| James Kent - Law - 1832 - 590 pages
...law. It is a necessary consequence of this equality, that each nation has a right to govern itself as it may think proper, and no one nation is entitled...course of internal policy, to another. No state is entitied to take cognizance or notice of the domestic administration of another state, or of what passes... | |
| James Kent - Law - 1851 - 706 pages
...law. It is a necessary consequence of this equality, that each nation has a right to govern itself as it may think proper, and no one nation is entitled...a form of government, or religion, or a course of inter. nail policy, to another. No state is entitled to take cognizance or uotice of the domestic administration... | |
| United States. Supreme Court, Benjamin Chew Howard - African Americans - 1857 - 260 pages
...law. It is a necessary consequence of this equality, that each nation has a right to govern itself as it may think" proper, and no one nation is entitled...dictate a form of government or religion, or a course of interli-'i Scott v. Sandford. [Ma. JUITICI DAHUL. nal policy, to another." This writer gives some instances... | |
| United States. Supreme Court, Benjamin Chew Howard - African Americans - 1857 - 254 pages
...law. It is a necessary consequence of this equality, that each nation has a right to govern itself as it may think proper, and no one nation is entitled...dictate a form of government or religion, or a course of interDred Scott v. Sandford. [MB. JUSTICE DANIEL. nal policy, to another." This writer gives some instances... | |
| United States. Supreme Court - Law reports, digests, etc - 1857 - 688 pages
...law. It is a necessary consequence of this equality, that each nation has a right to govern itaelf as it may think proper, and no one nation is entitled...dictate a form of government or religion, or a course of interDred Scott v. Sandford. [Ma. JoSTICl Distsl. nal policy, to another." This writer gives some instances... | |
| James Kent - Law - 1858 - 732 pages
...law. It is a necessary consequence of this equality, that each nation has a right to govern itself as it may think proper, and no one nation is entitled...No state is entitled to take cognizance or notice of the domestic administration of another state, or of what passes within it as between the government... | |
| Carlton Edwards - 1863 - 292 pages
...Kent, and other publicists from the time of Grotius, that " each nation has a right to govern itself as it may think proper, and no one nation is entitled...a form of government, or religion, or a course of public policy, to another." The bargain between the two monarchs was not a treaty in the true sense... | |
| James Kent - Law - 1866 - 722 pages
...law. It is a necessary consequence of this equality, that each nation has a right to govern itself as it may think proper, and no one nation is entitled...No state is entitled to take cognizance or notice of the domestic administration of another state, or of what passes within it as between the government... | |
| James Kent - International law - 1866 - 530 pages
...right to govern itself as it thinks proper, but that no one nation is entitled to dictate to another a form of government or religion or a course of internal policy ; nor is any state entitled to take cognizance or notice of the domestic administration of another... | |
| John C. Devereux - Law - 1868 - 444 pages
...21. It is a necessary consequence of this equality, that each nation has a right to govern itself as it may think proper, and no one nation is entitled...No state is entitled to take cognizance, or notice of the domestic administration of another state, or of what passes within, as between the government... | |
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