delivered the opinion of the Court.
Defendant in error, a board of improvement incorporated by the State of Arkansas, brought suit in the Circuit Court of Sebastian County, to recover the cost of paving a part of certain streets in Fort Smith, Arkansas,; occupied by the street railway of plaintiff in error. Plaintiff in error originally operated its railway under a fran-, chise requiring it to do similar paving and limiting it to a maximum fare of five cents per passenger. Availing of the permission granted by No. 571 of the Acts of Arkansas, 1919, amended by No. 124 of 1921, the company had surrendered in that year its franchise for an indeterminate permit to operate its road. The permit did not fix a maximum fare or require the railway to pave *389 piarts of the streets occupied by its tracks, but subjected it to the regulatory powers of a utilities commission.
. In 1923 the législature passed a statute, Acts .of Arkansas, 1923, No. 680, requiring plaintiff in error under certain conditions which have occurred, to ;pave the streets between its rails to the end of the ties. In the event of its failure to do so, the improvement district was authorized to do the paving at the expense of the railway. The act is in form a general statute, but by reason of provisions making it applicable to street railways operating under indeterminate permits in cities of the first class other than in Miller County, it in fact applied to plaintiff in error alone.
Plaintiff in error having -failed to do the required paving, the board completed the improvement and brought the present suit. The company by answer set up that the statutory requirements of paving impaired the obligation of its' contract with the state, in violation of Art. I, § 10 of the Federal Constitution, and deprived it of property without due process of law and denied the equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. The judgment of the circuit court for defendant in error was affirmed by the Supreme Court of the state.
It is,urged that the acceptance of the indeterminate permit under the Act of 1919 constituted a contract between the railway and the state by which the state bound itself not to impose any added burdens except in the exercise óf its police power; that the requirement.for street paving was not an exercise of the police power and was therefore a forbidden impairment of the contract. This contention assumes that the permit exempted the railway from paving costs. But no such exemption appears in the permit. Provisions of this character, are not lightly to be read into a contract between a state and a
*390
public utility.
Public Service Co.
v.
Durham,
Assuming the exercise of the power of amendment subject to the limitation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment,
Shields
v.
Ohio,
It is said that the act in its application is confiscatory because plaintiff in error must bear this expense although it is losing money in the operation of its road at the rates for service now prevailing. But the imposition of burdens, otherwise legitimate, upon a public service company cannot be held invalid as confiscatory'because the’ permitted rate does not allow an adequate return.
Woodhaven Gas Light Co.
v.
Public Service Commission,
It is also contended that as there are other street railways in the state, some operating under franchises and one under an. indeterminate permit, which are not required to do street paving, the challenged act denies the equal protection of the laws. The Fourteenth Amendment does not prohibit legislation merely because it is special, or limited in its application to a particular geographical or political subdivision of the state. See
Missouri
v.
Lewis,
Nor need we cite authority for the proposition that the Fourteenth Amendment does not require the uniform application of legislation to objects that are different, where those differences may be made the rational basis of legislative discrimination. There is nothing in the record now before us to show that there is any similarity of plaintiff’s road to others in the state with respect to many considerations which might reasonably determine which roads should be required to do street paving. Differences
*392
in location, use and physical character of the streets, the extent to which paving has been completed and local methods of assessing benefits for street paving, ,are some of the considerations which might reasonably move the legislature to require street paving of one road or several and not of others. Cf.
Metropolitan Street Ry.
v.
New York,
There are no facts disclosed by the record which would enable us to say that the legislative action with which we are here concerned was necessarily arbitrary or unreasonable or justify-us in overruling the judgment of the state court that it was reasonable. Public Service Co. v. Durham, supra, 154.
Judgment affirmed.
