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ARBITRATION OF PECUNIARY CLAIMS (INTER-AMERICAN)

  • Convention extending the treaty of January 30, 1902,[1] signed at Rio de Janeiro August 13, 1906
  • Senate advice and consent to ratification March 2, 1907
  • Ratified by the President of the United States March 13, 1907
  • Ratification of the United States deposited at Rio de Janeiro April 23, 1907
  • Effective from August 13, 1906; for the United States April 23, 1907
  • Proclaimed by the President of the United States January 28, 1913
  • Expired December 31, 1912[2]
37 Stat. 1648; Treaty Series 574

Convention

Pecuniary Claims

Their Excellencies, the Presidents of Ecuador, Paraguay, Bolivia, Colombia, Honduras, Panamá, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Peru, El Salvador, Costa Rica, the United States of Mexico, Guatemala, Uruguay, the Argentine Republic, Nicaragua, the United States of Brazil, the United States of America, and Chile;

Desiring that their respective countries should be represented at the Third International American Conference, sent thereto, duly authorized to approve the recommendations, resolutions, conventions and treaties that they might deem convenient for the interests of America, the following Delegates:

Ecuador—Dr. Emilio Arévalo; Olmedo Alfaro.

Paraguay—Manuel Gondra; Arsenio López Decoud; Gualberto Cardús y Huerta;

Bolivia—Dr. Alberto Guitérrez; Dr. Carlos V. Romero;

Colombia—Rafael Uribe Uribe; Dr. Guillermo Valencia;

Honduras—Fausto Dávila;


  1. TS 443, ante, p. 347.
  2. Art. 6 of the convention of Aug. 11, 1910 (TS 594), post, p. 765, provides, however, that "the treaty of Mexico [TS 443, ante, p. 347] shall continue in force after December 31, 1912, as to any claims which may, prior to that date, have been submitted to arbitration under its provisions."
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