This Article explores the life salvage rules under the general maritime law and under the 1912 life salvage statute. Surprisingly, some life salvors had greater rights under the general maritime law than they have under cases construing the statute. This Article suggests that courts have given insufficient attention to the purposes of the Brussels Salvage Convention of 1910, which inspired the 1912 statute, and that American courts should .remain free to recognize all rights that life salvors possessed before the Brussels Convention. This Article then considers whether American courts should further expand the rights of life salvors by awarding life salvage even when no property is saved. A few courts have resorted to some ingenious device...
Diverse areas of law regulate acts of rescue, often inconsistently. For example, maritime law mandat...
Marine salvage is a fascinating area of the maritime industry and involves aspects that are unique c...
This paper, a contribution to the Troubled Waters: Combating Modern Piracy with the Rule of Law sy...
This Article explores the life salvage rules under the general maritime law and under the 1912 life ...
Many scholars argue that international maritime salvage law, and particularly American salvage law, ...
The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has recognized a quasi-contract remedy for...
The article looks into the historical development of the international law duty to save life at sea....
As the case of the Deepwater Horizon reveals, the consequences of an oil spill or any other marine i...
This Note asserts that courts should continue to apply the traditional maritime rescue doctrine alon...
In recent years, as technology permitting previously impossible underwater salvage operations has be...
Under U.S. maritime law, a salvor of imperiled maritime property on navigable waters is entitled to ...
Rescue and salvage operations take place in many sea voyages. Numerous technical and legal problems...
Current marine salvage law often provides only limited incentives for salvors to prevent pollution. ...
As late as 1893, state courts were not required to apply federal maritime law to common-law proceedi...
Admiralty Rule of Care and Cure A Limit of Liability - One of the very ancient doctrines of the ge...
Diverse areas of law regulate acts of rescue, often inconsistently. For example, maritime law mandat...
Marine salvage is a fascinating area of the maritime industry and involves aspects that are unique c...
This paper, a contribution to the Troubled Waters: Combating Modern Piracy with the Rule of Law sy...
This Article explores the life salvage rules under the general maritime law and under the 1912 life ...
Many scholars argue that international maritime salvage law, and particularly American salvage law, ...
The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has recognized a quasi-contract remedy for...
The article looks into the historical development of the international law duty to save life at sea....
As the case of the Deepwater Horizon reveals, the consequences of an oil spill or any other marine i...
This Note asserts that courts should continue to apply the traditional maritime rescue doctrine alon...
In recent years, as technology permitting previously impossible underwater salvage operations has be...
Under U.S. maritime law, a salvor of imperiled maritime property on navigable waters is entitled to ...
Rescue and salvage operations take place in many sea voyages. Numerous technical and legal problems...
Current marine salvage law often provides only limited incentives for salvors to prevent pollution. ...
As late as 1893, state courts were not required to apply federal maritime law to common-law proceedi...
Admiralty Rule of Care and Cure A Limit of Liability - One of the very ancient doctrines of the ge...
Diverse areas of law regulate acts of rescue, often inconsistently. For example, maritime law mandat...
Marine salvage is a fascinating area of the maritime industry and involves aspects that are unique c...
This paper, a contribution to the Troubled Waters: Combating Modern Piracy with the Rule of Law sy...