after stating the case: Our statute ax^plicable to the questions involved in this appeal (Kevisal 1905, ch. 61, sec. 2642) directs: “That no railroad, steamboat, express or other transportation company engaged in the carriage óf freight, and no telegraph company or telephone company shall demand, collect or receive for any service rendered or to be rendered in the transportation of property or transmission of messages more than the rates appearing in the printed tariff of such company in force at the time such service is rendered, or more than is allowed by law.” In section 2643 a method is established by which formal demand for return of an overcharge shall be made, which allows a maximum period of sixty days within which to return the same; and section 2644 (the section objected to) provides as follows: “Any company failing to return such overcharge within the time allowed shall forfeit to the party aggrieved the sum of $25 for the first day and $5 per day for each day’s delay thereafter until said overcharge is paid, together with all costs incurred by the aggrieved: Provided, the total forfeiture shall not exceed $100.”
Under the charge of the Court, and the admissions therein referred to, the facts are necessarily established that there has *138been an overcharge for freight collected from plaintiffs by defendant; that demand for its return has been formally made as required by the statute, and that there has been a failure to return the amount to plaintiffs for a period greater than the sixty days declared to be the maximum period allowed, and for a time more than sufficient to make the maximum penalty of $100. On the facts, therefore, the plaintiffs’ claim comes directly within the provisions of the statute, and, unless the law is invalid, the judgment in their favor must be upheld. This being a domestic or intrastate shipment, the commerce clause of the Federal Constitution, and the various decisions construing it, do not affect the case; and the question presented, and which the defendant desired and intended to present, is whether this legislation is in conflict with the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment, guaranteeing to every citizen of the United States equal protection of the law. The statute has been passed upon by direct adjudication of this Court in Cottrell v. Railroad, 141 N. C., 383, and we might well refer to that decision as conclusive of the matter without-more. It was, however, earnestly urged on the argument of the present appeal that the law in question is in violation of the section of the Constitution referred to. And, as the constitutionality of the statute was accepted, without debate, in Gottrell’s case, supra, we have deemed it well that the positions contended for by defendant should be more fully considered.
The right of the State to establish regulations for these-public service corporations, and over business enterprises in which the owners, corporate or individual, have devoted their property to a public use, and to enforce these regulations by appropriate penalties, is now and has long been too firmly-established to require or permit discussion. Harrill’s case, 144 N. C. 532; Stone’s case, 144 N. C., 220; Walker’s case, 131 N. C., 168; McGowan’s case, 95 N. C., 417; Branch’s case, 77 N. C., 347; Railway v. State of Florida, 203 U. S., *139261; Railway v. Helms, 115 U. S., 513; Mobile v. Kimball, 102 U. S., 691; Munn v. Illinois, 94 U. S., 112.
As said by Associate Justico Fields, in Helms’ case, supra, “The power of the State to impose fines and penalties for a violation of its statutory requirements is coeval with government ; and the mode in which they shall be enforced, whether at the suit of a private party or at'the suit of the public, and what disposition shall be made of 'the amounts collected, are merely matters of legislative discretion. The statutes of nearly every State of the Union provide for the increase of damages where the injury complained of results from the neglect of duties imposed for the better security of life and property, and make that increase in many cases double,- in some cases treble, and even quadruple the actual damages. And experience favors 'this legislation as the most efficient mode of preventing, with the least inconvenience, the commission of injuries. The decisions of the highest courts have affirmed the validity of such legislation. The injury actually received is often so small that in many cases no effort would be made by the sufferer to obtain redress if the private interest were not supported by the imposition- of punitive damages.” And the right to establish such regulations for certain classes of pursuits and occupations, imposing these requirements equally on all members of a given class, has been made to rest very largely in the discretion of the Legislature. Tullis v. Railway, 175 U. S., 348; Insurance Co. v. Daggs, 172 U. S., 562; McGowan v. Savings Bank, 170 U. S., 286.
In Tullís’ case, just referred to, Chief -Justice Fuller, quoting with approval from the decision in Daggs’ case, supra, said: “The power of the State to distinguish, select and classify objects of legislation necessarily has a wide range of discretion; that it was sufficient to satisfy the demands of the Constitution, if the classifications were practical and not palpably arbitrary.” There are limitations on the right of- a State Legislature to impose these regulations, as indicated in *140 Smith v. Ames, 169 U. S., 466, and other cases of a like import, tlie exact nature and extent of which are not as yet fully or clearly defined. As said by Mr. Ereunde, in his work on the Police Power, sec. 550, “It has been shown that, after some hesitation, the courts have asserted and now fully exercise the power to control the legislative determination that a rate is reasonable. It has, -therefore, become encumbent upon the courts to lay down the princijoles by which the question of reasonableness must be judged, and the Federal Supreme Court alone can conclusively establish these principles in an affirmative manner. However, this important problem has not yet been finally solved.”
