woman, only less sacred than the oracles; of God himself, the faith of the State, cannot be thus trifled with. The very fact that the legislature, which passed the first act, did go through with the labor of digesting the whole scheme, to consummate which the pledge of the faith of the State was solicited, by implication furnishes at least legislative construction, that they considered it necessary that the whole plan should be developed and submitted to the people to enable them to act understandsgly in the premises.

We shall be very brief in further considering whether there .are material alterations made in the first act by the supplement. We have seen in what relation the State stood to the bank ¿proposed to be established by the first act. We have attempted to show that she was amply indemnified by mortgages for every .dollar of the bonds to be issued by her; that the execution of the mortgages was a condition precedent to the issuance of the bonds. The first section of the supplement provides that the State shall subscribe for 500,000 shares of the stock of the ■original capital of said bank as soon as the books of subscription were opened. Here, at once, an entire change is effected in the relations of the State to the bank, one never contemplated by the first act. But the change effected by said section • did not stop there. The stock so subscribed for, was to be paid for out of the proceeds of the bonds. The profits which accrued mn said stock, so subscribed for by the State, were declared to be held by the said bank, subject to the control of the legislature, for purposes of internal improvement and the promotion ■of education. The 19th section of the original act provided, that the whole of the profits should be employed by the bank :as a part of its capital, until the full payment of that portion *823of the bonds which were payable in twelve years; after which, one fourth should be divided amongst the stockholders, and the .remaining three fourths, and the whole of the profits subsequently accruing, were to be devoted to the payment of the bonds falling due in fifteen years; and one fourth of the residue to be divided amongst the stockholders, and the remaining three fourths, and the subsequent profits, to the next class of bonds, and so continuing to apply the profits, first, to the payment of the next class of bonds, and then one fourth to the stockholders, until the final .payment of all the bonds issued by the State. That the State was ever after to have one tenth of the whole profits in consideration of the issuance of her bonds.

This subscription for stock by the State, reduced the stock to be subscribed by individuals, to $10,500,000, and, to the same extent, reduced the mortgages and the security they afforded the State for the payment of the bonds. For, as before remarked, her bonds were still to be issued for the original amount of the capital of the bank, $15,500,000. The 8th section of the supplement declares, that the portion of stock subscribed for by the State, should be taken from the whole amount of the capital stock, and that the subscriptions of individuals should be so graduated as to reduce the amount of stock to be subscribed for by them. It also declares, that nothing in the first act should be so construed as to deprive the State of the amount of stock so subscribed for by her. Said section conflicts directly with the 8th section of the first act, which provided for the exepution of mortgages to secure the payment of the entire capital and interest.

The 6th section of the supplement authorizes subscribers, at any time, to transfer their respective shares to any citizen of this State, with the approbation of the directors of the parent bank.

The 4th section of the first act declares, that shares of stock should only be transferable to the owners of real estate situated in Mississippi, said owners being resident in said State, until after five years, when they may be transferred to any owner of real estate in this State, whether they be resident *824here or not. The 8th section of the supplement declares, that the resident citizens of the different districts shall be entitled to take the stock allotted to their respective districts.

The 4th section of the first act declared, that only citizens of Mississippi, owners of real estate situated therein, should be stockholders.

The 18th section of the supplement repeals so much of the 19th section of the first act, as gave the State one tenth of the whole profits of the bank, and also so much of the 31st section as entitled the State to a credit of $200,000. The 16th section of the supplement repeals all parts of the first act which conflict with the supplement.

Thus it will be seen, how widely the bank, established by the first act, differs from that established by the second. They are' no more the same institution than is the god of the Hindoo, the god of Jacob. It was the Mississippi Union Bank, of the first act, to which the State pledged her faith. Then it could not have been to the Mississippi Union Bank of the second act which, though bearing the same name, is an illegitimate child of the first, and not entitled to inherit.

Is it true, that the liability of the State was not increased by the subscription for stock directed in the first section of the supplement? If the bank failed, what security had she for the five millions of bonds issued by her for the stock subscribed by her, in making up the capital of $15,500,000 ? The whole amount of mortgages of individual stockholders was reduced to $10,500,000.

Would not the loss of those $5,000,000 most clearly fall on the State?

By the original charter, if it failed, the State was fully protected by mortgages to the whole amount of the capital, consequently, to the whole amount of her bonds.

How, then, can it be said, that the State, by her subscription for stock, did not become a debtor to the bank, or incur any additional obligation ?

The fact, that the first section of the supplement did not direct that mortgages should be executed to the bank in payment of the stock subscribed by the State, does not answer the *825objection we urge. The fact stands out undeniably true ; the State was still required to issue her bonds to the full amount of the capital stock of said bank, $15,500,000, whilst the entire sum which could be subscribed, and for which, consequently, mortgages could be executed, was only $10,500,000. The fact, that mortgages were not required of the State for the stock subscribed by her, is also another of the great changes made in the first act by the latter. For by the first act, mortgages were required to be executed proportioned to the amount of stock declared, and the reason given is, that they were to be security for the principal and interest of the bonds issued by the State.

But it is said, the effect of that provision of the supplement is to place the State precisely upon the same footing with private stockholders, in regard to the payment of the stock. That is one of the very objections we urge.

Does the fact, that if the bank failed to pay the bonds the individual stockholders would be required to contribute for that purpose, in proportion to their stock, and that in that sense and to that extent they might be considered debtors of the bank, at all conduce to show that the State would not still be a debtor on account of the stock subscribed by her, and bound, without security, for the bonds which she might be required to issue for the stock taken by herself? We think not.

The force of the objection is not met', as far as we can see, if it be conceded that she did not become a debtor to the bank by her subscription. We do not, however, by any means, concede that. It is said, however, that the subscription for stock by the State, as provided in the first section of the supplement, did not pledge the faith of the State, and, therefore, there was no necessity to refer the supplement to the people, or pass it b,y a second legislature. Let us look into this.

Could the bank have gone into operation ? was it competent for the governor to have appointed the provisional directory as provided in the 14th section of the first act, and have issued any portion of the bonds when the 50,000 shares, which the State was required to subscribe, were taken ? - Now those 50,000 shares were to be taken as 'soon as the books were *826opened. The 14th section of the first act declares, that so soon as 5,000 shares were subscribed and paid in, the governor should appoint the provisional directory, and the 30th section of the first act, as we have seen, provided, that as soon as the directors were appointed, they should elect a president; the same should be notified to the governor, “ who would thereupon execute bonds, from time to time,” &c. This could hardly be contended for, because it was expressly provided by the 14th section of the first act, that so soon as the directors were appointed, the power of the commissioners to take stock ceased. But a previous section had provided, that the.books, except of the parent bank, were to remain open for three months. This argument,' of course, proceeds on the admission that the supplement is to be treated as constitutional, and as forming, with the first act, one entire law, which I do not concede.

As the supplement was not referred to the people, or passed by two successive legislatures, if it created any new and substantive provisions in the charter of the bank, and in the very being and constitution of the bank, as affecting the pledge and faith of the State, it is admitted that it was unconstitutional. By the very terms of the section proposing to pledge the faith of the State, the 5th section of the first article, it is declared, “that in order to facilitate the said Union Bank for the said loan, &c., the faith of this State be, and is hereby pledged.” The people knew for what, and upon what terms, they were pledging the faith of the State. It was not a general loan or pledge merely for the amount specified, which the legislature coulcT use in its discretion, but was to facilitate the said Union Bank, all the powers of which, when to be put into operation, all the securities of which to protect the State, were known to the people. It was not lent to create a bank in which the State was to be a stockholder for five millions of dollars. The very terms of the section proposing a pledge of the faith of the State, show that this restriction was a part of the terms of the pledge.

If these restrictions were a part of the pledge, then, whatever may be said of the general powers of the legislature as to the *827right to repeal, no one will seriously contend that it could pass any law extending or varying these restrictions, which would not have to be referred to the people, as provided in the clause of the constitution referred to.

Were not bonds to be issued covering, as well the five millions subscribed for by the State, as for the stock subscribed for by individuals ? Whether the State, by subscribing, became a debtor to the bank, or the holders of the bonds, those bonds, which might be issued on account of the shares thus subscribed by the State, certainly did import a pledge of the faith of the State, and that pledge of faith, it cannot be pretended, was given by the people, or was- ever referred to them.

We think it will not do to answer this by saying that the State had already pledged her faith for the entire capital stock of the bank, and, therefore, there was no additional liability imposed on her. We do not think this will avail any more than to assert, that, upon five thousand shares of the stock being subscribed, and the provisional directory appointed, in pursuance of the terms of the 14th section of the first act, the governor could have been required to execute and deliver to the bank bonds for the full amount of the original capital, before any mortgages whatever had been executed.

But it is insisted that, because the legislature may direct a subscription for stock in a bank where no limitations or restrictions exist, therefore, it may where they do exist, under a special pledge of the faith of the State.

It is replied, however, that the pledge had nothing whatever to do with the details of putting the bank in operation; that the legislature had as ample power in readjusting those after, as before the question was submitted to the people. It is further contended, that it was only necessary to publish the 5th section, which contained the pledge intended to be made. All that does not answer the position taken by the State. And this, even though it be conceded that there is nothing in the argument, that by the terms in the constitution no law shall ever be passed to pledge the faith,” &c., was not clearly meant all the sections forming parts of the entire law. For, by the *828express terras of the said 5th section, it is made manifest that all the various sections of the act were distinctly before the people, whether by all being published or not. All formed a part of the pledge given. The language is, “ that in order to facilitate the said Union Bank for the said loan of,” &c.

We have already sufficiently commented on the words, “the said Union Bank.” But what is meant by “ the said loan ? ” For, it was for that, that the pledge was to be made. Why, surely, the loan provided for in the other sections of the act. You are obliged to refer to them to see what that loan was, its amount, its terms and conditions, and the use to which it was to be applied. Those other sections necessarily, therefore, formed parts of the one containing the pledge, and the pledge itself was made upon the conditions of those other sections. Therefore, the legislature could no more bind the people, by any material alteration of those sections thus made part of the con.tract of the pledge, than they could in the first place have bound them by an act pledging the faith of the State, which was never submitted to them at all.

The provision of the constitution is rendered wholly nugatory upon any other rule of .construction. If the will of the people, in giving or refusing the pledgees only to be sought for in the action of the next succeeding legislature, and that legislature is to be invested with unrestricted authority, and if the section containing the pledge, in referring, in general terms, to all the other sections of the act, does not, in the very nature of the case, limit the pledge to the very conditions of those sections, and none others, then the discretion of the legislature is substituted for the will of the sovereign people, and the wholesome reform intended by the constitution is converted into a syren song to entice the people into a snare. As well might it be contended, that the pledge could have been used to procure a loan for the Union Bank to establish a commission, factorage, and brokerage office, or to construct bridges, railroads, and other works of public improvement.

If correct in these views, then, when the legislature passed the supplement, making such radical changes in the original act, in the very being and construction of the bank thereby *829created, as evidenced by changing the character of those who were authorized to take stock and become corporators, and all the other various alterations which we have noticed ; then that supplement could only be a valid law after it was published and referred to the people. Indeed, I am not prepared to say that, the supplement having attached itself to the first act, it did not become necessary to publish and refer both, as the two were to be one law, and that not the law to which the people had pledged their faith.

Any other or different construction invests the legislature with the • power to seize the pledge when given, repeal all else with which it is connected, and make it the basis of any system it pleases. As well may it be contended, that it is no infringement of a patent right to take the principle of the invention, and by an ingenious change of machinery or application evade the laws governing in such case.

But it is argued, that the legislature possesses the power to pass just such laws as the two under examination, as to everything but the 5th section of the 1st article, independent of the clause of the constitution referred to, and therefore it may alter or repeal, at pleasure, all other portions of the two acts. That is not the question. The point is, are not the other portions inseparable parts of the pledge, being, by the language of the 5th section, which proposes the pledge, incorporated into the pledge as containing the conditions on which the pledge is granted. If so, the conclusion is irresistible, that the repeal of those parts operates the repeal of the pledge. An utter failure of consideration is established.

We admit, that a law pledging the faith of the State, when* passed in conformity with the provisions of the constitution on that subject, is of no higher import or greater sanctity, or less the subject of the repealing power of the legislature than any other law for ordinary purposes .passed in the usual mode of enacting laws.

