| Johan Friderich Wilhelm Schlegel - Naval convoys - 1801 - 194 pages
...and shifting opinions to serve present purpofes of particular national interest, but to adminifter with indifference, that justice which the law of nations...independent states, some happening to be neutral and fome to be belligerent. The feat of judicial authority is, indeed, locally here, in the belligerent... | |
| Capture at sea - 1806 - 108 pages
...portrait. of an admiralty judge, that the learned civilian who presides in a prize-court, sits there to administer with indifference that justice, which...holds out without distinction to independent states; and that the law itself has no locality, though the seat of judicial authority is in a particular country.... | |
| Great Britain - 1807 - 542 pages
...recollection ' what it is that the duty of my station calls from me ; namely, to consider myself as stationed here not to deliver occasional and shifting opinions...justice which the " law of nations holds out, without dis' tinction, to independent states, some ' happening to be neutr.il and some to ' be belligerent.... | |
| William Cobbett - Great Britain - 1807 - 544 pages
..." what it is that the duty of my station " calls from me ; namely, to consider myself as stationed here not to deliver occasional and shifting opinions...of particular national interest, but to administer 1 with indifference that justice which the ' law of nations holds out, without dis* tinction, to independent... | |
| English literature - 1811 - 600 pages
...of my station calls for from * me ; namely, to consider myself as stationed here, not to de' liver occasional and shifting opinions, to serve present...particular national interest, but to administer, with indif* ference, that justke which the' law of nations holds out, with' out distinction, to independent... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament - Great Britain - 1812 - 728 pages
...present pur' poses of particular national interest, but ' to administer with indifference that jus' tice which the law of nations holds out ' without distinction...independent states, ' some happening to be neutral and some ' belligerent. The seat of judicial autho' rity is indeed locally here in the belli-- ' gèrent country,... | |
| John Elihu Hall - Law - 1813 - 658 pages
...moment, what it is that the duty of my station calls for from mct namely, to consider myself as stationed here not to deliver occasional and shifting opinions...neutral and some to be belligerent. The seat of judicial amhority is indeed locally here, in the belligerent country according to the knows law and practice... | |
| Maurice Cross - 1835 - 416 pages
...namely, to consider myself as stationed here, not to deliver occasional and shifting opinions, to serre present purposes of particular national interest,...be neutral, and some to be belligerent. The seat of judical authority is indeed locally here in the belligerent country, according to the known law and... | |
| sir Archibald Alison (1st bart.) - 1835 - 830 pages
...anxious recollection, that the duty of my station calls me to consider myself not as stationed here to deliver occasional and shifting opinions to serve...indifference that justice which the law of nations holds out, u-itiioui distinction, to independent states— some happening to be neutral and some belligerent.... | |
| Henry Wheaton - International law - 1836 - 660 pages
...only. It is said indeed to be the duty of these courts, though established in the belligerent country, to administer with indifference that justice which...be belligerent. The seat of judicial authority is locally in the belligerent country, according to the known law and practice of nations; but the law... | |
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