Zeitschrift für internationales Recht, Količina 23Theodor Niemeyer Duncker & Humblot., 1913 - 645 strani |
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Abkommen Abschluß Anspruch Anwendung Artikel Artt ausdrücklich ausländische Recht ausländischen Güterstand ausländischen I. P. R. Beklagten besondere bestimmt Cyrenaika deshalb deutsche Recht deutschen gesetzlichen deutschen I. P. R. Deutschland droit Ehegatten ehelichen Güterrechts Eheschließung Ehevertrag England englischen Entscheidung erst Fall Frage französischen Frau fremden Gebiet geltend Geltung Geltungsbereich gemäß Gerichte Geschäfte Geschäftsfähigkeit gesetzlichen Güterstand Grund Grundsatz guten Glaubens Haager Abkommen Haager Wechselordnung Habicht handelt Hay-Pauncefote-Vertrage Heimatstaats Herrschaft Indossament Inhalt inländischen Inlandsbeziehung Interesse Intern Internationales Privatrecht Jahre Kanal Klage Klägerin Kollisionsnorm Konflikt Konsularbehörde Krieges land ländischen läßt lex fori lex rei sitae lichen Mannes maßgebend materiellen Rechts muß Nationen Niemeyer Normen Panama Panamakanal Parteien Person Planck Rechtsgeschäft Reich Reichsgericht Richter Rückgriff Rückverweisung Satz Schutz soll Staatsangehörigkeit Staatsverträge Statut Tripolitanien unserer Wechselordnung Urteil Vereinigten Staaten vergl Verjährung Verkehr Vermögen Vertrag Vertragsstaaten Völkerrecht Vorschriften Wechsel Wechselrechts Weiterverweisung Wirkung Wohnsitz Zahlung Zitelmann Zulässigkeit Zuständigkeit Zweck
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 137 - In the law of almost every country, the character of alien enemy carries with it a disability to sue, or to sustain in the language of the civilians a persona stand* in judicio.
Stran 83 - Government towards the commerce of the world is that all nations will be treated alike, and no discrimination made by the United States against any one of them observing the rules adopted by the United States.
Stran 136 - By the law and Constitution of this country, the sovereign alone has the power of declaring war and peace. He alone therefore who has the power of entirely removing the state of war, has the power of removing it in part, by permitting, where he sees proper, that commercial intercourse which is a partial suspension or the war.
Stran 50 - Resolved, That the President of the United States be respectfully requested to consider the expediency of opening negotiations with the governments of other nations, and particularly with the Governments of Central America and New Granada...
Stran 83 - States charging tolls to its own shipping only to refund them and remitting tolls altogether," as the British protest declares, then the irresistible conclusion is that the United States, although it owns, controls and has paid for the canal is restricted by treaty from aiding its own commerce in the way that all the other nations of the world may freely do. It would scarcely be claimed that the setting out in a treaty between the United States and Great Britain of certain rules adopted by...
Stran 83 - The privileges of all nations to whom we extended the use upon the observance of these conditions were to be equal to that extended to any one of them which observed the conditions. In other words, it was a conditional...
Stran 137 - In my opinion, no principle ought to be held more sacred than that this intercourse cannot subsist on any other footing than that of the direct permission of the state. Who can be insensible to the consequences that might follow, if every person in time of war had a right to carry on a commercial intercourse with the enemy, and under colour of that, had the means of carrying on any other species of intercourse he might think fit?
Stran 173 - Tribunal d'Arbitrage, constitué sur les bases de la Convention pour le règlement pacifique des conflits internationaux, signée à La Haye le 29 juillet 1899...
Stran 136 - In my opinion there exists such a general rule in the maritime jurisprudence of this country, by which all trading with the public enemy, unless with the permission of the sovereign, is interdicted.
Stran 50 - ... individuals or companies as may undertake to open a communication between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans by the construction of a ship canal across the isthmus which connects North and South America, and of securing forever, by such stipulations, the free and equal right of navigating such canal to all such nations, on the payment of such reasonable tolls as may be established to compensate the capitalists who may engage in such undertaking and complete the work.