cap. 11] LIMITATION OF LEGISLATION 379 the wide power given in that Act it was possible to prevent all British ships from engaging in the fisheries, however far out at sea, without taking out a licence, and in effect, as the fishery could only be carried on by vessels which could rely on the use of the shore for stores and shelter, it was possible, as shown in 1911, to require all foreign vessels to take out a licence and pay the fees as a condition of using the shore at all. The other case is that of The Queen v. Delepine,! in which, as in the former case, the waters of Newfoundland were held in the case of bays to extend from a line drawn three miles from headland to headland, quoting the decision of the Chief Justice of Newfoundland and of the Privy Council in Anglo-American Telegraph Co. v. The Direct United States Co. ? where it was laid down that Conception Bay was territorial waters of Newfoundland. The well-known Canadian case of the Frederick Gerring® illustrates, however, only the ordinary three-mile limit if the evidence is to be accepted as correct. At the same time it may be noted that in a recent case? the Canadian Supreme Court has adopted the doctrine that capture of a vessel which has just infringed some local law in territorial waters while it is being hotly pursued from these waters is lawful even if the capture is outside the three-mile limit, as it is recognized as legal in international law, and there seems nothing to justify us in supposing that the doctrine would not be upheld if an appeal had been brought to the Privy Council on the question. The Court evidently considered the usual question of the limitation of authority and decided against it, on the ground that the power of the fishing regulation could not be exercised effec- tively without it. It may be noted also that the Natal Treason Court held that it could punish treason committed outside 1 1897 Newfoundland Decisions, 378. It arose out of an alleged con- travention of the Bait Act, 50 Vict. c. 1. * 2 App. Cas. 394. See also the Hague Arbitration Award of 1910, which accepts the judgement, Cd. 5396, p. 23. Chaleurs Bay is territorial accord- ing to Mowat v. McFee, 5S. C. R. 66. * (1897) 27 8. C. R. 271, a decision much resented in the United States. The Ship < North® v. The King, 37 8. C. R. 385; and cf. Hall, Inter- national Law p. 246.