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so demanded shall not be compelled to attend until the same shall have been paid.

CORONERS.

Coroners may, for their own use, collect the following fees, and no others:

For general services in holding an inquest, ten dollars. For each witness subpoenaed, twenty-five cents.

For each mile necessarily traveled in going to the place of the inquest, twenty-five cents.

For directing or attending the interment of each body upon which an inquest has been held, two dollars; which fees shall be all that he shall be entitled to charge.

When acting as or in the place of the sheriff, the same fees as are allowed the sheriff for like services.

PUBLIC ADMINISTRATOR.

The public administrator shall charge and collect such fees as are now or may hereafter be allowed by law.

COUNTY SURVEYOR.

The county surveyor shall charge and collect such fees as are now or may hereafter be allowed by law.

Sec. 2. No fees or other compensation shall be paid for certificate of declaration to become a citizen of the United States, and for making a record thereof, or for issuing a certificate of citizenship to become a citizen of the United States, or for making a record thereof; and no fees or other compensation shall be paid for filing the statement and affidavit of a committee or candidate voted for at any public election held within the state; and this section shall apply to all the counties in this state.

Sec. 3. All acts or portions of acts inconsistent herewith are hereby repealed.

Sec. 4. This act shall take effect immediately.

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An act for the payment of the fees due to trial jurors, who have served as such in the superior court of any county or city and county of this state, under the act of 1895.

[Approved March 23, 1901. Stats. 1901, p. 684.] The people of the state of California, represented in senate and assembly, do enact as follows:

Section 1: All persons who have attended as jurors in the trial of criminal cases in the superior court of any county or city and county of this state, since the act of March twenty-eighth, eighteen hundred and ninety-five, and pursuant thereto, and have not been paid the fees specified in said act therefor, shall receive and be paid out of the general fund of such county or city and county, the sum of two dollars per day for each day's attendance as such juror.

Sec. 2. Such fees shall be paid by the treasurer of such county or city and county, out of the general fund thereof, upon the presentation of a written demand sworn to by the juror and certified as correct by the clerk of the court wherein said services were rendered; said demand so sworn to and certified must contain the title of the action wherein such services were rendered, the days and dates of service, and the amount due the person therein named.

Sec. 3. The demands for compensation for services rendered as such juror mentioned in section two of this act shall be allowed and audited in the same manner as other county or city and county claims.

Sec. 4. The board of supervisors of each county or city and county is hereby directed to make all necessary and suitable appropriation for the payment of the fees herein provided for.

Sec. 5. This act shall take effect immediately.

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Concerning lawful fences. [Stats. 1850, p. 131.]

"Repealed as to many counties by the statute of 1855, p. 154, from which, however, Amador, Butte, Calaveras, Colusa, Klamath, Nevada, Placer, San Bernardino, San Diego, Santa Barbara, Shasta, Siskiyou, Trinity, Tuolumne, and Yuba counties were omitted. The statute of 1855 was afterwards amended to include Butte, Calaveras, and Nevada. Special acts were passed relating to other counties,

but the statute of 1850 has apparently not been repealed as to Amador, Klamath, San Diego, Santa Barbara, Siskiyou, and Trinity counties."-Code Commissioners' note.

ACT 1135.

Concerning lawful fences.

[Stats. 1855, p. 154.]

Amended 1858, 123; 1861, 510, 513; 1863-4, 465; 1877-8, 765. Supplemented 1860, 141.

This act excepted from its operation the counties of Butte, Amador, Tuolumne, Calaveras, San Diego, Nevada, San Bernardino, Colusa, Placer, Santa Barbara, Yuba, Trinity, Shasta, Klamath, and Siskiyou.

This act and the supplementary act of 1860, 141, were continued in force by the Political Code, sec. 19, and consequently the Counties to which they apply are not subject to the provisions of Sec. 841 of the Civil Code. (Meade v. Watson, 67 Cal. 591. See, also, Gonzales v. Wasson, 51 Cal. 295.)

ACT 1136.

Lawful fences, supplementing statute concerning. [Stats. 1860, p. 141.]

ACT 1137.

Concerning lawful

fences in San Bernardino, Colusa, Shasta, Tehama, and Placer counties. [Stats. 1859, p. 279.]

