I. INTRODUCTION
The International Law Commission decided in 2018 to move the topic of ‘general principles of law’ onto its current programme of work and appointed as special rapporteur Marcelo Vázquez-Bermúdez (Ecuador). The Commission's work in this regard relates to the source of law enumerated in Article 38(1)(c) of the Statute of the International Court of Justice (ICJ): ‘the general principles of law recognized by civilized nations’.Footnote 1 One question has given rise to an inordinate amount of controversy in the Commission: does this category of principle include principles formed within the international legal system or does it embrace only (or for the most part) principles derived from national legal systems?Footnote 2
The prevailing thinking within the Commission at this stage of its work on the topic is apparent from Draft conclusions 3, 5, and especially 7, provisionally adopted by the Commission on first reading in 2023.Footnote 3 Draft conclusion 3 seems to recognize the existence of both types of general principle of law and to put the two on a largely equal footing:
General principles of law comprise those:
(a) that are derived from national legal systems;
(b) that may be formed within the international legal system.
In Draft conclusion 5, which concerns the first category, the Commission accepts general principles derived from national legal systems, with the requirement that their existence can be determined on the basis of a comparative analysis of national legal systems that is ‘wide and representative, including the different regions of the world’. That is consonant with the provision in Article 38(1)(c) to the effect that the principles in question must be ‘recognized’ to a requisite degree by States.
Draft conclusion 7, however, which concerns the second category, is in the following, more restrictive, terms:
(1) To determine the existence and content of a general principle of law that may be formed within the international legal system, it is necessary to ascertain that the community of nations has recognized the principle as intrinsic to the international legal system.
(2) Paragraph 1 is without prejudice to the question of the possible existence of other general principles of law formed within the international legal system.
As regards the first paragraph, the words ‘may be formed’, which were substituted for the original ‘general principle of law formed’, were inserted in order to ‘introduce a degree of flexibility to the provision, acknowledging that there is a debate as to whether a second category of principles of law exists’.Footnote 4 The word ‘intrinsic’ was taken to mean that the principle in question was ‘specific to the international legal system and reflects and regulates its basic features’.Footnote 5
As regards the second paragraph, the purpose of that peculiar provision was to leave open the question of the possible existence of general principles of law formed within the international legal system, other than those provided for in the first paragraph.Footnote 6
Despite the valuable efforts of the special rapporteur in his first and second reports, a number of Commission members had expressed hostility to the inclusion of general principles of law derived from the international legal system itself. The views of three of the members of the Commission, the members from the United States, France and the United Kingdom, were representative in this regard.
Mr Murphy (United States) expressed the view that general principles could emanate from within the international legal system; but ‘that category … was a relatively narrow one, and the Commission should be very cautious in indicating the circumstances in which such principles arose’. He added that the existence of such a second category had been ‘denied by a number of scholars’.Footnote 7 Furthermore, he warned against
the risk of encouraging decision-makers to identify miscellaneous principles as general principles of law that overwhelmed the other sources of international law, as well as the risk of dissipating the requirement for State consent to international obligations—perhaps even at the risk of unravelling the system of international law.Footnote 8
For these reasons, he asseverated, the text should be crafted ‘narrowly’: general principles formed within the international legal system could be ascertained only to the extent that they fulfilled a requirement of being ‘inherent in that system’.Footnote 9
Mr Forteau (France) expressed similarly critical views. He contended that modern scholarship had concluded that ‘the category of general principles of law formed within the international legal system was in fact an “innovation” of the International Law Commission’.Footnote 10 He considered that there seemed not to be ‘any real practice in support of such a category’.Footnote 11
Sir Michael Wood (United Kingdom) summarized the debate within the Commission by saying that the central issue ‘was the existence, or not, of a category of general principles of law other than those derived from national legal systems’, a question on which Commission members continued to hold a range of views. He suggested, therefore, that the Commission's challenge was ‘whether there could be such a second category’ and whether the Commission could come up with a credible way of describing it.Footnote 12 Sir Michael has also written on the topic,Footnote 13 concluding that ‘the traditional and still widely held view with respect to the meaning and scope of Article 38, paragraph (1)(c) is that it refers to general principles of law derived from domestic legal systems’Footnote 14 and, it could fairly be inferred, only that. As the Commentary puts it, some members had considered that Article 38, paragraph (1)(c) ‘does not encompass a second category of general principles of law, or at least remain sceptical of its existence as an autonomous source of international law’.Footnote 15 These members raised the concern that no sufficient State practice, jurisprudence or teachings were available fully to support the existence of the second category; in their view, this made it difficult to determine clearly the methodology for their identification.Footnote 16
