Public International Law Notes 1
Public International Law Notes 1
Public International Law Notes 1
and MELFA
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2.
(e.g.
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Municipal Law
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It should be presumed that municipal law is always enacted by each state with
due regard for and never in defiance of the generally accepted principles of
international law. (Co Kim Chan v. Valdez Tan Keh).
It is a settled principle of international law that a sovereign cannot be permitted to
set up his own municipal law as a bar to a claim by foreign sovereign for a wrong
done to the latter's subject. (US v Guatemala).
Constitution v. Treaty
Generally, the treaty is rejected in the local forum but is upheld by international
tribunals as ademandable obligation of the signatories under the principle of
pacta sunt servanda.
Pacta Sunt Servanda international agreements must be performed in Good
Faith. A treaty engagement is not a mere moral obligation but creates a legally
binding obligation on the parties. A state which has contracted a valid
international obligation is bound to make in its legislation such modifications as
may be necessary to ensure the fulfillment of the obligations undertaken.
The Philippine Constitution however contains provisions empowering the
judiciary to annul treaties thereby establishing the primacy of the local law
over the international agreement.
Art. X, Sec. 2(2) provides that all cases involving the constitutionality of any
treaty, executive agreement or law shall be heard and decided by the Supreme
Court en banc, and no treaty, executive agreement or law may be declared
unconstitutional without the concurence of ten justices.
The Constitution authorizes the nullification of a treaty not only when it conflicts
with the Constitution but also when it runs counter to an act of Congress.
(Gonzales v. Hechanova).
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CHAPTER 2
THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
International Community the body of juridical entities which are governed by
the law of nations.
Composition of International community:
1. State
2. United Nations
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3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
1. States
State a group of people living together in a definite territory under an
independent government organized for political ends and capable of entering into
international relations.
Some writers no loner recognized the distinction between state and nation,
pointing out that these two terms are now used in an identical sense.
Nevertheless, a respectable number of jurists still hold that the state is a legal
concept, the nation is only a racial or ethnic concept.
Elements of A State
1.
2.
3.
4.
People
Territory
Government
Sovereignty
B. Territory the fixed portion of the surface of the earth inhabited by the
people of the State.
The size is irrelevant. (San Marino v. China). But, practically, must not be too
big as to be difficult to administer and defend; but must not be too small as to
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Dependent states fall into two general categories: the protectorate and
the suzerainty. However, there is no unanimity as to their basic
distinctions in terms of measure of control over its external affairs.
Composite state one which consists two or more states, each with its
own separate government but bound under central authority exercising, to
a greater or less degree, control over their external relations.
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assuring to the Holy See absolute and visible independence and of guaranteeing
to it absolute and indisputable sovereignty in the field of international relations.
6. Belligerent Communities
When a portion of the population rises up in arms against the legitimate
government of the state, and such conflict widens and aggravates, it may
become necessary to accord the rebels recognition of belligerency.
For purposes of the conflict, and pending determination of whether or not the
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8. Individuals
Traditional concept regards the individual only as an object of international law
who can act only through the instrumentality of his own state in matters involving
other states.
Of late, however, the view has grown among many writers that the individual is
not merely an object but a subject of international law. One argument is that the
individual is the basic unit of society, national and international, and must
therefore ultimately governed by the laws of this society.
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CHAPTER 3
THE UNITED NATIONS
The United Nations emerged out of the travail of World war II as symbol of man's
undismayed determination to establish for all nations a rule of law that would
forever banish the terrible holocaust of war in the so9lution of international
disputes.
The first formal step toward the creation of the United Nations was the Moscow
Declaration, signed by the representatives of China, the Soviet Union, the United
Kingdom, and the United States.
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The Charter is intended to apply not only to the members of the Organization but
also to non-member states so far as may be necessary for the maintenance of
international peace and security.
Amendments to the Charter shall come into force by a vote of two-thirds of the
members of the General Assembly and ratified in accordance with their
respective constitutional processes by two-thirds of the Members of the United
Nations.
