| Great Britain. High Court of Admiralty, Christopher Robinson - Admiralty - 1806 - 458 pages
...explains it, from the commentators on the Canon Law, that there should be both the jus in rem, and the jus in re. — This is the general law of property,...countries, where a title is meant to be established, for tfiejirst time, some act? of possession is usually done and proclaimed as a notification of the fact.... | |
| Great Britain. High Court of Admiralty, Christopher Robinson - Admiralty - 1806 - 450 pages
...explains it, from the commentators on the Canon /• Law, that there mould be both the jus in rem, and the jus in re* — This is the general law of property, and applies, I conceive, no lefs to the right of territory than to other rights. Even in newly difcovered countries, where a title... | |
| Travers Twiss - Great Britain - 1846 - 304 pages
...been made known to other nations. "Thus Lord Stowell (in the Fama, 3 Rob. p. 115) lays it down, that " even in newly discovered countries, where a title...done and proclaimed as a notification of the fact. There can be no second discovery of a country. In this respect title by discovery differs from title... | |
| Richard Wildman - International law - 1849 - 662 pages
...should be both the jus in rem and the jus in re. It is the general principle of property and applies no less to the right of territory than to other rights. Even in newly discovered countries, where a right is meant to be established for the first time, some act of possession is usually done and proclaimed... | |
| Great Britain. High Court of Admiralty, William Robinson, Christopher Robinson - Admiralty - 1853 - 684 pages
...explains it, from tljfidommentators on the Canon Law, that there should be both the jus ytrem, and the jus in re. This is the general law of property,...rights. Even in newly discovered countries, where a [ * 116 ] title is meant to be established, for the first * time, some act of possession is usually... | |
| Robert Phillimore - International law - 1854 - 406 pages
...from the commentators on the Canon Law, that there should be both the jus in rem and the jus^in^re. This is the general law of property, and applies,...countries, where a title is meant to be established for theßrst time, some act of possession is usually done and proclaimed as a notification of the fact.... | |
| Sir Robert Phillimore - International law - 1857 - 666 pages
...conceive, no less to the right of territory than to other rights. Even in newly discovered countries when a title is meant to be established for the first time,...as a notification of the fact. In transfer, surely, when the former rights of others are to be superseded and extinguished, it cannot be less necessary... | |
| Robert Phillimore - International law - 1857 - 668 pages
...both right to the thing and possession of it; both jut ad rem, and jut in re. '< This," he observes, " is the general law of property, and applies, I conceive,...to other rights. Even in newly discovered countries when a title is meant to be established for the first time, some act of possession is usually done,... | |
| New Almaden quicksilver mines, Calif - 1860 - 1122 pages
...Barbeyrac explains it, from the commentators on the canon law, that there should be both the jus in rem and the jus in re. This is the' general law of property,...as a notification of the fact. In transfer surely, when the former rights of others are to be superseded and extinguished, it cannot be less necessary... | |
| Travers Twiss - International law - 1861 - 414 pages
...territory : it is an inoperative act. Lord Stowell11 has accordingly noticed, as an indisputable fact, that in newly discovered countries, where a title is meant...done and proclaimed as a Notification of the fact. §112. The mode of Notification, in other words, Notificawhat acts should be respected by the Comity... | |
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