The causes involve the legality of certain taxes levied by the board of supervisors of the respective-counties for the support of the poor. At the time of making the annual tax levy for the year 1884, said boards of supervisors each made an order reciting that the ordinary revenue of the county had proven insufficient for the support of the poor, and levying a tax of one mill on the dollar on all the taxable property in the county for that purpose. The counties each
The legislature in 1876 passed an act to amend this section. The act is chapter 149 of the Acts of the Sixteenth General Assembly, and it is as follows: “ Section 1. That section 1381, tit. 11, chap. 1, Code, be amended by striking out the words ‘one mill’ in the fifth line of the said section and inserting therein in lieu thereof the words ‘one and a half mills,’ so that the section will read as follows: Sec. 1381. The expenses of the poor-house shall be paid out of the county treasury in the same manner with other disbursements for county purposes; and, in case the ordinary revenue of the county prove insufficient for the support of the poor, the board may levy a poor tax not exceeding one and a half mills on the dollar, to be entered and collected as the ordinary county tax: provided, that the provisions of this act shall not apply to counties in which the population is less-than thirty-three thousand (33,000) inhabitants.”
The question to be determined is as to the effect of the enactment. It is contended by appellant that its effect is to strike out absolutely from the section the words “ one mill,” and insert in lieu thereof the words “one and a half mills,”
In the next place, the language preceding the proviso clearly indicates an intention by the legislature to amend the section in the single respect of striking out the words “one mill ” and inserting “ one and a half mills.” The language is “ that section 1381 * * * be amended by striking out the words ‘ one mill,’ in the fifth line, * * * and inserting therein in lieu thereof the words 1 one and a half mills,’ so that the section will read as follows;” — and this is followed by the amendment, and there is no provision expressly making the proviso a part of the section. We think it clear, then, from the language made use of, that the proviso was intended as a limitation of the amendatory act, and that it does not constitute any part of
Affirmed.