| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| |