Few would agree with the views put forward by these three Commission members (two of whom, Mr Murphy and Sir Michael Wood, it should be said, have since joined the ranks of former Commission members). Nevertheless, such views having been forcibly put in the Commission debates seems to have meant that the Commission has adopted an approach to the topic that is unduly restrictive and retrograde.Footnote 17 The bluntness of the views put forward by the Commission members in question invites bluntness in reply: the views set out above do not withstand scrutiny. They lead, moreover, to an unsatisfactory approach to the understanding of Article 38(1)(c), for essentially three reasons, which will be dealt with in turn:
(1) They are based on the erroneous assumption that the category ‘general principles of law’, as drafted in 1920, was meant to embrace only principles derived from national legal systems and not ones formed within the international legal system itself;
(2) They are predicated on the erroneous assumption that States in their practice have given expression to the view that the category ‘general principles of law’ was meant to embrace only principles derived from national law and not ones formed within the international legal system; and
(3) They are, finally, predicated on the erroneous assumption that the balance of views of leading writers, ‘the most highly qualified publicists of the various nations’,Footnote 18 is that ‘general principles of law’ embrace only principles derived from national legal systems and not principles formed within the international legal system.
II. NO DENIGRATION OF GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW INTENDED
It was indicative of general thinking in international law at the beginning of the twentieth century when the tribunal in Walfisch Bay observed in 1911 that it would rely on ‘the general principles of law’, which, continued the tribunal, were ‘the same as the principles of international law’.Footnote 19 There were, however, differing views on this within the Advisory Committee of Jurists that the League of Nations had tasked in 1920 with the drafting of Article 38 of the Statute. That may have been, at least in part, because some of the members were better versed in municipal (and Roman) law than they were in international law.
The British member, Lord Phillimore, a domestic Court of Appeal judge prominent in the field of ecclesiastical and admiralty law, was of the view that, ‘[g]enerally speaking, all the principles of common law are applicable to international affairs’.Footnote 20 He later observed that the principles referred to by the term general principles of law ‘were those which were accepted by all nations in foro domestico’.Footnote 21 The President of the Committee, the Belgian Baron Descamps, a professor of international law in the University of Louvain, was of the (rather broader) view that the Court should in this context be able ‘to take into consideration the legal conscience of civilised nations’.Footnote 22 On this basis Descamps had suggested the following formulation of what would become Article 38(1)(c): ‘the rules of international law as recognised by the legal conscience of civilised nations’.Footnote 23 The Brazilian member, Fernandez, observed that it might be possible to bridge the opposing views of Phillimore on the one side and Descamps on the other if the Court were to be given the power to base its decisions, in the absence of any conventional or customary law, on certain ‘principles of international law’.Footnote 24 De Lapradelle, the French member, a prominent professor of international law in the University of Paris, considered that it would be preferable not to specify in the text whether the general principles in question were general principles of domestic or international law, but simply ‘the general principles of law’, without indicating exactly the sources from which the principles should be derived.Footnote 25 That became the solution in the final text, which de Lapradelle duly presented, on the Committee's behalf, to the Council of the League of Nations on 23 June 1920.Footnote 26
It is surprising that there is even a debate today as to whether general principles of law formed within the international legal system are part of Article 38(1)(c). Considering the matter in the 1920s, Anzilotti, a Judge of the Permanent Court of International Justice, and who had acted as the Committee's Secretary-General,Footnote 27 wrote that not only were general principles of law formed within the international legal system part of the category of Article 38(1)(c), but that the rubric referred first and foremost to such principles, giving only second place to principles recognized in domestic legal systems.Footnote 28
There is also the authority of Politis, Professor of international law in the University of Paris and Greece's representative in the League of Nations, for the same proposition.Footnote 29 One had to admit, Politis observed, that Article 38(1)(c) referred not only to general principles of international law, but also to those which had generally been admitted in the legislation of domestic legal systems.Footnote 30
