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" ... the international law sought to be applied must, like anything else, be proved by satisfactory evidence, which must show either that the particular proposition put forward has been recognized and acted upon by our own country, or that it is of such... "
The Theory of State Succession: With Special Reference to English and ... - Page 13
by Arthur Berriedale Keith - 1907 - 101 pages
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American Law School Review, Volume 2

Law - 1906 - 688 pages
...that the particular proposition put forward has been recognized and acted upon by our own country, or that it is of such a nature and has been so widely...generally accepted that it can hardly be supposed that any civilized state would repudiate it." The opinion adopts the definition of international law of the...
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The Austinian Theory of Law: Being an Edition of Lectures I,V, and VI of ...

John Austin, William Jethro Brown - Jurisprudence - 1906 - 412 pages
...that the -particular proposition put forward has been recognized and acted upon by our own country, or that it is of such a nature, and has been so widely...accepted, that it can hardly be supposed that any civilized State would repudiate it."1 560. The judgment in the two leading cases just cited appears...
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The Law Quarterly Review, Volume 22

Frederick Pollock - Law - 1906 - 494 pages
...that the particular proposition put forward has been recognized and acted upon by our own country, or that it is of such a nature, and has been so widely...accepted, that it can hardly be supposed that any civilized state would repudiate it ; ' p. 407. I now propose to examine further the nature and extent...
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Congress of Arts and Science, Universal Exposition, St. Louis, 1904 ...

Howard Jason Rogers - Science and the humanities - 1906 - 902 pages
...that the particular proposition put forward has been recognized and acted upon by our own country, or that it is of such a nature, and has been so widely...accepted, that it can hardly be supposed that any civilized state would repudiate it. The mere opinions of jurists, however eminent or learned, that...
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The American Journal of International Law, Volume 1, Part 1

Electronic journals - 1907 - 586 pages
...that the particular proposition put forward has been recognized and acted upon by our own country, or that it is of such a nature, and has been so widely...accepted, that it can hardly be supposed that any civilized state would repudiate it. The mere opinions of jurists, however eminent or learned, that...
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The American Journal of International Law, Volume 1, Part 2

Electronic journals - 1907 - 526 pages
...that the particular proposition put forward has been recognized and acted upon by our own country, or that it is of such a nature, and has been so widely...accepted, that it can hardly be supposed that any civilized state would repudiate it. The mere opinions of jurists, however eminent or learned, that...
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The American Journal of International Law, Volume 1, Part 1

Electronic journals - 1907 - 590 pages
...that the particular proposition put forward has been recognized and acted upon by our own country, or that it is of such a nature, and has been so widely...accepted, that it can hardly be supposed that any civilized state would repudiate it. The mere opinions of jurists, however eminent or learned, that...
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The Study of International Law in Law Schools

Charles Noble Gregory - International law - 1907 - 26 pages
...that the particular proposition put forward has been recognized and acted upon by our own country, or that it is of such a nature and has been so widely...generally accepted that it can hardly be supposed that any civilized state would repudiate it." The opinion adopts the definition of international law of the...
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Handbook of International Law

George Grafton Wilson - History - 1910 - 698 pages
...that the particular proposition put forward has been recognized and acted upon by our own country, or that it is of such a nature, and has been so widely...accepted, that it can hardly be supposed that any civilized state would repudiate it. The mere opinions of jurists, however eminent or learned, that...
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British Ruling Cases from Courts of Great Britain, Canada, Ireland ..., Volume 5

Law reports, digests, etc - 1916 - 1090 pages
...that the particular proposition put forward has beeii recognized and acted upon by our own country, or that it is of such a nature, and has been so widely...accepted, that it can hardly be supposed that any civilized state would repudiate it. The mere opinions of jxirists, however eminent or learned, that...
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