Prize Law During the World War: A Study of the Jurisprudence of the Prize Courts, 1914-1924Macmillan, 1927 - 712 sidor |
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Prize Law During the World War: A Study of the Jurisprudence of the Prize ... James Wilford Garner Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1927 |
Vanliga ord och fraser
according admiralty adverting affirmed American Appam appeal applied Austria-Hungary authorities Belgian belligerent binding Britain British Prize Courts cargo claim claimants condemned confiscation contraband Court for Egypt Crown days of grace decided decisions Declaration of London Declaration of Paris decree demnation domicile droits of admiralty effect enemy ship enemy vessels English entitled Entsch fact Fauchille et Basdevant French Prize Council German government German Prize Court German vessel Hague Convention hostilities ibid infra international law judgment Judicial Committee jurisdiction Jurispr law of nations Lloyd Lord Stowell Lord Sumner Lordships municipal law Naval Prize neutral country neutral flag neutral port opinion Order in Council outbreak owners practice principles Privy Prize Court Rules prize law prize tribunals question regarded release right of capture rule of international seized seizure Sir Samuel Evans supra Supreme Prize Court territorial waters tion trade transfer validity Visscher
Populära avsnitt
Sida 471 - Intend. (1) Where there is a contract to sell specific or ascertained goods, the property in them is transferred to the buyer at such time as the parties to the contract intend it to be transferred.
Sida 561 - Absolute contraband is liable to capture if it is shown to be destined to territory belonging to or occupied by the enemy or to the armed forces of the enemy. It is immaterial whether the carriage of the goods is direct or entails transshipment or a subsequent transport by land.
Sida 177 - While the guiding principles of the law must be followed, it is a truism to say that international law, in order to be adequate, as well as just, must have regard to the circumstances of the times, including "the circumstances arising out of the particular situation of the war, or the condition of the parties engaged in it:" vide The Jonge Margaretha (1799), 1 C.
Sida 552 - The reason for drawing a distinction between foodstuffs intended for the civil population and those for the armed forces or enemy Government disappears when the distinction between the civil population and the armed forces itself disappears.
Sida 60 - I consider to be goods of prize ; for I know no other definition of prize goods than that they are goods taken on the high seas, jure belli, out of the hands of the enemy...
Sida 463 - East, from the oldest times, an immiscible character has been kept up; foreigners are not admitted into the general body and mass of the society of the nation; they continue strangers and sojourners as all their fathers were - Doris amara suam non intermiscuit undam...
Sida 189 - ... it is strictly true that by the Constitution of this country the King in Council possesses legislative rights over this court and has power to issue orders and instructions which it is bound to obey and enforce; and these constitute the written law of this court. These two propositions, that the court is bound to administer the law of nations, and that it is bound to enforce the King's Orders in Council, are not at all inconsistent with each other, because these orders and instructions are presumed...
Sida 30 - In spite of remonstrances from many quarters, they placed full reliance on the American prize courts to grant redress to the parties interested in cases of alleged wrongful capture by American ships of war, and put forward no claims until the opportunities for redress in those courts had been exhausted.
Sida 636 - It may be added, that the term "probable cause," according to its usual acceptation, means less than evidence which would justify condemnation; and, in all cases of seizure, has a fixed and well-known meaning. It imports a seizure made under circumstances which warrant suspicion.
Sida 235 - A prize may only be brought into a neutral port on account of unseaworthiness, stress of weather, or want of fuel or provisions. It must leave as soon as the circumstances which justified its entry are at an end. If it does not, the neutral Power must order it to leave at once ; should it fail to obey, the neutral Power must employ the means at its disposal to release it with its officers and crew and to intern the prize crew.