Hudson, the American Judge of the Permanent Court, observed in 1943 that the phrase ‘general principles of law recognized by civilized nations’ might well be thought to ‘refer primarily to the general principles of international law’.Footnote 31 It is correct that the wording of Article 38(1)(c) refers not, for example, to general principles of law ‘common to’ or ‘recognized in’ the States’ concerned. Instead, the focus in the wording chosen is on the recognition given by States to these general principles of law: the ordinary meaning to be given to the wording lends itself equally well to recognition that States give to general principles in the domestic context of their internal law and in the international context of their inter-State relations. Hudson went on to explain that, given that Article 38(1)(c) followed the provisions in Article 38 relating to international conventions and customary international law, it appeared from the context that the content was ‘larger’ than one referring primarily to the general principles of international law: it also empowered the Court to draw upon principles common to systems of domestic law.Footnote 32
The same understanding is apparent from the contemporaneous work of the Institut de Droit International. In Article I of its 1925 resolution on extinctive prescription in international law—ie the bar of international claims by lapse of timeFootnote 33—it observed that:
practical considerations of order, stability, and peace, long-recognized in the decisions of arbitral tribunals, put acquisitive prescription of obligations of States among the general principles of law recognized by civilized nations, which international tribunals must apply.Footnote 34
It is apparent from the description in Article I that this is an instance of a general principle formed within the international legal system, which is considered to be amongst the general principles of law referred to in Article 38(1)(c). As a more recent authority has put it, with reference to the resolution of the Institut, the operation of extinctive prescription in international law has been ‘recognized as a general principle of law in the meaning of Article 38(1)(c) of the ICJ Statute’.Footnote 35
The views of Anzilotti, Politis, Hudson and the Institut are eloquent of the traditional understanding of general principles of law as this category was codified in Article 38(1)(c). It was self-evident that principles formed within international law were a part of Article 38(1)(c). The only question open for debate was whether those principles of law formed within national legal systems, too, had a right of abode within the category.
Against this background, the Commission's special rapporteur on general principles of law is correct today to ‘focus on the text of Article 38(1)(c), which did not refer to the possible origins of general principles’.Footnote 36 Adopting definitions of the sources of law set out in Article 38 that hew closely to the language of the Statute has the great advantage of maintaining its key concepts, which are the basis not only of the ICJ, but also of other courts and tribunals and of States.Footnote 37 There is every reason, therefore, to take Article 38(1)(c) at its word and, as Mr Jalloh (Sierra Leone) observed during the Commission debates, there is ‘nothing in Article 38 (1) (c) to indicate that general principles of law were limited to principles derived from national legal systems’.Footnote 38
III. INTERNATIONAL PRACTICE IS TO THE EFFECT THAT ‘GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF LAW’ EMBRACE GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW
It is apparent from international practice, both in the period before and after 1920, that general principles of international law—or principles formed within the international legal system—are part of general principles of law in the sense of Article 38(1)(c).
From its international practice, it appears that France considers that general principles of law, as enumerated in Article 38(1)(c), embrace general principles formed within the international legal system. When France gave its de jure recognition of the government of the Soviet Union, it reserved ‘expressly the rights held by French citizens on the basis of contractual obligations of Russia or its nationals under previous régimes, obligations the respect of which is guaranteed by the general principles of law’.Footnote 39 The principle in question, the respect for acquired rights of aliens, is not one which could have been derived from national legal systems. It is a principle that must, at least in part, have been formed within the international legal system. As tribunals have recognized, the principle of acquired rights ‘constitutes undoubtedly one of the general principles recognized by international law’.Footnote 40 Similarly, the representative of France in the Sixth Committee of the General Assembly stated in 1950 that ‘[t]he principles of international law, as defined in Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice, were those recognized by civilized nations or embodied in international custom’.Footnote 41 That means that, of the two kinds of principle of international law identified by the French representative, one kind fell within the rubric international custom in Article 38(1)(b), and the other within those principles recognized by civilized nations, under Article 38(1)(c); these latter principles did not overlap with customary international law.
