% INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER.
important stage in the movement; they conformed to
the basic principles of war under the conditions then
prevailing. Neutral traders afford very real assistance
to belligerents by carriage of goods to and for them,
and modern means of communication and the complexity
of the social and economic organisation of the world are
such that, just as the Prize Courts of the United States
were justified by their extension of the doctrine of
Continuous Voyage, so the Prize Courts of Great Britain
were similarly bound to take cognisance of the new
conditions. The Arbitral Tribunal which adjudicated on
the claims against the United States under the Treaty
of Washington, 1871, in practically all their awards
supported the decisions of the American Prize Courts.
Viewing the decisions as a whole, it is believed that
there is no greater extension of the principles of Inter-
national Law by the decisions of the Prize Courts under
review than in the American cases. International Law
must take cognisance of existing conditions.
The work of the English Prize Court was very heavy ;
the number of cases dealt with was great. Altogether
a sum of about £15,000,000 was allocated to the
Naval Prize Fund, and about £8,000,000 went to the
Exchequer, to which Department belong the droits of
Admiralty, as distinct from the droits of the Crown,
which were allocated to the Naval Prize Fund by the
Naval Prize Act, 1918.
In connection with the work of the Navy it is
necessary to advert to a practice, which became the
ordinary one during the war, of diverting neutral vessels
for search in port, instead of effecting this operation at
sea, as was the practice in the old wars. The legality
of this practice, which is an extension of the undoubted
Iv