THOMAS KING, CARROLL,
ESQ. GOVERNOR.
1829.
Sec. 6. And be it enacted,
That the board of examiners be,
and they are hereby authorised and required to refuse a warrant
to any applicant who may be, in their opinion, incompetent
from drunkenness, or any other depravity, to discharge
the duties of pilot, any thing in the original act to the contrary
notwithstanding; and for like causes to suspend the warrant
of any pilot who may have obtained the same.
|
CHAP. 74.
Warrant may be
refused to.
|
———
|
|
CHAPTER 75.
An act to Incorporate the Hagerstown Beneficial Society.
|
Passed Feb. 12, 1830.
|
WHEREAS, many citizens of Washington
county have formed
a Society founded on principles of charity, benevolence and
mutual assistance to each other, and have by their petition,
prayed this General Assembly for an act to incorporate said
Society, in order more fully to advance the interest of said
Society; therefore,
|
Preamble.
|
Section 1. Be it enacted by
the General Assembly of Maryland,
That Benjamin Kurtz, James Zwisler, Jr., Thomas Martin,
Christopher Hillerd, Henry Ainsworth, Samuel Protzman,
Richard Wise, Freeman Little, Henry Freaner, Martin
King, George Updegraff, David Gilbert, N. Schutz, William
D. Macgill, Jacob Brogunier, John Marteny, William Hawken,
Robert Lergeny, John Hosteller, Mark Downey, Joseph
Martin, Mathias Colher, John Kealhofer, Joseph Little, Jun.
Daniel F. Little, Samuel Hager, Ignatius Dillon, John Wherritt,
Michael Bish, Hugh C. Raney, James Darry, John Boyer,
David Harry, Jr. Samuel Hoffman, A. W. Lewis, George W.
Smith, F. B. O'Kinsell, Christian Winter, Frederick Scaner,
Charles G. Lane, John H. Kantner, Daniel Hartzman and Andrew
Newman, their associates and successors, be and they
are hereby created and declared to be incorporated as a body
politic, under the name and style of the " Hagerstown Beneficial
Society," and by that name they shall be and are hereby
made able and capable in law, to have, purchase, receive, possess,
enjoy and retain to them and their successors, lands, tenements,
rents, annuities, or other hereditaments, and the same
to grant, demise, alien or dispose of, in such manner as they
may judge most conducive to the interest of the Society; Provided
nevertheless, that the said corporation or body politic,
shall not, at any time, hold or possess property, real, personal
or mixed, exceeding the sum of twenty thousand dollars.
|
Corporate powers
granted.
Limitation.
|
Sec. 2. And be it enacted,
That the said society, and their
successors, by the aforesaid name, shall forever hereafter be
able and capable in law to sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded,
answer and answered, defend and be defended, in
all or any court of justice whatsoever, and also to have, make
|
Authority to sue
&c.
|
10
|
|