It emerges from international arbitral practice that general principles of international law may be something other than principles embodied in customary international law, as well as something other than principled restatements of what is already embodied in general treaties. In Biens britanniques au Maroc espagnol the sole arbitrator, Max Huber, a judge of the Permanent Court,Footnote 42 observed that, no treaty in force between the parties being capable of governing the questions before the tribunal, it must base its decision on ‘the rules of customary law and on the general principles of international law’.Footnote 43 The two were, in other words, different from one another.
The same is apparent from State practice. An example is the position taken by Egypt when, in reaction to Israel's occupation of Om-Rachrach, later known as Eilat, the Egyptian military occupied the islands of Tiran and Sanafer, which gave Egypt control over the entry into the Gulf of Aqaba. The Egyptian Minister of Foreign Affairs stated, in a note to the United Kingdom of 28 January 1950 and to the United States two days later, that:
Given that this occupation in no way has been inspired by a wish to prevent in any manner the innocent maritime passage between the two aforementioned islands and the coast of Egyptian Sinai, that passage, the only one practically navigable, will remain as it has been in the past open to navigation, in conformity with international custom and recognized principles of international law.Footnote 44
Furthermore, the United States seems to have expressed a similar opinion when it reacted in 1973 to Libya's declaration of a ‘restricted area’, a special zone covering the air space within a radius of 100 nautical miles from Tripoli; the United States’ position was that Libya's actions were inconsistent with ‘generally recognized principles of international law’.Footnote 45
A telling instance in treaty practice of States referring to general principles of law formed within the international legal system can be found in the Declaration Concerning the Laws of Naval War of 26 February 1909.Footnote 46 In the preamble, the States Parties set out their agreement that ‘the rules contained in the following Chapters correspond in substance with the generally recognized principles of international law’.Footnote 47 According to the General Report on the Declaration presented to the Conference on behalf of its Drafting Committee,Footnote 48 this category went beyond customary international law: it would serve, ‘where needful, to complete what might be considered as customary law’.Footnote 49 In fact, ‘there were so many points on which it was necessary to “complete” the law’, that there was a considerable amount of clear blue water between the two rubrics generally recognized: principles of international law, on the one hand, and customary international law, on the other.Footnote 50 States continued to refer to the principles of the Declaration of London as ‘generally recognized principles of international law’, rather than by using other terms, such as customary international law or international custom.Footnote 51 Other examples from more recent treaty practice could be mentioned, too, where the States Parties have used the rubric ‘the generally recognized principles of international law’ to refer to general principles in the sense of Article 38(1)(c).Footnote 52
There is, furthermore, valuable recent treaty practice regarding the term ‘the general principles of international law’ in bilateral investment treaties,Footnote 53 on which investment tribunals have had occasion to rule. A prominent example is the decision by the Annulment Committee in Mobil v Venezuela, to the effect that a reference in the 1991 Venezuela–Netherlands bilateral investment treatyFootnote 54 to ‘the general principles of international law’ referred to (and only to) Article 38(1)(c); the tribunal in the underlying case had been wrong to suggest that the rubric (also) referred to customary international law.Footnote 55 The tribunal in Infinito v Costa Rica similarly held that the term ‘principles of international law’, without the qualifier ‘general’, in the 1998 Canada–Costa Rica bilateral investment treaty, was to be understood ‘as a reference to the general principles of law cited in Article 38(1)(c)’.Footnote 56
International courts and tribunals in inter-State proceedings have also taken the approach that general principles of international law are part of ‘general principles of law’ in the sense of Article 38(1)(c).Footnote 57 They have done so in a manner that gives useful guidance concerning how the requisite recognition by the community of States is to be ascertained. In Reservations to the Genocide Convention, the ICJ set out the special characteristics of the Genocide Convention,Footnote 58 including its origins and character. It stated that it had been the intention of the United Nations to condemn and punish genocide as a crime under international law, a crime contrary to moral law and to the spirit and aims of the United Nations. According to the Court, ‘the principles underlying the Convention are principles which are recognized by civilized nations as binding on States, even without any conventional obligation’.Footnote 59 As Giorgio Gaja has explained, what the Court was doing was to ascertain:
the basis for the existence of a principle in the recognition by States, noting that such recognition was expressed in resolution 96(I) of the General Assembly, which marked ‘the intention of the United Nations to condemn and punish genocide as a crime under international law’. This approach is in line with an interpretation of Article 38, paragraph 1, (c), which considers that the existence of a principle may rest on its ‘recognition’ by States and does not necessarily consist in the presence of parallel principles in municipal laws.Footnote 60
More recently, the tribunal in Abyei held that it was a ‘general principle of law’ that ‘the transfer of sovereignty in the context of boundary delimitation should not be construed to extinguish traditional rights to the use of land (or maritime resources)’.Footnote 61 This is also a general principle of law that by definition cannot have been derived from national legal systems. Like the ICJ in Reservations to the Genocide Convention, the tribunal in Abyei looked for recognition, at the international level, of the general principle of international law in question. The tribunal found that the principle had been ‘recognized in a multitude of international agreements’,Footnote 62 and that this also followed from the decisions of international courts and tribunals;Footnote 63 it was therefore a ‘general principle of law’.
