Magdalena Steam Navigation Company v Martin: 1859

The defendant asserted that he was entitled to diplomatic privilege to protect him from an action here. He was public minister of a foreign state. He had been received by the Court and given formal accreditation. He had no real property in Britain.
Held: Since he had done nothing to disentitled himself from such protection, he remained entitled in a civil action ‘although such action may arise out of commercial transactions by him here, and although neither his person nor his goods be touched by the suit.’

Citations:

[1859] 34 LTOS 30, [1859] 5 Jur NS 1260, [1859] 7 WR 598, [1859] 121 ER 36, (1859) 2 E and E 94, [1859] 28 LJQB 310

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Jones (Margaret), Regina v Milling and others HL 29-Mar-2006
Domestic Offence requires Domestic Defence
Each defendant sought to raise by way of defence of their otherwise criminal actions, the fact that they were attempting to prevent the commission by the government of the crime of waging an aggressive war in Iraq, and that their acts were . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Constitutional

Updated: 09 December 2022; Ref: scu.239965