Purposes
The purposes of the Charter are expressed in Article 1 as follows:
1. Maintain international peace and security;
2. Develop friendly relations among nations;
3. Achieve international cooperation in solving international problems;
4. Be a center for harmonizing the actions of nations in the attainment of
these common ends.
Principles
The Seven Cardinal Principles ( as enumerated in Article 2):
1. The Organization is based on the principle of the sovereign equality of all
its members;
2. All Members shall fulfill in good faith the obligations assumed by them
in accordance with the present Charter;
3. All Members shall settle their international disputes by peaceful
means;
4. All Members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or
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Membership
Two Kinds of members in the United Nations
1. Original those which, having participated in the United Nations
Conference on International Organization at San Francisco or having
previously signed the Declaration by the United Nations of January 1,
1942, signed and ratified the Charter of the United Nations.
2. Elective
In addition to the original members, other members may be admitted to the
United Nations by decision of the General Assembly upon the favorable
recommendation of the Security Council.
Membership Qualifications to the United Nations
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
It must be a state;
It must be peace-loving;
It must accept the obligations of the Charter;
It must be able to carry out these obligations; and,
It must be willing to carry out these obligations;
Suspension of Members
As in the case of admission, suspension is effected by two-thirds of those
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Expulsion of Members
A member which has persistently violated the principles contained in the Charter
may be expelled by two-0thirds of those present and voting in the General
Assembly upon the recommendation of the Security Council by a qualified
majority vote.
Withdrawal of Members
No provision on withdrawal of membership was included in the Charter because
of the fear that it might encourage successive withdrawals that would weaken the
Organization.
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such
as
initiating
studies
and
making
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The jurisdiction of the Court is based on the consent of the parties as manifested
under the optional jurisdiction clause in Article 36 of the Statute.
Advisory opinions may be given by the Court upon request of the General
Assembly or the Security Council, as well as other organs of the United Nations,
when authorized by the General Assembly, on legal questions arising within the
scope of their activities.
F. The Secretariat
It is the chief administrative organ of the United Nations which is headed by the
Secretary-General.
The Secretary-General is chosen by the General Assembly upon the
recommendation of the Security Council. His term is fixed at five years by
resolution of the general Assembly, and he may be re-elected.
The Secretary-General is the highest representative of the United Nations and is
authorized to act in its behalf. When acting in this capacity, he is entitled to full
diplomatic immunities and privileges which only the Security Council may waive.
The Secretary-General also acts as secretary in all meetings of the General
Assembly, the Security Council, the Economic and Social Council and the
Trusteeship Council and performs such other functions as may be assigned to
him by these organs.
In addition, he prepares the budget of the United Nations for submission to the
General Assembly, provides technical facilities to the different organs of the
Organization, and in general coordinates its vast administrative machinery.
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CHAPTER 4
THE CONCEPT OF THE STATE
As the basic unit of the international community, the state is the principal subject
of international law.
People
Territory
Government
Sovereignty
Revolution
Unification
Secession
Assertion of independence
AgreementsAttainment of civilization
Succession of States
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State succession takes place when one state assumes the rights and some of
the obligations of another because of certain changes in the condition of the
latter.
Universal Succession when a state is annexed to another state or is totally
dismembered or merges with another state to form a new state.
Partial Succession when a portion of the territory of a state secedes or is
ceded to another or when an independent state becomes a protectorate or a
suzerainty or when a dependent state acquires full sovereignty.
The political laws of the former sovereign are automatically abrogated and
may be restored only by a positive act on the part of the new sovereign.
All rights of the predecessor state are inherited by the successor state but
this is not so where the liabilities are concerned.
Succession of Governments
One government replaces another either peacefully or by violent methods. In
both instances, the integrity of the state is not affected; the state continues as the
same international person except only that its lawful representative is changed.
The rule is that where the new government was organized by virtue of a
constitutional reform, the obligations of the replaced government are also
completely assumed by the former.
