| Pan American Union - 1940 - 1028 pages
...article 7 that if no generally recognized rule of international law exists, the Prize Court should give judgment in accordance with the general principles of justice and equity. But the convention does not state what is meant by these expressions. After the war, some ground was... | |
| New Jersey State Bar Association - 1916 - 232 pages
...said treaty. "In the absence of such provisions, the court shall apply the rule of international law. If no generally recognized rule exists, the court...with the general principles of justice and equity." It certainly needs no argument to commend to the enlightened judgment of mankind the establishment... | |
| Carnegie Endowment for International Peace - 1916 - 236 pages
...treaty provisions governing the case presented "the Court shall apply the rules of international law. If no generally recognized rule exists, the Court...with the general principles of justice and equity." When the question of ratifying this treaty was presented to the Powers whose delegates had signed it,... | |
| Maryland State Bar Association - 1909 - 448 pages
...said treaty. In the absence of such provisions, the Court shall apply the rules of International Law. If no generally recognized rule exists, the Court...with the general principles of justice and equity." The obvious limitations of this Tribunal may be somewhat overcome by the work of a Naval Conference... | |
| Hersch Lauterpacht - 1970 - 624 pages
...provides : * In the absence of such provisions the Court shall apply the rules of international law. If no generally recognized rule exists, the Court...with the general principles of justice and equity'; see also: Article 7 of the Treaty of September 1794 between Great Britain and the United States; Article... | |
| American Society of International Law. Annual Meeting - 1911 - 424 pages
...that, " in the absence of such provisions the court shall apply the rules of international law. Tf no generally recognized rule exists, the court shall...with the general principles of justice and equity." When Great Britain came to consider the ratification of this convention, it seemed to her government... | |
| 1915 - 436 pages
...treaty provisions governing the case presented "the Court shall apply the rules of international law. If no generally recognized rule exists the Court shall...with the general principles of justice and equity." When the question of ratifying this treaty was presented to the powers whose delegates had signed it... | |
| Virginia State Bar Association - 1911 - 384 pages
...proceedings, the court is governed by the provisions of the ^aid treaty. the rules of international law. // no generally recognized rule exists, the court shall...the general principles of justice and equity." This provision and the reasons for its adoption are thus explained by the eminent Professor Louis Renault... | |
| Francis Anthony Boyle - 1985 - 388 pages
...rules of international law," and if no generally recognized rule existed, the Court was ordered to give judgment in accordance with "the general principles of justice and equity." Due to the composition of the Court, the Anglo-American judges would be in a minority and therefore... | |
| Dietrich Schindler, Jiří Toman - 1988 - 1084 pages
...said treaty. In the absence of such provisions, the Court shall apply the rules of international law. If no generally recognized rule exists, the Court...with the general principles of justice and equity. The above provisions apply equally to questions relating to the order and mode of proof. If, in accordance... | |
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