| Great Britain. High Court of Admiralty, Christopher Robinson - Admiralty - 1799 - 424 pages
...that the neceflity of this right of vifitation and fearch exifts. This right is fo clear in principle, that no man can deny it who admits the legality of maritime capture ; becaufe if you are not at liberty to afcertain by lufficient inquiry whether there is property that... | |
| James Allan Park - Bottomry and respondentia - 1800 - 690 pages
...that the neceffity of this right of vifitation and learch exifts. This right is fo clear in principle that no man can deny it, who admits the legality of maritime capture ; becaufe if you are not at liberty to afcenain bvfufficient enquiry whether, there is property that... | |
| Johan Friderich Wilhelm Schlegel - Naval convoys - 1801 - 194 pages
...that the necessity ofthis ri;;ht of visitation and search exists. This right is so clear ia principle, that no man can deny it, who admits the legality of...you are not at liberty to ascertain by sufficient inquiry, whether there is property that can legally be captured, it is impossible to capture. Even... | |
| Samuel Marshall - Bottomry and respondentia - 1802 - 392 pages
...thefe points, that this right of vifitation and feairch exifts. This fight is fo clear in principle, that no man can deny it who admits the legality of maritime capture ; becaufe, if you are not at liberty to afcertain, by fufficient enquiry, whether there be property... | |
| James Allan Park - Bottomry and respondentia - 1817 - 848 pages
...right of visitation and search exists. This right is so clear in principle that no man can deny i'-; who admits the legality of maritime capture; because...sufficient enquiry whether there is property that can legally be captured, it is impossible to capture. Even those who contend for the inadmissible rule,... | |
| Wendell Phillips - Insurance law - 1823 - 572 pages
...that the necessity of this right of visitation and search exists. This right is so clear in principle, that no man can deny it who admits the legality of...you are not at liberty to ascertain by sufficient inquiry, whether there is property that can be legally captured, it is impossible to capture. Even... | |
| Henry Wheaton - International law - 1836 - 420 pages
...and search exists. This right is so clear in principle that no man can deny it who admits the right of maritime capture; because if you are not at liberty to ascertain by sufficient inquiry whether there is property that can legally be captured, it is impossible to capture. Even those... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - American fiction - 1837 - 594 pages
...case of the Maria,* remarks on this subject, that " no man can deny this right who admits the right of maritime capture ; because, if you are not at liberty to ascertain by sufficient inquiry whether there is property that can lezally be captured, it is impossible to capture." And Mr.... | |
| William Oke Manning - International law - 1839 - 450 pages
...destinations, by the lawfully commissioned cruizers of a belligerent nation, was a right so clear in principle, that no man can deny it who admits the legality of...you are not at liberty to ascertain by sufficient inquiry whether there is property that can be legally captured, it is impossible to capture. The right... | |
| Francis Hildyard - Insurance law - 1845 - 894 pages
...that the necessity of this right of visitation and search exists. This right is so clear in principle, that no man can deny it who admits the legality of...you are not at liberty to ascertain by sufficient inquiry whether there is property that can legally be captured, it is impossible to capture. Even those... | |
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