Conversely, where the new government was established through violence, it may
lawfully reject the purely personal or political obligations of the predecessor
government but not those contracted by it in the ordinary course of official
business.
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CHAPTER 5
RECOGNITION
Even if an entity has already acquired the elements of international personality, it
is not for this reason alone automatically entitled to membership in the family of
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Objects of Recognition
Recognition may be extended to:
a. State, which is generally held to be irrevocable and imports the recognition of
its government;
b. Government, which may be withdrawn and does not necessarily signify the
existence of a state as the government may be that of a mere colony; and,
c. Belligerency, which does not produce the same effects as the recognition of
states and governments because the rebels are accorded international
personality only in connection with the hostilities they are waging.
Kinds of Recognition
1. Express recognition may be verbal or in writing;
2. Implied recognition when the recognizing state enters into official
intercourse with the new member by exchanging diplomatic
representatives with it, etc.
The Act of Recognition is Indicative of the Following Intentions
1. To treat with the new state as such;
2. To accept the new government as having authority to represent the state;
3. To recognize in the case of insurgents that they are entitled to exercise
belligerent rights.
Recognition of State
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The recognition of a new state is the free act by which one or more states
acknowledge the existence on a definite territoryof a human society politically
organized, independent of any other existing state, and capable of observing the
obligations of international law, and by which they manifest therefore their
intention to consider it a member of the international community.
Recognition of Governments
The recognition of the new government of a state which has been already
recognized is the free act by which one or several states acknowledge that a
person or a group of persons are capable of binding the state which they claim to
represent and witness their intention to enter into relations with them.
Two Kinds of Governments
1. De Jure
2. De facto
Three Kinds of De Facto Government
1. That which is established by the inhabitants who rise in revolt against and
depose the legitimate regime;
2. That which is established in the course of war by the invading forces of
one belligerent in the territory of other belligerent, the government of which
is also displaced; and,
3. That which is established by the inhabitants of a state who secede
therefrom without overthrowing its government.
Tobar or Wilson Principle recognition shall not be extended to any
government established by revolution, civil war, coup d'etat or other forms of
internal violenceuntil the freely elected representatives of the people have
organized a constitutional government.
In any event, the practice of most states now is to extend recognition to a new
government only if it is shown that it has control of the administrative machinery
of the state with popular acquiesence and that it is willing to comply with its
international obligations.
Distinctions between the two kinds of recognition
De Jure
De Facto
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Relatively permanent;
Provisional;
Does not;
Recognition of Belligerency
A belligerency exists when the inhabitants of a state rise up in arms for the
purpose of overthrowing the legitimate government.
Conditions for A Belligerent Community to Be Recognized
1. There must be an organized civil government directing the rebel forces;
2. The rebels must occupy a substantial portion of the territory of the state;
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3. The conflict between the legitimate government and the rebels must be
serious, making the outcome uncertain; and,
4. The rebels must be willing and able to observe the laws of war.
CHAPTER 6
THE RIGHT OF EXISTENCE AND SELF-DEFENSE
Once a state comes into being, it is invested with certain rights described as
fundamental.
Fundamental Rights of A State
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
The most important of these rights is the right of existence and self-defense,
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because all other rights are supposed to flow or be derived from it. By virtue of
this right, the state may take measures, including the use of force, as may be
necessary to counteract any danger to its existence.
Requisites of Right
In Art. 51 of the Charter of the United Nations, it is provided that Nothing in the present Charter shall impair the inherent right of individual or
collective self-defense if any armed attack occurs against a member of the
United Nations, until the Security Council has taken the measures necessary for
the maintenance of international peace and security. xxx
The presence of an armed attack to justify the exercise of the right of the selfdefense under this article suggests that forcible measures may be taken by a
state only in the face of necessity of self-defense, instant, overwhelming and
leaving no choice of means and no moment for deliberation.
