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Responsibility of states for damage caused in their territory to the person or property of foreigners

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fullscreen: Responsibility of states for damage caused in their territory to the person or property of foreigners

Monograph

Identifikator:
1831665921
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-222025
Document type:
Monograph
Author:
Maúrtua, Víctor M.
Scott, James Brown http://d-nb.info/gnd/117654191
Title:
Responsibility of states for damage caused in their territory to the person or property of foreigners
Place of publication:
New York
Publisher:
Oxford Univ. Press
Year of publication:
1930
Scope:
V, 67 S.
Digitisation:
2022
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Chapter

Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
III. Municipal legislation
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • Responsibility of states for damage caused in their territory to the person or property of foreigners
  • Title page
  • I. The basis of state responsibility
  • II. Acts of state organs
  • III. Municipal legislation
  • IV. Mediate and immediate state responsibility
  • V. Acts of the legislative organ
  • VI. The administration of justice
  • VII. Protection of aliens
  • VIII. Exhaustion of logical remedies
  • IX. Civil war, insurrctions and mob violence
  • X. Self-defence, necessity and rescission

Full text

24 
RESPONSIBILITY OF STATES 
laws which are also binding in international circles, and others which entail 
responsibility due to their breach of international principles. The cases 
in which the State undertakes the obligation to establish and maintain 
special rights differ from the regular functions of the government to pro- 
vide for the organization of its various branches, or the enactment of laws 
to adopt certain measures, or preparatory to the exercise of its powers, or 
the discharge of obligations contracted with the other States. These laws 
place the State in a better position, anticipating the propriety of its inter- 
national conduct. The failure to enact these laws, or their repeal after 
being in force, however, do not involve responsibility. This arises as a 
rule from the acts of the State, irrespective of whether or not they are 
due to lack of proper legislation. Also, a municipal law is implicitly essen- 
tial whenever the obligation imposed upon the State cannot be discharged 
xcept in the form of a law,! or without the sanction of legal provisions.? 
The municipal laws may be contrary to the international law, either 
because they have been enacted in the face of an obligation not to legislate 
on the subject, or because such laws contain provisions whereby the organs 
of the State are compelled to act in violation in international usage. In 
such cases it is not the municipal law itself which gives rise to the responsi- 
sility of the State, but the acts of the State agents. = “Municipal laws”— 
according to the Permanent World Court—*“‘are simply the expressions of 
t“As an exception, it must be admitted that where, by definition, the obligation 
placed upon the State cannot be executed except through the enactment of a law, then 
the convention considers it is unnecessary to refer specifically to this point. As all 
subjective rights and duties cannot be enforced except by a positive enactment, and in 
the case of modern treaties dealing with the establishment and practice of professions, 
copyrights, etc, the purpose is to afford proper mutual guaranties to the nationals of 
he various States by means of public and private laws, the promise to give them such 
rights usually already carries with it the obligation to enact or maintain the positive 
aw which will establish such rights. Finally, the State is always compelled to enact 
‘aws because, under the principles of its own municipal jurisprudence, whenever it has 
an act to perform or a contract to execute, this cannot be accomplished except by the 
authorization of a law. When a State, by virtue of an international convention, must 
issue orders to authorities or individuals, it cannot do so in the immense majority of 
cases, except by means of a law, and not through an ‘administrative act’ or a decree.” 
(Rechtsverfiigung) Triepel, Rapports du droit international avec le droit interne, p. 298. 
'“The State enacts the law in this instance, because without same, it would not be, 
in accordance with its municipal jurisprudence, in a position to fulfil its international 
Juties—as, for instance, the duty to punish—either because without the enactment of a 
State law an act ordered by the Law of Nations could not be performed, or else be- 
cause without the State law, an act forbidden by international law could not be omitted. 
Therefore, it is not the international law which compels the legislature to act, but the 
municipal jurisprudence itself. When there are rights ordered to be immediately 
established, the act which the international law requires the State to perform is the 
anactment of the law creating such right, and thus the State places itself, as regards 
its own jurisprudence and by reason of such new enactment, in a position to execute 
an act ordered by international law. Heretofore the failure to legislate or the repeal 
of laws in force was already in itself contrary to the law; but now the violation con- 
sists in the fact that the State has either failed to perform the act that the law re- 
juires, or that it has performed an act which the law forbids.” (Triepel. Rapports du 
iroit international avec le droit interne, p. 200.)
	        

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Responsibility of States for Damage Caused in Their Territory to the Person or Property of Foreigners. Oxford Univ. Press, 1930.
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