But we say, that when that repealing power is exerted it must be in toto, not partially. The same act which repeals the other sections, which set forth the purposes and conditions and *830uses for which the pledge was given, equally repeals the pledge itself.

That is a limitation upon the repealing power created by the constitution itself, and by the terms of the contract for which and upon which the pledge is given.

The same remark, with the same qualification, applies also to the objection, “that the people or the State are a party to a law pledging the faith of the State, after it has been passed as required by the constitution, in the same sense in which they are a party to any act of legislation passed according to the usual form.”

There is but one way by which the provision of the constitution can be made effective of the end intended. And that is, if it did not contemplate an actual submission of the question of the pledge of the faith of the State to the people through the ballot-box, then the succeeding legislature, passing the second time on the ac,t, must adopt the whole act as originally passed, or repeal the whole, the 5th section included. It certainly cannot take the capital which was lent to the copart-nership of A. B. & Co., on special conditions, and dissolve that firm, and organize a new one of C. D. & Co., and turn over the capital to them. No, the consideration fails, the capital must be returned to the owner.

It is admitted, that the objects of the framers of the constitution, in the clause under review in requiring the reference and publication of laws to pledge the faith of the State for a loan of money, “ were to direct the attention of the people to the proposed measure.” Exactly. But what proposed measure ? Why the loan of the faith of the State to a bank organized on certain principles, and giving the State certain privileges and securities against liability on that pledge. We agree, that the “ expediency or impolicy of such a measure would be discussed,” and the attention of the public drawn to the subject, and the danger of hasty and improvident legislation prevented. For, by that means, the legislature would be enabled to act under the direct counsel and advice of the whole of their .constituents.”

*831We quote the whole passage for the purpose of indorsing it, and claiming it as an argument in our favor.

It assumed that, because the legislature could reject the law containing the pledge, after its reference to and approval by the people, therefore they have full power of altering or amending.

We think this a non sequitur. The people are made liable for nothing when the whole law, the section containing the pledge,,and all, are repealed.

Again it is said, that the second legislature have the power to pass such a law in opposition to the known wishes of a majority of the people. What, then, becomes of the 9th section of the 7th article of the constitution. What was gained by referring it to the people, if there is no mode of ascertaining their will, or if there be, it may be disregarded when ascertained.

The reason why a law passed to borrow money on the faith of the State cannot be partially repealed or modified by a succeeding legislature, as other laws can or may be, before it has been carried into effect, and the money obtained is, because, upon the argument already made, the pledge was given to a particular thing, for a particular purpose, and upon limited conditions which are specified in the other sections, which make parts of the one which contains the pledge; and, therefore, a partial repeal operates to release the State from her pledge. In this sense all the parts and sections made up the entire law. And' the language of the constitution is, “no law shall ever be passed to pledge the faith of the State,” &c.

One section of a law is no more the whole law than one segment of a wheel is the wheel itself, or one leg of a triangle is the triangle itself.

The succeeding legislature may refuse to reenact the law after its reference to the people, though approved by them, yet its power is limited to a repeal or a reenactment of the whole law, pledge and all.

A pledge of the faith of the State is asked. It is given upon the terms on which it was asked. The legislature may decline to accept or use it, after it is given. If it accept *832or use it, it must do so upon the terms it .was asked and given.

This distinction is at the foundation of the whole question. It is this which destroys all analogy between the power of the legislature, as to the right of repeal, in an act to pledge the faith of the State, and an act of ordinary legislation.

With great deference, we think your honors concede all that is contended for by the State, when you say: “ Hence, although the legislature professes the unrestricted power to repeal a law of that character, before it is carried into effect, a right cannot be claimed for it so to alter or modify the law as to make the amendatory act a distinct and substantive act of legislation, by which another and distinct pledge of the faith of the' State would be effected.”

It is by that very rule we wish the‘supplement tested. If tested by that, we think it clear, “that another and distinct pledge of the faith of the State ” was “ effected,” or the pledge which was given was applied to another and distinct person, and upon other and distinct terms, than those the people intended.

But it is argued, on the opposite side, that the position of the attorney-general is, that the supplement is unconstitutional, null, and void; therefore, it does not enter into this controversy; and, as it is not denied, that the first act was passed in conformity to the provisions of the 9th section of the 7th article of the constitution, and as the 5th section, which contains the pledge, was passed by two legislatures, therefore the State is liable under the first act. This, however, assumes that the bonds were issued under the first act, and that it was only necessary to publish and refer the 5th section of that act, the contrary of which we think we have proved.

It is insisted, that the legislature, under the general grant of powers in the constitution, may release any debt, obligation, or liability, assumed by any person to the State, or any penalty incurred; and consequently, that it did not exceed its powers in the changes made in the supplement. This argument is based on the assumption, that the mortgages were only a security to the State for the pledge of its faith and the issuance *833of its bonds; and that they were not intended to be executed before the bonds were issued, and that no rights had vested, and no liabilities were incurred under the first act. We have already attempted to answer this position, by a comparison of the different sections of the first act. In doing so, we think we showed, if this argument was true, that the bonds might be issued at a time when there was no security whatever provided for them. For the only security which it is pretended existed, or could exist, before the mortgages were executed, was the mere deposit of title papers made by subscribers at the time of applying for stock, and which were regarded by the charter of too light a character to declare stock upon, and we asked if they were to be considered sufficient security for a pledge of the solemn faith of a sovereign State, and one, too, which had by her constitution proved herself to be so jealous of her plighted faith. We showed that, as it was made the duty of the directors to reject the stock subscribed, unless the title papers, thus placed in their hands, were approved, no security whatever might be afforded the State for the bonds.

Again. The stockholders, by the 29th section of the first article, could, on certain terms, transfer their stock, and be discharged; and by the 20th section of the 2d act, (which your honors hold to be constitutional,) they had the right, if dissatisfied with the graduation of the stock subscribed for by them, to withdraw the property pledged, and cease to be stockholders, and their stock could be again offered to subscribers.

Now, to test the matter of any lien being created on the lands proposed to be mortgaged by the subscribers, before stock was declared, we submit, that a judgment rendered against said subscribers, after the deposit of their title papers in the hands of the commissioners to receive stock, and before an examination had been made, the titles approved and mortgages executed would be a lien on said lands. Would not a sale of said lands, made by the subscribers, intermediate the time of subscription, and the examination and approval of the titles and the execution of the mortgages, convey a valid title to the purchaser ? It certainly would, unless it could be shown that the purchaser had notice of such deposit. Indeed,; I think it. *834would in any event. Upon general principles, there can be no doubt of it. I know of nothing in the first act which could change the rule of construction.

Again. In regard to the general power of the legislature to release debts and obligations, or other security to the State, we reply, this is not a case coming under the ordinary powers of the legislature; they are securities upon which the State has issued her bonds and incurred liabilities ; and that a release of these by the legislature operates, ipso facto, a release of the pledge of the faith of the State.

Besides; under the pledge of the 5th section, rights had been vested which could not be impaired, without again referring the question to the people. Every citizen of the State was liable to be taxed to redeem the faith of the State. They had agreed to assume this liability, in consideration of the indemnity afforded the State by the provisions of the first act. The conditions of that liability could not be changed without their consent.

The converse of this is true, if the argument be well founded, that the provision of the constitution and the will of the people impose no restraint upon the legislature in the use made of a special pledge of the faith of the State, all the purposes and securities of which are limited and defined. But that argument, throughout, begs the question, which is the gravamen of the whole controversy, namely : Was it a naked pledge of the faith of the State, or was it coupled with limitations? It also defeats the admitted objects of the framers of the constitution in the clause under notice.

It is urged, that the pledge of the faith of the State was to the bank in its corporate character, not to the stockholders. It is' not perceived that this, by any means, meets the position of the State; that the pledge was special, not' general, whether made to the one or the other. The point of the identity of the .corporation, under the first and second acts,-1 shall not here discuss, as I have noticed it in another portion of my argument, and, as I am advised, Judge Mayes will file a brief on .that subject.

It is argued, that there is no real conflict between the 1st *835section of the supplement and the 8th section of the first act, and that the legislature did not intend to repeal the latter by the adoption of the former. First, because it has not so declared expressly; and second, because a construction can be given both which will make them consistent. We have already, in fact, considered the conflict between the two sections. By the original act, the whole amount of stock was to be subscribed by citizens of the State, who were to execute mortgages for the same on real estate in the State; which mortgages were to be security for the payment of 'the capital and interest of the bonds. The capital was to be borrowed on the bonds of the State. The 8th section provided, that the mortgages were to be in all cases equal to the amount of the stock. The 1st section of the supplement makes it the duty of the governor, as soon as books of subscription are opened, to subscribe for fifty thousand shares for the State; the same to be paid for out of the proceeds of the State bonds, and the dividends and profits on said stock to be/held by said bank, subject to the control of the legislature, for purposes of internal improvement and education. Here no mortgages are to be executed by the State, and none by stockholders for the shares subscribed by the State; but bonds are' to be issued covering that amount, as well as the stock of individuals; and, as we' have already remarked, if the bank failed, the State would be bound to pay the $5,000,000 subscribed by herself without any security whatever. But there is- a great conflict between the latter clause of that 1st section, which refers to the profits and dividends, and the 19th section of the first act, which provides : “ That the whole of the profits of said Union Bank shall remain with and be employed by the directors, as a part of its capital, until the full payment of that portion of the bonds of the State specified in the 5th section, which will be payable in twelve years; after which, one fourth of the profits then realized shall-, be divided among the stockholders, in the proportion to which they shall be entitled respectively; and the whole of the remaining and subsequent profits of the bank shall- be employed by the bank, until the full payment of the bonds of the State, which will be payable in fifteen years; after *836which, one fourth of the profits then realized shall be divided out among the stockholders, as before provided for and mentioned ; and the whole of the remaining and subsequent profits shall be employed by the bank, until the full payment of the bonds of the State, which will be payable in eighteen years; after which, one fourth of the profits then realized shall be divided as aforesaid ; and the whole amount of the remaining and subsequent profits shall be employed by the bank, until the final payment and extinguishment of all the bonds of the State in favor of the institution; after which the whole of the profits shall be divided annually, with this proviso, that, in consideration of the bonds made by the State, in addition to a voice in its direction, the State shall be entitled to one tenth part of the whole profits of the bank, which one tenth part shall be paid into the treasury, at the times and in the proportions provided for by this section to the stockholders.”

Here it is made apparent, that it was the intention of the legislature that the profits of said bank should pay off and satisfy the bonds. They were to be applied to the classes of the bonds as they respectively became due. When they exceeded the instalments, at their maturity, one fourth of the excess was to be divided amongst the stockholders; the other three fourths were to be retained by the bank, ready, with other accruing profits, to be applied to the succeeding instalment; and so continuing the whole series. We think no doubt can be entertained, that it was the belief of the legislature, in the passage of that section, that the profits would discharge the whole of the bonds. The 1st section of the supplement interposes, and diverts the profits on $5,000,000, the amount of the State’s stock, from paying the bonds, to purposes of internal improvement and of education; and not the profits on that amount only, but the entire interest of the State in the whole profits on the entire capital of the bank, after the bonds were paid. To that extent it created a bank for internal improvement, and for purposes of education.

I desire to know if the legislature possessed the power, so to alter the provisions of the first act, as to divert the profits of the bank to that extent, why they could not equally have *837diverted them to the full amount, and thus have dispensed with every security and all share in the profits claimed by the State ?

The motive which is assigned for the passage of the said first section is, that the consideration which the State was to receive by the first act was inadequate to the grant of the faith of the State for the whole capital of the bank, (which is said, in fact, to belong to the whole State,) of fifteen millions and a half. The answer is, that though the profits to the State might be less, the liabilities were less. For in the first case she would be.indemnified by mortgages to the full amount of her bonds; in the other case, she had no security at all for $5,000,000, the amount of her own stock, if the bank failed. But it is a question of power, not of motive. Are the terms on which the pledge was given changed ? If so, the legislature has no power to pass it. The report of the committee of the house of representatives, appointed to consider whether the first act could not be constitutionally amended, “so as to convert the bank into a State institution, owned and entirely controlled by the State of Mississippi,” is quoted to prove that such was the motive. As that report is introduced, we claim the benefit of it. They reported, that the legislature had the power to amend the details of the charter; but as “to that portion of the said charter which related to the subscribers or stockholders ” being, in their - opinion, “ the primary condition on which the faith of the State was pledged, they had no power to change the same, unless it should be again submitted to the people.” House Journal, 1838, 118. Now, was there no such change made in regard to subscribers and stockholders ? 1

We have already shown, • that other persons than those prescribed in the first act were, by the supplement, entitled to become stockholders; so in relation to the transfer of stock, as prescribed in the. two acts, which we have also adverted to. Yet the provisions of the first act on these very points, thus changed by the supplement, were the “ primary conditions on which the faith of the State was pledged.” “ Therefore, they *838had no power to change the same, unless it should be again submitted to the people.”