Regional Arrangements
Collective self-defense is recognized not only in Article 51 of the Charter of the
United Nations but also in Art. VII on Regional Arrangements ... provided that
such arrangements or agencies and their activities are consistent with the
Purposes and Principles of the United Nations (Art. 52, Sec. 1 of the Charter of
the United Nations).
Aggression Defined
Definition of agression as adopted by the U.N. General Assembly on December
14, 1974:
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Article 1
Aggression is the use of armed force by a State against the sovereignty,
territorial integrity or political independence of another state, or in any other
manner inconsistent with the Charter of the United Nations.
Article 3
Any of the following acts qualify as an act of agression
a. The invasion or attack by the armed forces of a state of the territory of another
state;
b. bombardment by the armed forces of a state against the territory of another
state;
c. The blackade of the ports or coasts of a state by the armed forces of another
state;
d. An attack by the armed forces on land, sea or air forces, or marine or air fleets
of another state;
e. The use of armed forces of one state in the territory of another state with the
agreement of the receiving state, in contravention of the conditions provided for
in the agreement or any extension of their presence in such territory beyond the
termination of the agreement;
f. The action of the state in allowing its territory, which it has placed at the
disposal of another state, to be used by that other state perpetrating an act of
agression against a third state; and,
g. The sending by or on behalf of a state of armed force against another state of
such gravity as to amount to the acts listed above, or its substantial involvement
therein.
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CHAPTER 7
THE RIGHT OF INDEPENDENCE
Sovereignty is the supreme, uncontrollable power inherent in a state by which
that state is governed. It is the supreme power of the State to command and
enforce obedience, the power to which, legally speaking, all interests are
practically subject and all wills subordinate.
Nature of Independence
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Intervention
In addition, the state must abstain from intervention. Even as it expects its
independence to be respected by other states, so too must it be prepared to
respect their own independence.
Intervention an act by which a state interferes with the domestic or foreign
affairs of another state or states through the employment of force or the threat of
force.
The use of force is only allowed under the Charter of the United Nations when it
is exercised as an act of self-defense, or when it is decreed by the Security
Council as a preventive or enforcement action for the maintenance of
international peace and security.
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CHAPTER 8
THE RIGHT OF EQUALITY
In Article 2 of the Charter of the United Nations, it is announced that the
Organization is based on the principle of the sovereign equality of all its
Members.
In the provision of the Montevideo Convention of 1933, states are juridically
equal, enjoy the same rights, and have equal capacity in their exercise.
Essence of Equality
In international law, equality among states does not signify parity in physical
power, political influence or economic status or prestige.
The Principle of Equality all the rights of state, regardless of their number,
must be obsreved or respected by the international community in the same
manner as rights of other states are observed and respected.
Accordingly, all members of the United Nations have each one vote in the
General Assembly, all votes having equal weight, and are generally eligible for
positions in the various organs of the United Nations. Every state has the right to
the protection of its nationals, to make use of the open seas, or to acquire or
dispose territory.
Under the rule of par in parem, non habet imperium, even the strongest state
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state cannot assume jurisidction over another state, no matter how weak.
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CHAPTER 9
TERRITORY
Territory the fixed portion of the surface of the earth inhabited by the people of
the state.
As previously observed, the territory must be big enough to provide for the needs
of the population but should not be so extensive as to be difficult to administer or
defend from external aggression.
by abandonment or dereliction
by cession
by subjugation
by revolution and
by natural causes
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Discovery alone, without any subsequent act, cannot at the present time
suffice to prove sovereignty over the Island of Palmas.... (Island of
Palmas Case)
Besides the animus occupandi, the actual and not the nominal taking of
possession is necessary condition of occupation.
This taking of
possession consists... steps to exercise exclusive authority there.
(Clipperton Island Case)
Dereliction
Requisites of Valid Dereliction
1. act of withdrawal, and
2. the intention to abandon
Hence, where the forces of the state are driven away from the territory by the
natives, title is not thereby necessarily forfeited, as it may be that they intend to
to return with the necessary reinforcements to suppress the resistance.
