Earl Russell himself, so swift to make this concession, is led to confess the necessity of Prize Courts on the part of ocean belligerents, and thus exposes the irrational character of his own work.
Prize Courts may be instituted by belligerents in any part of their territory or the territories of allies, but not on neutral territory.
The origin[379] of Prize Courts is to be traced back to the end of the Middle Ages.
By an act of 1894 further provision is made for the constitution of prize courts in British possessions.
The district courts have all the powers of a court of admiralty whether as instance or prize courts (Glass v.
The questions upon which shippers are really desirous of information (which they are, however, perhaps not likely to obtain, otherwise than from decisions of prize Courts) are of a less elementary character.
In regard to the actual administration of these laws of prize distribution the decisions of prize courts in cases where the questions of distribution have arisen furnish the most satisfactory clue to the practice.
They have no provinces, no towns, no ports, no prize courts.
A cruiser without accountability to Prize Courts is a lawless monster which civilized nations cannot sanction.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "prize courts" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.