But the fact, that the supplement was passed at the same session that the report was made, is cited in proof, that the house of representatives did not consider they had the power to alter the provisions of the first act, in relation to “subscribers and stockholders.” From that the inference is drawn, that “ they did not, by an act passed at the same session at which the report was made and agreed to, not having expressly so declared, intend to alter or repeal that very condition.” We reply, we are to look to the act itself, and the plain and obvious meaning of it, for the exposition of the legislative intention.

Where the terms of the act are specific, and the meaning obvious, no construction need or can be allowed, to assign a motive or intention different from that arising out of the plain language used in the act.

Much less shall any inference be drawn from the fact, that because the committee on the part of the house reported that the provisions of the charter relating to subscribers and stockholders could not be altered, as they were the primary conditions on which the faith of the State was pledged, therefore those alterations were not made. We say that vital and fundamental changes were made in those very particulars. And we appeal to the alleged changes themselves. There is no necessity to have recourse to the report of that committee in the construction of the acts under consideration. If the provisions of the two differ, of course the latter prevails, as the evidence of legislative intention and motive. Besides, there is no ambiguity in the terms of the law, calling for any other than the rules of interpretation which obtain when the language of the act is plain, precise, and having a well understood meaning.

On these points, we refer your honors to the authorities which will be found cited in the conclusion of this brief.

The stockholders are not the same in the two acts. Stock may be taken by one class of persons, under the one, who *839could not take under the other. Stock may be transferred under the one, at a time and to a class of persons, it could not be under the other.

We do not contend, that the right to take stock in the bank was the inducement to the State to lend her credit, and that, for that reason, the supplement should have been referred to the people and passed by two successive legislatures. We say it wholly changed the character of the bank chartered by the first act, as well as the liability and security of the State, as provided by that act; all of which were the conditions'upon which she had consented to the pledge of her faith under the first act, and, therefore, the second act should have been referred to the people and passed by a second legislature.

We have now concluded our examination of the provisions of the supplement; first, with reference to their agreement with those of the original act; and secondly, with reference to the constitutional power of the legislature to alter, modify, or repeal the former; and thirdly, to discover whether the bonds issued under the supplement or not. The latter point we were indifferent about, as we think we showed they could not have issued under the first act; which was sufficient for our purpose, if your honors adopt the view we entertained in regard to the power of the legislature over the faith of the State, pledged for a specific purpose, upon prescribed terms and conditions.

If we are correct in this view, nothing whatever is to be presumed against the State by the mere execution and delivery of the bonds by the governor, and their sale by the commissioners appointed by the legislature.

It is said, because the directors are made judges of the sufficiency of the mortgages offered for stock, and have power to reject the same, as provided in the 26th section of the first act, and, by the 30th section, can call on the governor and demand the issuance of bonds proportioned to the sums subscribed, and secure to the satisfaction of the directors,” &c.; therefore, on the hypothesis, “that the execution of the mortgages was the condition on which the issuance of the bonds and the liability of the State depended, the directors were special agents of the State, vested with ample discretion to *840determine whether that condition was performed agreeably to directions of the charter,” and having determined that, their decision was binding on the State. It is also said, that they did so decide, will be presumed by their calling on the governor for the bonds, and his issuing them.

On the point of estoppel here presented, which denies the right of the State to call in question the execution of the mortgages, I can add nothing to the very able brief of the attorney-general, which I trust will be reexamined.

Your honors say, that “were it conceded that, upon a just construction of the charter, it was not the intention of the legislature that the bonds should be issued, unless the mortgages were previously executed,” you would still hold, that the State was liable. That would be upon the presumption that the directors had discharged their duty and had taken the mortgages. It could not apply in this case, however, as it is admitted in the agreed facts,” that they were not executed when the bonds issued. Moreover, your honors have admitted, that “if the bonds were not issued under the first act, but were under the second, and if that was not passed in pursuance of the directions of the constitution, and, therefore, void, then the mere sealing and delivery of the bonds by the governor did not create a liability on the State.” Suppose that the - directors had surreptitiously obtained possession of the bonds of the State, signed by the governor, and with the great seal of State attached, which were prepared to be delivered when the mortgages were executed, would the State be estopp.ed from showing that fact? The State alleges in this case, that the bonds issued fraudulently and in violation of law and the constitution. As a sovereign, her voice is only heard speaking through her constitution, just as'the voice of Jehovah is heard speaking through the Holy Bible. All who treat with those who profess to represent her,' must know, at their peril, that they are clothed with the power they undertake to exercise.

The case of The United States v. Arredondo, 6 Peters, 691, quoted by your honors, we cannot consider as conflicting with the position assumed by the State in this case. It was there held, that “ where power was confided to the discretion of an *841agent or public officer, the acts performed by him are valid as to the subject-matter, and individual rights would not be collaterally disturbed for any thing done in the exercise of that discretion, within the power and authority conferred.” So we say. Whatever was done within the power and authority here conferred by the constitution and law, we do not object to. Your honors have repeatedly and correctly held, thad all special jurisdiction is to be exercised in strict consonance with the law creating it.

So you have held, in the case of the sale of lands of decedents, by executors and administrators, that as their powers are special, created and defined by statute, the record of the proceedings of the court, which is one of limited jurisdiction, must affirmatively show upon its face that every act was done which was required by law to be done, to vest title in the purchaser, or the sale will be vacated.

Your honors hold, that were it conceded that the charter-required the execution of the mortgages; as a condition precedent to the issuance of the bonds, you would presume that this-had been done, because the directors were made sole judges in regard to the execution of the mortgages and the approval of titles, and the governor was required to issue bonds on the application of the directors. In other words, you would presume that the directors had rightfully exercised their discretion, and they would not have called upon the governor for, and he would not have issued, the bonds, unless the mortgages had been executed. But no presumption can be indulged in that matter here, as it is admitted by the opposite side that the mortgages had not been executed when the bonds issued. And a party having once admitted on the record that a thing was not done, is estopped from setting up in argument that it was done. And also, because of the admission of your honors, just noticed, that if the bonds were issued under the supplement, and that was not passed pursuant to the directions of the constitution, and, therefore, was void, then the mere sealing and delivery of the bonds by the governor did not create a liability on the State. There is, therefore, nothing in this which militates against the position of the State; but the proposition. *842must stand as at first stated. Was the execution of the mortgages the condition upon which the bonds were to be issued ? We will not return to the discussion of that proposition at this point.

Recurring to the object of the provision of the 9th section of the 7th article of the constitution, it is said by your honors, “it was not to take away from the legislature the power of passing laws to borrow money in the name of the State, but to provide against hasty, inconsiderate, and ill-advised legislation.”

But it must be recollected, that it is the organic law we are speaking of. We are not now considering what are the ordinary powers of the legislature, after the legislative department of the government is created. This is a provision which is being adopted at the moment the legislature itself is being created. It is the fiat of the sovereign people, speaking the government itself into being, and impressing upon it the law of its being. It is a primary, undelegated power of the people, pertaining to their sovereignty, and now, for the first time, a body of magistracy is being created, who are to exercise just so much power, and no more, as the creator confers upon it. This legislature is the creature of the constitution. It is a solecism to speak of taking from it that which it never possessed. It presupposes prior existence in the creature to the creator. Whereas, the framers of the constitution impose a limitation upon the power, in the very act which creates the power.

Therefore, the objection we make is not answered by saying, that in the absence of this clause in the constitution, the power would have resulted to the legislature under the general grant of the constitution. It was against the implication of such a power the constitution has provided. It is not less an act of original power to have imposed the limitation, than it would have been to have withheld the power altogether. Indeed, it is the same thing precisely, as though the constitution had declared as follows: The legislature shall and may have the power to pledge the faith of the State to raise a loan of money, or for the payment or redemption of any loan or debt; but such power shall only be exercised in the mode and manner pre*843scribed in said clause. And then the acts of creating and limiting the power spring from the same source, and are simultaneous.

The general power to pledge the faith of the State still resides in the bosom of the sovereign people. The qualified power has been conferred on the legislature. It is, at last, the approval of the people, in some form, no matter how much speculation may be indulged, which gives even this qualified exercise of the power the sanction and authority of law.

To contend, therefore, that whilst it'is the approval of the people that gives it vitality, that breathes into it the breath of life, the will of the people may be disregarded, is to set at naught the very law of its being.

I have heretofore been considering the question, whether the bonds issued under the original act. I think I have shown that they did not. I have also noticed the point, whether they issued under the supplement. I have endeavored to prove that they did. But suppose that, instead of issuing under either separately, they issued under the joint provisions of the two.

If the argument I have offered be true, that material alterations were made by the supplement in the provisions of the first act; if new powers were created and old ones modified, whereby the very organic structure and constitution of the bank were wholly changed, and the safeguards and securities thrown around the pledge of the faith' of the State were repealed; and if all the other sections of the first act were to be considered as connected with the fifth section, and, therefore, limitations and restrictions upon the pledge, then those sections and the fifth section constitute the law to pledge the faith of the State; from all these the corollary would result, that the two acts being now moulded into one, and that one not the law which had been published, and referred, and passed by two legislatures, that ceremony would be essential to its validity. To meet these positions, it is said, it must be admitted, “ if the Mississippi Union Bank had been an existing corporation, it would have been competent for the legislature, by a statutory provision, to have pledged the faith of the State for a loan of money to be made by it, without making the charter of the bank a part or portion of the law by which the faith of the *844State was pledged,” and that it would also have been “in the power of a single legislature, with the consent of the stockholders, to have made any alteration in the charter, without affecting the liability which the State had agreed to assume.”

■ To this we reply, that if the law so passed should be couched in the terms of the 5th section, referring to all the other sections of the act for an explanation of the nature of the pledge and the conditions on which, it was asked and granted, then those sections and conditions are a part of the pledge itself, and the action supposed would be no more competent in the case stated, than the case before your honors. And we cite the argument already made as applicable.

The same reply is also made in the case supposed, of two laws passed at the same session of the legislature, one of which proposes a general pledge of the faith of the State, and the other the indemnity and inducement offered the State for the pledge of its faith. It is asked, if those two acts could be said, in a legal sense, to constitute one law, so that the repeal of the one which provided the indemnity would be a repeal of the other. I reply, as the pledge was asked, so was it granted.

Otherwise, it is only necessary for the legislature to pass an •act to obtain a general pledge of the faith of the State for any and all purposes, and for all time, publish and refer it in the manner proposed by the constitution, pass it at the next session, and relieve themselves forever, in pledging the faith of the State, from the inconveniences proposed by the 9th section of the 7th article of the constitution.

If the argument, that it was only necessary to have referred the 5th section of the first act, and passed it again at the next session of the legislature, be admitted, it does not impair the force of the position taken by the State. For we repeat, the fifth section, in its very terms, renders it indispensable to refer to the other sections for a knowledge of the pledge sought: “ that in order to facilitate the said Union Bank for the said loan.”

Now, is not the language of the section unintelligible, unless reference is made to the other sections ? It would be to stultify the people to suppose they would have given the pledge without *845having their attention directed to, and their action based upon, the whole law. And even if it be granted, that the publication of the other sections might have been dispensed with, it does not, by any manner of means, negative the idea that they were not informed of them. They were, at least, published in the manner other laws are required to be, and every citizen is presumed to know the laws of his State; he cannot plead ignorance of them.

The fact that the legislature may, in a law made up of various sections, and all relating to different matters, repeal one section, and that not operate a repeal of all, does not show that they can, in a law, all the sections of which relate to one matter, repeal one without repealing thereby all the other sections, if such connection and mutual dependence exist between them as we contend do between the 5th section and all the others of the first act. One of the most familiar rules of construction is, that all the sections of a law, in pari materid, are to be considered in connection. Violence shall not be done to all the other sections, to favor a particular construction of any one.

