His Majesty the King of the Hawaiian Islands on the one part, and His
Majesty the King of the Belgians on the other part, desiring to facilitate the establishment of
commercial relations between the Hawaiian Islands and Belgium, and to favor their development by a
treaty of Amity, Commerce and Navigation, suited for securing to the two countries equal and
reciprocal advantages, have nominated to this purpose for their Plenipotentiaries, that is to say:
His Majesty the King of the
Hawaiian Islands, Sir John Bowring as Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary and His
Majesty the King of the Belgians the Sieur Charles Rogier, His Minister of Foreign Affairs, Grand
Officer of the Order of Leopold, etc., etc., etc.
Who having mutually
communicated their powers and found them in good and true form, have agreed on the following
articles:
ARTICLE I. There shall be perpetual peace and constant friendship between the
Kingdom of the
ARTICLE II. There shall be between the
ARTICLE III. The citizens of each of the contracting parties may, like the natives in
the respective territories, travel or reside, trade wholesale or retail, rent occupy the houses,
stores and shops which they may require; they may carry on the transport of merchandise and money,
and receive consignments; they may also, when they have resided more than a year in the country, and
their goods, chattels or movables which they there possess shall offer a sufficient security be
admitted as sureties in custom-house transactions.
The citizens of both countries
shall, on a footing of perfect equality, be free both to purchase and to sell, to establish and to
fix the price of goods, merchandise and articles of every kind, whether imported or of home
manufacture, whether for home consumption or for exportation.
They shall also enjoy liberty
to carry on their business themselves, to present to the custom-house their own declarations or to
have their place supplied by their own attornies, factors, consignees, agents, or interpreters
whether in the purchase or sale of their goods, their property or merchandise, whether for the
loading or unloading or of the expedition of their vessels.
They shall also have the right
to fulfill all the functions that are confided to them by their own countrymen, by strangers or by
natives, in the position of attornies, factors, agents, consignees, or interpreters.
For the performance of all
these acts they shall conform to all the laws and regulations of the country, and they shall not be
subject in any case to any other charges, restrictions, taxes or impositions than those to which the
natives are subject; provided, always, that the police regulations employed for the protection of
the citizens of the most favored nation be respected.
It is also specially provided
that all the advantages, of any kind whatever, actually granted by the laws and decrees now in force
or which shall in future be accorded to foreign settlers, shall be granted to Belgians established
or who shall establish themselves in whatever positions they may deem fit in the Hawaiian Territory.
And the same shall hold good
for Hawaiian subjects in
ARTICLE IV. The respective citizens of the two countries shall enjoy the most
constant and complete protection for their persons and property. Consequently they shall have free
and easy access to the courts of justice in the pursuit and defence of their rights in every
instance and degree of jurisdiction established by the laws. They shall be at liberty under any
circumstances to employ lawyers, advocates or agents, from any class whom they may see fit to
authorize to act in their name. In fine, they shall, in all respects enjoy, the same rights and
privileges which are granted to natives and they shall be subject to the same conditions.
ARTICLE V. The Hawaiians in
Article VI. The citizens of both countries respectively shall not be subject to any
embargo, nor to be detained with their vessels, luggage, cargoes or commercial effects for any
military expedition whatever, nor for any public or private service whatever, unless the government
or local authority shall have previously agreed with the parties interested, that a just indemnity
shall be granted for such service, and for such compensation as might fairly be required for the
wrong or injury (which not being purely fortuitous) may have grown out of the service which they
have voluntarily undertaken.
ARTICLE VII. The most entire liberty of conscience is guaranteed to Hawaiian subjects
in
ARTICLE VIII. Citizens of either of the contracting parties shall, on the respective
territories, have the right of possessing property of any sort, and disposing of the same in like
manner as the natives.
Belgians shall enjoy in all the
Hawaiian territories the right of collecting and transmitting successions ab intestato or testamentary as Hawaiians, according to the
laws of the country without being subjected as strangers to any burthens or imposts which are not
paid by the natives.
And reciprocally, Hawaiian
subjects shall enjoy as Belgians, the right of collecting and transmitting successions ab intestato or testamentary on the same conditions as
Belgians, according to the laws of the country, and without being subject as strangers to any charge
or impost not payable by the natives.
