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1887 Deed of Gift
This Deed of Gift, made the twenty-fourth
day of October, one thousand eight hundred and eighty-seven,
between George L. Schuyler as the sole surviving owner of
the Cup won by the yacht AMERICA at Cowes, England, on the
twenty-second day of August, one thousand eight hundred
and fifty-one, of the first part, and the New York Yacht
Club, of the second part, as amended by an order of the
Supreme Court of the State of New York dated December 17,
1956 and April 5, 1985.
WITNESSETH
That the said
party of the first part, for and in consideration of the
premises and of the performance of the conditions and agreements
hereinafter set forth by the party of the second part, has
granted, bargained, sold, assigned, transferred and set
over, and by these present does grant, bargain, sell, assign,
transfer, and set over, unto said party of the second part,
its successors and assigns, the Cup won by the schooner
yacht AMERICA, at Cowes, England, upon the twenty-second
day of August, 1851. To have and to hold the same to the
said party of the second part, its successors and assigns,
IN TRUST, NEVERTHELESS, for the following uses and purposes:
This Cup is donated
upon the conditions that it shall be preserved as a perpetual
Challenge Cup for friendly competition between foreign countries.
Any organized Yacht Club of a
foreign country, incorporated, patented, or licensed by
the legislature, admiralty, or other executive department,
having for its annual regatta on ocean water course on the
sea, or on an arm of the sea, or one which combines both,
shall always be entitled to the right of sailing a match
for this Cup, with a yacht or vessel propelled by sails
only and constructed in the country to which the Challenging
Club belongs, against any one yacht or vessel constructed
in the country of the Club holding the Cup.
The competing yachts or vessels,
if of one mast, shall be not less than forty-four feet nor
more than ninety feet on the load water-line; if of more
than one mast they shall be not less than eighty feet nor
more than one hundred and fifteen feet on the load water-line.
The Challenging Club shall give
ten months' notice, in writing, naming the days for the
proposed races; but no race shall be sailed in the days
intervening between November 1st and May 1st. Accompanying
the ten months' notice of challenge there must be sent the
name of the owner and a certificate of the name, rig and
following dimensions of the challenging vessel, namely,
length on load water-line; beam at load water-line and extreme
beam; and draught of water; which dimensions shall not be
exceeded; and a custom-house registry of the vessel must
also be sent as soon as possible. Center-board or sliding
keel vessels shall always be allowed to compete in any race
for this Cup, and no restriction nor limitation whatever
shall be placed upon the use of such center-board or sliding
keel, nor shall the center-board or sliding keel be considered
a part of the vessel for any purposes of measurement.
The Club challenging for the
Cup and the Club holding the same may, by mutual consent,
make any arrangement satisfactory to both as to the dates,
courses, number of trials, rules and sailing regulations,
and any and all other conditions of the match, in which
case also the ten months' notice may be waived.
In case the parties cannot mutually
agree upon the terms of a match, then three races shall
be sailed, and the winner of two of such races shall be
entitled to the Cup. All such races shall be on ocean courses,
free from headlands, as follows: The first race, twenty
nautical miles to windward and return; the second race an
equilateral triangular race of thirty-nine nautical miles,
the first side of which shall be a beat to windward; the
third race (if necessary) twenty nautical miles to windward
and return; and one week day shall intervene between the
conclusion of one race and the starting of the next race.
These ocean courses shall be practicable in all parts for
vessels of twenty-two feet draught of water, and shall be
selected by the Club holding the Cup; and these races shall
be sailed subject to its rules and sailing regulations so
far as the same do not conflict with the provisions of this
deed of gift, but without any time allowances whatever.
The challenged Club shall not be required to name its representative
vessel until at a time agreed upon for the start, but the
vessel when named must compete in all the races, and each
of such races must be completed within seven hours.
Should the Club holding the Cup
be for any cause dissolved, the Cup shall be transferred
to some Club of the same nationality, eligible the challenge
under this deed of gift, in trust and subject to its provisions.
In the event of the failure of such transfer within three
months after such dissolution, such Cup shall revert to
the preceding Club holding the same, and under the terms
of this deed of gift. It is distinctly understood that the
Cup is to be the property of the Club subject to the provisions
of this deed, and not the property of the owner or owners
of any vessel winning a match.