That is the mode in which the legislative intent in passing the law is to be ascertained. It is a very good one by which to ascertain the intent of the people in pledging the faith of the State in this case. Whether the various sections of an act are to be considered as making as many laws as there are sections, or but one, is to be deduced from a comparison of each and all the sections.

If the position contended for be true, that the 5th section of the first act contains the entire law which it was necessary to refer and publish, and that it was an absolute and unconditional pledge, not embracing the terms and provisions of the other sections, then it seems to us the conclusion would follow, that it was only necessary for the next legislature to pass that section, and the requirement of the constitution would be satisfied. Can such a position be' maintained ?

We will pursue the argument no further. We have endeav- • ored, in all honesty, to maintain the position.of the State.. The views expressed, however erroneous they may be held to be, are conscientiously entertained, after as patient and. impartial *846an investigation of the case as we have been able to bestow upon it.

The apology we offer for the otherwise inexcusable length of our argument, will be found in the brief period of its preparation. Short as that time was, it has been subject to many interruptions by other duties. We have, therefore, been deprived of the opportunity of reviewing and condensing.

I ask the attention of your honors, in conclusion, to the following principles and rules of law, now too well established to be called in question, which, I think, fully sustain all the positions I have contended for, and which furnish the true criteria in the construction of the two acts, and the provision of the constitution under examination : —

“ Relative words in a statute may make a thing pass, as well as if expressed particularly.” Raym. 50.

“ No principle is more firmly established, or rests on more secure foundation, than the rule which declares, when a law is plain and unambiguous, whether it be expressed in general or limited terms, the legislature shall be intended to mean what they have plainly expressed, and consequently no room is left for construction.” 9 Port. 268; 2 Cranch, 358; Ib. 10; 7 Ib. 52; 12 Pick. 223, 226.

“ A mere failure of justice would not be a sufficient ground for construing statutes against their clear meaning, so as to give a court jurisdiction.” 10 Pick. 506.

“ It is only where the construction is doubtful, that the argument ‘from a failure of justice’ applies.” Ib.

“ A law is the best expositor of itself.” 2 Cranch, 33.

“ Every part of an act is to be taken into view for the purpose of discerning the intention of the legislature.” Ib.

“ It is to be interpreted according to the intention of the legislature apparent upon its face.” 2 Peters, 662.

“ Every technical rule as to the construction or force of particular terms must yield to the clear expression of the paramount will of the legislature.” Ib.

“ The most general and natural mode of construing a statute is to construe one part by another part of the same statute, for this best expresseth the meaning of the makers, and such con*847struction is ‘ ex visceribus actus.'” 7 Bac. Ab. 452; 1 Brock. C. C. R. 162.

The whole statute must be inspected to ascertain its meaning.” Ib.

“ If any part of a statute be obscure, it is proper to consider the other parts of the same act; for the words and meaning of one part of a statute frequently leads to the sense of another.” 1 Leach, C. C. 352, 355; 2 East, P. C. 898; How. 365; 11 Mod. R. 161.

“ A statute ought, upon the whole, to be so construed that, if it can be prevented, no clause, sentence, or word, shall be superfluous, void, or insignificant.” 1 Show. 108; Hard. 344; 1 Har. 285; 4 Blackf. 148.

Every clause and word shall be presumed to have been intended to have some force and effect.” 22 Pick. R. 571; 1 Story, Com. 383, 384; Ib. 411, 436.

“ Where words in a statute are express, clear, and plain, the words ought to be understood according to their genuine and natural signification and import, unless by such exposition -a contradiction or inconsistency would arise in the statute, by reason of some subsequent clause, from whence it might be inferred that the intent of parliament was otherwise.” Parker, 233; Hobart, 93, 97; 7 Mass. R. 523.

“ If the meaning of a statute be doubtful, the consequences are to be considered in the construction; but where the meaning is plain, no consequences are to be regarded in the construction, for this would be assuming legislative authority.” The Queen v. Simpson, 10 Mod. R. 344; 13 Mass. R. 324.

“ Where the language of a statute is clear, direct, and positive, leading to no absurd results, courts are to be governed by the obvious meaning and import of its terms, and not to extend its operations because they suppose the legislature intended to give a more effectual remedy.” 3 Kelly, 146.

The rule is laid down by Chancellor Kent, (1 Kent, Com. 447,) as follows: “ It is a principle in the English law, that an act of parliament, delivered in clear and intelligible terms, cannot be questioned, or its authority contradicted in any court of justice. When it is said in the books, that a statute, *848contrary to natural equity and reason, or repugnant, or impossible to be performed, is void, the cases are understood to mean, that the courts are to give the statute a reasonable construction. They will not, out of respect and duty to the lawgiver, readily presume that any unjust or absurd consequence was within the contemplation of the law. But if it should happen to be too palpable in its direction to admit of but one construction, there is no doubt in the English law as to the binding efficacy of the statute.”

The “will of the legislature is the supreme law of the land, and demands perfect obedience.” 1 Kent, 447.

“It is,” says Sir Wm. Blackstone, “the exercise of the highest authority the kingdom acknowledges on earth ” — the will of parliament.

The same doctrine is laid down by the last named author, in his 1st Vol. Com. 63. See also the note of the learned editor of that work, same page.

“ When the law is clear, it must not be eluded in order to grasp its intention. Words must be used in their usual and most known signification, unless they appear plainly to have been used in another sense.” 21 Wend. R. 211.

“ To ascertain and fix the true sense of a law, we must examine the context.” 1 Bouvier, Inst. 41.

The words used in the 5th section of the first act, in relation to the pledge of the faith of the State, namely: “ That in order to facilitate the said Union Bank, for the said loan,” &c., are to be construed by the foregoing rules. The same rules prevail in the construction of penal statutes, where the words “ then and there,” “ said and aforesaid,” are used. For example, in indictments. Hence, it is said, in 1 Chit. Crim. Law, 181: “ After the time has been once fixed, or named with certainty, it is after-wards sufficient to refer to it by the words ‘then and there,’ which have the same effect as if the day and year were actually repeated.”

The same author, at page 182, says: “ In some cases the words, ‘ then and there ’ are more certain than even a repetition of the day and year, for the latter will not be sufficient when, in order to complete the offence, connected acts must be shown *849to be done at the same time; but the terms, ‘then and there 5 must be adopted.” So with the words in an indictment, “jurors aforesaid, upon their oaths aforesaid,” “ of the county-aforesaid,” &c., and many other examples which might be given.

In Brien v. Williamson, 7 How. 20, the learned Chief Justice Sharkey, remarking upon the provision of the constitution which prohibited the introduction of negroes into the State for sale, said : “ In the language of a learned jurist, the constitution was made by the people, made for the people, and is responsible to the people.”

“ It is, from its very nature and object, the supreme law of the land, fixed and unalterable, except by the power that made it. It contains only certain great principles, which are to control in all legislation, and extend through the whole body politic. These principles are of themselves laws. General principles, thought to be essential to a free government, are declared ; and (emanating from the sovereign authority) that mere declaration imparts to them all the force of a supreme law.”

“ It became, by that mere declaration, proprio vigore, a law; and whether it may be supposed to be defective in not providing all the means necessary to enforce the prohibition makes no difference, provided it can, by any means, be carried into effect.”

“ Its design was evidently to protect the people against a supposed evil.”

“ It was one of those principles which required no legislative aid to give it strength,” &c.

“All fundamental principles, whether inherent or otherwise, in any form of government,-constitute a part of the law of that government. When the people prescribe their constitutional form of government, they ordain that every part of that form must have its appropriate effect. Every principle is to be regarded as fundamental and self-executing.”

“ Surely, we may claim for our constitutional provision the dignity of a principle, even if it is too vague for a prohibition ; and being a principle, it must be carried out; it cannot be defeated by contract.” All of which are words of wisdom; as *850applicable to the clause of the constitution we have been considering, as to the one of which the eminent jurist was speaking.

Petition for a re-argument, by Daniel Mayes.

In presenting the following petition for re-argument, the undersigned has to express his deep regret, that the time allowed by the court, which could be devoted to its preparation, is not sufficient to enable him to digest, methodize, and condense his views, on any one of the' topics which properly enter into the discussion; and has wholly precluded the possibility of presenting various views, which seem to him to strengthen and fortify the conclusion to which his mind was irresistibly forced, contrary to his preconceived opinion, during the progress of the argument in court.

A' position proved by one unaswerable argument, is as firmly established, as if it were proved by ten thousand. And if I fail in establishing my position, so clearly and fully, that no unpre-possessed mind can entertain a doubt, I hope the court will perceive, that the failure results only from a defect in my mode of argument. „

The position which I take is this : —

The Mississippi Union Bank, which went into operation, was not the Mississippi Union Bank provided for in the original act, which was passed by two successive legislatures, and for which that act pledged the faith of the State. That the faith of the State never was pledged, or authorized to be pledged, for the bank, which went into operation, under the supplemental act; and consequently the bonds were issued payable to, and transferred by, that bank without any authority whatever.

This being my position, the first question naturally is, — in what does the identity of a bank consist ? What is it that imparts to a bank its individuality, so that it is itself, and not another bank? Of what changes is it susceptible, without losing its identity, and becoming another bank ? And what changes will put an end to its identity, and render it a different artificial being ? Until the mind is supplied with a clear and *851definite idea in this respect, it is impossible to enter upon the discussion with any certainty of reaching the true conclusion.

But with it, truth may be ascertained, with the certainty of a mathematical demonstration. Let us then ascertain in what this identity consists.

Every person, whether natural or artificial, must conform to the law impressed upon it, by its creator, and so long as it does so, it may continue to exist, as the same person, notwithstanding a change in its component parts; but that change in its component parts must be brought about by the operation of some law, impressed upon it in its creation. If new laws are impressed upon it, so changing its constitution, that it has a body, which it néver could have had according to its original organization, and which impart to it faculties and capacities which it had not, and never could attain by the operation of the law, which alone acted upon it, in its first state of being, and to which it must conform in its new state of being, it becomes a different creature, for "such a result can only be produced by a new exertion of creative power, by the creator of that being, whether that creator be God, ’creating man, and impressing upon him all the laws of his being, or a legislature chartering a bank, and impressing upon it the law of its being. It makes no odds how great these changes are, or what difference there be in the body, faculties, or capacities of the being, in the various stages of its existence. If those changes are brought about by the operation of laws impressed upon it in the first stage of its being, it remains the same individual.

Take for instance art egg: By the law impressed upon it, it becomes a worm. It feeds upon the leaves of the mulberry, goes through its various moultings, becomes a chrysalis, and in the proper time it exists as a beautiful butterfly. All these changes result, from the faculties and capacities of the being which first existed in the form of an egg, and ended in that of a butterfly. They were all effected by itself — by its acting in obedience to the law impressed upon it by its creator, when it first came into existence as an egg. No additional exercise of creative power was necessary. It may,' therefore, be said to *852have retained its identity, notwithstanding its existence in these very different forms.

Let me farther illustrate : ■—

Man is a being having a body composed of material substances, among which are bones, muscles, tendons, hair, horn, ivory, &c. Among other laws of his being, is one by which the particles of matter, of which these bones, muscles, tendons, hair, horn, ivory, &c., are formed, are constantly passing from his body, and their places supplied by others of the same kind. He is also a moral, intellectual, rational being, having, as we believe, an immortal soul.

An ox, is a being composed of material substances, among which are bones, muscles, tendons, hair, horn, ivory, &c.; but he is not a moral, intellectual, and rational being, nor has he, as we believe, an immortal soul. Among the laws of his being is one, by which he has the power, notwithstanding the particles of matter which form this body are constantly passing away, of supplying their place by other particles of matter, of the same kind.

So long as the man or the ox produces these changes pursuant to the laws that constitute the one a man and the other an ox, the man remains the same man, and the ox the same ox.

Now let it be supposed that God impressed upon the ox a law, different from that of his original constitution, by the operation of which new law, in supplying the place of the first material, by introducing the new, he assumes the form and organization of man, and becomes a rational, moral, and intellectual being, having an immortal soul.

Does he after this change remain the same ox that he originally was, although his body is still mainly composed of bones, tendons, muscles, hair, horn, ivory, &c. ? .

