that, if any person escaped alive out of the ship, it should be no wreck: and, after various modifications, it was decided, in the reign of Henry III, that if goods were cast on shore, having any marks by which they could be identified, they were to revert... Encyclopaedia Americana: A Popular Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature ... - Page 264edited by - 1833Full view - About this book
| Sir William Blackstone - 1807 - 686 pages
...was consonant neither to reason nor humanity. Wherefore [291] it was first ordained by king Henry I. that if any person escaped alive out of the ship it should be no wreck*; and afterwards king Henry II, by his charter 1 ", declared, that if on the coasts of either England, Poictou,... | |
| Great Britain. Court of King's Bench, James Burrow - 1812 - 450 pages
...a beast, cat, or other living thing came to shore " with the wreck, or not." Henri/ 1st. ordained, that if any person escaped alive out of the ship, it should be no wreck.. Henry 2d by his charter, declared that if any roan or beast should escape or be found alive in the... | |
| Great Britain. Court of King's Bench, James Burrow - 1812 - 446 pages
...a beast, cat, or other living thing came to shore " with the wreck, or not." Henri/ 1st. ordained, that if any person escaped alive out of the ship, it should be no wreck. Henry 2d by his charter, declared that if any man or beast should escape or be found alive in the ship,... | |
| Sir William Blackstone - 1825 - 660 pages
...and was consonant neither to reason nor humanity. Wherefore it was first ordained by king Henry I. that if any person escaped alive out of the ship it should be no wreck »; and afterwards king Henry II., by his charter b, declared, that if on the coasts of either England, Poictou,... | |
| William Blackstone - 1825 - 572 pages
...and was consonant neither to reason nor humanity. Wherefore it was first ordained by king Henry I. that if any person escaped alive out of the ship it should be no wreck a ; and afterwards king Henry II., by his charter i>, declared, that if on the coasts of either England,... | |
| John Ramsay McCulloch - 1833 - 146 pages
...England it was adjudged, so early as the reign of Henry I., that if any person escaped alive out of a ship it should be no wreck. And after various modifications...they could be identified, they were to revert to the owners, if claimed any time within a year and a day. The statute 27 Edward III., cap. 13, enacted,... | |
| John Ramsay McCulloch - 1833 - 142 pages
...England it was adjudged, so early as the reign of Henry I., that if any person escaped alive out of a ship it should be no wreck. And after various modifications...they could be identified, they were to revert to the owners, if claimed any time within a year and a day. The statute 27 Edward III., cap. 13, enacted,... | |
| William Blackstone - 1836 - 694 pages
...and was consonant neither to reason nor humanity. Wherefore it was first *ordained by King Henry I. that if any person escaped alive out of the ship, it should be no wreck (a) ; and afterwards King Henry II. by his charter (b) declared, that if, on the coasts of either England,... | |
| William Blackstone, James Stewart - 1839 - 556 pages
...and was consonant neither to reason nor humanity. Wherefore it was first ordained by king Henry I., that if any person escaped alive out of the ship it should be no wreck ;S and afterwards king Henry II., by his charter, 11 declared, that if on the coasts of either England,... | |
| George Lillie Craik - 1844 - 776 pages
...custom, which made all wrecks the property of the crown, as to have enacted, that, if any human being escaped alive out of the ship, it should be no wreck; and his grandson still farther extended the operation of the humane principle thus introduced, by decreeing,... | |
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