As is apparent from the foregoing, general principles of international law are considered in the practice of States, and of international courts and tribunals, to be included in the category general principles of law in Article 38(1)(c). In keeping with this general position, there are certain fields of international law where States have made particularly recurrent reference either to ‘general principles of international law’ or ‘generally recognized principles of international law’ in describing the basis for rights and obligations. The practice suggests that they have, in those particular contexts, preferred these categories over ‘customary international law’,Footnote 64 because the questions arising in these fields have been of a nature that, for reasons which are their own, States have not considered it to be opportune to address them through customary international law, but instead to do so through the other constituent part of general international law: the general principles of law. The main reason is to emphasize the fundamental importance of a norm as compared to the many rules of customary international law which are of lesser moment.
The contexts in question are, first, the independence and territorial integrity of States; secondly, naval and aerial warfare; thirdly, the relationship between provisions of municipal law and those of international treaties; and, fourthly and finally, the procedure of international courts and tribunals. They will be addressed in turn below.
A. Independence and Territorial Integrity of States
The following five examples from State practice make it apparent that, in the context of independence and territorial integrity, States have, at least in the pre-World War II period, preferred to conceive of the questions arising in this field as governed in the first instance by general principles of law. First, Mr Paul Bastid, a professor in the University of Paris and a deputy in the French Chamber of Deputies, presented in 1929 a report to the Chamber of Deputies in which he explained on behalf of the Commission on Foreign Affairs that:
Article 38 of the Statute of the Permanent Court of International Justice lays down that it must apply, in addition to international conventions and international custom, the general principles of law recognized by civilized nations. Now, the independence of States within the field of their political and economic organization is, without a shadow of doubt, among those general principles, even though it is not part of customary international law. Our liberty would, it seems, therefore be safeguarded.Footnote 65
This principle is, by its nature, not a principle that could have been derived from national legal systems.
Secondly, in 1931 the Tribunal de commerce de Luxembourg held in Dortven v Deckers that it was
a general principle of international law, recognized through obligations set out in general conventions of the international community of modern States, such as Article 10 of the Pact of the League of Nations, that States must mutually respect one another's political independence and territorial integrity.Footnote 66
Thirdly, in 1939, following Germany's invasion of Czechoslovakia, the deposed Czech President Edouard Beneš had addressed a telegram to the Secretary-General of the League, which was presented by the Soviet Union to the Assembly and League Members.Footnote 67 The telegram referred to breaches by Germany of ‘the fundamental articles of the Pact of the League of Nations as well as the recognized general principles of international law’.Footnote 68
Fourthly, Iraq sent a letter to the President of the Security Council on 29 April 1969, in which it accused Iran of acts which, in Iraq's contention, constituted a violation of ‘one of the basic and generally recognized principles of international law which prohibits States from interfering in the exclusive territorial jurisdiction of another State, or to carry out any executive action on the territory of another State’.Footnote 69
Fifthly, in the Bulgaria–Syria Consular Convention the two States Parties expressed in 1981 their desire to continue to develop and intensify their friendly relations ‘on the basis of the generally recognized principles of international law and, in particular, on the basis of the principles of sovereign equality of States, territorial integrity and non-interference in internal affairs’.Footnote 70 As is apparent from these examples, States have in the context of the independence and territorial integrity of States given recognition to a general principle of law, which by its nature cannot be derived from national legal systems, rather than to seek to claim that the same position follows from customary international law.