. Thus we see, that the identity of the being ceases, when the changes in body, faculties, and capacities are produced by the operation of a new law, and could not have been produced in pursuance of the law impressed upon the being in its first state of existence. If this is not the true and only test, what is the test? — for there must be some test of identity, or there is no reasoning about identity at all. We now perceive that *853the test of identity is this : that no odds how great the changes, if they take place in conformity with the law, under which the being had its first existence, the being remains the same; but if a new exertion of creative power is necessary to impress on the being different or additional laws, by which different or additional laws only, the change of body, faculties, and capacities, can be brought about, the being does not remain the same. Thus prepared I proceed with the argument.

The first section of the original act, provides, that an institution shall be established under the title of “ The Mississippi Union Bank,” with a capital of $15,500,000, which said capital shall be raised, by means of a loan, to be obtained by the directors of the institution.

The 4th section provides, “ That the stock shall be subscribed, (1) by the owners of real estate, (2) that the real estate shall be situated in the State of Mississippi, (3) that they, the subscribers, shall be citizens of the State of Mississippi, (4) that the shares shall be transferable only to such owners (viz.: owners of real estate in Mississippi, who are eitizens of Mississippi,) until after five years; (5) that after five years, the stock may be transferred to any owner of real estate in Mississippi, whether citizen or not, with a proviso, that to secure the capital or interest of said bank, mortgage shall be given on property of a sufficient character, and. of an imperishable nature.

In this section, then, we have a complete identification of the-description of persons, who could be stockholders, and an express exclusion of all persons who did not belong to the-described class.

No one can become a stockholder or member of the corporation, but (1) by a subscribing for stock, or (2) by a transfer-of stock previously subscribed. This is true in the very nature-of things. Those who may become stockholders, by subscrib-* ing, must be (1) “ owners of real estate, (2) situated in the State of Mississippi, and (3) who are citizens thereof,” and those only. This is true by the expresa provision of the original statute. The subscribers must, therefore, be exclusively natural persons, for a corporation is not “a citizen.” The State of' Mississippi is, therefore, by this section expressly excluded,'. *854unless it can be proved, that the State of Mississippi, in its corporate or political character, is a citizen of the State of Mississippi. And this, it is presumed, will not be contended for. And for the same plain reason the State could not have become the owner of stock by transfer.

If it were possible to make this proposition more clear and conclusive, it is done by the proviso requiring that, “ to secure the capital or interest of said bank, mortgage shall be given, on property of a suitable character, and of an imperishable nature.”

Thus, then, we find that the institution spoken of in the first section, and which was to be under the title, or name of “ The Mississippi Union Bank,” is an institution with a capital of $15,500,000, to be exclusively subscribed for, and owned by (1) natural persons, (2) owners of real estate, (3) situated in the State of Mississippi, and (4) who are citizens thereof; and that all corporations, whether political (as State) or otherwise, are, by express words of exclusion, debarred of the privilege of becoming members of that institution. They can by no means be corporators, but by a clear and manifest violation of the charter.

Next comes the fifth section, which alone authorizes the pledging of the faith of the State.

It provides, “ That in order to facilitate the said Union Bank, for the said loan of $15,500,000, the faith of this State be, and is hereby pledged, both for the security of capital and interest.”

Now what bank is it, to which the words “ the said Union Bank” refer? Can it be pretended, with the least plausibility, that they have reference to any bank but the bank before spoken of? And what is the bank before spoken of ? Is there any other bank mentioned in the charter, save the bank before mentioned ? No one will pretend that there is. What, then, is the bank before spoken of? How can it be contended, or by what strange logic can it be shown, that it is not a bank, (1) with a capital of $15,500,000, (2) to be subscribed by natural persons only, (3) who are owners of real estate, (4) situated in the State of Mississippi, and (5) who are citizens thereof?

Such bank, then, being the only bank spoken of in the charter, and to which the words, “the said Union Bank” necessarily and exclusively apply, the fifth section expressly confines the *855pledge of the faith of the State, to facilitate that bank, to be composed of a described, fixed, and ascertained class of persons, and for no other bank whatever.

The words, “ the said loan of $>15,500,000 ” refer to the loan mentioned in the first section, for there is no other loan mention éd in the act. ^

The bank which was to obtain that loan was the institution mentioned in the first section. It was the directors of that institution, and that institution only, who were authorized to obtain the loan. It was to facilitate that institution, and that institution only, that the faith of the State might be pledged, and that institution was to be composed exclusively, (1) of the owners of real estate, (2) situated in the State of Mississippi, (3) and who are citizens thereof.

The statute declares that “ the faith of the State be, and the same is hereby pledged, both for the capital and interest ” of that identical, ascertained, and fixed institution, which has been before as specially, absolutely, and positively ascertained and declared, as human language can identify, define, or declare it.

Therefore, as the faith of the State was pledged by the fifth section, and by no other section, to facilitate the bank, consisting of the class of persons mentioned in the fourth, and for no other bank, it conclusively follows, that if the identical bank, for which the faith of the State was then pledged, was never organized, never went into operation; the faith of the State was never pledged for any bank. The fifth section did not pledge it for any bank or institution, save that which was provided for by the fourth section. There is no other section which pledges the faith of the State.

The original charter having been passed by two legislatures, pursuant to the constitution, all admit that the faith of the State would have been pledged by the fifth section of the act, had the "bank gone into operation without the passage of the supplemental act.

I admit, that under the general grant of legislative power, it could wholly repeal, or change, or modify the charter, to any extent or in any manner whatever. But this neither proves, nor- tends to prove, any thing in the present controversy. The *856question is not, whether the second legislature could repeal or modify the charter. The only question is, Did the fifth section of the original act pledge the faith of the State, for the corporation formed under the charter, as modified or changed by the supplement ?

The corporation, as the charter was thus modified, consisted of stockholders, who were owners of real estate situated in the State of Mississippi, and who were citizens thereof, to the extent of $10,500,000 of the capital, and of the State of Mississippi for the residue, that is, $5,000,000.

By the sixth section of the supplemental act, it is provided, That subscribers to the stock in the said Union Bank, or their legal representatives, may at any time transfer their respective shares to any citizen of this State, with the approbation of the directory of the mother bank, and that no person not a citizen of this State shall ever own any stock in this bank.”

Here we find another important change in the essential nature and character of the corporation; for by the fourth section of the original act, the corporation was so constituted, that, until after five years, no person could receive a transfer of stock, and thus become a corporator, unless such person was (1) the owner of real estate, (2) situated in the State of Mississippi, (3) and who was a citizen thereof, and after five years any person might become a corporator, by receiving a transfer ■ of stock, if such person was the owner of real estate in Mississippi, whether such person was or"tvas not a citizen of Mississippi. Whereas, by the sixth section of the supplement, no person, not a citizen "of the State, could ever own stock, or become a corporator; but any person who was a citizen of Mississippi might receive stock, by transfer at any time, whether such person was or was not the owner of real estate.

The question then becomes, singly and simply, one of identity.

1st. Is a corporation, with a capital of $15,500,000 owned exclusively by natural persons, who are the owners of real estate, situated in the State of Mississippi, and who are citizens thereof, one and the same with a corporation consisting of such owners of real estate, who are citizens of Mississippi, to the extent of $10,500,000 of the capital, and of the State of Missis*857sippi, in her sovereign political character to the amount of $5,000,000 ?

2d. Is a corporation, which, by its constitution, cannot receive into its body any but natural persons, one and the same with a corporation which can, by its constitution, receive into its body a sovereign State ?

3d. Is a corporation which, until after five years, cannot receive into its body any person but the owners of real estate situated in the State of Mississippi, and who are citizens thereof, one and the same, with a corporation which can receive into its body, at any time, any citizen of the State of Mississippi, whether such citizen be the owner of real estate or not ?

4th. Is a corporation which can receive into its body after the expiration of five years, any owner of real estate in Mississippi, whether citizen or not, one and the same with a corporation which can at no time receive into its body any but citizens of Mississippi?

5th. Again, is a corporation which cannot receive into its body, by transfer of stock, any person, but upon the proviso, that the capital or interest is secured by mortgage to be given on property of a sufficient character, and of an imperishable nature, one and the same with a corporation which can receive into its body any citizen of the State, upon the single condition that the transfer of stock is made with the approbation of the directory of the mother bank ?

It is impossible to answer any of these questions affirmatively, yet each must be answered affirmatively, or the corporation authorized by the original act, and to facilitate which, in procuring a loan, the faith of the State was pledged, is not the same .corporation with that which went into operation under the supplemental charter. It is admitted on all hands', that the faith of the State cannot be pledged, except by the assent of two legislatures, ascertained in the manner required by the constitution.

Now did the legislature which passed the original charter, ever consent to a pledge of the faith of the State for any purpose but “ to facilitate the said Union Bank for the said loan *858of $15,500,000?” the words, the “ said Union Bank” directly referring to a bank to be constituted upon the principles, and to consist of the description of persons mentioned in the fourth section.

To make their pledge of the faith of the State extend to “the Mississippi Union Bank,” as modified by the supplement, is not to construe the language the legislature has used, for they have used no language which embraces such an idea. Then-language expressly limits the pledge to the bank, which they were incorporating.

They used the definite article “ the,” and the word of reference “ said,” thus expressly limiting and tying down the pledge to the bank before described. Their language admits of no latitude of construction. Indeed, it admits of no construction at all. For there is no ambiguity. Words more plain, simple, and definite, cannot be found in the English language. And yet, to hold that the State is bound for these bonds, is to hold that the words the “ said Union Bank,” do not refer to the bank which they were chartering, to be composed of the class or description of persons which they had declared should only compose it, but that the words, the said Union Bank, mean a bank consisting of the State of Mississippi, in her sovereign ■character, to the extent of near one third of the stock; and of the described class of persons, for the residue, when it is obvious that such a corporation was never in their mind, and when by plain, express language, they have excluded from the corporation they were creating, and to facilitate which they agreed to pledge the faith of the State, every person, whether natural or • artificial, except those of the class mentioned in the fourth section.

When they declare, “that the faith of the State be, and is hereby pledged,” how can it be contended, that the faith of the State was by them intended to be pledged, in order to facilitate a bank which had no existence, which they did not intend to give an existence, and which, so far as their action was concerned, could never have an existence ?

By the forty-seventh section of the original act, the fifth section, whereby fhe faith of the State is pledged for the payment *859and redemption of the loan contemplated by that act, was referred to the next legislature, although the whole act was ordered to be published, as required by the constitution.

Why was this ? The reason is most obvious. One legislature could pass an act incorporating a bank. They had passed an act incorporating the “ Union Bank.” As its creator, they had organized it according to their own will. They had imparted to it all such faculties and capacities as they intended it should possess. They had declared its body should consist of a certain class of persons, to whom they were willing to grant the franchises specified in the charter; but these franchises, and no other, would they grant. And they would grant them to persons of a particular class, by them designated, and to no other persons. And having impressed on this their creature, its every faculty and capacity, and declared of what material its body should consist, to facilitate the action of that being, by them thus created, the materials of its body, ascertained, fixed, and limited to a particular class of persons, and all other persons being expressly excluded from that body, and the faculties and capacities of the body to be so constituted, having been by them ascertained and declared, they consented to pledge,' and did pledge, the faith of the State, to aid this being, the workmanship of their own hands; but they never did pledge the faith of the State for any other corporation except the identical corporation which they chartered.

They, therefore, did not refer the charter to the next legislature for modification or change, and agree to pledge the faith of the State for the corporation which might go into operation under the charter, as it might be modified or changed by the next legislature. They gave no such consent; they made no such pledge. But having pledged the faith of the State to facilitate the action of their own creature, and that pledge not being obligatory on the State until ratified by the next legislature, they simply refer to that legislature the question, Will you ratify this our pledge, made by us, to facilitate this corporation of our creation ?

That legislature did ratify it, by again passing the entire act, which was approved on the 5th of February, 1838. How did *860the matter then stand ? Two successive legislatures had, in strict conformity to the constitution, agreed to pledge, and had pledged, the faith of the State, “ in order to facilitate the said' Union Bank,” that is, the Union Bank provided for in the original charter, to wit, a bank composed exclusively of the ascertained and described class of persons mentioned in the fourth section, and who were to have the abilities and capacities specified in that charter. Was the faith of the State, then, pledged for a bank constituted differently from that bank ? Had either legislature agreed so to pledge it ? Certainly not. Well, that bank never went into operation. But on the 15th of February, 1838, the supplemental act passed. It so modified or changed the charter, by a repeal of many of. its provisions, and by the addition of other provisions, that the corporation under the charter, as thus modified, changed and added to, was in its component parts, and in its faculties and capacities, a different corporation from that, to facilitate the operation of which the two successive legislatures had agreed to pledge the faith of the State.

