after stating the case: It appears from the legislation and findings of fact pertinent to the inquiry and fully embodied in the judgment that defendant is a corporation having the right under the statutes applicable to construct and maintain a turnpike road from Lenoir, N. C., to Blowing Eock and beyond; to operate stage lines thereon; to charge and collect tolls of travelers using the same; and are allowed to establish two or more toll gates along the route at points considered desirable for the convenient and efficient collection of tolls. That a part of this route from Lenoir for six miles or more to the ford of the Yadkin Eiver, near Patterson, N. C., the road is held by a lease of fifty years duration from 6 September, 1909, said lease being made by the county commissioners under legislative authority expressly conferred by statute, and that soon after taking said lease defendant company, at great cost, changed the grade and otherwise improved said road and the tolls of persons living along this portion of the road when traveling to Lenoir and otherwise amounts to several thousand dollars per year. That one of the toll gates established under the laws applicable and necessary to the efficient collection of tolls is on this portion of the route and about four miles from Lenoir. That at the special session of 1920 the General Assembly passed a special act purporting to amend chapter 62, Public-Local Laws of 1911, the same containing in effect the chartered rights of the company, and which provided that the statute referred to be amended by adding to the end of section 3 the following: “The said *134company shall not be allowed to maintain any toll gates thereon nearer than eight miles from the corporate limits of Lenoir, N. C., nor shall it increase its tolls over those charged at present ?” It further appears that the force and effect of this statute, if the same is allowed to prevail, will be not only to deprive the company of its right to maintain its toll gates as the act of incorporation provided, but in its practical and necessary operation will disenable it from collecting any tolls of persons using only that portion of the road for eight miles out from Lenoir, and this being true, we are of opinion that the act is void as contrary to certain recent amendments to our Constitution, which inhibit any special legislation in amendment of charters of this hind, and that in any event such an amendment would be declared'invalid as impairing and destroying vested property rights of the company contrary to the law of the land.
In reference to the first proposition, it will be recalled that with the view of relieving the Legislature of the time and work not infrequently expended on local measures which could as well be accomplished under general laws, and allowing time for fuller deliberation on matters of public moment, the General Assembly of 1915 submitted several amendments to the Constitution, which were ratified by vote of the people in 1916, and became effective as part of the organic law 10 January, 1917. Kornegay v. Goldsboro, 180 N. C., 441; Mills v. Comrs., 175 N. C., 215; Reade v. Durham, 173 N. C., 668.
In a large number of these designated subjects, appearing principally in Art. II, sec. 29, of the Constitution, among them measures which authorize the laying out, opening, altering, maintaining or discontinuing highways, etc., the General Assembly is expressly prohibited from passing any “local, private, or special act or resolution,” except to repeal same, and the section provides further that “any local, private, or special act or resolution passed in violation of this section shall be void.”
In pursuance of the same purpose and policy, and by amendment submitted, ratified, and becoming effective at the same time, sec. 1 of Art. VIII of the Constitution was stricken out and a new section substituted. This Art. VIII is entitled “Corporations other than municipal,” and the original and substituted sections are as follows:
Section 1, as it originally appeared: “Corporations may be formed under general laws, but shall not be created by special act, except for municipal purposes, and in cases where in the judgment of the Legislature the object of the corporation cannot be attained under general laws. All general laws and special acts passed pursuant to this section may be •-altered from time to time, or repealed.”
And the substituted section is as follows: “Section 1. Corporations under general laws. No corporation shall be created, nor shall its char*135ter be extended, altered, or amended by special act, except corporations for charitable, educational, penal, ^>r reformatory purposes that are to be and remain under the patronage and control of the State; but the General Assembly shall provide by general laws for the chartering and, organization of all corporations,. and for amending, extending, and forfeiture of all charters, except those above permitted by special act. All such general laws and special acts may be altered from time to time or repealed; and the General Assembly may at any time by special act repeal the charter of any corporation.”
From a perusal and comparison of the two sections, and a proper consideration of authoritative cases in which same have been interpreted and applied, it is clear, in our opinion, that,-except for purposes of absolute repeal which is retained throughout as essential to .the proper exercise and enforcement of the police powers of Government, and except, also, in the instances expressly designated in the section of “Corporations for charitable, educational, penal, or reformatory purposes that are to be and remain under the patronage and control of the State,”' this, section withdraws from the General Assembly any and all power' by special enactments to create, extend, alter, or amend the charter of all private business corporations, and all guicm-publie corporations, such as railroads, incorporated turnpike or toll roads, bridge companies, and the like, and also those corporations which while having at times and to some extent powers appertaining to government are in fact and in truth business corporations for the purpose principally of promoting, private interests, as in Southern Assembly v. Palmer, 166 N. C., 75; Comrs. v. Webb, 160 N. C., 594, etc.