B. Naval and Aerial Warfare
Naval and aerial warfare has been a particularly productive field for the development by States of general principles of international law.Footnote 71 It was in the field of naval warfare that the tribunal in Eastern Extension, Australasia, and China Telegraph Co made its often quoted observations concerning the need to have resort to general principles of law.Footnote 72 Those observations were well described by Cassese, who explained that the tribunal set out that the need to resort to general principles of international law was conspicuous in this context because:
treaty law tends to regulate only the specific matters of concern to the relevant contracting parties, and customary rules normally come into being slowly and by definition cannot address all the interests and concerns of States. In this community, general principles constitute both the backbone of the body of law governing international dealings and the potent cement that binds together the various and often disparate cogs and wheels of the normative framework.Footnote 73
Mention has already been made above of the reference in the preamble of the London Declaration Concerning the Laws of Naval War of 1909 to ‘the generally recognized principles of international law’, a category that was taken, where necessary, to complement what might follow from customary international law. Another instance of treaty practice relating to naval warfare is the Declaration between Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden for the Purpose of Establishing Similar Rules of Neutrality of 27 May 1938.Footnote 74 This Declaration provided, in five essentially identical instruments, that each of the States would, for the purposes of safeguarding in wartime the sovereign rights and maintaining the neutrality of the Kingdom or Republic in question, prohibit access to its ports and other stated zones of territorial waters, ‘while at the same time observing the general principles of international law’ applicable in the field.Footnote 75
As regards State practice in the form of diplomatic exchanges, examples can be given from World Wars I and II. Germany stated, in a Note of 7 January 1916, from its Ambassador in Washington to the United States Government, that its U-boats in the Mediterranean had, from the beginning of World War I, ‘received orders not to conduct warfare against enemy commercial vessels other than in conformity with the general principles of international law’.Footnote 76
A British Note of 10 February 1914, dealing in part with the same topic, referred to criticism by the United States that a British Order in Council was in breach of ‘the generally recognized principles of international law’ applicable in this context.Footnote 77 A German Note of 4 May 1916, relating to the torpedoing of The Sussex, similarly referred to ‘the general principles of visit and search and destruction of merchant vessels as recognized by international law’.Footnote 78 At the beginning of World War II, the German Foreign Office had been asked by the Naval High Command whether Germany could engage in ‘unrestricted submarine warfare against England’.Footnote 79 The Legal Department of the Foreign Office advised that ‘such warfare cannot be justified on the basis of the principles of international law generally recognized’.Footnote 80
In a Note of the Soviet Union to the United Kingdom dated 25 October 1939, the Soviet Union stated that ‘[t]he generally recognized principles of international law as is well known do not permit the noncombatant population, women, children or the aged to be subjugated to bombardment from the air’.Footnote 81 The United Kingdom, using the same language, answered in a Note of 26 October 1939 that ‘the generally recognized principles of international law’ did not permit the aerial bombardment of civil populations.Footnote 82
Against this backdrop, the ICJ could be confident in Corfu Channel that the general principle of law in question was sufficiently recognized by States, when it observed that ‘elementary considerations of humanity, even more exacting in peace than in war’ amounted to a ‘general and well-recognized principle’.Footnote 83 The Court did so reproducing almost textually the formula of Article 38(1)(c): the ICJ was, in common with the State practice of the first half of the twentieth century, relying on general principles of law formed within the international legal system in the application of ‘general principles of law recognized by civilized nations’.Footnote 84 As Rolf Einar Fife has observed, the elementary considerations of humanity to which the Court referred, later relied on by the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea,Footnote 85 are an example of ‘a general principle of international law, and therefore a source of law in its own right’; ‘[t]hese considerations thus supplement those which are already reflected in customary law and treaty obligations’.Footnote 86
C. Provisions of Municipal Law Cannot Prevail Over Those of the Treaty
Another context in which States have expressed preference, in their practice, for general principles of international law is the relationship between international law and municipal law, more specifically the question of whether provisions of municipal law can prevail over those contained in international treaties. Fitzmaurice referred to this principle as ‘one of the great principles of international law, informing the whole system and applying to every branch of it’.Footnote 87
It is striking how States have in this context couched their practice in terms of either ‘generally recognized principles of international law’ or ‘general principles of law’, to the exclusion of references to customary international law.