The corporation provided for in the original act never went into operation, and, consequently, the State is not bound for that. The corporation provided for by the supplemental act did go into operation.

Is the faith of the State pledged for that? and the answer to this depends on the question, Did two successive legislatures agree to such a pledge? It has already been shown, that the legislature, which passed the original charter, had no idea of such a corporation, that by express provision they excluded the possibility of its existence, under the original charter; and that they made the pledge to facilitate the corporation, provided for in the original charter, and for no other corporation which might go into operation, constituted in part under the provisions of that act, and in part under the provisions of another act, of the extent, or character of the changes effected by which, they could have no possible idea. They perfectly defined, in every particular, the corporation for which they agreed to pledge the faith of the State; and for that corporation, and that corporation only, they pledged the faith of the State. Therefore, *861if the faith of the State is pledged, it is pledged for the corporation, which might have been formed under the act passed by two successive legislatures, although it never went into operation; or it is pledged for the corporation which went into operation under the charter, as changed by the supplement, although by no possibility could any legislature, but the last, have sanctioned such a pledge.

But it is said, that those who maintain the affirmative of the proposition that it was necessary that the supplemental act should be passed by two successive legislatures, or the faith of the State was not pledged for the corporation thereby provided for, “ assume as a fact,” “ that the corporation so organized was another and different corporation than that referred to in the law by which the faith of the State was pledged. They seem to overlook the essential nature and character of a corporation, to wit, Its continued existence as an artificial being, notwithstanding the individuals who compose it may repeatedly change ? ” I have not assumed, but have proved conclusively, that the corporation provided for by the original act, i§ a different corporation from that which went into operation under the supplemental charter, nor can the force of my reasoning be resisted, unless the three following propositions can be maintained.

1st. That it is of the essential nature and character of a corporation that it has a continued existence as the same artificial being, notwithstanding the individuals who compose it may repeatedly change; and

2d. That this change may be effected by an act of the legislature, and not in virtue of a principle, or capacity impressed or conferred on the corporation itself by the law which gives it its being, and from which alone it derives every faculty and capacity which it possesses; and

3d. That this change can take place in a corporation which never was a corporation, for the Mississippi Union Bank, spoken of in the original charter, never had a being.

Neither of these propositions can be maintained. The reverse of each is true.

It is not of the essential nature and character of a corpora*862tion that it has a-continued existence as the same artificial being, notwithstanding the individuals who compose it may repeatedly change.

It is true of the generality of corporations, that they have this power of a continued existence as the same corporation, notwithstanding the individuals composing it may, from time to time, change.

But the legislature being the creator of the corporation, can impress upon its creature, just such character, and endow it with just such abilities or capacities as it chooses. The corporation has the abilities and capacities conferred by its creator, and none other; he may give the power of continued existence, notwithstanding a change of members, or he may deny that power; he may limit the corporation to particular individuals by name, or he may confine it to a particular class of individuals, by words describing the class, and excluding alb others, as was done by the fourth section of the original act ; he may provide that the first corporation shall have no successors, or that they may have successors, and he may declare what persons by name, or what class of persons, by describing the class may be successors, as was also done by the fourth section of the original act.

A corporation is as really and truly the creature of the legislature, moulded and fashioned according to its will, and as absolutely and positively deriving its every faculty and capacity from that will, as man is the creature of Jehovah, moulded and fashioned to His will, and deriving from Him every faculty and capacity possessed by man.

And as the man consists, not merely of organized matter, indeed with the principle of life, but all his faculties and capacities, constitute parts of him; so a corporation consists of the natural persons incorporated, and the faculties and capacities conferred upon them by the legislature. One of the capacities of man is this : that although the matter which forms his body is continually passing from it, he can digest food, and by its assimilation, supply the place of the old with new organized matter. And although by the continued operation of this principle, the entire material forming his body may be changed, *863his personal identity still remains; but this power of substituting new to supply the place of old matter, is one conferred upon him by his creator, and must be exercised in conformity with the law of his nature, impressed upon him, in the act of creating, and constituting him as he is.

Independent of this he has no power of assimilation, or receiving into his body new materials, to supply the place of the old.

The food which he can digest and assimilate is limited, and confined by the law of his being. Precisely so it is by a corporation. Its body is composed of such natural persons as the legislature, its creator, chooses to admit into its composition ; its capacity to receive new materials to supply the place of the old, is limited and confined to such persons, whether described by name, or by classes, as the legislature may choose to admit, by the act of incorporation. It can no more receive into its body individuals excluded by the law which imparts to it its life, and impresses upon it its constitution, than the natural man can receive and incorporate into his body materials excluded by the law of his being.

The natural man cannot, according to his organization, digest and by assimilation supply the waste of his body by eating arsenic instead of bread. To be enabled to do so his organization [.must be changed ; it cannot be done by continuing him the same man. It requires a new exercise of the creative power of Jehovah. The exercise of legislative powér in chartering corporations, in declaring of what component parts they shall consist, and what faculties and capacities they shall have, is an exercise of creative power. And a bank constituted as that authorized by the original act, can no more receive into its body, (without a new exercise of this creative power of the legislature,) the State of Mississippi, than man can digest and incorporate into his body arsenic, without a new exercise of the creative'power of God. The legislature knew this, and, therefore, exerted this creative power by passing the supplemental act.

Now by the original act the body of the corporation was to be composed: (1) of natural persons ; (2) owners of real estate; *864(3) situated in the State of Mississippi; (4) who were citizens thereof.

No person whether natural or artificial could forra a part of this body, as it was to be originally constituted, nor had it the power according to the law of its being of receiving into this body any person whether natural or artificial, except such as are before described, until five years should have elapsed. It might, then, receive and incorporate into itself as substitutes, or to supply the place of former members, any owner of real estate in the State of Mississippi, whether a citizen or not. Provided, however, to secure the capital and interest of said bank, mortgage should be given on property of a sufficient character, and of an imperishable nature.

According to the very law of its being, its ability to receive into its body, either by subscription of stock, or by transfer of stock, other persons than those described was excluded. Although, then, it might have a continued existence, as the same artificial being, notwithstanding the individuals who compose it may repeatedly change, it could not have a continued existence as the same artificial being, notwithstanding the change effected by the supplemental charter, for that introduces into its original organization the State of Mississippi, in its sovereign political character. The State of Mississippi is not of the class of persons, who by the law of its being could enter into or compose a part of this artificial person, The Mississippi Union Bank,” mentioned in the original act, and also by the supplemental charter, the law impressed upon it by the original act was so changed as to confer the capacity of receiving into its body persons who could not have entered into its composition by the original act, and also to deprive it of the capacity of receiving into its body, persons who could be received by the original act.

Therefore, the new exercise of the creative power of the legislature was resorted to, and the supplemental act passed.

How, then, can it with any plausibility be contended, that the corporation provided for in the original act is one and the same, with the corporation which went into operation under the supplemental act; and that it has a continued existence as the *865same artificial being, notwithstanding the individuals who compose it may repeatedly change ?

How can it be said that it had a continued existence as the same artificial being, when the first never had an existence at all ? For the corporation authorized by the original act was never formed. There was never a stockholder, a president, or director, under the original act. As, then, there was no individual composing part of the artificial being authorized by the original act, there could be no change in the individuals who composed that artificial being.

It is certainly true, as stated by one of the learned judges, that the act of assembly did not create a corporation, that it only conferred on persons, the power to form themselves into a corporation. Under the original act no persons did form themselves into a corporation. There was, therefore, no corporation under the original act, and unless the corporation which was formed is one and the same with a corporation which never was formed, it cannot be that the corporation formed under the supplement, is the same corporation with that which might have been formed, but was not, under the original act.

That which never was cannot be the same with that which was. That which was not, was nothing ; that which was, was a thing, and a thing and no thing cannot surely be the same.. The corporation provided for in the original act, never having been formed, if it continued, it continued no thing, for that which is no thing, cannot by its continuance become a thing.

It is admitted by the learned judge, that “ this principle, when applied to an unincorporated partnership, is correct, but it does not apply,” says he, “ to corporations. A distinguishing characteristic is the very fact, that the body continues the same, notwithstanding the change of the individuals who compose it. So that new members may be introduced at any time without changing the corporation.” The principle which is spoken of above is the principle contended for on the part of the- State, that the provision of the supplemental charter which-permitted the State of Mississippi to become a stockholder to the amount of $5,000,000, rendered the corporation which went into operation under its provisions a different corporation* from that *866for which the original act provided, and which never was formed, and which if formed must have been composed exclusively of “ the owners of real estate, situated in the State of Mississippi, and who are citizens thereof,” and which words are followed, by the excluding provision, “ that they shall be the only persons entitled to subscribe for stock.”

If we admit the soundness of the argument, (and this I cannot admit,) how does 'it warrant the conclusion, that a bank composed of stockholders, one of whom is the State of Mississippi, subscribing for $5,000,000 of stock, and the others being “the owners of real estate situated in the State of Mississippi, and who are citizens thereof,” and which corporation was actually formed, is the same corporation which might have been formed under a charter, expressly providing, “that the owners of real estate situated in the State of Mississippi, and who are citizens thereof, shall be the only persons entitled to subscribe” for stock, when the latter corporation never was formed. The argument must prove this, or the conclusion does not follow.

Now let,us examine the argument itself. Why is it, that the principle spoken of when applied to unincorporated partnerships is correct? Most unquestionably it is, because by the general law under which unincorporated partnerships may be formed, there is no principle conferring upon them the ability to change the partners, and remain the same partnership. If the law under which unincorporated partnerships are formed, contained such principle, the partnership would remain the same, notwithstanding a change of partners.

Why is it, and how far is it, that a distinguishing characteristic of a corporation is the very fact, that the body continues the same, notwithstanding the change of the individuals who compose it ?

It surely is not contended, that a corporation has this power in and of itself, inherent in its very nature, wholly independent of and towering above the legislative power, that the legislature has not the power to create a corporation, and deny it this faculty of a change of members; that the legislature ■could not provide that a number of individuals, by name, shall *867be a corporation. Nor will it be denied that they could create a corporation, and make a valid provision, that the corporation should consist of a described and ascertained class of persons, and of no others. If the legislature has not such a power, it is because there is some provision in the constitution of the United States, or the State constitution, which would be violated by such an enactment. It is not, then, a distinguishing characteristic of a corporation, that the body continues the same, notwithstanding the change of the individuals who compose it. It is not “ the very fact ” that the body continues the same, notwithstanding the change of the individuals, that distinguishes an incorporated company from a corporation. The corporation possesses, or does not possess, this power of change, as its creator, the legislature, which imparts to it its every power, confers this capacity of change, or withholds it. If the legislature imparts this faculty, it has it. If the legislature withholds this faculty, it has it not, unless the creature transcends in power its creator.

The question then again recurs, What was the power or capacity of the corporation provided for in the original act? Had it the general power of receiving into its body, and making part of itself, the State of Mississippi, in its sovereign political capacity ? It has already been shown that it had not.

But now let it be supposed that a distinguishing characteristic of a corporation “ is the very fact,” that the body continues the same, notwithstanding the change of the individuals who compose it. It is said, that those who contend that the bank which went into operation is a different corporation from that authorizecl by the original act, overlooked the fact, that when the law passed pledging the faith of the State for a loan of money, to be made by the “ Mississippi Union Bank,” that no such corporation was in existence, but it was thereafter to be organized, pursuant to the authority conferred by the law for that purpose. It is repeated, “ That when the law was thus passed, pledging the faith of the State for the loan of the money to be made by the bank, no corporation had been organized; the bank was not in existence; but was thereafter to be organized and formed. The principle of law is undeniable, *868that a law authorizing the creation of a corporation does not of itself create one. Such a law is a mere authority or power conferred by the legislature, a privilege granted, that a corporation may be formed and created.”

