The Chorzow Factory Case (1928, Germany V Poland) : Fact
The Chorzow Factory Case (1928, Germany V Poland) : Fact
The Chorzow Factory Case (1928, Germany V Poland) : Fact
Germany v Poland)
Principle:
It is a general principle of law as well as International law, that
any breach of agreement creates an obligation to make reparation.
Fact:
There was an agreement between Germany and Poland and that bilateral
treaty was known as the Geneva Upper Silesia convention 1922.
Issues:
1 Whether a state can be held responsible for expropriation of alien
property.
Reasoning:
The action of Poland was not expropriation in its real sense, it was
rather a seizure of property, right and interest which could not be
expropriated even against compensation, save under the special
conditions fixed by Art. 7 of the Upper Silesia convention of 1922. in
doing so, therefore, Poland acted contrary to its obligations.
FACTS
In its Judgment, the Court recalled that the Cameroons had formed
part of the possessions to which Germany renounced her rights
under the Treaty of Versailles and which had been placed under the
Mandates System of the League of Nations.
The latter divided its territory into the Northern Cameroons, which
was administered as part of Nigeria, and the Southern
Cameroons, which was administered as a separate province of
Nigeria.
The first was that there was no dispute between itself and the
Republic of Cameroon, and that if any dispute had at the date of
the Application existed it was between the Republic of Cameroon
and the United Nations.
The Court found in this connection that the opposing views of the
parties as to the interpretation and application of the
Trusteeship Agreement revealed the existence of a dispute, at the
date of the Application, in the sense recognised by the
jurisprudence of the Court.
But the seising of the Court was one thing, the administration
of justice was another.
Even if the Court, when seised, found that it had jurisdiction, it was
not compelled in every case to exercise that jurisdiction. It
exercised a judicial function which was circumscribed by
inherent limitations. Like the Permanent Court, it could not depart
from the essential rules guiding its activity as a Court.
The Republic of Cameroon did not dispute that the decisions of the
General Assembly would not be reversed or that the Trusteeship
Agreement would not be revived by a Judgment of the Court on the
merits, that the Northern Cameroons would not be joined to the
Republic of Cameroon, that its union with Nigeria would not be
invalidated, or that the United Kingdom would have no right or
authority to take any action with a view to satisfying the underlying
desires of the Republic of Cameroon. The function of the Court was
to state the law, but its judgments must be capable of having some
practical consequences.
DECISION
It might be contended that if, during the life of the Trusteeship, the
Trustee was responsible for some act in violation of its terms which
resulted in damage to another Member of the United Nations or to
one of its nationals, a claim for reparation would not be
liquidated by the termination of the Trust, but the Application of
the Republic of Cameroon sought only a finding of a breach of
the law and included no claim for reparation.
Whether or not at the moment the Application was filed there was
jurisdiction in the Court to adjudicate upon the dispute, circumstances
that had since arisen rendered any adjudication devoid of purpose.
Under these conditions, for the Court to proceed further in the case
would not, in its opinion, be a proper discharge of its duties.
For these reasons the Court did not feel called upon to pass
expressly upon the several submissions of the United
Kingdom and found that it could not adjudicate upon the
merits of the claim of the Federal Republic of Cameroon
Mavrommatis Case (Greece v. Britain) (1924)
Mm. Loder (President of the Permanent Court
of International Justice)
FACTS:
Britain imposed its preliminary objection and argued that Greece had no
standing in this case.
For the case to come under PCIJ jurisdiction, it must be that the dispute
cannot be settled by negotiation.
• The Court recognized that the State does not substitute itself for the
subject; it is asserting its own rights and, consequently, factors foreign to
the previous discussions between the individual and the competent
authorities may enter into the diplomatic negotiations. But it recognized
that the character of the dispute may render unnecessary the
renewed discussion on opposing contentions from which the original
dispute arose. It is a matter of consideration in each case.
Perm. Ct. of Arbitration, 2 U.N. Rep. Int’l Arb. Awards 829 (1928).
While the U.S. (P) maintained that it was part of the Philippines, the
Netherlands (D) claimed it as their own.
A title that is inchoate cannot prevail over a definite title found on the
continuous and peaceful display of sovereignty.
Facts.
Both the United States (P) laid claim to the ownership of the Island of
Palmas. While the U.S. (P) maintained that it was part of the Philippines,
the Netherlands (D) claimed it as their own.
The claim of the U.S. (P) was back up with the fact that the islands had
been ceded by Spain by the Treaty of Paris in 1898, and as
successor to the rights of Spain over the Philippines, it based its
claim of title in the first place on discovery.
Can a title which is inchoate prevail over a definite title found on the
continuous and peaceful display of sovereignty?