notwithstanding the. assessment and taxation of the relator upon that part of its capital which was invested in the debt of the Hnited States was illegal, as adjudged in
People ex rel. The Bank of Commerce
v.
Commissioners of Taxes, New York City
(
The claim of the relator was made a county charge,, not by the adjudication and allowance of the board of supervisors,
*115
but by the legislature in the exercise of the taxing power, in respect to which it is sovereign. The legislature may determine what sums shall be raised by taxation, and for what purposes, and it may make appropriations of money, and cause the same to be levied by tax, either general or local, for the satisfaction of a claim which is not recoverable by action, or a public charge in virtue of any previous or existing laws, and which is only founded in equity and justice, or which the legislature regards as equitable and just.
(Town of Guilford
v.
Supervisors of Chenango,
3 Kern., 143;
Brewster
v.
City of Syracuse,
The only question, then, is whether the act chapter 180, of the Laws of 1874, repealed the act of 1867 as well as that of 1873
(supra),
and thus recalled the concession and revoked the mandate to the board of supervisors and took from that body all power in the premises. If by the repeal of the act of 1873 the law of 1867 was restored, then the mandate remained, and the relator was entitled to a
ma/ndcmms,
as was held in
People
v.
Supervisors of Otsego Country (supra).
The result in such
*117
case would only be to modify the law in apportioning the tax, and the form of the taxation, and impose the whole amount upon the county at large, instead of .apportioning it among the towns upon some equitable basis. This was clearly within the province of the legislature, and if such is the effect of the legislation, the mandatory part of the law in all that is substantial to the rights of the relator, and the remedy under the law remains. By the law of 1873 that of 1867 was not repealed; but from the time the former was passed, it became the law as to all proceedings thereafter, while all that had been done before that time was supported by the first act, and must be judged by it.
(Ely
v. Holton,
At the time of the passage of the repealing act of 1874, by which the act of 1873 was in terms and by reference to its title and the date of its passage repealed, the act of 1873 was the only law in force. The earlier statute had been merged by being incorporated and united with new provisions in the amendatory act substituted for ik The general rule is, that if a statute that repeals another is itself afterwards repealed, the first statute is thereby revived, without - any formal words for that purpose. (1 Black’s Com., 90 ;
Wheeler
v.
Roberts,
The order must be affirmed.
All concur, except Batallo, J., not voting.
Order affirmed.
