... be said that there is no principle of international law applicable. International law, as well as domestic law, may not contain, and generally does not contain, express rules decisive of particular cases; but the function of jurisprudence is to resolve... American and British Claims Arbitration - Página 41913Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| 1924 - 970 páginas
...1884, enunciating the principle of the freedom of governments in time of war, had thereby recognized that there was no special limitation, by way of obligatory...no treaty and no specific rule of international law foimulated as the expression of a universally recognized rule governing the case of the cutting of... | |
| John Fischer Williams, H. Lauterpacht - 1933 - 518 páginas
...Submarine Cables of 1884 enunciated the principle of the freedom of action in time of war. This meant that there was " no special limitation, by " way of..." of dealing with submarine cables in time of war " (at p. 75). (b) Customary International Law: — (i) Novelty of Action in International Law. Even... | |
| Haro F. Van Panhuys - 1980 - 242 páginas
...adequately the role to be played by principles of international law: (E)ven assuming that there was ... no treaty and no specific rule of international law...of a universally recognised rule governing... the cutting of cables by belligerents, it cannot be said that there is no principle of international law... | |
| J. G. Lammers - 1984 - 760 páginas
...Eastern Extension , A ustralasia and China Telegraph Co.,(l 923) : "Even assuming that there was ... no treaty and no specific rule of international law formulated as the expression of a universally recognized rule governing ... the cutting of cables by belligerents, it cannot be said that there is... | |
| Vincent Coussirat-Coustáere, Pierre Michel Eissemann - 1989 - 916 páginas
...1884, enunciating the principle of the freedom of Governments in time of war, had thereby recognized that there was no special limitation, by way of obligatory...law formulated as the expression of a universally recognized rule governing the case of the cutting of cables by belligerents, it can not be said that... | |
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