If such intention is not present, the territory itself becomes res nullius or terra
nullius, becoming open once again to the territorial ambitions of other states.
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Prescription
There is as yet no rule in international law fixing the period of possession
necessary to transfer title to the territory from the former to the subsequent
sovereign.
Cession
Cession is a method by which territory is transferred by one state to another
by voluntary agreement between them.
Cession may be in the form of sale, donation, barter or exchange, and even by
testamentary disposition.
Subjugation
Subjugation is when, having been previously conquered or occupied in the
course of war by the enemy, it is formally annexed to it at the end of the war.
Requisites of Valid Subjugation
1. conquest
2. annexation
Accretion
Accretion is a mode of acquiring territory based on the principle of accessio
cedat principali. It is accomplished through both or natural or artificial processes.
Components of Territory
Territtory of the State Consists of the Following:
1. Terrestrial Domain
2. Maritime and Fluvial Domain
3. Aerial Domain
A. The Terrestrial Domain
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CHAPTER 10
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JURISDICTION
Jurisdiction is the authority exercised by the state over persons and things within
or sometimes outside its territory, subject to certain exceptions.
General Classifications of Jurisdiction
1. Personal Jurisdiction
2. Territorial Jurisdiction
Subjects of State Jurisdiction
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
its nationals
the terrestrial domain
the maritime and fluvial domain
the continental shelf
the open seas
the aerial domain
outer space
other territories
Personal Jurisdiction
Personal jurisdiction is the power exercised by the state over its nationals. It
is based on the theory that a national is entitled to the protection of his state
wherever he may be and is, therefore, bound to it by a duty of obedience and
allegiance.
Article 15 of the Civil Code: laws relating to family rights and duties, or to
the status, condition and legal capacity of persons, are binding upon
citizens of the Philippines, even though living abroad.
Under Article 16 of the Civil Code: intestate and testamentary succession, both
with respect to the other of succession and to the amount of successional rights
and to the intrinsic validity of testamentary provisions, shall be regulated by the
national law of the person whose succession is under consideration, whatever may
be the nature of the property and regardless of the country wherein said property
may be found.
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Indeed, even an alien may be held subject to the laws of a state whose national
interest he has violated, and notwithstanding that the offense was committed
outside its territory.
Article 2 of the Revised Penal Code, for instance, punishes any person
who, whether in or outside our territory, should forge or counterfeit
Philippine currency, utter such spurious securities or commit any crime
against our national security or the law of the nations.
Territorial Jurisdiction
General rule: a state has jurisdiction over all persons and property within its
territory.
The jurisdiction of the nation within its own territory is necessary, exclusive and
absolute. It is susceptible of no limitation not imposed by itself (The Schooner
Exchange v McFaddon).
Exceptions:
1. Foreign states, heads of states, diplomatic representatives, and consuls to
a certain degree;
Foreign states and their heads are exempt because of the sovereign
equality of states and on the theory that a contrary rule would disturb
the peace of nations. Diplomats and consuls enjoy the exemption in
order that they may have full freedom in the discharge of their official
functions.
1. Acts of state;
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Land Jurisdiction
Everything found within the territorial domain of the state is under its jurisdiction.
Nationals and aliens, including non-residents, are bound by its laws, and no
process from a foreign government can take effect for or against them within the
territory of the local state without its permission.
Also, as against all other states, the local state has exclusive title to all property
within its territory which it may own in its own corporate capacity or regulate
when under private ownership through its police power for forcibly acquire
through the power of eminent domain. Such property is also subject to its taxing
power.
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English rule the coastal state shall have jurisdiction over all offenses
committed on board, except only where they do not compromise the peace of the
port.
French rule the flag state shall have jurisdiction over all offenses committed
on board such vessel, except only where they compromise the peace of the port.
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Aerial Jurisdiction
There are no traditional rules in international law regarding the rights of the
subjacent state to its aerial domain.
Nonetheless, it may be said that the consensus appears to be that the local state
has jurisdiction over the airspace above it to an unlimited height, or at the most
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