Extended to Yuba county, 1863, 357. This latter act repealed, Stats. 1871-2, 700.

ACT 1138.

Division fences, construction of. [Stats. 1875-6, p. 175.] Amended 1877-8, 765. Repealed, as to San Mateo County, 1877-8, 1019.

This act applied to the counties of Sacramento, Solano, Sutter, Yuba, Butte, Contra Costa, San Joaquin (parts of), Amador, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Ventura, Tulare, El Dorado, Tuolumne, San Mateo, and Nevada.

ACT 1139.

Regulating the height of division and partition fences in cities. [Stats. 1885, p. 45.]

Cal. Rep.Cit. 118, 343.

Fences wholly on the land of their owner excluded therefrom. (Western etc. Co. v. Knickerbocker, 103 Cal. 111.)

ACT 1140.

To prevent persons from passing through inclosures and leaving them open, and tearing down fences to make passage through inclosures. [Stats. 1871-2, p. 384.]

See sec. 7, 1875-6, 408; 1877-8, 49, 776.

Cal Rep.Cit. 108, 347.

In full in Appendix to Penal Code, p. 598.

ACT 1141.

To prevent the leaving open of inclosures and hunting on inclosed lands. [Stats. 1875-6, p. 408.]

Amended 1877-8, 49, 776.

In full in Appendix to Penal Code, p. 599.

ACT 1146.

TITLE 159.

FERRIES.

Concerning public ferries and toll bridges. [Stats. 1855, p. 183.]

Supplemented 1861, 18; 1862, 247; 1869-70, 887. Amended 1861, 307; 1863, 720, 747, 758; 1863-4, 192; 1867-8, 77; 1873-1, 581. Superseded by Political Code, sec. 2843 et seq.

Cal.Rep.Cit. 7, 115.

ACT 1147.

An act relating to ferries across navigable rivers sepa rating counties, and empowering the boards of supervisors of such counties to establish and maintain ferries across such rivers, and to pay the expense thereof.

[Approved March 16, 1903. Stats. 1903, p. 156.] The people of the state of California, represented in senate and assembly, do enact as follows:

Section 1. When a navigable river forms a boundary between two counties of this state, the boards of supervisors of such counties are hereby given the power to establish and operate a ferry or ferries across such stream.

Sec. 2. Each of such counties shall pay such propor tion of the expenses of establishing and operating said ferry or ferries as may be agreed upon by the boards of supervisors of such counties.

Sec. 3. In case either of said counties shall refuse to enter into an agreement to establish and operate such ferry or ferries, the county situated upon the opposite bank of such river may establish and operate a ferry or ferries across such river, and such county is hereby empowered to acquire landing places for such ferry or ferries on the bank of such river opposite the boundary of such county, and may pay the expense of establishing and ope

rating said ferry or ferries out of the general road fund of such county.

Sec. 4. This act shall take effect from and after its passage.

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To provide for the issuance and sale of state bonds to create a fund for the construction and furnishing, by the board of state harbor commissioners, of a general ferry and passenger depot in the city and county of San Francisco; to create a sinking fund for the payment of said bonds, and providing for the submission of this act to a vote of the people. [Approved March 17, 1891. Stats. 1891, p. 110.]

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An act to regulate the sale of commercial fertilizers or materials used for manurial purposes, and to provide penalties for the infraction thereof, and means for the enforcement of the act.

[Approved March 20, 1903.

Stats. 1903, p. 259.]

The people of the state of California, represented in senate and assembly, do enact as follows:

Section 1. Every lot, parcel, or package of commercial fertilizers or materials to be used for manurial purposes (excepting the dung of domestic animals), sold, offered, or exposed for sale, within this state, shall be accompanied by a plainly printed label, stating the name, brand, and trademark, if any there be, under which the fertilizer is sold, the name and address of the manufacturer, importer, or dealer, the place of manufacture, and a chemical analysis, stating the percentages claimed to be therein; of nitrogen, specifying the form or forms in which it is present; of phosphoric acid, available and insoluble; and of potash, soluble in distilled water, and the materials from which all of said constituents are derived. All analyses are to be made according to the methods agreed upon by the American association of official agri

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