after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
Thus, in Chapman v. Douglas County,
So, too, in Parkersburg v. Brown,
The trial court having rested its decree upon the decision in that case, the question to be considered is whether the clause of our constitution prohibits a county from becoming a tenant in common in respect to real property. The use to which the premises are subjected by the county can have no bearing upon the inquiry; for, if the organic law of the state interdicts the unity of possession, the prohibition is alike applicable to any and all real property. We can not believe that the language of our constitution hereinbefore quoted is susceptible to the construction given to a similar clause by the Supreme Court of Ohio, nor yield our consent to the reasons assigned for the decision there rendered. It is the duty of the court, in interpreting a constitution, which is a limitation and not a grant of power, to consider the existing evil intended to be avoided by the prohibition. The establishment of manufacturing industries, where labor finds profitable employment, generally .tends to the happiness of the workmen, thereby augmenting the wealth and increasing the importance of the city, town, or village in which they settle, resulting from their home building and the inauguration of various
