JAMES THOMAS, ESQUIRE, GOVERNOR.
1833.
ges that may be sustained by any person or persons through
whose land the said road may be made to pass, taking into
consideration the advantages and disadvantages (if any,)
and the damages so ascertained, shall be levied and assess-
ed as other county charges in said counties are, and shall
be paid by the counties wherein such damages may be sus-
tained, to the persons thereunto entitled.
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CHAP. 226.
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Sec. 4. And be it enacted, That the said commissioners
or a majority of them, before they proceed to act shall take
an oath or affirmation, as the case may be, before some-
justice of the peace, that they will without favor, partiality
or prejudice, assess the damages sustained by the person
or persons, through whose lands the said road may pass.
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Oath
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CHAPTER 226.
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An act entitled, an act to repeal the first section of the act
of Assembly, passed at December session, eighteen hun-
dred and six, chapter seventy-nine, and for other pur-
poses.
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Passed Mat. 14,1834
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SECTION 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of
Maryland, That the first section of the act of Assembly,
passed at December session, eighteen hundred and six,
chapter seventy-nine, be and the same is hereby repealed,
and that all the rest and residue of said act shall be and re-
main in full force.
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Repeal
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Sec 2. And be it enacted, That all fish dams or other de-
vices for catching fish hereafter to be made, and all other
erections hereafter to be made in the river Monococy, be-
low Kemps, lately Davis's Mill dam, in Frederick county,
shall be and they are hereby declared nuisances, and may
by any person or persons, be pulled down, prostrated and
abated as such, and the person or persons so erecting or cre-
ating such nuisance, shall be liable to indictment on infor-
mation as in other cases of nuisances.
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Fish dams— nui-
sances
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