Numerous examples could be given; the following four are representative. First, Greece objected to the United States’ reservations to the Genocide Convention on the basis that ‘the Government of the Hellenic Republic considers that, in accordance with the generally recognized principles of international law, a party to an international convention may not invoke its domestic legislation as a reason to avoid honouring its obligations under that Convention’.Footnote 88
Secondly, Hungary and Australia considered that Pakistan's reservations to the Torture ConventionFootnote 89 were subject to ‘the general principle’ according to which ‘a party may not invoke the provisions of its internal law as justification for its failure to perform a treaty’.Footnote 90
Thirdly, the Czech Republic and Australia considered that the Maldives’ reservation to the International Covenant on Civil and Political RightsFootnote 91 was in contradiction with ‘the general principle’ according to which ‘a State Party to a treaty may not invoke the provisions of its internal law as justification for failure to perform according to the obligations set out by the treaty’.Footnote 92
Fourthly, in connection with Uruguay's interpretative declaration to the Rome Statute,Footnote 93 Finland recalled ‘the general principle relating to internal law and observance of treaties, according to which a party may not invoke the provisions of its internal law as justification for its failure to perform a treaty’.Footnote 94
It is correct therefore, as the ICJ has observed, that ‘it is a generally accepted principle of international law that in the relations between Powers who are contracting Parties to a treaty, the provisions of municipal law cannot prevail over those of the treaty’,Footnote 95 and as a United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) ad hoc tribunal held more recently, that ‘[i]t is a general principle of international law that a State cannot rely on its own laws to avoid its international obligations’.Footnote 96 As the State practice in the field makes apparent, this principle is one recognized by the community of States: it is a general principle of law in the sense of Article 38(1)(c).
D. The Procedure of International Courts and Tribunals
Although the context of the procedure of international courts and tribunals is, of course, one which might reasonably draw on the rich experience of tribunals in foro domestico, there are important differences between international tribunals, on the one hand, and domestic tribunals, on the other, which have meant that procedural principles at the international level have had to rely on general principles of law formed in the international legal system.Footnote 97 In domestic law, the default position is that there is a judicial forum before which to bring a claim, whereas ‘the default position under public international law is the absence of a forum before which to present claims’.Footnote 98 This means that, in spite of the similarities that exist, there is a vital difference as regards the very fundamentals of the functioning of international courts and tribunals on the one hand and domestic courts on the other.Footnote 99 In Nottebohm the ICJ dealt with the principle of Kompetenz-Kompetenz—the principle that, in the event of a dispute as to whether an international tribunal has jurisdiction, the matter shall be settled by the decision of the tribunal itself. The Court stated that Article 36(6) of the Court's Statute, which codifies the principle:
merely adopted, in respect of the Court, a rule consistently accepted by general international law in the matter of international arbitration. Since the Alabama case, it has been generally recognized, following the earlier precedents, that, in the absence of any agreement to the contrary, an international tribunal has the right to decide as to its own jurisdiction and has the power to interpret for this purpose the instruments which govern that jurisdiction.Footnote 100
It seems that this was a principle formed within the international legal system, which was already well established by the eighteenth century in international arbitration.Footnote 101
Similarly, the tribunal in Waste Management No 2 observed that the principle of res judicata was a principle of international law and that it belonged under the rubric ‘general principle of law within the meaning of Article 38(1)(c)’.Footnote 102 Whilst of course it exists in national legal systems, res judicata is as a matter of international law a principle formed within international law rather than in domestic law. This is because the principle of res judicata at the international level has features which domestic versions of the principle lacks, although there are of course similarities. This is related to structural differences between the contexts in which domestic and international tribunals operate. One such difference in context, highlighted by McNair, is that in relation to the definition of the jurisdiction of the Permanent Court, and later the ICJ, it was ‘worthwhile recalling the general principle of international law that no State can be compelled to litigate against its will’.Footnote 103 For example, questions relating to the principle of res judicata such as those which arose in Von Tiedemann—what happens under the principle of res judicata when a tribunal has, in a preliminary decision, upheld jurisdiction and then, subsequently, but prior to its decision on the merits, finds that in fact it lacks jurisdiction—do not have analogues in domestic law.Footnote 104 The general principles of international law of Kompetenz–Kompetenz and res judicata are, within the context of the procedure of international courts and tribunals, instances of general principles of law within the meaning of Article 38(1)(c).
