Trez
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Just curious...and would like to hear if this is possible or has it happened before? and the legal side most importantly.
On a shipwreck where there were no documented survivers, only just a record of a general location of said vessel(s) as to where it was saling either coming or going etc...and since news traveled so slow back in those days...
Scenario...if lets say a Spanish vessel was captured and all specie/cargo both private and government owned were captured legally by an enemy of Spain...but during the legal capture both vessels sank while in taking control of and thus contaminating the wreck-site with both vessels...and then said wreck is found today with a contamination field filled with both Countries material from said wrecks...
How would the courts possibly view this? and who determines the rights to them? Could a case be made against Spain's ownership then?
Just a thought let's say English artifacts were strewn unmust the "Mercedes" debri field...could Odyssey then have proceeded this differently?
http://books.google.com/books?id=0p...BA#v=onepage&q=legal capture of vessel&f=true
I understand Spain "not abandoning" her shipwrecks per say...but just because Spain claims such in every case of a sunken vessel nowadays even without positive identification of that vessel and just basing ID on position and or cargo, I would think maritine law would have to come into act in some cases...and actually deny such claims.
I was just fishing
Trez
On a shipwreck where there were no documented survivers, only just a record of a general location of said vessel(s) as to where it was saling either coming or going etc...and since news traveled so slow back in those days...
Scenario...if lets say a Spanish vessel was captured and all specie/cargo both private and government owned were captured legally by an enemy of Spain...but during the legal capture both vessels sank while in taking control of and thus contaminating the wreck-site with both vessels...and then said wreck is found today with a contamination field filled with both Countries material from said wrecks...
How would the courts possibly view this? and who determines the rights to them? Could a case be made against Spain's ownership then?
Just a thought let's say English artifacts were strewn unmust the "Mercedes" debri field...could Odyssey then have proceeded this differently?
http://books.google.com/books?id=0p...BA#v=onepage&q=legal capture of vessel&f=true
I understand Spain "not abandoning" her shipwrecks per say...but just because Spain claims such in every case of a sunken vessel nowadays even without positive identification of that vessel and just basing ID on position and or cargo, I would think maritine law would have to come into act in some cases...and actually deny such claims.
I was just fishing

Trez