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International Responsibility to Corporate Bodies for Lives Lost by Outlawry

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2017

Extract

A novel case has recently arisen involving the liability of a foreign government to indemnify an American corporation (a missionary board) for the death of its employees by mob violence. The case grew out of the assault in 1905 of a mob of native Chinese upon the American Protestant Mission Station at Lienchou, province of Quantung, China, resulting in the death of four missionaries and one child.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1907

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References

1 U. S. Foreign Rel., 1868, p. 582.

2 For. Rel., 1874, pp. 734, 737; 1876, p. 386.

3 Moore’s Int. Law Digest, 815.

4 6 Moore’s Digest, 806.

5 6 Moore’s Digest, 801.

6 4 Sutherland on Damages, chap. 37, ed. 1903; 2 Sedgwick on Damages, chap. 18, ed. 1891.

7 New York Code of Civil Procedure, §§ 1902, 3 and 4.

8 Appendix to For. Rel., 1901, Mr. Rookhill’s Report, 106.