Neutral Rights, Or, An Impartial Examination of the Right of Search of Neutral Vessels Under Convoy and of a Judgment Pronounced by the English Court of Admiralty, the 11th June, 1799, in the Case of the Swedish Convoy: With Some Additions and CorrectionsPrinted at the Aurora Office, 1801 - 162 Seiten |
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Seite 7
... contraband of war ( contreband de guerre ) afforded too great a latitude . They even fometimes laid afide the exprefs provifion of treaties , under the pretence , that it was in contra- diction to the maritime ordinances and re ...
... contraband of war ( contreband de guerre ) afforded too great a latitude . They even fometimes laid afide the exprefs provifion of treaties , under the pretence , that it was in contra- diction to the maritime ordinances and re ...
Seite 11
... contraband of war , exprefsly comprising therein , ma- terials for fhip building . The instructi- ons were without limitations or excepti- ons , not even of ships belonging to states with which there were treaties to the contrary then ...
... contraband of war , exprefsly comprising therein , ma- terials for fhip building . The instructi- ons were without limitations or excepti- ons , not even of ships belonging to states with which there were treaties to the contrary then ...
Seite 13
... contraband of war , than is neceffary for the use of the voy- age . 2. That no merchandize should be deemed contraband of war , but fuch as was directly used in war . 3. That nothing fhould be carried in- to the port or city of one ...
... contraband of war , than is neceffary for the use of the voy- age . 2. That no merchandize should be deemed contraband of war , but fuch as was directly used in war . 3. That nothing fhould be carried in- to the port or city of one ...
Seite 15
... He went farther , and revived the old and ridiculous pretenfion of Sweden , that coined money ought to be compri- zed zed among the merchandize prohibited as contraband of war , [ 15 ] of English lawyers, that the rights of ...
... He went farther , and revived the old and ridiculous pretenfion of Sweden , that coined money ought to be compri- zed zed among the merchandize prohibited as contraband of war , [ 15 ] of English lawyers, that the rights of ...
Seite 16
... contraband of war , and directed his cruisers to feize fhips bound for Ruffia with money on board . The order was not however very rigorously enforced . During the prefent war the illufion has wholly vanished ; for none of the ante ...
... contraband of war , and directed his cruisers to feize fhips bound for Ruffia with money on board . The order was not however very rigorously enforced . During the prefent war the illufion has wholly vanished ; for none of the ante ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Admiralty againſt alfo armed belligerent powers British cafe captain capture cargo caſe caufe cited commander Commerce between Ruffia confequence confidered confiscation contraband contrary convoy Court of Admiralty cruizers Daniſh declared Denmark detained efcort enemy enemy's England Engliſh eſtabliſhed exprefsly fame favour feized ferve fhall fhips fhould fince fome force fovereign France ftates fubjects fuch fuffer fuppofing fupport hemp himſelf ibid itſelf Judge judgment juftice latively Law of Nations maritime MARTENS merce merchant veffels moſt neutral flag neutral powers neutral ſtate neutral veffels obferve ordinance perfons Petersburgh pitch port prefent pretenfion principle privateers prize prohibited PUFFENDORF queftion reafon refiftance refpect refufal refults refuſal right of vifiting ſhip ships Sir WILLIAM SCOTT Spain Sweden Swedish convoy Swedish frigate thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe tion traband Treaty of Commerce United Provinces uſe VALIN VATTEL veffels failing veſſel vessels viſiting
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 143 - ... belligerent country, according to the known law and practice of nations ; but the law itself has no locality. It is the duty of the person who sits here to determine this question exactly as he would determine the same question if sitting at Stockholm ; to assert no pretensions on the part of Great Britain which he would not allow to Sweden in the same circumstances, and to impose no duties on Sweden, as a neutral country, which he would not admit to belong to Great Britain in the same character.
Seite 143 - The seat of judicial authority is. indeed, locally here in the belligerent country, according to the known law and practice of nations, but the law itself has no locality.
Seite 143 - 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, but to administer with indifference that justice which the law of nations holds out, without distinction, to independent states, some happening to be neutral and some to be belligerent. The seat of judicial authority...
Seite 150 - The right is equally clear in practice ; for practice is uniform and universal upon the subject. The many European treaties which refer to this right, refer to it as preexisting, and merely regulate the exercise of it. All writers upon the law of nations unanimously acknowledge it, without the exception even of Hubner himself, the great champion of neutral privileges.
Seite 146 - ... rule may not have been broken in upon in some instances by considerations of comity or of policy, by which it may be fit that the administration of this species of law should be tempered in the hands of those tribunals which have a right to entertain and apply them ; for no man can deny that a state may recede from its extreme rights, and that its supreme councils are...
Seite 152 - ... in such a way as may surrender the known and ancient rights of some nations to the present convenience of other nations (which nations may perhaps remember to forget them when they happen to be themselves belligerent), no reverence is due to them.
Seite 145 - Conformably to this principle, we find in the celebrated French Ordinance of 1681, now in force, article 12, " That every vessel shall be good prize in case of resistance and combat; " and Valin in his smaller Commentary, p.
Seite 150 - ... sails with instructions to prevent inquiry and search by force, which instructions he is bound to obey, and which he is prevented from acting upon to their utmost extent only by an irresistible force. Under such circumstances how does the presumption of abandonment arise? If it does, mark the consequences. If he meets with a superior force, he abandons his hostile purpose. If he meets with an inferior force, he carries it into complete effect. How much is this short of the ordinary state of actual...
Seite 146 - I stand with confidence upon all fair principles of reason ; upon the distinct authority of VATTEL , Upon the institutes of other great maritime countries, as well as those of our own country — when I venture to lay it down, that by the law of nations, as now understood, a deliberate and continued resistance to search, on the part of a neutral vessel to a lawful cruizer, is followed by the legal consequence of confiscation.
Seite 152 - That the penalty for the violent contravention of this right is the confiscation of the property so withheld from visitation and search. For the proof of this I need only refer to Vattel, one of the most correct and certainly not the least indulgent of modern professors of public law.