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Decision by the Swiss Federal Court Concerning the International and Constitutional Effects of Territorial Possession and the Duty of a Succeeding State to Recognize the Concessions Granted by its Predecessor

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2017

Abstract

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Type
Judicial Decisions Involving Questions of International Law
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1907

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References

1 Compare: Max Huber, Ein Beitrag zur Lehre von der Gebietshoheit an Grenz-fluessen, in the first volume of Zeitschrift für Völkerrecht und Bundesstaatsrecht (1906), pp. 29–52, 159–217.

2 According to Art. 110 of the Federal Constitution suits may be brought in the Federal Court in matters of private law between cantons on the one side and private persons or corporations on the other side.

3 An appeal might in a given case take place also on account of the violation of a right guaranteed by the Federal Constitution, e. g., that of freedom of trade or of equality (arbitrary treatment) or of a right guaranteed by the constitution of Schaffhausen.

4 The above case is translated from the first volume of the Zeitschrift für Völkerrecht und Bundesstaatsrecht (1906), pp. 275–283.

5 Zeitschrift für Völkerrecht und Bundesstaatsrecht (1906), pp. 213–217.