The plaintiffs’ charter (St. 1824, c. 110,) granted to them certain tolls. By St. 1832, c. 117, they were authorized to reduce their tolls, and to compound the same in all cases in which they might deem it expedient. This last statute was repealed, one year afterwards, so far as it authorized the compounding of tolls. St. 1833, c. 218. Four days after the repealing act was passed, to wit, on the 14th of March, 1833, the plaintiffs passed the following vote: “ All present proprietors of stock in Central bridge shall have the right to pass free of toll, with their horses and carriages.” The defendant was not then a proprietor of stock, but has since become a proprietor of stock which then existed. And he contends that by becoming owner of such stock, he is entitled, by force of the vote, to pass the bridge free of toll; or, to use the language of his counsel, that “ the vote intended that the right to pass the bridge, free of toll, should become a concomitant part of the stock which then existed.” But the court are of opinion that, by the vote, no one was exempted from liability to pay toll, besides those who then owned stock in the bridge. The “ present proprietors ” cannot be construed to include future proprietors. On the defendant’s construction of the vote, all the owners of stock' in the L ridge would *475be forever authorized to pass the bridge, toll free, with their horses and carriages. Such a construction and effect cannot be given to the vote, except by an utter perversion of its terms. Nor can the construction of this vote be affected by the previous vote of July 2d, 1832, set forth in the statement of facts. Whether the vote granted to those, who were proprietors when it was passed, an exemption from paying toll for their lives, or only while they should continue to be proprietors, is a question not now before the court, and on which no opinion is given. Their assignees are not exempted, and the defendant is therefore liable to pay toll, to the same ex tent as any stranger who passes over the bridge.
This view of the case renders it unnecessary to consider whether the votes and proceedings of the plaintiffs, on the subject of tolls, were warranted by their charter, or by St. 1832, c. 117, or by any other law, and leaves only one other question to be decided, namely, whether the defendant is liable in this action of assumpsit.
It is well settled that assumpsit lies for tolls. But the defendant insists that this action cannot be maintained against him, because he has always claimed exemption from liability to pay toll, and also has always refused to pay it. And he relies on the case of Whiting v. Sullivan, 7 Mass. 107, where it is said that the law will not imply a promise of any person against his own express declaration; because such declaration is repugnant to any implication of a promise. Admitting this to be true, as a general rule, it clearly is not true in those cases in which a party is under a legal obligation paramount to his will. Thus, if a husband wrongfully expels his wife from his house, he is liable in assumpsit to any person who furnishes her with necessary supplies, although he gives notice that he will not be liable for her support. The law imposes on him the obligation to support his wife, and does not consult his will, on the question whether he shall pay for her support, when it is furnished by others, in consequence of his wrongful default. There are numerous instances of the like kind; and the case at bar is one of them.* The *476defendant has passed over the plaintiffs’ bridge, and the law obliges him to pay toll, although his will may not consent
Judgment for the plaintiffs.
See 20 American Jurist, 9.