The same reciprocity between
the citizens of the two countries shall exist for donations inter
vivos. On the exportation of property collected or acquired under any head by Belgians in the
ARTICLE IX. All Belgian or Hawaiian vessels sailing under their respective colors,
and which shall be bearers of the ships papers and documents required by the laws of the
respective countries shall be considered as national vessels.
ARTICLE X. Belgian vessels which shall arrive either in ballast or laden in Hawaiian
ports, or which shall leave the same, and reciprocally, Hawaiian vessels which, either in ballast or
laden, enter or leave the ports of Belgium, whether by sea, or by river, or canals, whatever be the
place of their departure or that of their destination, shall not be subject either at entry or
departure, to duties on tonnage, port or transit, pilotages, anchorage, shifting, light-houses,
sluices, canals, quarantines, salvage, bonding-warehouses, patents, brokerage, navigation, passage,
or to any duties or charges whatever, levied on the hulks of vessels received or established for the
benefit of the government, of the public functionaries, communes or establishments of any sort other
than those which are now or may hereafter be levied on national vessels.
ARTICLE XI. In all that regards the stationing, the loading and unloading of vessels
in the ports, roadsteads, harbors and docks, and generally for all the formalities and arrangements
whatever to which vessels employed in commerce with their freights and loading may be subject, it is
agreed that no privilege shall be granted to national vessels, which shall be equally granted to
vessels of the other country, the intention of the high contracting parties being that in this
respect also the respective vessels shall be treated on the footing of perfect equality.
ARTICLE XII. Vessels of the subjects of the contracting parties, compelled to seek
shelter in the ports of the other, shall pay neither on the vessel nor the cargo more duties than
those levied on national vessels in the same situation; provided, that the necessity of such shelter
seeking be legally shown, that the vessel shall carry on no commercial speculations, and that it
will tarry no longer than is required by the motives which impelled it to enter the port.
ARTICLE XIII. Belgian ships of war, and whaling ships shall have free access to all the
Hawaiian ports; they may there anchor, be repaired and victual their crews; they may proceed from
one harbor to another of the
At all the ports which are or
may be hereafter opened to foreign vessels , Belgian ships of war and whalers shall be subject to
the same rules which are or may be imposed, and shall enjoy in all respects the same rights,
privileges and immunities which are or may be granted to Hawaiian ships and whalers, or to those of
the most favored nation.
ARTICLE XIV. Articles of all sorts imported into the ports of either of the
contracting States, under the flag of the other, whatever be their origin, and from whatever country
imported, shall pay neither, other nor heavier duties of entry, and shall not be subjected to any
other charges than if imported under the national flag.
ARTICLE XV. Articles of all sorts exported from either of the two countries, under
the flag of the other, from whatever country they may be, shall not be subjected to other duties or
other formalities, than if exported under the national flag.
ARTICLE XVI. Hawaiian ships in Belgium, and Belgian ships in the Hawaiian Islands, may
discharge a portion of their cargo in the port of their first arrival, and proceed with the rest of
their cargo to other ports of the same country, which may be open to foreign trade, whether to
complete their unloading or to provide their return cargo, and shall pay in neither port other or
heavier duties than those levied on national vessels in similar circumstances.
As regards the coasting trade,
the vessels of each country shall be mutually treated on the same footing as the most favored
nation.
ARTICLE XVII. During the period allowed by laws of the two countries for the
warehousing of goods, no other duties than those for custody and storage shall be levied upon
articles imported from one of the two countries into the other, until they shall be removed for
transit, re-exportation or internal consumption.,
In no case shall such articles
pay higher duties or be liable to other formalities than if they had been imported under the
national flag, or from the most favored country.
ARTICLE XVIII. Merchandise shipped on board Belgian or Hawaiian ships, or belonging to
their respective citizens, may be transhipped in the ports of two countries to a vessel bound for a
national or foreign port, according to the custom house regulations of the two countries, and the
goods so transhipped for other ports shall be exempt from all duties of customs or warehouses.
ARTICLE XIX. Articles of all sorts proceeding from
And reciprocally the articles
of every sort, the produce of the Hawaiian Islands or sent from that country, shall enjoy in their
passage through Belgium, the same advantages as are possessed by the most favored nation.
ARTICLE XX. Neither one nor the other of the contracting parties will impose upon the
goods proceeding from the soil, the manufactures or the warehouses of the other different or greater
duties on importation or re-exportation, than those which shall be imposed on the same merchandise
coming from any other foreign country.