For reasons stated in the fully considered case of Kornegay v. Goldsboro, 180 N. C., 440, the inhibitory features and effect of these amendments do not apply or extend to municipal or gucm’-public corporations, such as counties, cities, towns, and other recognized governmental agencies, other than changing the names of cities and towns, and creating or changing lines of townships and schools and districts. Apart from these, however, and as to corporations above stated, special legislation is now prohibited, and the act of-1920, upon which the plaintiff rests his claim for relief, coming directly within the constitutional provision, has been properly held invalid. Kornegay v. Goldsboro, supra; Mills v. Comrs., 175 N. C., 215; Board of Education v. Board of Comrs., 174 N. C., 47. And though the attempted amendment in question here had-been passed in accord with constitutional methods, that is, under the provisions of a general law, it could not be upheld for the reason that it destroys or impairs vested rights of property. True, that in order to relieve the State and its Legislature' from the restrictions imposed by the principles of the Dartmouth College case, and which were such as to *136threaten, and in their subsequent application at times interfere with, the efficient administration of well ordered government, this Art. VIII, in sec. 1, reserves to the General Assembly the power to amend or repeal all corporate charters, and while the right of repeal is at all times absolutely with the Legislature, the power of amendment as contained in this reservation is by no means unlimited. In order to its proper exercise, the proposition must be germane or in some way promotive of the principal corporate purpose as contemplated by the charter or in reasonable regulation of its methods, and the decided cases are agreed in the position that an amendment which destroys or sensibly impairs the vested property rights of the company, or which attempts to transfer them either to the public or other except under the principles of eminent domain and upon compensation duly made, must be held invalid. The principle, as stated, was fully recognized by this Court in R. R. v. Comrs., 108 N. C., 56, and is in general accord with the authorities on the subject. Shields v. Ohio, 95 U. S., 319; Comrs. v. Power Co., 104 Mass., 446; Commonwealth v. Essex Co., 79 Mass., 239; City of Detroit v. Howard Turnpike Road Co., 43 Mich., 140; Clark on Corporations, p. 212; 26 R. C. L., p. 1399; Turnpike and Toll Roads, sec. 5; 10 Cyc., p. 1087.
In R. R. v. Comrs., supra, it was attempted, under guise of an amendment and by a proposed popular vote, to divert a municipal subscription made to a designated railroad route, after said subscription had been contracted to another and in part earned, and in disapproving the measure the Court held: “The provision in the Constitution (Art. VIII, sec. 1) which reserves to the General Assembly the power to alter or repeal acts incorporating companies does not authorize the enactment of a statute which, under the pretense of protecting a public interest, or exercising an acknowledged police power, appropriates the corporate property to the public use.”
In Commonwealth v. Essex, Chief Justice Shaw states the principle as follows: “The rule to be extracted is this: ‘That where, under power in a charter, rights have been acquired and become vested, no amendment or alteration of the charter can take away the property rights which have become vested under a legitimate exercise of the powers granted.’ ”
And, speaking generally to the position in Shields v. Ohio, supra, Associate Justice Swayne said: “The power of alteration is not without limit, the alterations must be reasonable, they must be made in good faith, and be consistent with the scope and object of the act of incorporation. Sheer oppression and wrong cannot be inflicted under the guise of amendment or alteration. Beyond the sphere of the reserved powers, the vested rights of corporations in such cases are surrounded by the same sanction and are as inviolable as in other cases.”
*137Doubtless, as in other cases of gwsi-public corporations who have dedicated their property to public use, the rates of toll through properly constituted agencies may be and are subject to reasonable regulation. It was so held in the last case cited of Shields v. Ohio, and the principle is fully established with us. But such a principle gives no sanction to the case presented here. Where the proposed act in its practical operation takes from defendant company, and without compensation, eight miles of its road, in which they have a chartered right to collect tolls, •and which they hold by a lease for fifty years under legislative authority, and on which they have done a large amount of costly work.
In any event, therefore, such an act is in clear conflict with the constitutional guarantees protecting vested rights of property, and the judg■ment of his Honor declaring same invalid must be
Affirmed.