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 | 1962 |
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Law Number | 314 |
Subjects |
Law Body
CHAPTER 314
An Act to authorize the Council of the City of Alexandria and the County
Board of Arlington County to negotiate a specific mutual boundary
line dividing such city from such county; and to repeal certain acts.
(S 112]
Approved March 30, 1962
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. § 1. The Council of the City of Alexandria and the County Board
of the County of Arlington are hereby authorized to enter into negotiations
to determine a specific mutual boundary line dividing the said city from
said county, the line being generally as follows:
Beginning at the point where Four Mile Run empties into the Potomac
and extending up the meanders of Four Mile Run to where it intersects
the south right-of-way line of the Washington & Old Dominion Railroad,
thence with that line to the intersection with former Seminary Road, now
Shirlington Road, then with the center line of the original Seminary Road,
now Quaker Lane, to where Braddock Road is intersected by what is now
Radford Street, thence west to Leesburg Pike (King Street, extended),
gee northwesterly along the City-County line to South Greenbrier
treet.
Upon an agreement being reached between said city and county, each
governing body shall, by resolution, set forth the specific boundary line
agreed upon, and cause same to be recorded in the clerk’s offices within
the City of Alexandria and the County of Arlington in which deeds to
land are recorded. Thereafter, the boundary line so agreed upon shall
be the boundary line between the said city and county, and each political
subdivision shall have jurisdiction and all powers over that part of the
area which is on its side of the boundary line as fixed by the agreement.
2. All acts and parts of acts in conflict herewith are hereby repealed to
the extent of such conflict.
3. An emergency exists, and this act is in force from its passage.