An Act to amend and reenact § 46.1-299, as amended, of the Code of Virginia, relating to devices signalling intention to turn or stop and rules therefor.
Volume 1968 Law 99
Volume | 1922 |
---|---|
Law Number | 173 |
Subjects |
Law Body
Chap. 173.—An ACT to amend and re-enact section 134 of an act entitled an
act to raise revenue for the support of the government and public free
schools, and to pay the interest on the public debt, and to provide a special
- tax for pensions as authorized by section 189 of the Constitution, approved
April 16, 1903, as heretofore amended. (S B 336
Approved March 14, 1922.
-1- Be it enacted by the general assembly of Virginia, That sec-
tion one hundred and thirty-four of an act entitled an act to raise
revenue for the support of the government and public free schools
and to pay the interest on the public debt, and to provide a specia
tax for pensions as authorized by section one hundred and eighty
nine of the Constitution, approved April sixteenth, nineteen hundrec
and three, as heretofore amended, be amended and re-enacted so as
to read as follows:
Section 134. Licenses to livery stable keepers—-Every persor
who shall keep a livery stable in the country, and in towns of less
than two thousand inhabitants, shall’ pay the sum of seven dollars
and fifty cents, and an additional sum of twenty-five cents for each
additional stall in excess of twenty-five, and in towns of two thousand
inhabitants and over, he shall pay twelve dollars and fifty cents, and
an additional tax of twenty-five cents for each stall therein. And
herein shall be included as stalls such space as may be necessary for
a horse to stand and in which a horse may be kept. The license to
keep a stable by the proprietor of public watering places and other
places of summer resort, or any other person at such places, for six
months or less, there shall be one-half of the sums hereinbefore
specified. Every person, for the privilege of running a single hack,
carriage, cab or other vehicle for carrying passengers for hire, shall
pay five dollars except that a license of one dollar and twenty-five
cents only shall be imposed on persons running such conveyances
solely in the country or in towns of not more than one thousand
inhabitants. Every person who shall keep a feed stable for boarding
horses for compensation, shall pay for such privilege two dollars and
fifty cents in the country and in a town of less than two thousand
inhabitants, and in a town or city of two thousand or over two thou-
sand inhabitants, five dollars. Every person for the privilege of run-
ning a conveyance of any kind for transfer of baggage, freight,
furniture, or other articles of merchandise in cities and towns of
two thousand inhabitants and over, shall pay for each one-horse
conveyance the sum.of one dollar and twenty-five cents, and for
each conveyance of two horses or more, the sum of two dollars and
fifty cents on each conveyance.