It is certainly true, that a law authorizing the creation of a corporation does not of itself create one. Such a law is a .mere authority, or power conferred by the legislature, a privilege granted, that a corporation may be formed and created. ■Let it be supposed, then, that a distinguishing characteristic of a corporation is, the very fact that the body continues the same, notwithstanding the change of the individuals who compose it; yet the body must exist before the individuals who compose it can change. And as the act itself does not create a corporation, but is only a power conferred by the legislature to form a corporation, the corporation must have been formed, in virtue of this power, or there was no corporation. In virtue of the power conferred by the original act, passed by two successive legislatures, in conformity with the provision of the constitution, no corporation was formed.

That body, therefore, never existed. There could, therefore, be no change of the individuals who composed it; and the corporation formed under the supplemental charter could not be the same body. It was an original and new body, essentially differing in its constituent parts, in its franchises, and privileges, from the body which could have been formed under the original act, and for which body alone did the first legislature agree to pledge the faith of the State, when that body should be formed and organized; and.to the president of which, and to the president of no other body, did the first legislature authorize the governor to deliver the State bonds. It was to the president of “ that body,” •■and to the cashier of “ that body,” and to the president and cashier of no other body, that the legislature intrusted the power to transfer the State bonds by indorsement, and until it is proved that that corporation was formed, and that the president and cashier of that corporation transferred the bonds, it is not shown that the present holders have any right to them, or that the governor and treasurer had any power to issue them. They were but the agents of the State, and unless two successive *869legislatures authorized them to issue the bonds of the State to the corporation which went into operation -under the supplemental charter, the State was no .more bound than it would have been, had any other individuals issued the bonds.

Let us take a simple, and, as I believe, a correct view of the effect of the passage of the supplemental act. The original act had been passed by two successive legislatures,-in strict pursuance of the constitution. It provided for the incorporation of an institution under the title of “ The Mississippi Union Bank, with a capital of $15,500,000, which capital shall be raised by a loan to be obtained by the directors of the institution.”

By the 4th section, the owners of real estate situated in the State of Mississippi, and who are citizens thereof, shall be the only persons entitled to subscribe; and shares so subscribed, shall be transferred only to such owners,” &c. “ That in order to facilitate the said Union Bank for the loan of $15,500,000, the faith of the State be, and is hereby pledged, both for the security of the capital and interest.” This act having been passed by two successive legislatures, but no stock having been subscribed, it was in the power of the legislature to repeal it. They did not repeal the act wholly, but the legislature determined that the corporation thereby authorized to be formed, never should be formed. This determination they had the right and power to execute, and this power they did exercise by the supplemental charter. They determined that a different corporation should be formed, and they made provision for its formation by the enactment of the supplemental charter.

The corporation which they authorized was to consist of the State of Mississippi for $5,000,000, and of the citizens of Mississippi, &c., for $10,500,000. The franchises, privileges, duties, and rights of this corporation, are in many important respects different from those of the corporation authorized by the original act. All this they had the power to do.

But they also determined, that the faith of the State should be pledged for this corporation of their creation; and provided that the governor should issue the bonds of the State, payable to this corporation instead of the corporation provided for in *870the original act; that they should be transferable by the indorsement of the president and cashier of the corporation by them authorized, and not by the president and cashier of the corporation which might have been formed under the act which had been passed by two successive legislatures.

This they had not the power to do. For by that legislature only was the faith of the State pledged for that corporation. By that legislature only was the governor authorized to issue the bonds payable to that corporation. The mere retention of the name, “ The Mississippi Union Bank,” did not make' this their creature, the same bank which might have been organized under the original act as passed by the two legislatures.

If it is said, in answer to this, that the supplemental charter contains no provision pledging the faith of the State, I reply, that although this does not strengthen my argument, it renders its conclusiveness more strikingly manifest. If the faith of the State is only pledged by the act which was passed by the two successive legislatures, it was not pledged by even one legislature for the corporation which actually went into operation under the supplemental act.

To present this argument, and the certainty with which it establishes my conclusion in an unquestionable point of view, let it be supposed, that when the original act was put upon its passage it had been rejected: or, having been passed, it was vetoed by the executive, and that a bill had been introduced in the legislature at the time the supplement was introduced to incorporate an institution “ under the style of The Mississippi Union Bank, with a capital of $15,500,000, which said capital should be raised by means of a loan to be obtained by the directors of the institution.” That it had further been provided, that five hundred thousand shares of the stock should be subscribed for by the State of Mississippi, and that the remainder of the stock should be subscribed by the owners of real estate situated in the State of Mississippi, and who are citizens thereof; that it was then provided, that “ in order to facilitate the said Union Bank for the loan of $15,500,000, the faith of the State be, and is hereby pledged, both for the security of the •capital and interest,” &c., in the words of the fifth section, and *871that every provision had been embodied in this act, which remained in force upon the passage of the supplemental act, and that this act passed on the day on which the supplement did. Now would this act, thus passed, pledge the faith of the State under the constitution, without being referred to another legislature ?

The legislature which first passed the original act had pledged the faith of the State as far as its action could contribute to do so, in aid of the Mississippi Union Bank, which it had incorporated.

The second legislature had pledged the faith of the State, as far as it could do so, in aid of the “ Mississippi Union Bank,” which it had incorporated. If the bank provided for by the first legislature is the same bank provided for by the second, then two legislatures had pledged the faith of the State for that bank, and the State would be bound. But unless that provided for by the first, is the same provided for by the second, then but one legislature had agreed to pledge the faith of the State, and the State would not be bound until the law which pledged its faith should have been passed by another legislature. Now in what respect is there a substantial difference between the case supposed, and the case actually before the court?

The ingenuity of man can point out no substantial differenhe.

The end effected by the supposed case of an executive veto of the first, and the subsequent passage of the second act, is precisely the same end with that effected by the passage of the first act by the two legislatures, and the changes in its provision by the passage of the supplemental act.

The only difference is in the manner of doing the thing. There is no difference in the thing done.

The constitutional provision, that the faith of the State should be pledged only by a law passed by two legislatures, was not intended to prohibit mere matters of mode or form in pledging the faith of the State. It was intended to incorporate, and did incorporate into the very framework of the State, a fixed and inviolable principle, which should. protect the State from being involved in debt, until the subject of that indebtedness should actually be presented to the people of the State, *872that they might influence the decision of the question, whether the State should become indebted or not.

This influence it was intended the people of the State should exercise through the ballot-box, by electing such persons members of the legislature as they believed would carry their will into execution, by passing, or refusing to pass the law pledging the faith of the State. It is only to make this great principle of the constitution ridiculous, to give it an effect which but prohibits modes or forms of doing a thing, and not the thing itself. The danger intended to be guarded against was the incurring of large debts to the ruin or serious embarrassment of the State, without due deliberation^ and the direct influence of the people, on the decision of that question through the ballot-box. The form of producing this evil was of no consequence. Constitutions are not framed to protect the community against mere modes or forms of legislative action; they are framed to protect it from the effects of legislative action. Things, not words, modes, or forms, are to be regarded. Hence is our legal maxim, “ Legislaturum est viva vox, rebus et non verbis legem imponere.” “ The voice of legislators is a living voice, imposing laws on things, and not on words.”

If the conclusion be true to which the court has come, the constitutional provision is worse than useless. While it holds out a seeming of protection to the people, it is only a lure to deceive and mislead them.

It is said by the court, in substance, that although a charter is enacted authorizing the formation of a corporation, and the particular corporation defined and ascertained, and a provision made to pledge the faith of the State in aid of that corporation, a subsequent legislature, to which the question of pledging the faith of the State is referred, may at any time, before rights are vested under the charter, wholly repeal the act of incorporation, or modify and change it, as it may choose. All of which I grant. But the- question is not whether they have the power to repeal or modify. The question is wholly different. It is, What is the effect of the exercise of that power ?

It is further said, that inasmuch as this power to repeal,alter, or modify the charter, belongs to the general legislative *873power, “we must, therefore, conclude that the law pledging the faith of the State for a loan of money to be made by the Mississippi Union Bank, a corporation not then in existence, but to be organized at a future day, was passed with reference to the general power thus belonging to the legislature, under which general power the legislature could increase or diminish the number, or change the qualifications of those who might become subscribers for stock until the corporation was organized.

“ The legislature, by the supplemental act authorizing the State to subscribe for stock in the Mississippi Union Bank, only exercised one of its legitimate powers of legislation, known to exist in it at the time the law was passed pledging the faith of the State, to be made for an inchoate corporation; and the law then passed can receive no other proper construction than such as leaves to the legislature this power of legislation conferred upon them by the constitution, and which they were not bound by any contract to refrain from exercising.

“ It must be treated as a law by which, in legal effect, the State agreed to facilitate by means of its credit a loan of money to be made by directors of the Mississippi Union Bank, whenever that corporation might be organized and formed according to the provisions of tlife original act, and such amendments and modifications thereof as the legislature, by .virtue of their general legislative" power, were authorized to make in order to carry into effect the great purpose for which the original act was passed, to wit f-the establishment of a bank with a capital stock to be qegotiated by the directors of the institution.” ‘

It is said: “ We must, therefore, conclude, that the law pledging the faith of the StateíórTi loan of money to be made by the Mississippi Unión Bank, a corporation not then in existence, but to be organized- at a future day, was passed with reference to this general power, thus, belonging to the legislature, by which the legislature Oould increase or diminish the number or change the qualifications of those who might become subscribers for the stock.” 'That it must be treated as a law, by which in legal effect, the State agreed to facilitate by means *874of its credit a loan of money to be made by the directors of the Mississippi Union Bank, whenever that corporation might be organized and formed according to the provisions of the original act, and such amendments and modifications thereof as the legislature, by virtue of their general legislative power, were authorized to make in order to carry into effect the great purpose for which the original act was passed, to wit: The establishment of a bank with a capital stock, to be raised by means of a loan of money, to be negotiated by the directors of the institution.” And thus the supposed great object of the legislature in passing the original act, in the very teeth of its express declaration, that they pledged the faith of the State to facilitate the corporation, the charter of which they enacted is made to override and grind into powder the manifest great object of the people in forming that constitution, under which only that legislature has its being, and from which it derives its power. By what process of reasoning it can be proved, that we must so conclude, or by what process of reason it can be proved, that it must be treated as a law by which in legal effect the State so agreed, I am wholly at a loss to conjecture.

No attempt is made to do one or the other, and I have in vain exerted my best ability to discover some reasoning which would tend to such conclusion. I can conceive of none, and if I could, I should be met and refuted by the express language of the fourth and fifth sections of the act, wherein the legislature that passed that act emphatically declare as a part of the fundamental law of the corporation which they were creating, and to aid which they agreed to pledge the faith of the State, “ that owners of real estate situated in the State of Mississippi, and who were citizens thereof, shall be the only persons entitled to subscribe.” That in order to facilitate the said Union Bank” for the said loan of §15,500,000, the faith of this State be and is hereby pledged. If this is not a perfect declaration that they made the pledge, in aid of a corporation to be formed under the charter which they granted, and no other corporation, I can conceive of no language which would distinctly express their meaning. It is true, they have not said it in express *875words, but the words which they use are not ambiguous, and admit of no -other application. • That they did so intend, is not merely a probable, but nécessary inference from the language they^have used. They meant that, or they meant nothing. When it is said, the legislature having the general power vrhofiy to repeal, modify, or change charters, we mugt, therefore, conclude that the law pledging-the faith of the State for a loan of money to be made by the Mississippi Union Bank, a corporation not then in existence, bút to be organized at some future day, was passed with reference to this general power, thus belonging to the legislature, under which the legislature could increase or diminish the number, or change the qualifications of those who might become subscribers for the stock, I can only assent to the truth of the proposition, if it was so modified, as to declare, that it was passed subject to this power, not in reference to it, and add, that the exercise of this power repealed the pledge.

But there'is no mistaking'.the sense in which it is used by the court, for it is added: “ It' must be treated as a law by which, in legal effect, the State agreed to facilitate by means of its credit a loan of money to be made by the directors of the Mississippi Union Bank, whenever that corporation might be organized and formed according to the provisions of the original act, and such amendments and modifications thereof as the legislature, by virtue of their general legislative power, were authorized to make in order to carry into effect the great purpose for which the original act was passed, to wit: the establishment of a bank with a capital stock, to be raised by means of a loan of money to’- be negotiated by the directors of the institution.” "1

Important as are the interests of the State involved in this controversy, they shrink into utter insignificance when compared with the new and startling doctrine embodied in these few words ; a doctrine against which as a lawyer, a man, and a citizen, I most respectfully enter a solemn protest for myself, my children, and my countrya doctrine which, if true, strikes at the very root of civil liberty, by annihilating the power of conventions and legislatures, the force of constitutions and *876statutes, and which erects the judiciary into a sovereign with unlimited power. The distinction between legislative and judicial power is entirely annihilated, and the former as effectually swallowed up by the latter as were Datban and Abiram by the earth, when at the command of Jehovah it opened its bosom to receive them.