There is every reason, however, for international courts and tribunals, not least in the dynamic field of investment arbitration, to heed the call by commentators, such as Martins Paparinskis, not to invoke too readily what are considered to be general principles of law, whether of international or national law origin, as a substitute for rigorous applicable law analysis.Footnote 105 There is evidence that tribunals are increasingly aware of this, as is evidenced by the award in Yukos Capital v Russia, where the tribunal rejected a claim based on the clean hands doctrine in favour of the application of the test under the applicable municipal law.Footnote 106
IV. THE BALANCE OF VIEWS OF LEADING WRITERS IS THAT ‘GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF LAW’ EMBRACE GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW
Basdevant, later judge and President of the ICJ, wrote in 1936 that the contribution to the international legal order of Article 38(1)(c) was not limited to principles formed in national legal systems.Footnote 107 If it was legitimate to transform into the international legal order principles formed in foro domestico, then it was surely no less legitimate to introduce, through the same conduit, into international law general principles recognized by States in their international practice.Footnote 108 De Visscher, a judge of both the Permanent Court and its successor, shared this view: the Court must apply general principles of law, he explained, ‘to the extent that they have received general adhesion, whether in international practice itself or in the internal law of civilized nations’.Footnote 109 Morelli, a judge of the ICJ, was of the view that, if Article 38(1)(c) referred to principles accepted within national legal systems, general principles formed within the international legal system were also part of the category and must, if anything, take precedence over those formed within domestic legal systems.Footnote 110 Rousseau similarly wrote that the principle of general principles of law in Article 38(1)(c) was not limited to principles derived from national legal systems: it also covered the general principles of international law, which did not have to be recruited from any other system than international law itself.Footnote 111 In summary, Alain Pellet was right when he wrote in 1974 that the view according to which the general principles of law embrace both the category of principles derived from national law and that of principles of international law was extremely widespread.Footnote 112
The correct view is, as a great number of leading writers have concluded, that general principles of law formed within the international legal system are a part of Article 38(1)(c) on a perfectly equal footing with general principles of law derived from national legal systems.Footnote 113
V. CONCLUSION
General principles of law, like other instances of international law, are not only a product of principles derived from national legal systems. This body of law is instead, and to a very real extent, ‘its own creation’.Footnote 114 In various contexts of international life, States have relied, and continue to rely, on diplomatic exchanges and on treaty practice, on general principles of law formed within the international legal system. In this manner, they have given and give their recognition to a certain number of general principles of international law as being ‘general principles of law’ in the sense of Article 38(1)(c). Such instances of recognition in the practice of States have, since the early twentieth century, been reflected in judicial decisions of international courts and tribunals and in the writings of the most qualified publicists.
The International Law Commission is right to have adopted on first reading the approach to general principles derived from national legal systems that follows from Draft conclusion 5. The requirement that the recognition by States is ‘wide and representative, including the different regions of the world’ is in keeping with Article 38(1)(c). It is worth remembering that there is State practice to suggest that a more restrictive test would need to be met: at the League of Nations Codification Conference of 1930, for example, 17 States (then a large number) were of the view that it was only when general principles were ‘indisputably admitted by the international community’ that there was sufficient recognition.Footnote 115 The Commission is right not to have adopted such an approach to general principles of law derived from national legal systems. The question is why the Commission, without any support in the text of Article 38(1)(c) and without State practice to buttress its conclusion, considers that it can adopt a restrictive approach to the recognition of general principles of law formed within the international legal system. It would be unsatisfactory for the International Law Commission, whose prime object is ‘the promotion of the progressive development of international law and its codification’,Footnote 116 to adopt a regressive instrument in which the character of general principles of law formed within the international legal system is so at odds with the realities of international life. In order for the Commission to fulfil its mandate of codification of international law, the work of the Commission in this field needs to reflect more clearly that general principles of law formed within the international legal system are no less part of ‘general principles of law’ than general principles of law derived from national legal systems.