| United States. Supreme Court - 1823 - 756 sider
...inclined to admit the doctrine urged at the bar that treaties become extinguished, ipto facto, by wr between the two governments, unless they should be...is not universally true. There may be treaties of such a nature, as to their object and import, as that war will put an end to them ; but where treaties... | |
| James Kent - 1832 - 590 sider
...United States would not admit the doctrine that treaties became extinguished ipso facto by war, unless revived by an express or implied renewal on the return of peace. Such a doctrine is not universally true. Where treaties contemplate a permanent arrangement of national... | |
| Henry Wheaton - 1836 - 660 sider
...extinguished, if not revived by an express or implied renewal on the return of peace. Whatever might be the latitude of doctrine laid down by elementary...of nations, dealing in general terms in relation to the subject, it was satisfied that the doctrine contended for was not universally true. There might... | |
| Henry Wheaton - 1836 - 416 sider
...doctrine, that treaties become, by war between the two contracting parties, ipso facto extinguished, if not revived by an express or implied renewal on the return of peace. Whatever might be the latitude of doctrine laid down by elementary writers on the law of nations, dealing in... | |
| Travers Twiss - 1846 - 304 sider
...we are not inclined to admit the doctrine urged at the bar, that treaties become extinguished, ipso facto, by war between the two governments, unless...is not universally true. There may be treaties of such a nature, as to their object and import, as that war will put an end to them ; but where treaties... | |
| James Kent - 1851 - 706 sider
...United States would not admit the doctrine that treaties became extinguished ipso facto by war, unless revived by an express or implied renewal on the return of peace. Such a doctrine is not universally true. Where treaties contemplate a permanent arrangement of national... | |
| Sir Robert Phillimore - 1857 - 666 sider
...We are not inclined to admit the doctrine urged at the bar, that Treaties become extinguished, ipso facto, by War between the two governments, unless...is not universally true. There may be treaties of such a nature, as to their object and import, as that War will put an end to them ; but where Treaties... | |
| James Kent - 1866 - 530 sider
...United States would not admit the doctrine that treaties became extinguished ipso facto by war, unless revived by an express or implied renewal on the return of peace. Such a doctrine is not universally true. Where treaties contemplate a permanent arrangement of national... | |
| John C. Devereux - 1868 - 444 sider
...43. Is the doctrine universally true, that treaties become extinguished, ipso facto, by icar, unless revived by an express or implied renewal on the return of peace f — 176. It is not. When treaties*contemplate a permanent arrangement of national rights, or, by... | |
| Henry Wager Halleck - 1878 - 588 sider
...parties as to render it inapplicable. A change of condition, as that treaties become extinguished ipso facto by war between the two governments unless they...implied renewal on the return of peace.' Whatever might be the latitude of doctrine laid down by elementary writers on the law of nations dealing in... | |
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