From the very nature of the case, it would be difficult, perhaps impossible, to lay down a general rule so plain and precise that different cases could be readily referred to the one side or the other; and the United States Supreme Court has very wisely determined that the line shall be marked and the doctrine explained and applied by their decisions on, the varying cases as they may arise.
This phase of the matter is not pursued further, for the reason that the defendant does not assail the law because the regulations thereby imposed are unreasonable in themselves, but because it establishes an unreasonable and arbitrary classification :
1st. In imposing the regulation therein specified on corporations and companies engaged in the transportation of freight, while individuals engaged in like service are not included.
2d. Because a penalty 'is imposed on corporations and companies mentioned for not paying their debts, and in this denying such companies the equal protection of the law, on the principle established more especially by the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Railway v. Ellis, reported in 165 U. S., 151. In Ellis’ case it is held: “The mere fact of classification is not sufficient to relieve a statute *141from the reach of the equality clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and in all eases it must appear, not merely that a classification has been made, but also that it is based upon some reasonable ground — something which bears a just and proper relation to the attempted classification and is not a mere arbitrary selection.” And, while this Court gives full adherence to the principle there stated, we are of opinion that its proper application does not sustain the defendant in either position maintained by it.
As to the first, “That it denies to defendant equal protection of the law, in that individuals engaged in like occupations are not included in the term of the statute,” even if the construction assumed as the basis of this position should be the true one, we are inclined to the opinion that the classification could be upheld, applying as it does to all corporations and companies engaged in the transportation of freight as common carriers. The terms are, we think, sufficiently broad and the regulations thereunder have such a reasonable relation to the occupation in which the companies are engaged that the Legislature, in the proper exercise of its police poAver, might well haAre determined that such a classification could be upheld on the principle .established by the cases heretofore cited, and that, even if individuals Avere shoAvn to haA^e engaged in like occupations, their enterprises would necessarily be so restricted and of such little moment that their cases would not require that they should be embraced by the statute. But we are of opinion that the construction of the laAV assumed by the defendant is not the correct one. A perusal of the entire statute and its different sections, taken in connection with those sections of chapter 20, Eevisal of 1905, which deal Avith cognate subjects and whereby the Corporation Commission- is given poAver to establish these regulations in reference to companies engaged in domestic traffic, leads to the conclusion that the Legislature applied, and intended to apply, these provisions of the law to all corporations 'and companies *142engaged in tbe transportation of freight for the public; that it was the occupation which it had chiefly in mind, rather than the agency engaged, and that the term “company” was used and intended to include all corporations, companies, firms or individuals who were engaged as common carriers in the transportation of freight. Many of the sections of the statute could be referred to in support of this construction, and this interpretation has been frequently applied to the word “company” in statutes passed in promotion of the public weal, in enforcement of the collection of revenue, in regulating the proper exercise of quasi public franchises, and in other regulations of like character.
This significance was given to the term “company” in-the case of Sewing Machine Co. v. Wright, 97 Ga., 114, where an occupation tax was collected from an individual engaged in a pursuit where only “companies” were taxed, and Lumpkin, Judge of the Court, said: “The most serious question for determination as to the constitutionality of the law in hand, in view of the 'uniformity clause’ above mentioned, is this: Is its language sufficiently comprehensive in meaning to embrace all manufacturers of sewing machines who sell at retail ? Unless it is, the law must fail, because, when once a class is established, every member properly belonging to that class must be taxed, or else the uniformity required is destroyed. If the words 'every sewing machine company’ are applicable only to corporations or partnerships, then individuals manufacturing and selling sewing machines would not be reached. It may be true, in point of fact, that there are no single individuals in Georgia answering to this description; but the law should be broad enough in its terms to include any person who may at any time, upon his own account, enter upon such business, for otherwise it would be possible for an individual to begin the transaction of this very business and escape tax which corporations in the same business are compelled to pay. An omission of this kind in a taxing law might in some in*143stances operate as an invitation to individuals to undertake business enterprises because of an attendant nonliability for taxes, and a consequent advantage to be gained over competitors engaged in tbe same business who are specifically named and taxed. . At any rate, such an omission makes a discrimination, wbicb the Constitution forbids. We think, however, that, so far as the law with which we are now dealing is concerned, the whole difficulty may be properly removed by simply holding that the words ‘every sewing machine company’ would apply to every sewing machine ‘man’ who undertook to engage in the manufacture and sale of such machines in this State. This construction, upon reflection, will be found not to be a strained or unreasonable one. On the contrary, we think it is entirely permissible when reference is had to the object of the law in question, that object being, not to tax a company or person carrying on the business, but the business itself. Of course,- if the tax he upon the business, it is entirely immaterial whether such business be carried on by an individual, a partnership or a corporation. As has been seen, the power of the Legislature extends only to classifying business occupations into different branches and laying upon each separate branch thus created such a tax as is deemed proper. The Legislature has absolutely no power to classify persons, natural or artificial, engaged in precisely the same occupation, laying a tax upon some of them and exempting others, or imposing a tax not operating uniformly upon all. Therefore, it would certainly seem the most natural and reasonable inference that the General Assembly, in passing the law in question, attempted to accomplish what it had an undoubted right to do, rather than that which the Constitution expressly forbids. It should be the purpose of the courts to give effect to legislative intention, and, where the intention is not perfectly clear, the unbending rule is that such a reasonable construction of the statute as will render it harmonious with the constitutional restrictions shfiaild invariably be adopted. In *144the present instance we are quite sure tbe Legislature intended that tbis tas should apply to tbe business in question, no matter by whom tbe same might be conducted.”
