аfter making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
The validity of this very statute'of Arkansas (at least until Congress legislates upon thе subject) has already been affirmed by this court,
Woods & Sons
v.
Carl,
It is sought tо avoid the authority of bur decision upon this Arkansas statute by asserting that nothing was therein decided, except, the validity of the first section of the act, and that the validity of the act when considered in connection with the fourth section was not argued or decided. The fourth section reads as fоllows: “This act shall not. apply to merchants and dealers who sell patented things in the usual course of business.” Other reasons for an affirmance are set up in the brief of respondent.
The grounds given for the decision by the Circuit Court and the Circuit Court of Appeals differ somewhat. The Circuit Court says that the effect of the fourth section of the statute is to violate that portion of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution, which provides thаt no State shall, *255 deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the'laws; while the Circuit-Court of Appeals bases its-judgment upon the unlawful disсrimination evidenced by the act against those who are protected by á patent granted by the United States.
In
The manufacturer of a patented article,, who also sells it in the usual course of business in his store or factory, would probably come within the exception of § 4. He may be none the less a dealer, selling in the usual course of his business, because he is also a manufacturer of the artiсle dealt in. Exceptional and rare cases, not arising out of the sale of patented things in the ordinary way, may be imagined where this general classification separating the merchants and dealers from the rest of the people might be regarded as not sufficiently comprehensivе, because in such unforeseen, unusual and exceptional cases the people affected’by the .-statute ought, in strictness, to have been included in the exception. See opinion of Circuit Court herein, 127 Fed. Rep., supra. But we do not think the statute should be condemned on that, account. It is because such imaginary and unforeseen cases are so rare and exceptional as to have been overlooked that the general classification ought not to be rendered invalid. In such case there is really no substantial denial of the equal protection of the laws within the meaning of the amendment.
It is almost impossible, in some matters, to foresee and provide for every imaginable and exceptional case, and a legislature. ought not to be required to do so at the risk of having its. legislation declared void, although appropriate and proper upo'n the general subject upon which such legislation is to act, so long as there is no substantial and fair ground to say that the statute makes an unreasonable and unfounded general classification, and thereby denies to any' person the equal protection of the laws. In a сlassification for governmental purposes there. cannot be an
exact
exclusion or inclusion of persons and things. See
Gulf
&c.
Co.
v.
Ellis,
The case of
Connolly
v.
Union Sewer Pipe Co.,
We think there is a distinction, founded upon fair reasoning, which upholds the principle of exemption as contained in the fourth section, and that, consequently, the statute does not violate the Fourteenth Amendment on the ground stated.
The сase was decided by the courts below solely upon constitutional grounds, and upon those grounds the decision cannot rest. It must, therefore, be rеmanded, and if there be any other facts to be urged they can be presented on another trial.
The judgments of the Circuit Court and .the Circuit Court of Appeals must be reversed and the case remanded to the Circuit Court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.
