after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
It is a fundamental principle of a republican form of government that no man shall be involuntarily deprived of his life, liberty, or property without due process of law. The prohibition of such a deprivation by the states is found in the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States. But it lies deeper, and limits and conditions every grant of legislative, executive, or judicial authority. The proposition was announced in the early history of the republic, and it has been constantly affirmed. The supreme court said in Calder v. Bull,
*829 “A law that punishes a citizen for an innocent action, or, in other words, for an act which, when done, was in violation of no existing law; a law that destroys or impairs the lawful private contracts of citizens; a law that makes a man a judge in his own cause; or a law that takes property from A. and gives it to B., — it is against all reason and justice for a people to Intrust a legislature with such powers, and therefore it cannot he presumed that they have done it.”
A legislative act which takes, or undertakes to authorize the taking, of private property for* a private object, either by taxation, or hv the exercise of the power of eminent domain, or by any other means, is not a law, but an arbitrary decree, whereby the property of one citizen may be transferred to another. Such an act is beyond the limits of the powers granted by the people to the legislatures of the states, and is without legal force or effect. The legislative power of taxation and power of eminent domain are alike limited to the exercise thereof for public objects, and they cannot be successfully prostituted for private purposes. For the same reasons the power of a legislature to create or to authorize the creation of a public debt, and the issue of public bonds to be paid by taxation, is subject to the same limitation. The clear and forcible declarations of Chief Justice Black in 1853 in Sharpless v. Mayor, etc., of Philadelphia,
“Neither has the legislature any constitutional right to create a public debt, or to lay a tax, or to authorize any municipal corporation to do it, in order to raise funds for a mere private purpose. No such authority passed to tlie assembly by the general grant of legislative power. This would not be legislation. Taxation is a mode of raising revenue for public purposes. When it is prostituted to objects in no way connected with the public interests or welfare, it ceases to be taxation, and becomes plunder. Transferring money from the owners of it into the possession of those who have no title to it, though it be done under the name and form of a tax, is unconstitutional for all the reasons which forbid the legislature to usurp any other power not granted to them.”
See, also, Cole v. City of La Grange,
A necessary corollary to these propositions is that a legislature, which has no power to authorize the levy of a tax or the creation of a public debt for a private purpose, has no power to draw that authority to itself, or to create it by its mere declaration that a private purpose is a public one. Any other theory would destroy the limitation. A legislature cannot make a private purpose a public one by its mere flat, and the determination of the question in any case whether or not a given object is public or private is a judicial, and is not a legislative, function. Allen v. Inhabitants of Jay,
If the bonds and coupons upon which this action is founded are ever paid, the money to discharge them must he raised by the levying of taxes upon private property situated in the township of Mission. Their validity, therefore, must depend upon the answer to the ques
. Counsel for the .plaintiff in error, however, call attention to the settled rule that the promotion of the construction of railroads and of custom gristmills operated by water is a public purpose, in aid of which municipal corporations may lawfully issue bonds, and to the opinion of the supreme court in Burlington Tp. v. Beasley,
The decision in this case is not controlling upon the issues presented in the case at bar, because the bonds before us disclose the fact that they were issued for the purpose of encouraging the construction and operation of a public sugar mill, so that there can be no bona fide purchasers without notice of the object of their issue, and because the Burlington Tp. Case illustrates, not the general rule, but an exception to the well-established rule that the aid of private manufacturing or business enterprises is not a public purpose for which taxation may be imposed. This decision is the outgrowth of a more primitive state of society, when there were no railroads and few good highways, and when custom gristmills in the immediate neighborhoods of productive fields to grind grain for bread for the people and for food for the cattle were a public necessity. In this state of affairs a line of decisions was developed to the effect that aid in the construction and maintenance of custom gristmills driven by water, and the development of the necessary water power to propel them, was a public object, for which taxes might be lawfully levied upon the property of all the citizens. Guernsey v. Burlington Tp.,
When we turn from this line of decisions to the consideration of the nature of public aid in the construction and operation of other manufacturing plants of various kinds, the decisions of ,the supreme court voice no uncertain sound. In Citizens’ Savings & Loan Ass’n v. City of Topeka,
The sugar factory, to aid in the construction of which these bonds were issued, was not to be constructed or operated by the township or its officers, but by private owners. The officers of the township were to have no control or direction of its management. It was not to be erected.to perform, or to assist in the performance of, any function of government. All prosperous mercantile and manufacturing enterprises in a town tend to enhance the value of property, to employ labor, and to increase business. The fact that the construction and operation of this mill would have a similar effect in no way differentiates the purpose or object of its promotion from that of the promotion of other private business undertakings. If this attempt to promote the manufacture of sugar by taxation is to be sustained, every holder of property in this township must contribute a portion of that property to pay for the erection and operation of this mill. For what purpose must he make this contribution? Not to sustain the government, but to build a mill for private owners, in which they may conduct their own private business. Who receives the proceeds of these bonds? Or, in other words, to whom does the taxpayer really pay his tax? bTot to the salaried officers of the government, not to the teachers of the children in the public schools, but to the private individuals who own the mills. For whose benefit does he contribute this share of his property? For the direct benefit of the owners of the mill alone, and perhaps for the indirect benefit of those farmers who contract with these owners before they plant their cane for its manufacture into sugar or syrup. When these facts are studiously considered, all doubt of the character of this promotion vanishes. The aid of the construction and operation of this mill actually serves but two purposes. It serves to enable the owners of the mill to gain the legitimate profits of their undertaking, and it serves to take by taxation from the owners.of property in
The argument of counsel for the plaintiff in error that the promotion of the construction and operation of this mill is a public purpose, because the legislature declared in the act authorizing the issue of the bonds that the mills aided thereby were public mills, and because the supreme court in Munn v. Illinois,
