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When instructions may be asked.

ARTICLE XXXI.

When Consuls may ask Instructions from the Depart

ment.

687..The foregoing regulations are prescribed for the information and guidance of Consular Officers in the discharge of their official duties. It is expected that their provisions should be carefully examined before applying to the Department of State for instructions. When, however, after an examination of these regulations, and of any other instructions, special or otherwise, which they may have received, Consular Officers shall find themselves without directions how to act in any case, they may write to the Department. In all other cases they will be expected to act upon the regulations herein contained, and upon such other special instructions as they may from time to time receive.

APPENDIX No. I.

TREATIES AND EXTRACTS FROM TREATIES RELATING TO CONSULAR OFFICERS.

227

EXTRACTS FROM TREATIES AND CONVENTIONS RE

FERRED TO IN THE TEXT.

ARGENTINE REPUBLIC.

Treaty concluded July 27, 1853 (Friendship, Commerce, and Navigation).

688.. ARTICLE IX.

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If any citizen of either the two contracting parties shall die without will or testament, in any of the territories of the other, the Consul-General or Consul of the nation to which the deceased belonged, or the representative of such Consul-General or Consul, in his absence, shall have the right to intervene in the possession, administration, and judicial liquidation of the estate of the deceased, conformably with the laws of the country, for the benefit of the creditors and legal heirs.

689.. ARTICLE XI.

It shall be free for each of the two contracting parties to appoint Consuls for the protection of trade, to reside in any of the territories of the other party; but, before any Consul shall act as such, he shall, in the usual form, be approved and admitted by the government to which he is sent; and either of the contracting parties may except from the residence of Consuls such particular places as they judge fit to be excepted.

The archives and papers of the Consulates of the respective governments shall be respected inviolably, and under no pretext whatever shall any magistrate, or any of the local authorities, seize or in any way interfere with them.

The Diplomatic Agents and Consuls of the Argentine Confederation shall enjoy, in the territories of the United States, whatever privileges, exemptions, and immunities are, or shall be, granted to Agents of the same rank, belonging to the most favored nation; and, in like manner, the Diplomatic Agents and Consuls of the United States, in the territories of the Argentine Confederation, shall enjoy, according to the strictest reciprocity, whatever privileges, exemptions, and immunities are, or may be, granted in the Argentine Confederation to the Diplomatic Agents and Consuls of the most favored nation.

AUSTRIA-HUNGARY.

Consular Convention concluded July 11, 1870 (Rights, privileges, and immunities of Consuls.)

690..ARTICLE I.

Each of the high contracting parties shall be at liberty to establish Consuls-General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls, or Consular Agents at the ports and places of trade of the other party, except those where it may not be convenient to recognize such officers; but this exception shall not apply to one of the high contracting parties without also applying to every other Power. Consuls-General, Consuls, and other Consular Officers appointed and taking office according to the provisions of this article, in one or the other of the two countries, shall be free to exercise the right accorded them by the present convention throughout the whole of the district for which they may be respectively appointed. The said functionaries shall be admitted and recognized respectively upon presenting their credentials in accordance with the rules and formalities established in their respective countries. The exequatur required for the free exercise of their official duties shall be delivered to them free of charge; and upon exhibiting such exequatur they shall be admitted at once and without interference by the authorities, Federal or State, judicial or executive, of the ports, cities, and places of their residence and district, to the enjoyment of the prerogatives reciprocally granted.

691..ARTICLE II.

The Consuls-General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls, and Consular Agents, their Chancellors, and other Consular Officers, if they are citizens of the State which appoints them, shall be exempt from military billetings, from service in the military or the national guard, and other duties of the same nature, and from all direct and personal taxation, whether Federal, State, or municipal, provided they be not owners of real estate, and neither carry on trade nor any industrial business.

If, however, they are not citizens of the State which appoints them, or if they are citizens of the State in which they reside, or if they own property, or engage in any business there that is taxed under any laws of the country, then they shall be subject to the same taxes, charges, and assessments as other private individuals. They shall, moreover, enjoy personal immunities, except for acts regarded as crimes by the laws of the country in which they reside. If they are engaged in commerce, personal detention can be resorted to in their case only for commercial liabilities, and then in accordance only with general laws, applicable to all persons alike.

692.. ARTICLE III.

Consuls-General, Consuls, and their Chancellors, Vice-Consuls, and Consular Officers, if citizens of the country which appoints them, shall not be summoned to appear as witnesses before a court of justice, except

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