... be employed against him; that a most unlimited right is acquired to his person and property ; admits that war does not transfer to the sovereign a debt due to his enemy ; and,- therefore, if payment of such debt be not exacted, peace revives the former... A Treatise on the Law of War - Page 56by Cornelis van Bijnkershoek - 1810 - 218 pagesFull view - About this book
| John Elihu Hall - Law - 1810 - 530 pages
...this we grant, and in others we refuse to the enemy the persona standi in judicio? It has undoubtedly been so adjudged, and if the distinction is proper...which have been confiscated during the war, and have beem called in by the sovereign, are considered at the peace as lost, and are for ever extinct; but... | |
| Henry Wheaton, William Beach Lawrence - International law - 1855 - 942 pages
...of such debt be not exacted, peace revives the former right of the creditor; " because," he says, " the occupation which is had by war consists more in fact than in law." He adds to his observations on this subject: " Let it not, however, be supposed that it is only true... | |
| Thomas Welles Bartley - United States - 1873 - 26 pages
...admits that war does not transfer to the sovereign a debt due to his епетy, because, he says, ' the occupation which is had by war consists more in fact than in law.' * * * * "And on page 140 he adds: 'This rule appears to bo tota'ly incompatible with the idea that... | |
| Law reports, digests, etc - 1917 - 1152 pages
...property, admits that war does not transfer to the sovereign a debt due to his enemy because, he says, the occupation which is had by war consists more in fact than in law. Let it not, however, be supposed that it is only true of actions that they are not condemned ipso jure,... | |
| Freeman Snow - International law - 1893 - 636 pages
...of such debt be not exacted, peace revives the former right of the creditor ; ' because,' he says, ' the occupation which is had by war consists more in fact than in law.' He adds to his observations on this subject, 'let it not, however, be supposed that it is only true... | |
| United States. Supreme Court - Law reports, digests, etc - 1903 - 334 pages
...of such debt be not exacted, peace revives the former right of the creditor ; " because," he says, " the occupation which is had by war consists more in fact than in law." He adds to his observations on this subject, " let it not, however, be supposed, that it is only true... | |
| Albert Hutchinson Putney - Law - 1908 - 396 pages
...payment of such debt be not exacted, peace revives the former right of the creditor; 'because,' he says, 'the occupation which is had by war consists more in fact than in law.' He adds to his observations on this subject, 'let it not, however, be supposed that it is only true... | |
| Albert H. Putney - Law - 1908 - 386 pages
...payment of such debt be not exacted, peace revives the former right of the creditor; 'because,' he says, 'the occupation which is had by war consists more in fact than in law.' He adds to his observations on this subject, 'let it not, however, be supposed that it is only true... | |
| New York (State). Courts, Francis Blaine Delehanty (Reporter), Austin B. Griffin (Reporter), Robert George Scherer (Reporter), Edward Jordan Dimock (Reporter), Joseph Albert Lawson (Reporter), Charles Cook Lester (Reporter), William Van Rensselaer Erving (Reporter), Louis J. Rezzemini (Reporter) - Law reports, digests, etc - 1917 - 802 pages
...property, admits that war does not transfer to the sovereign a debt due to his enemy because, he says, the occupation which is had by war consists more in fact than in law. Let it not, however, be supposed that it is only true of actions that they are not condemned ipso jure,... | |
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