TREATY, international
law. A treaty is a compact made between two or more independent nations
with a view to the public welfare treaties are for a perpetuity, or for
a considerable time. Those matters which are accomplished by a single
act, and are at once perfected in their execution, are called
agreements, conventions and pactions.
2.
On the part of the United States, treaties are made by the president,
by and with the consent of the senate, provided two-thirds of the
senators present concur. Const. article 2, s. 2, n. 2.
3.
No state shall enter into any treaty, alliance or confederation; Const.
art. 1, s. 10, n. 1; nor shall any state, without the consent of
congress, enter into any agreement or compact with another state, or
with a foreign power. Id. art. 1, see. 10, n. 2; 3 Story on the Const.
§1395.
4.
A treaty is declared to be the supreme law of the land, and is
therefore obligatory on courts; 1 Cranch, R. 103; 1 Wash. C. C. R. 322 1
Paine, 55; whenever it operates of itself without the aid of a
legislative provision; but when the terms of the stipulation import a
contract, and either of the parties engages to perform a particular act,
the treaty addresses itself to the polit-ical, not the judicial
department, and the legislature must execute the contract before it can
become a rule of the court. 2 Pet. S. C. Rep. 814. Vide Story on the
Constitut. Index, h. t.; Serg. Constit. Law, Index, h. t.; 4 Hall's Law
Journal, 461; 6 Wheat. 161: 3 Dall. 199; 1 Kent, Comm. 165, 284.
5.
Treaties are divided into personal and real. The personal relate
exclusively to the persons of the contracting parties, such as family
alliances, and treaties guarantying the throne to a particular sovereign
and his family. As they relate to the persons they expire of course on
the death of the sov-ereign or the extinction of his family. Real
treaties relate solely to the subject-matters of the convention,
independently of the persons of the contracting parties, and continue to
bind the state, although there may be changes in its constitution, or
in the persons of its rulers. Vattel, Law of Nat. b. 2, c. 12, 183-197.
TREATY OF PEACE. A
treaty of peace is an agreement or contract made by belligerent powers,
in which they agree to lay down their arms, and by which they stipulate
the conditions of peace, and regulate the manner in which it is to be
restored and supported Vatt. lib. 4, c. 2, §9.
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