And decisions of like import have been made elsewhere by courts of tbe highest authority. Missouri v. Stone, 118 Mo., 388; Dock and Canal Co. v. Garrets, 115 Ill., 155; Morvan v. Ross, 19 Cal., 159; Manufacturing Co. v. Wright, 33 Fed., 121. The statute in question does not make the discrimination complained of by defendant, and its first position, therefore, finds no support in the law as correctly construed.
And we hold that the second ground of defendant’s objection to the statute is not -well considered, being of opinion that it does not come within the principle of the decision relied on to support it. Ellis’ case, supra. That decision involved the validity of a statute of the State of Texas, which imposed a fee of $10 on claims against railroad companies, not exceeding $50, for personal service rendered or labor done, a damage for OATercharge on freight, etc., which the company failed to pay for thirty days after demand was duly made, and which claimant was compelled to collect by action, etc. The statute was held unconstitutional and a recovery by plaintiff denied. This, as we understand the opinion, was on the ground that the statute embraced claims for personal services rendered or labor done, as well as for damages for all overcharges of freight, etc., and the Supreme Court of Texas having held the statute constitutional as a whole, the United States Supreme Court, accepting that construction of the statute, considered it as one imposing a penalty for the nonpayment of debts, and, as such, having no reasonable reference especially to a railroad, as distinguished from any other corporation, or the proper exercise of its franchise, or the performance of its duties, or the dangers incident to its operation, and held that such a classification was, therefore, arbitrary and colorable, and the penalty imposed pursuant to same was contrary to law. But the principle does not obtain where the law which *145establishes the regulations and imposes tbe penalties makes a classification resting on some reasonable ground and having some real relation to the privileges enjoyed or duties especially encumbent on all members of the class which it creates. Accordingly, in several opinions determined since the Ellis case, notably in the case of Railway v. Paul, 173 U. S., 404, and Railway v. Mathews, 174 U. S., 96, the same high Court,the filial arbiter in such questions, has upheld classifications for the reason indicated, and these opinions are, to our mind, controlling in the case we are considering, and decide the questions raised against defendant’s position.
In Mathews’ case, supra, a statute of the State of Kansas allowed an attorney’s fee in case of recovery against railroad companies for damages caused by fires in the operation of the company’s trains. The statute was upheld because the Court was of the opinion that the classification established was not arbitrary, as in Ellis’ case, but was made in reference to the damages from fires peculiarly incident to the operation of trains. Mr. Justice Brewer-, for the Court, said: “Its monition to the roads is not ‘Pay your debts without suit, or you will have to pay for attorney’s fee,’ but, rather, ‘See to it that no fire escapes from your locomotives, for if it does, you will be liable, not merely for the damage it causes, but also for the reasonable attorney’s fee of the owner of the property injured or destroyed.’ ” And so it is here. The penalty imposed is not for the nonpayment of a debt, in the ordinary acceptation of that term, but it is for having made an extortionate charge and failing to return the same within a reasonable time after demand was formally made, pursuant to law. .
The regulation established in section 2642, applying, as we have seen, to all corporations and companies, including firms and individuals, engaged as common carriers in the transportation of freight, is one that the Legislature had the undoubted right to make. Its proper application and efficient *146enforcement are of supreme importance to shippers and the public. The Legislature could, no doubt, have imposed a penalty for making an extortionate charge, and its power, of a certainty, is not impaired or destroyed, because, in reasonable consideration of the carrier’s interest, it is allowed time to investigate the demand and inform itself of the facts. The penalty is imposed, as stated, not for the nonpayment of a debt, but for wrongfully withholding an amount charged contrary-to law, and is in direct enforcement of the carrier’s duties.
Since this opinion was prepared, our ■ attention has been called to an opinion just delivered by the United States Supreme Court in the case of Railway v. Seigers Bros., in which a statute of the State of South Carolina, similar to the one we are considering, was declared to be constitutional and valid. This opinion of the United States Court is decisive of the principal questions involved in this appeal, and the full and learned opinion of the South Carolina Supreme Court (reported in 13 S. C., 71) also gives convincing reason in support of the position.
There is no error in the defendant’s appeal, and the judgment of the court below is affirmed.
No Error.