after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The Supreme Court of Mississippi did not put its decision upon the ground that it was not competent under the. state constitution for the State to contract with the company that the latter should not be subjected to ■ taxation, but upon the ground that the exemption claimed could not be allowed. The taxes in question were assessed under the act of 1888, and if the charter of the company, which became a law on the 17th of February, 1882, inhibited such taxation, then this court has jurisdiction to re-examine the conclusion reached. Although by the terms of the act of 1888 the taxes therein referred to were not to be levied as against a railroad exempt by law -or charter, yet the Supreme Court held that this company is not exempt, and is embraced ivithin the act; so that if a contract of exemption is contained in the company’s charter, then the obligation of that contract is impaired by the act of 1888, which must be considered, under the ruling of the Supreme Court, as intended to apply to the company. The result is the same, although the act of 1888 be regarded as simply putting in force revenue laws existing at the date of the company’s charter, rather than itself imposing taxes, for if the contract existed those laws became inoperative, and would be reinstated by the act of 1888. The motion to dismiss the writ of error is therefore overruled.
By the eighth section of the company’s charter it was declared “that said company, its stock, its railroads and appurtenances, and all its property in this State necessary or incident to the full exercise of all the powers herein granted —not to include compresses and oil mills- — shall be exempt from taxation for a term of twenty years from the completion of said railroad to the Mississippi River, but not to extend beyond twenty-five years from the date of the approval of this act; and when the period of exemption herein prescribed shall have expired, the property of said railroad may be taxed at the same rate as other property in this State.” If the provision had terminated with the words “ Mississippi River ” it
In
Vicksburg, Shreveport Pacific Railway Company
v.
Dennis,
By the general law of the State of Mississippi in force at the time the charter of appellant was granted, it was provided that no railroad company should be subject to taxation while the same was in process of construction, but if any part of any road should be completed so as to be used for profit, the part so used should be taxed, although the whole road might not be' finished. It is admitted' that the taxes here were' levied in respect to parts .of the road which were in operation.
By the thirteenth section it was provided that the legislature might declare the charter forfeited, if twenty miles were not constructed and in operation within three years from the -passage of the.act. This indicates that the legislature did not assume that the line might probably be extended to the river in less than five years, and were not thereby induced to insert the twenty years as a limitation on the twenty-five. No reason is perceived for limiting the exemption to begin with the completion of the railroad to the Mississippi River, if it were intended that the exemption should be for more than twenty years at all events, commencing with the approval of the act.
The question when the property may be taxed is answered
Again, the preamble to the act is referred to by counsel, as sustaining their construction, because it is therein declared that the Avork is one of “ great public importance,” and “ to be encouraged by legislative sanction and liberality,” and that “the physical difficulties of constructing and maintaining railroads to, across, along or within either the Mississippi, SunfioAver, Deer Creek or Yazoo bottoms or basins, or the other alluvial lands herein referred to, are such that no prh'ate company has so far been able to establish a railroad and branches developing said basins and alluvial lands, and connecting them with the railroad system of the country.” Rut as the preamble is no part of the act, and cannot enlarge or confer powers, nor control the Avords of the act, unless they are doubtful or ambiguous, the necessity of resorting to it to assist in ascertaining the true intent and meaning of the legislature is in itself fatal to the claim set up. Indeed, what is therein stated appears to us to be quite as referable to the remarkably extensive poAvers granted as to the assignment of reasons for exemption from taxation.
It is true that it is stated in section eight, that, in order to encourage the investment of capital in the enterprise, and “to make certain in advance of such investment, and as inducement
Since upon the expiration of the period of exemption, it would have followed that the property of the company would be subject to taxation at the same rate as other property, it may be that the object of the final clause was to create a scheme of taxation peculiar to the road. Upon the comprehensiveness and validity of. such scheme we do not undertake to pass. It was not to take effect until the exemption expired, and the terms in which it was couched do not render the commencement of the exemption other than the Supreme Court held it to be.
The case is clearly controlled by our decision in Vicksburg, Shreveport & Pacific Paihvay Company v. Dennis, supra, and the judgment must therefore be
Affirmed.