If, when the legislature says, (1) “ that the owners of real estate (2) situated in the State of Mississippi, (3) who were citizens thereof, (4) shall be the only persons entitled to subscribe, (5) and shares so subscribed shall be transferable to such owners only until after five years, (6) when they may be transferred to any owner of real estate in this State, whether citizens or not; (7) provided, however, to secure the capital or interest of said bank, mortgage shall be given on property of sufficient character, and of an imperishable nature;” and when they have added, (8) that “in order to facilitate the said Union Bank for the said loan of $15,500,000, the faith of this State be, and is hereby pledged, both for the security of the capital and interest,” a court may say, that they intended that pledge as a pledge of the faith of the State, not for that bank only, but for any bank that might go into operation under that charter, or for any other bank, that might go into operation under any modifications of it that might be made by another legislature, language has ceased to have a meaning, and it is utterly impossible that a legislature can so express its meaning that a court may not declare, that its legal effect is to do any thing and every thing that may be conceived of, whether it be to add to, substract from, or vary the clear, unequivocal sense of the most unambiguous and definite terms that a legislature can employ. There is no limit but in the discretion of the judiciary. But it is a maxim of the law, that words have meaning, and that courts shall so construe them, that every word shall, if possible, have operation, and all construction shall be upon the words, and no construction shall be put upon the words which gives to them a meaning which they do not contain. “ The words of a statute are to be taken in their ordinary and familiar signification and import; and regard is to be had to their general and proper use; for jus et norma *877loquendi, is governed by usage ; and the meaning of words spoken or written ought to be allowed to be, as it has been taken to be, loquendum est ut yulgus. 4 Rep. 47.

But if the usage have been to construe the words of the statute contrary to their obvious meaning by the vulgar tongue, and the common acceptation of terms, such usage is not to be regarded, it being rather, say the books, an oppression of those concerned than a construction of the statute.” Vaughn, 169 Parker, 44.

In Rex v. Stake Damerel, 7 B. & C. 569, it is laid down, that “where the object of the legislature is plain and unequivocal, courts ought to adopt such a construction as will best effectuate the intention of the lawgiver. But they must not, in order to give effect to what they supposed to be the intention of the legislature, put upon the provisions of a statute a construction not supported by the words, though the consequence should be to defeat the, object of the act.”

In Rex v. Ramsgate, 6 B. & C. 712, it is laid down, that, “Where the legislature has used words of a plain and definite' import, it would be very dangerous to put upon them a construction which would amount to holding, that the legislature did not mean what it has expressed. The fittest course, in all cases where the intention of the legislature is brought into question, is to adhere to the words of the statute, construing them according to their nature and import, in the order in which they stand in the act'of parliament.”'

In Rex v. Inhabitants of Great Bentley, 10 B. & C. 527, it is said: “The most enlightened and experienced judges have for some time lamented the too frequent departure from the plain and obvious meaning of the words of the act of parliament, by which a case is governed, and themselves hold it much the safer course to adhere to the words of the statute, construed in their ordinary import, than to enter into inquiry as to the supposed intention of the parties who framed the act.”

In Rex v. Gwenop, 3 T. R. 135; Rex v. Markes, 13 East, 165; 2 Co. Inst. 111; 11 Rep. 33, the force of the word “ such,”' *878in a statute, is treated of, and it-is held, that though general words are used in their plain and ordinary sense, the word “ such,” will restrain and limit them to a particular description of things contained in a preceding section to which the word “ such ” refers. The same question arose in Morris v. Miller, 6 B. & C. 446; and Bennett v. Daniel, 10 B. & C.; and the same rule was again and again declared. In 6 Rep. 76, it is said, “ always in statutes, relation shall be made according to the matter precedent.”

“ The good' expositor,” says Lord Coke, “ makes every sentence have its operation to suppress all the mischief,” he gives effect to every word in the statute, he does not construe it so that any thing should be vain and superfluous, nor yet makes exposition agáinst express words, for viperina est expositio quce corridit viscera textus.” 11 Rep. 34, citing 2 Bulst. 179; 10 Rep. 105. In Moser v. Newman, 6 Bing. 561, it is said: “ When in several statutes in pari materid, the legislature is found sometimes inserting, and sometimes omitting a clause of relation, it is to be presumed that then intention has been drawn to the point, and that the omission is designed.”. “ But,” says Lord Ellenborough, “ if it were not intended, we can only say of the legislature, quod voluit non dixit.” 6 East, 518.

So, in the present case, even if the first legislature did intend to pledge the faith of the State for such bank as might go into operation pnder the charter, with such modifications, alterations, or additions as the next legislature might make, the court, in the language of Lord Ellenborough, can only say of the legislature, quod voluit non dixit.

If words go beyond intention, or fall short of it, it rests with the legislature to make the alteration or addition. “ Our decision,” says Lord Tenterden, “ may perhaps in this particular ■case, operate to defeat the object of the statute; but it is better 'to abide by this consequence than to put upon it a construction ■not warranted by the words of the act, in order to give effect to what is supposed to be the intention of the legislature.” Rex v. Barham, 8 B. & C. 104.

In Notley v. Buck, 8 B. & C. 164, we read: “ The words may *879probably go beyond the intention, but if they do, it rests with -the legislature to make am alteration-; the duty of a courtis only to construe and give effect to the provision.”

In 1 T. R. 52, we reíd: “ It is safer to adopt what the legislature have actually said, than do suppose what they meant to say.”

In 1 T. R. Rep. 52, it is held, that “ a casus omissus can in no case be supplied by a court of law, for that would be to make laws. Judges are bound to take the act of parliament as the legislature have made it.”

In the case of Brandling v. Barrington, 6 B. & C. 475, Lord Tenterden said: “ Speaking for myself alone, I cannot forbear observing, that I -think that- there is always danger in giving effect to what is called the equity of the statute; and that it is much safer and better to rely on, and abide by the plain words, although the legislature might possibly have provided for other cases had their attention been directed to them.” Bailey, (J.,) said: “ I certainly think that the present case comes within the mischief intended to be remedied by the statute, (8 Anne, c. 14, § 1,) and I should have been better satisfied if it could have been brought within the fair construction of the words of that enactment. But I think we should be attributing too comprehensive a meaning to the words of the statute.” Plolroyd, (J.), said: “This case does not appear to have been contemplated by the legislature, although itjnay, perhaps, be within the mischief which they intended to remedy.”

The indubitable rule, then, is this,-that to bring á case within the operation of a statute, it should not only be a case within the legislative intention, to be collected from the body of the act, but that it should also be within the plain, intelligible import of the words of the act itself. This is the rule as laid down by Dwarris, p. 53, from' whose works I have taken the preceding extracts.

The foregoing rules are of universal application. They grow out of the very nature of, and distinction between, legislative and-judicial powers. Their birth was coeval with the science of civil government, and they must continue to exist until civil liberty shall end.

*880They prevail as cardinal rules, through the whole of continental Europe, and have prevailed from the earliest ages. They have been regarded by the wise and good of all nations as founded in the nature of law and of government. It is said by Vattel, that the first general maxim of interpretation is, “ that it is not allowable to interpret what has no need of interpretation.” Vattel, b. 2, chap. 17, § 263.

Puffendorff, on Law, Nature, and Nations, pr. b., p. 13, § 12, says: “ If the words of the law express clearly the sense and intention, we must hold to that.”

Again, Vattel, b. 2, ser. 17, § 270, says: “ The sole object of interpretation of a statute, is to discover the intention of the framers. That intention is, however, sometimes very obscurely expressed. Whenever we meet with an obscurity in a statute, we are to consider what, probably, were the ideas of those who drew the act, and to interpret it accordingly.” I do not give his precise words for brevity’s salce.

Smith, in his Commentaries, 627, has the following: “ When the words of an act are in clear and precise terms, when its meaning is evident and leads to no absurd conclusions, there can be no reason for refusing to admit the meaning which the words naturally present; to go elsewhere in search of conjecture in order to restrict or to extend the act, would be but an attempt to elude it. Such a method, if once admitted, would be exceedingly dangerous; for there would be no law, however definite and precise in its language, which might not, by interpretation, be rendered useless. However luminous each clause might be, however clear and precise the terms of it, all this would be of no avail if allowed to go in quest of extraneous arguments to prove that it is not to be understood in the sense which it naturally presents.”

Again, Puffendorff says (p. 5, ch. 12, § 3) : “ As for the words, the rule is, unless there be reasonable objections against it, they are to be understood in their proper and most known signification, not so much according to grammar as to the general use of them.”

Again, Vattel lays down this rule. It is to be presumed, that the legislature employed the words in their proper signifi*881cation, that is, the signification which common usage has affixed to them. It is not to be presumed, that it did not intend to annex thp sáme meaning to the words which common usage has annexed to them. Hence, in no instance ought courts to deviate from the common usage of the words, unles it should clearly appear, that they were intended to be used in a different sense, &c. Vattel, b. 2, ch. 17, §§ 274, 277.

With these lights before us, by which we perceive the rules to which courts must resort, when they undertake to ascertain the legal effect of statutes, how can we possibly reach the conclusion, that when the legislature provided that the owners of real estate, situated in the State of Mississippi, shall be the only persons entitled to subscribe, they in legal effect intended that the State of Mississippi might subscribe for $5,000,000 ? That when they said, “ that in order to facilitate the said Union Bank, for the said loan of $15,000,000 the faith of this State be and is hereby pledged,” they'in.legal effect said, that in.order to facilitate the said Union Bank, or such other bank as may be-formed under this charter, with any modifications or changes that the next legislature may make, either as to the individuals who compose the corporation, or in its faculties or capacities, or in the security*herein provided for the State; and notwithstanding it may be made a bank to provide a fund, “ subject to the epntrol of the legislature, for the purpose of internal improvement and the promotion- of education,” the faith of this State be, and is hereby pledged ?

If, when they made every provision for a definite and ascertained bank, they did -not mean that such provisions should effect-any thing, but their intentions were as the court has supposed, and carried out, they were certainly engaged in a most childish and idle enterprise in enacting a charter at all. The means by which they might have attained that supposed great object were most simple and obvious. A statute in these words would have effected all .that they intended to effect. Instead of the title, “ An act .to incorporate the subscribers to the Mississippi Union Bank',” they should have adopted the title, “ An act to pledge the faith of the State,” and they should have commenced with this preamble to have made themselves, *882perfectly intelligible: Whereas it is the great purpose of this legislature, that a bank hereafter be established with a capital stock of $15,500,000, to be raised by means of a loan of money to be negotiated by the directors of the institution.

Sect. 1. “ Be it enacted by the legislature of the State of Mississippi, that in order to facilitate such bank as the next legislature may incorporate in obtaining a loan of $15,500,000, to constitute the capital stock of such bank, the faith of the State be, and is hereby pledged, both for the security of the capital and interest aforesaid.”

Sect. 2. That this act be published, &e., and referred to the next legislature.

According to the opinion of the court, this simple enactment would have effected the great object that the legislature had in view, and would have attained every end which they proposed. For if the next legislature could wholly repeal, change, modify, add to, or subtract from, the charter without limit, and the provision pledging the faith of the State still remained a valid pledge, what end or object could the legislature have had in view which the above statute does not reach ? There could have been but one sensible object in passing the act, as it was passed, and causing it to be published and laid before the people, to influence them at the next election, and that object would have been a most reprehensible one. It could only have had the effect of deceiving the voters.

The whole difficulty of the case seems to me to grow out of the omission to ascertain,

1st. In what does the identity of a bank consist ? and

2d. What is the correct rule of judicial interpretation, by which to ascertain the legal effect of words used by a legislature ?

I have endeavored to supply the one and the other. I hope and believe I have succeeded. Nothing but the deep conviction under which I labor could have induced me to present this application. I regret the length of the argument. I have not time to make it shorter.