Lord Stowell, His Life and the Development of English Prize LawConstable Limited, 1916 - 116 sider |
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Side 14
... Commerce and Lectius ' edition of the Greek poets . This confidential position , after the death of Reynolds and Hawkins , involved Scott in a troublesome corre- spondence with Dr. Parr , who had been com- missioned by Reynolds , on ...
... Commerce and Lectius ' edition of the Greek poets . This confidential position , after the death of Reynolds and Hawkins , involved Scott in a troublesome corre- spondence with Dr. Parr , who had been com- missioned by Reynolds , on ...
Side 42
... commerce with the blockaded place . " " I must , therefore , " he continued , " consider the act of egress to be as culpable as the act of ingress . " 1 There are and always will be two schools in regard to the conflicting interests of ...
... commerce with the blockaded place . " " I must , therefore , " he continued , " consider the act of egress to be as culpable as the act of ingress . " 1 There are and always will be two schools in regard to the conflicting interests of ...
Side 54
... commerce of that place , and , " there follows one result , " a neutral is no more entitled to assist the traffic of exportation than of importa- tion . " 1 Such being the elementary rights of a belligerent , it was Lord Stowell's ...
... commerce of that place , and , " there follows one result , " a neutral is no more entitled to assist the traffic of exportation than of importa- tion . " 1 Such being the elementary rights of a belligerent , it was Lord Stowell's ...
Side 56
... commerce , are sufficient to justify the modern application of the principle to contraband . Briefly stated , a voyage from A to C was illegal , but a voyage from B to C was legal . It is unnecessary to refer to the manner in which the ...
... commerce , are sufficient to justify the modern application of the principle to contraband . Briefly stated , a voyage from A to C was illegal , but a voyage from B to C was legal . It is unnecessary to refer to the manner in which the ...
Side 62
... commerce , the other to a prohibition at once larger and not definitely limited . " 1 These adverse views had been more than once embodied in treaties , that of Whitehall between England and Sweden in 1661 being the most important from ...
... commerce , the other to a prohibition at once larger and not definitely limited . " 1 These adverse views had been more than once embodied in treaties , that of Whitehall between England and Sweden in 1661 being the most important from ...
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Lord Stowell, His Life and the Development of English Prize Law Edward Stanley Roscoe Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1916 |
Lord Stowell: His Life and the Development of English Prize Law Edward Stanley Roscoe Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1916 |
Lord Stowell: His Life and the Development of English Prize Law Edward Stanley Roscoe Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1916 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
academic Admiral Admiralty Court Advocate Allies applied became belligerent blockade Boswell bottomry Britain British and Colonial British Prize Court British prize law capture cargo circumstances claim claimants Colonial Prize commerce Commissioners of Prize common stock condemned continued contraband Corpus Christi College Court of Admiralty Crown Declaration of London destination Doctors of Law Droits of Admiralty effect eighteenth century enemy English law English prize law entitled enunciated Erleigh Court fact freight High Court important instance international law John Westlake Johnson Judge judgment jurisprudence jurist law of nations lawyers lien Lord Eldon Lord High Admiral Lord Stowell Lords Commissioners Majesty's Government Maria maritime law ment modern neutral country neutral port neutral vessel Order in Council owner Oxford practice principles Privy Council reason regarded Robinson rule salvors Sir Samuel Evans Sir William Scott Stowell case law Stowell's decisions Stowell's judicial tion tribunal University College voyage Westlake
Populære avsnitt
Side 11 - Lectures were once useful ; but now, when all can read, and books are so numerous, lectures are unnecessary. If your attention fails, and you miss a part of the lecture, it is lost ; you cannot go back as you do upon a book.
Side 41 - I trust that it has not escaped my anxious recollection for one moment what it is that the duty of my station calls for from me; — namely, to consider myself as stationed here, not to deliver occasional and shifting opinions to serve present purposes of particular national interest...
Side 96 - I think, not tenable to the extent in which it has been thrown out ; for though in the ordinary state of things he is a stranger to the cargo, beyond the purposes of safe custody and conveyance, yet in cases of instant and unforeseen and unprovided necessity, the character of agent and supercargo is forced upon him, not by the immediate act and appointment of the owner, but by the general policy of the law...
Side 105 - When goods are clearly intended to become incorporated in the mass of merchandise for sale in a neutral country, it is an unwarranted and inquisitorial proceeding to detain shipments for examination as to whether those goods are ultimately destined for the enemy's country or use. Whatever may be the conjectural conclusions to be drawn from trade statistics, which, when stated by value, are of uncertain evidence...
Side 54 - A blockade is a sort of circumvallation round a place, by which all foreign connexion and correspondence is, as far as human force can effect it, to be entirely cut off. It is intended to suspend the entire commerce of that place; and a neutral is no more at liberty to assist the traffic of exportation than of importation.
Side 87 - is well known that a declaration of hostilities naturally carries with " it an interdiction of all commercial intercourse ; it leaves the " belligerent countries in a state that is inconsistent with the relations "of commerce.
Side 84 - If there is no change of property, there can be no change of national character. Those lending money on such security, take this security subject to all the chances incident to it, and amongst the rest, the chances of war.
Side 107 - In the presence of facts such as those indicated above, the United States Government will, it is believed, agree with His Majesty's Government that no belligerent could in modern times submit to be bound by a rule that no goods could be seized unless they were accompanied by papers which established their destination to an enemy country, and that all detentions of ships and goods must uniformly be based on proofs obtained at the time of seizure. To press any such theory is tantamount to asking that...
Side 74 - Council, is pleased to order, and it is hereby ordered, as follows: 1. During the present hostilities the provisions of the Convention known as the Declaration of London shall, subject to the exclusion of the lists of contraband and noncontraband, and to the modifications hereinafter set out, be adopted and put in force by His Majesty's Government.
Side 44 - Where it is neutral, the act of destruction cannot be justified to the neutral owner by the gravest importance of such an act to the public service of the captor's own state ; to the neutral it can only be justified under such circumstances by a full restitution in value.