| John Duer - Insurance law - 1845 - 822 pages
...law of the admiralty, which equally forms a branch of the general jurisprudence of the kingdom. War puts every individual of the respective governments, as well as the governments themselves, into a state of hostility with each other. There is no such thing as a war for arms, and a peace for... | |
| William Johnson, New York (State). Supreme Court - Law reports, digests, etc - 1864 - 520 pages
...insurance must be equally illegal, for it is an indemnity against the risks attending on such trading. War puts every individual of the respective governments, as well as the governments themselves, into a state of hostility with each other. There is no such thing as a war for arms and a peace for... | |
| James Kent - International law - 1866 - 526 pages
...commerce. The war puts an end at once to all dealing and all communication with each other, and places every individual of the respective governments, as...the governments themselves, in a state of hostility *. [And as it places every subject or citizen in hostility to the adverse party, and as each individual... | |
| James Kent - Law - 1866 - 722 pages
...commerce. The war puts an end at once to all dealing and all communication with each other, and places every individual of the respective governments, as * well as the governments themselves, in a * 67 state of hostility, (a) l This is equally the doctrine of all the authoritative writers on the... | |
| New York (State). Supreme Court, William Johnson - Law reports, digests, etc - 1867 - 510 pages
...the Jl"l":ir. ' J <:;property engaged in it to confiscation. War puts every indi- S-*^7,,R'"" vidual of the respective governments, as well as the governments...themselves, in a state of hostility with each other." Again; *f'Ol:"-R having a British license is illegal, and having an American license cannot neutralize... | |
| Law - 1888 - 564 pages
...anthority has it, that " war puts every individual of the respective governments, as well as the government themselves, in a state of hostility with each other;...may seize the persons and property of each other." On the other hand, it is confidently maintained, and with far greater reason, that the rule by which... | |
| Oliver Lorenzo Barbour, New York (State). Supreme Court - Law reports, digests, etc - 1871 - 706 pages
...Alexander's Cotton, (2 Wai. 419.) See also 1 Gallison's Rep. 295, where Judge Story declared that, " war put every individual of the respective governments, as...themselves, in a state of hostility with each other; that the subjects were in all respects considered as enemies." These general doctrines have been declared... | |
| Calvin Townsend - Commercial law - 1871 - 620 pages
...commerce. The war puts an end at once to all dealing and all communication with each other, and places every individual of the respective governments, as well as the governments themselves, in a state of hostility.1 It follows as a necessary consequence of this doctrine, that all contracts with the enemy,... | |
| James Kent - Law - 1873 - 820 pages
...all dealing and all communication with each other, and places every individual of the respec* 67 tive governments, as *well as the governments themselves, in a state of hostility, (a) This is equally the doctrine of all the authoritative writers on the law of nations, and of the... | |
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