193 Mass. 196 | Mass. | 1906
Acting under St. 1887, c. 157, § 6, the plaintiff took the franchise, corporate property, and all the rights and privileges of the defendant, and being unable to agree with the defendant upon the amount of the total cost of that which was taken, it brings this bill for an ascertain
The chief argument against this construction of the statute is that the investors do not get compound interest or its equivalent by this method. But it is plain that the statute does not purport to give them compound interest. Another way of stating the same argument and objection is that, if the income considerably exceeded expenditure every year, it would be possible for the town to take the property, after a long period, without being obliged to pay anything for it, inasmuch as the application of the excess of income each year to the original investment would in time cancel it by paying back all that was put into the property, with interest. The answer to this argu
Total cost to be ascertained and fixed accordingly.