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not; each benefits or suffers through the good or bad state of the

roof and the principal walls: therefore; all must furnish their quota

of the indispensable expenses; even a majority of votes would not rid

them of these; one claimant alone would suffice to hold them

responsible; they have no right to impose on him the danger which they

accept for themselves; nor to shirk expenses by which they profit as

well as himself。 Consequently; on the report of an expert; the

magistrate interferes; and; willingly or not; the repairs are made;

then; willingly or not; both by custom and in law; each pays his

quote; calculated according to the locative value of the portion

belonging to him。 … But here his obligations cease。 In fact as in law;

the community (of property) is restricted; the associates take good

care not to extend this; not to pursue other aims at the same time;

not to add to their primitive and natural purpose a different and

supplementary purpose; not to devote one room to a Christian chapel

for the residents of the house; another room for a kindergarten for

the children that live in it; and a side room to a small hospital for

those who fall ill; especially; they do not admit that a tax may be

imposed for these purposes and each of them be subject to a

proportional increase of assessment at so many additional centimes per

franc。'3'  For; if the proprietor of the ground…floor is an Israelite;

the proprietor of a room on the second story is a bachelor; the

proprietor of the fine suite of rooms on the first story is rich; and

has a doctor visit him at the house; these must pay for a service for

which they get no return。 … For the same reason; their association

remains private; it does not form part of the public domain; they

alone are interested in it; if the State let us use its tribunals and

officials; it is the same as it is with ordinary private individuals。


It would be unjust both against it and against itself if it would

exclude or exempting it from common right; if it put it on its

administrative rolls。 It would deform and disrupt its work if it

interfered with its independence; if added to its functions or to its

obligations。 It is not under its tutelage; obliged to submit its

accounts to the prefect; it delegates no powers and confers no right

of justice; or police; in short; it is neither its pupil nor its

agent。 Such is the lien which permanent proximity establishes between

men; we see that it is of a singular species: neither in fact; nor in

law; can the associates free themselves from it; solely because they

are neighbors; they form a community for certain indivisible or

jointly owned things; an involuntary and obligatory community。 To make

amends; and even owing to this; I mean through institution and in the

natural order of things; their community is limited; and limited in

two ways; restricted to its object and restricted to its members;

reduced to matters of which proprietorship or enjoyment is forcibly in

common; and reserved to inhabitants who; on account of situation and

fixed residence; possess this enjoyment or this property。i



III。 Essential Public Local Works。



Analysis of other local societies; commune; department; or province。 …

Common interests which necessitate local action。 … Two objects in

view: care of public roads and means of protection against spreading

calamities。 … Why collaboration is an obligation。 … Neighbors

involuntarily subject to a common bond on account of proximity。 …

Willingly or not each shares in its benefits。 … What portion of the

expense belongs to each。 … Equal advantages for each。 … The unequal

and proportionate advantages for each in his private expenses;

industrial or commercial gains; and in the locative value of his real

estate。 … Each person's quota of expense according to his equal and

proportionate share in advantages。



All local societies are of this kind; each limited to a certain

territory and included with others like it inside a larger area; each

possessing two budgets depending on whether it is a distinct body or

member of a larger corporation; each; from the commune to the

department or province; instituted on a basis of interests which make

them jointly but involuntarily liable。 … There are two of these

important interests which; as in the Annecy building; elude human

arbitrariness; which demand common action and distribution of the

expense; because; as in the Annecy building; they are the inevitable

results of physical proximity:



First; comes care for the public highways; by land or by water; river

navigation; canals; towing…paths; bridges; streets; public squares;

by…roads; along with the more or less optional and gradual

improvements which public roads demand or prescribe; such as their

laying…out; sidewalks; paving; sweeping; lighting; drainage; sewers;

rolling; ditches; leveling; embankments; and other engineering works;

which establish or increase safety and convenience in circulation;

with facilities for and dispatch in transportation。



Next; comes protection against the spread of calamities; such as

fires; inundations; contagious diseases; epidemics; along with the

more or less optional and remote precautions which this protection

exacts or recommends; night watchers in Russia; dikes in Holland;

levees in the valleys of the Po and the Loire; cemeteries and

regulations for interment; cleanliness of the streets; ventilation of

holes and corners; drainage of marshes; hydrants; and supplies of

drinkable water; disinfecting of contaminated areas; and other

preventive or necessary hygienic measures which remove or prevent

insalubrities growing out of neighborhood or contact。



All this has to be provided for; and the enterprise; if not wholly and

in its developments; at least in itself and in what is necessary;

imposes itself; collectively; on all the inhabitants of the

conscription; from the highest to the lowest。 For; in the absence of a

public road; none of them can do his daily work; travel about; or even

leave his premises; while transportation ceases and trade is

suspended; hence; commerce and other pursuits languish; industry is

arrested; agriculture becomes impracticable or fruitless; the fields

are no longer cultivated; while provisions; food; including bread;'4'

everything is wanting; the dwellings becoming uninhabitable; more so

than the Annecy houses when the roofs fall in and let in the rain。 …

On the other hand; for lack of protection against calamities; these

get a free rein: the day arrives when an equinoctial tide submerges

the flat coastal area; when the river overflows and devastates the

countryside; when the conflagration spreads; when small…pox and the

cholera reach a contagious point; and life is in danger; far more

seriously imperiled than when; in the Annecy domicile; the main walls

threaten to tumble down。'5'



Undoubtedly; I can personally accept this miserable condition of

things; resign myself to it; and consent; as far as I am concerned; to

shut myself up within my own walls; to fast there; and run the risk;

more or less imminent; of being drowned; burnt; or poisoned; but I

have no right to condemn another to do this; nor to refuse my

contribution to a protection by which I am to profit。 As to my share

of the expense it is fixed beforehand; and fixed through my share in

the benefit:



Whoever receives; owes; and in proportion to what he receives;



such is an equitable exchange; no society is prosperous and healthy

without this; it is essential that; for each member of it; the duties

should exactly compensate the advantages; and that the two sides of

the scale should balance。 In the local community; the care taken of

public roads and the precautions taken against natural calamities are

useful in two ways: one; which especially improves the condition of

persons; and the other; which especially improves the condition of

things。 The first is equal and the same for all。 The poor man; quite

as much as the rich one; needs to go and come and to look after his

affairs; he uses the street; pavement; sidewalks; bridges; highways;

and public fountains quite as much; he equally benefits by the

sweeping and lighting of the public gardens。 It may be claimed that;

in certain respects; he derives more benefits from all this; for he

suffers sooner and more keenly when bad roads stop transportation;

arrest labor; and increase the cost of food; he is more subject to

contagion; to epidemics; to all physical ills; in case of a fire; the

risks of a workman in his garret; at the top of steep; narrow stairs;

are greater than those of the opulent proprietor on the first story;

in a mansion provided with a broad range of steps。 In case of

inundation; the danger is more suddenly mortal for the humble

villager; in his fragile tenement; than for the gentleman farmer in

his massive constructions。 Accordingly; under this heading; the poor

man owes 

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