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Definition of Shipping articles
1. Noun. A contract between crew and captain of a ship.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Shipping Articles
Literary usage of Shipping articles
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Commentaries on American Law by James Kent, George Franklin Comstock (1866)
"2, relative to shipping articles; and the above act of 1799 still constitutes
the leading statute to regulate our commercial intercourse with foreign ..."
2. Commentaries on American Law by James Kent, John Melville Gould, Oliver Wendell Holmes (1901)
"... relative to shipping articles ; and the above act of 1799 still constitutes
the leading statute to regulate our commercial intercourse with foreign ..."
3. The Law of Contracts by Theophilus Parsons, John Melville Gould (1904)
"OF THE shipping articles, (ж) The United States statutes require every vessel
bound from a home port to a foreign port, (/) or, if it be of fifty tons or ..."
4. Commentaries on American Law by James Kent, William M. Lacy (1889)
"shipping articles are contracts in writing, or in print, declaring the voyage and.
the ... 2, relative to shipping articles, and the ahove Act of 1799 still ..."
5. Commentaries on American Law by James Kent (1873)
"23, authorizes an examination by the consul or commercial agent in a foreign
port, into the complaints of the mariners, and a copy of the shipping articles ..."
6. Commentaries on American Law by James Kent (1848)
"23, authorizes an examination by the consul or commercial agent in a foreign
port, into the complaints of the mariners, and a copy of the shipping articles ..."
7. Commentaries on American Law by James Kent (1836)
"shipping articles are contracts in writing, or in print, declaring the voyage
and the term of time for which the seamen are shipped, and when they are to ..."
8. Commentaries on American Law by James Kent (1858)
"(d) shipping articles are contracts in writing, or in print, declaring the voyage
and the term of time for which the seamen are shipped, and the (a) Pothier ..."