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TOLL (etymologically, that which is n...

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 1053 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TOLL (etymologically, that which is numbered or counted; from a
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common Teutonic form, cf. " tale," " tell ")
  , a sum of
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money paid for the use and enjoyment of a
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privilege or
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advantage . In England it is now usually a sum of money; but formerly tolls in kind were frequent . Among the sins of the Miller in Chaucer's Prologue is that he could " tollen thryes," in that he was
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clever enough and
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rogue enough to subtract thrice the legal allowance from the corn he ground . In a note to the Heart of Midlothian, Scott asserts that the name of Lockman given in Old Scots to the hangman was because he was entitled to take a lock or fixed toll out of every
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boll of
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meal exposed in the market for sale . An act of 1796 for the regulation of mills, substituting a money payment for tolls of corn in kind taken by millers, makes an exception for tolls taken by custom in soke mills . The Weights and
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Measures Act 1878 enacts that all tolls are to be charged and collected according to imperial weights and measures . The word " toll " in early times had various meanings, thus it is defined by Glanville as the liberty of buying and selling in one's own
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land: " tol, quod nos vocamus theloneum, scilicet libertatem emendi et vendendi in terra sua . It also signified the right to be
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free of toll, but this implies a more general signification of the
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term, the right to take and the thing so taken . It formed the most obvious source of revenue in the early
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English boroughs; goods coming to market or passing through the borough paid toll, to this extent the practice still exists in various
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European countries under the name of octroi (q.v.) . Private lords also levied tolls, but these in no case were levied theoretically at pleasure, all ultimately depending upon some real or feigned grant from the
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Crown . Imposts by the Crown are more properly taxes, though the name was frequently used, as in maletote, an arbitrary and vexatious impost levied till
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Edward III.'s time, usually on wool . Such payments might bring freedom from other exactions .

We learn from Domesday

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Book that the men of Dover who paid the .king's dues there were quit of toll throughout all England . Many subsequent charters granted the like, or even greater immunities from toll to favoured folk . In
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modern English law toll is either an incident of a franchise, as of a market or
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fair, or is
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independent of franchise . In the latter case it is claimed by
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prescription, as toll
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traverse or toll thorough, or is created by act of parliament, as in the case of turnpikes,
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railways, harbours, navigable rivers and canals . Toll traverse is paid for passing over a private way,
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bridge or ferry . No consideration need be proved . Toll thorough is paid for the use of a
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highway . In this case, if charged by a private person, some consideration, such as repair of the highway, must be shown, as such a toll is against
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common right . At common law a toll must be reasonable . The same principle appears in various acts of parliament . The
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Statute of Westminster the First inflicts a penalty for taking excessive toll . The Railway Clauses Act 1845 provides for the equality of tolls, that is, that all persons and classes of goods shall in like circumstances be treated alike as to charges .

A right of

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distress is incident to the right to toll, but the distress cannot be sold unless an act of parliament expressly authorizes the sale . Tolls are not rateable, unless they are appurtenant to land . Exemption from tolls may be claimed by the
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prerogative, by grant or prescription, or by act of parliament . The king and queen consort pay no toll, and the Crown may grant to another exemption from toll .
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Turnpike tolls, bridge money and
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causeway
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mail were abolished in Scotland by the Roads and Bridges Act 1878 as from the 1st of
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June 1883 . In England tolls on roads and bridges are now only payable in a few places . In the
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United States tolls are a subject for state legislation, unless they affect the whole
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commonwealth, when they are dealt with by acts of congress . A city may levy reasonable tolls in a market established by itself . A shunpike, or road constructed to facilitate evasion of tolls on a turnpike road, may be closed by injunction . The question of tolls was at one time an important one in inter-
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national law . Tolls were exacted on certain straits and tidal rivers by virtue of the
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sovereignty of a particular state . Notable instances were the Scheldt tolls and the Sound dues levied by Denmark .

These last were justified as a return for the

lights maintained on the coast and the terror to pirates inspired by the castle of Elsinore . In 1659, owing to the united efforts of England, France and Holland, an unvarying
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rate was arranged . See
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Pollock and Maitland,
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History of English Law (1895); Pease and Chitty, Markets and Fairs (1899) ; Cunningham, Growth of English Industry and Commerce (1903) .

End of Article: TOLL (etymologically, that which is numbered or counted; from a common Teutonic form, cf. " tale," " tell ")
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