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Status of Enemy Merchant Ships

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2017

Extract

When no distinction was made in theory and practice between the status of private property of the enemy upon land and upon sea it necessarily followed that such property was liable to seizure and confiscation wherever found.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1908

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References

1 Moore, Digest of Inter. Law, sec. 1196.

2 Halleck, , Inter. Law (3d ed., by Baker), Vol. I, 552, 533 Google Scholar, note.

3 Moore, Inter. Law Digest, sec. 1196.

4 Halleck, , Inter. Law (3d ed., by Baker), Vol. I, 532 Google Scholar, note.

5 Digest of Inter. Law, sec. 1196.