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3. Responsibility of individuals for violation of neutral duties. 278
4. Where a citizen offers supplies to an enemy
5. Neutral vessels transporting enemy's goods
6. Opinions of English and American text-writers.
7. Neutral goods in enemy's vessels
8. Maxims of 'free ships free goods' and 'enemy ships enemy
23. Effect on American commerce of the rule of 1793
24. Opinions of Story and of Phillimore
25. Views of American Government
26. Change of British colonial policy
279
281
282
17.
Constructive joint captures not allowed to privateers .
18. Captures by revenue cutters
362
363
365
366
367
371
373
374
375
376
377.
2.
1. Validity of a maritime capture, how determined.
Why prize courts of other countries cannot condemn
3. Apparent exceptions to rule
393
394
395
17. Cases of England and Prussia in 1753, and of the United
States and Denmark in 1830.
407
409
I.
Rights of Military Occupation
Distinction between military occupation and complete con-
7. Effect of military occupation under the law of England
8. Under the constitution of the United States.
432
433
436
437
438
439
443
444
PARA.
9. Distinction concerning relations of inhabitants with regard
10.
II.
12.
to foreign States
In regard to States of the Union
Collection and use of revenues in such territory.
Transfer of private property
13. Laws relating to such transfers .
14. Allegiance of inhabitants of occupied territory
15. Lawful resistance and insurrection
16. Implied obligations of the conquered
17. Of the conqueror
18.
Right of revolution.
PAGE
445
446
447
448
CHAPTER XXXIV
Rights of Complete Conquest
17. Laws of conquered territory and the constitution of the new
State
485
18. How far laws of military occupation continue after complete