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 | 1926 |
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Law Number | 248 |
Subjects |
Law Body
Chap. 248.—An ACT to amend and re-enact sections 3 and 4 of an act entitled
an act to amend the charter of the town of Cape Charles and to legalize
certain acts of the town council, approved December 20, 1895, section 3
having been amended by an act approved February 17, 1898. [H B 494]
Approved March 23, 1926. .
1. Be it enacted by the general assembly of Virginia, That sec-
tions three and four of an act entitled an act to amend the charter of
the town of Cape Charles and to legalize certain acts of the town
council, approved December twentieth, eighteen hundred and ninety-
five, section three having been amended by an act approved February
seventeenth, eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, be amended and
re-enacted so as to read as follows:
Section 3. The council of said town shall appoint annually an
assessor, who shall be qualified voter of said town, and shall assess
the value of all the real and personal property in the corporate limits
of said town, subject to town taxation, which said assessment shall
not be higher than the assessment made on said property for State
taxation, if there be a State assessment of such property, and the same
shall form the basis of taxation for said town; and said council shall
have power and authority to levy and collect annually a tax on the
real and personal property and other subjects in the corporate limits
of said town, subject to town taxation, and for the privilege of carrying
on any regular business, trade or profession, by persons residing
within the corporate limits thereof; provided, that the poll tax shall
not exceed fifty cents on every resident of the town over twenty-one
years of age, in any one year, and for the purpose of carrying on any
regular business, trade, occupation or profession within said town by
persons residing without the corporate limits shall not exceed in any
one year the tax imposed by said council on persons residing within
the corporate limits for carrying on like business, trade, occupation
or profession. Should any person carry on such business, trade,
occupation or profession without obtaining a license therefor and
paying the tax required by ordinance, he shall be prosecuted as for a
violation of the ordinances of said town as herein provided for.
Section 4. The said council shall also have power and authority
to make all necessary provisions to prevent accidents by fire, and to
supply the town with water for all necessary purposes, and to pur-
chase engines, hose, firehooks, ladders and other fixtures useful for
preventing accidents by fire, and to organize fire companies. The
council of said town shall also have power and authority to negotiate
any loan or loans for the purpose of purchasing necessary real estate,
and for the erection of public buildings, and for general improvement
of said town. All outstanding loans of the town are hereby validated,
ratified and confirmed. They shall also have power and authority
to establish markets and regulate the same; to grade and pave or in
any other way improve the streets, sidewalks, and alleys of said town;
to make and maintain sewers; to change and direct the water courses
in said town; to prevent and punish by reasonable fines the practice
of firing guns and pistols, or in any manner setting fire to powder;
of running horses, and of all else detrimental to the peace and quiet
of said town; to license and regulate shows and public exhibitions,
and to tax the same to such an extent as they may deem reasonable
and expedient; to prescribe rules for the orderly and regular building
of houses and chimneys; to regulate blacksmith shops and all other
shops considered likely to occasion accidents by fire, and the erection
of stoves and stove-pipes; to regulate the erection of privies, stables
and cow-sheds; and prescribe their location; to regulate butchers’
stalls and slaughter-houses; to abate and remove nuisances within
the said town at the expense of those who may occasion them; to pro-
hibit horses, mules, hogs, dogs, cows and other animals from running
at large within the limits of said town; to prevent the exhibition of
stud horses or jackasses or other objectionable exhibitions; and gen-
erally to pass all by-laws and ordinances, not contrary to the Consti-
tution and laws of the State or of the United States, which the said
council may think necessary and proper for carrying into effect the
foregoing powers, or that may hereafter be vested in them; and for the
regulating of the police, preserving the peace and good order and
government of said town, and to amend and repeal the same at their
pleasure; and to enforce the observance of such by-laws and ordinances,
under penalties not exceeding one hundred dollars for one offense,
to be recovered, with costs in the name of said corporation, before the
mayor or any councilman of said town, and applied in aid of the taxes
imposed upon said town.
Subject to the provisions of section one hundred and twenty-five
of the Constitution, and section three thousand and sixteen and
following of the Code of Virginia, the council shall have power to
grant exclusive franchises to public service and public utility cor-
porations or companies.
An emergency existing, this act shall be in force from its passage.