| United States. Supreme Court - Law reports, digests, etc - 1901 - 648 pages
...claimed, and as we believe for the first time by a court of the United States, that territory may come under the complete and absolute sovereignty and dominion of the United States and yet remain foreign. Judge Townsend has held in the case of Goetze v. The United States that although... | |
| United States - 1901 - 1234 pages
...claimed, and as we believe for the first time by a court of the United States, that territory may come under the complete and absolute sovereignty and dominion of the United States and yet remain foreign. Judge Townscnd has held in the case of Goetze r. The United States that although... | |
| Charles Henry Butler - Constitutional law - 1902 - 704 pages
...of the transaction. "The Philippines thereby ceased, in the language of the treaty, 'to be Spanish.' Ceasing to be Spanish, they ceased to be foreign country....stipulation that the native inhabitants should be mcorporated into the body politic, and none securing to them the right to choose their nationality.... | |
| Charles Henry Butler - Constitutional law - 1902 - 704 pages
...of the transaction. "The Philippines thereby ceased, in the language of the treaty, 'to be Spanish.' Ceasing to be Spanish, they ceased to be foreign country....government could be established. The result was the Snmo although there was no stipulation that the native inhabitants should be tucorporated into the... | |
| Andrew Cunningham McLaughlin, Albert Bushnell Hart - United States - 1914 - 794 pages
...country. They came under the complete and absolute sovereignly and dominion of the United States, and NO became territory of the United States over which civil government could be etsablished. The result was the same, although there was uo stipulatlou that the native Inhabitants... | |
| Michigan. Attorney General's Office, Michigan. Department of Attorney General - 1915 - 680 pages
...practically the same basis, and that the Philippine Islands were not a foreign country but were rather "territory of the United States over which civil government could be established." Inter-state Commerce Commission v. Steamship Co., 224 US 474 may also be cited in support of the conclusion... | |
| George A. Malcolm - Law - 1916 - 824 pages
...Court, having in mind the title acquired by the Treaty of Paris, has further said that the Philippines "came under the complete and absolute sovereignty and dominion of the United States." ao Again the Court said that "The jurisdiction and authority of the United States" over the Philippines... | |
| United States. District Court (Hawaii) - Court rules - 1918 - 1016 pages
...used this language: " 'The Philippines thereby ceased, in the language of the treaty, 'to be Spanish'. Ceasing to be Spanish, they ceased to be foreign country....absolute sovereignty and dominion of the United States, over which civil government could be established. " 'The result was the same although there was no... | |
| |