

For what purposes may an agent be appointed? The applicant may appoint an agent or agents to represent him before the receiving Office, the International Bureau, the International Searching Authority, any Authority specified for supplementary search and the International Preliminary Examining Authority - that is, for the purposes of the international phase generally. REPRESENTATION BY AGENTS AND COMMON REPRESENTATIVESġ1.001.

You must have Javascript enabled to see these links.CHAPTER 11: MISCELLANEOUS QUESTIONS CONCERNING THE INTERNATIONAL PHASE
The defects that they were to remedy were those barriers that limited trade or commerce between the states under the Articles of Confederation. The formal title of the meeting was a Meeting of Commissioners to Remedy Defects of the Federal Government.

The Annapolis Convention was a meeting of 12 delegates from five states (New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Virginia) that called for a constitutional convention. THE ANNAPOLIS CONVENTION, September 11 - 14, 1786 At the same time, the Commissioners invited Pennsylvania to join in an effort to improve the navigation of the Potomac River to its headwaters, arguing that such a project would "have for their object the interest and convenience of Citizens and those of the other States in the Union."
#NEXT MEETING SOON MAKE IT OBVIOUS FREE#
Both states declared that their waterways would be "forever considered as a common Highway Free for Use and Navigation of any vessel belonging" to the other. The result was the Compact of 1785, the first mutually binding agreement of its kind between two states. 1792Ĭommissioners from Maryland and Virginia met at Mount Vernon in March 1785 to discuss fishing rights and the regulation of commerce on the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries. MOUNT VERNON EAST FRONT, by unknown artist, ca.Washington's desire to improve the navigation of the river led him to invite the Maryland and Virginia commissioners to meet at Mount Vernon in March 1785. From the east porch of his home on the Potomac River, George Washington could look across to the Maryland shore.