Nor shall there be imposed on
the goods exported from one country to the other, different or higher duties than if they were
exported to any other foreign country.
No restriction or prohibition
of importation or re-exportation shall take place in the reciprocal commerce of the contracting
parties which shall not be equally extended to all other nations.
ARTICLE XXI. Consuls-General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls and Consular Agents may be
established by each country in the other for the protection of commerce, such agents shall not enter
upon their functions or enjoyment of the rights, privileges and immunities which belong to them
until they have obtained the authorization of the territorial government, which shall, besides,
preserve the right of determining the place of residing where Consuls may be established; it being
understood that neither Government will impose any restriction which is not common in the country to
all nations.
ARTICLE XXII. The Consuls-General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls and Consular Agents of Belgium
in the
And the same shall be the
position in
ARTICLE XXIII. The desertion of seamen embarked in the vessels of either of the
contracting parties shall be severely dealt with in their respective territories. In consequence the
Belgian consuls shall have the power to cause to be arrested and sent on board, or to
All aid and assistance shall be
given for the discovery and arrest of such deserters, who shall be detained in the prisons of the
country, on the requirement and at the expense of the consuls, until they shall find an opportunity
of sending them away, If, however no opportunity shall offer in the course of two months, counting
from the day of arrest, the deserters may be set at liberty.
It is understood that seamen
who are native Hawaiians shall be excepted from this arrangement and to be treated according to the
laws of their own country, on the requirement and at the expense of the consuls, until they shall
find an opportunity of sending them away. If, however, no opportunity shall offer in the course of
the two months, counting from the day of arrest, the deserters may be set at liberty.
It is understood that seamen
who are native Hawaiians shall be excepted from this arrangement and to be treated according to the
laws of their own country.
If the deserter have committed
any crime in the Hawaiian territory, his release shall not take place till the competent tribunal
shall have given judgment, and this judgment been carried into execution.
Hawaiian consuls shall possess
exactly the same rights in Belgium, and it is formally agreed between the two contracting parties,
that every other favor or facility granted or to be granted by either to any other power for the
arrest of deserters shall be also granted to the present contracting parties as fully as if they had
formed part of the present treaty.
ARTICLE XXIV. All operations connected with the salvage of stranded or wrecked vessels
on the Hawaiian coasts shall be superintended by the Consular Agent of Belgium and reciprocally the
Consular Hawaiian Agents shall superintend the operations connected with the salvage of Hawaiian
vessels stranded or wrecked on the Belgian coasts.
But if the parties interested
find themselves on the spot, or the captain possess adequate powers, the administration of the wreck
shall be committed to them.
The intervention of the local
authorities shall only be applied to the maintenance of order, to guarantee the rights of the
salvors if they do not belong to the ship-wrecked crew, and to assure the execution of the measures
to be taken for the entry and departure of the saved goods. In the absence and until the arrival of
the Consular Agents, the local authorities will take the needful steps for the protection of persons
and property wrecked.
The goods saved shall never be
subjected to customs or duty, unless they are disposed of for home consumption.
ARTICLE XXV. The ships, merchandise and effects belonging to the respective citizens
which may have been taken by pirates or conveyed to or found in the ports of either of the
contracting parties, shall be delivered to their owners on payment of the expenses should there be
such, the amount to be determined by the competent tribunals when the right of the proprietor shall
be proved before these tribunals, and the claim being made within the space of eighteen months by
the interested parties, by their attorneys, or by the agents of their respective Governments.
ARTICLE XXVI. If, from a concurrence of unfortunate circumstances, differences between
the contracting parties should cause an interruption of the relations of friendship between them,
and that after having exhausted the means of an amicable and conciliatory discussion, the object of
their mutual desire should not have been completely attained, the arbitration of a third power,
equally the friend of both shall by a common accord be appealed to, in order to avoid by this means
a definitive rupture.
ARTICLE XXVII. The present treaty shall be in vigor for ten years, to commence six
months after the exchange of ratification. If a year before the expiration of this term neither of
the contracting parties shall have announced, by an official declaration, its intention of
terminating it, the treaty shall still remain in force for a year, and so continue from year to
year.
ARTICLE XXVIII. The present treaty shall be ratified and the ratification exchanged at
In faith whereof the respective
Plenipotentiaries, have signed the same, and thereto affixed their seals.
Done in duplicate at
[L. S.] |
|
JOHN BOWRING |
[L. S.] |
|
C. ROGIER |