delivered the opinion of the court.
Thеse are writs of certiorari to test the validity of assessments for the widening of an alley in Washington under the *138 act of Congress of July 22,1892, c. 230,27 Stat. 255, as amended by the act of August 24, 1894, ,c. 328, 28 Stat.' 501. The writs were quashed by the Supreme Court of the District and the judgments affirmed by the Court of Appeаls. 26 App. D. C. 140, 146. The principal case is that of Brandenburg, the owner of land taken for the. widening. That of Martin raises questions as to the rights of a mortgagee of the same land. The main issue is upon the constitutionality of the act. The statute authorizes the Commissioners оf the District to com demn, open, widen, etc., alleys upon the presentation to them of a plat of the same acсompanied by a. petition of the owners of more than one-half of the real estate in the square in which such alley is sought to be opened, etc., or in certain other cases. After prescribed preliminaries the Commissioners are to apрly to the marshal of the District to empanel a jury of twelve disinterested citizens, and the marshal is to empanel them, first giving ten days’ notice to each proprietor of land in the •square. The jury is to appraise the damages to real estate and alsо is'to “apportion an amount equal to the amount of said damages so ascertained and appraised as aforesaid,” including fixed pay for the marshal and jury, “according as each lot or part of lot of land in such square may be benefitеd by the opening, widening, extending or straightening such alley,” with certain deductions. The amendment authorizes the Commissioners to open minor streets; to run through a square, etc., whenever in the judgment of said Commissioners theJ public interests require it.
. ;,The law is not a legislative adjudiсation concerning a particular place and a particular plan- like the one before the court in
Wight
v.
Davidson,
But when the chance of-the cost exceeding the benefit grows large аnd the amount of the not improbable excess is great, it may not follow that the case last cited will be a precedent. Constitutional rights like others are matters of degree. To illustrate: Under the police power, in its strict sense, a certain limit might be set to the height of buildings without compensation; but to make that limit five feet would" require compensation-and a taking by eminent domain. .So it wеll might be that a form of assessment that would be valid for paving would not be valid for the more serious expenses involved in the taking of land. Such’ a distinction was relied on in
French
v.
Barber Asphalt Paving Co.,
And yet it is evident that the act of Congress under consideration is very like earlier acts that have bеen sustained. .That passed upon in
Wight
v.
Davidson,
it.is true, dealt with a special tract, and so required the hypothesis of a legislative determinаtion as to the amount of benefit conferred. But the real ground of the "decision is shown by the citation (
In view оf the decisions to which we have referred it would be unfortunate if the present act should be declared unconstitutional aftеr it has stood so long. We think that without a violent construction of the statute it may be read in such a way as not to raise the difficult questiоn with which we have been concerned. It is true'that the jury is to apportion an amount equal to the amount of the damage аscertained, but it is to apportion it “ according as each lot or part of lot of land in such square may be benefited by the opening, etc.”' Very likely it was thought that in general, having regard to the shortness of the alleys, the' benefits would be greater than the cost. But the words quoted permit, if they do not- require, the interpretation that in any event the apportionment is to be limited to the benefit, and if it is so limited all serious doubt as to the validity of the statute disappears.
It is clear, however, from the petitions and the rеturns that the jury did not administer the statute in the way in which we have determined that it should be read. About one-fifth of each lot was taken, and wаs valued at $92 and $75 respectively. That would give a value of $368 and $300, at the most, to the remaining portions, hefore the improvement was made. These lots were assessed $650 less said $92, or $558, and $550 less said $75, or $475. It is most improbable' that the widening of an alley could have nеarly trebled the value of each lot. We think it apparent, as was assumed by the Court of Appeals, *141 that the jury understood their duty to be to divide the whole cost among the landowners, whether the benefit was equal to their share of the cost or not. It must be admittеd that the language of the. statute more or less lent itself to that understanding. There is nothing in the record sufficient to show that the jury took а different view, or that they limited the assessment to the benefit actually conferred on- these lots. For this reason the assessment must'be quashed; and it will not be necessary to consider the special objections of the mortgagee. • •
Judgments reversed.
