Mississippi Code § 65-27-9

Penalties, forfeitures, and damages recovered
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
All penalties and forfeitures incurred by the owner or keeper of a toll ferry, bridge, turnpike, causeway, or plank road may be recovered by suit on the bond of the owner or keeper, one half to go to the person who sues for it, the other half to be paid into the county treasury; and damages may likewise be recovered against such owner or keeper by suit on the bond. Codes, 1892, § 3949; 1906, § 4462; Hemingway's 1917, § 4578; 1930, § 4682; 1942, § 8474.
All penalties and forfeitures incurred by the owner or keeper of a toll ferry, bridge, turnpike, causeway, or plank road may be recovered by suit on the bond of the owner or keeper, one half to go to the person who sues for it, the other half to be paid into the county treasury; and damages may likewise be recovered against such owner or keeper by suit on the bond. Codes, 1892, § 3949; 1906, § 4462; Hemingway's 1917, § 4578; 1930, § 4682; 1942, § 8474.
All penalties and forfeitures incurred by the owner or keeper of a toll ferry, bridge, turnpike, causeway, or plank road may be recovered by suit on the bond of the owner or keeper, one half to go to the person who sues for it, the other half to be paid into the county treasury; and damages may likewise be recovered against such owner or keeper by suit on the bond. Codes, 1892, § 3949; 1906, § 4462; Hemingway's 1917, § 4578; 1930, § 4682; 1942, § 8474.
All penalties and forfeitures incurred by the owner or keeper of a toll ferry, bridge, turnpike, causeway, or plank road may be recovered by suit on the bond of the owner or keeper, one half to go to the person who sues for it, the other half to be paid into the county treasury; and damages may likewise be recovered against such owner or keeper by suit on the bond.
Codes, 1892, § 3949; 1906, § 4462; Hemingway's 1917, § 4578; 1930, § 4682; 1942, § 8474.

‹ Prev All Mississippi sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.