No vessel which has been defeated
in a match for this Cup can be again selected by any Club
as its representative until after a contest for it by some
other vessel has intervened, or until after the expiration
of two years from the time of such defeat. And when a challenge
from a Club fulfilling all the conditions required by this
instrument has been received, no other challenge can be
considered until the pending event has been decided.
AND, the said party of
the second part hereby accepts the said Cup subject to the
said trust, terms, and conditions, and hereby covenants
and agrees to and with said party of the first part that
it will faithfully and fully see that the foregoing conditions
are fully observed and complied with by any contestant for
the said Cup during the holding thereof by it; and that
it will assign, transfer, and deliver the said Cup to the
foreign Yacht Club whose representative yacht shall have
won the same in accordance with the foregoing terms and
conditions, provided the said foreign Club shall, by instrument
in writing lawfully executed, enter with said part of the
second part into the like covenants as are herein entered
into by it, such instrument to contain a like provision
for the successive assignees to enter into the same covenants
with their respective assignors, and to be executed in duplicate,
one to be retained by each Club, and a copy thereof to be
forwarded to the said party of the second part.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the party
of the first part has hereunto set his hand and seal, and
the said party of the second part has caused its corporate
seal to be affixed to these presents and the same to be
signed by its Commodore and attested by its Secretary, the
day and year first above written.
GEORGE L. SCHUYLER, (L.S.)
In the presence of THE NEW YORK YACHT CLUB H. D. Hamilton.
by Elbridge T. Gerry,
Commodore (Seal of the New York Yacht Club)
John H. Bird, Secretary
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Résolutions
& Interpretations
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THE WATERLINE LENGTH AND "OWN BOTTOM"
AMENDMENT
ORDER WITH RESPECT TO ADMINISTRATION OF GIFT, DATED DECEMBER
17, 1956 NEW YORK YACHT CLUB,
having filed a verified petition dated
September 21, 1956, praying that an order be made pursuant
to Section 12 of the Personal Property Law or otherwise,
directing that the gift by George L. Schuyler of the America’s
Cup which was won by the yacht AMERICA at Cowes, England
on August 22, 1851, in trust under a Deed of Gift dated
October 24, 1887, shall be administered as if the minimum
load water-line length of the competing yachts or vessels
of one mast and thereby required to be forty-four (44) feet
and without regard to and free from the direction contained
therein that yachts or vessels competing for the America’s
Cup shall sail on their own bottoms to the port where the
contest is to take place, and that such other and further
relief as to the Court may seem just and proper be granted
to petitioner; and it appearing to the satisfaction of the
Court from said petition and the papers annexed thereto
that circumstances have so changed since the execution of
said Deed of Gift, in a manner not known to the said donor
and not anticipated by him, as to render impractical a literal
compliance with the aforesaid terms of said Deed of Gift;
and it further appearing that the grantor of said Deed of
Gift has died and that the Attorney General of the Sate
of New York is the only person interested in this proceeding;
and said Attorney General having appeared and certified
that he has no objections to the entry of an order as prayed
for by petitioner,
NOW, upon motion of Carter, Ledyard and Milburn, attorneys
for petitioner, it is
ORDERED that New York Yacht Club, as trustee of the America’s
Cup given under the Deed of Gift dated October 24, 1887
made by George L. Schuyler, hereby is directed to administer
the said Gift as if said Deed of Gift included no provision
requiring yachts or vessels competing for the America’s
Cup to sail, on their own bottoms, to the port where the
contest is to take place, and as if the minimum load water-line
length of the competing yachts or vessels of one mast was
thereby required to be forty-four (44) feet.
Enter,
Hon. Edgar J. Nathan, Jr. J.S.C.
Justice
"THE 1958 RESOLUTION"
RESOLUTION ADOPED BY THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES ON MARCH 27,
1958
WHEREAS, a question has been raised on
behalf of certain individuals, citizens of a foreign country,
interested in a possible challenge for the America’s Cup,
as to whether a challenge would be accepted by the New York
Yacht Club if the challenger were designed in the United
States but the hull built in the country of the challenging
Club; and
WHEREAS, by the original Deed of Gift of the America’s Cup
dated July 8, 1857, it was expressly provided that the Cup
should be "perpetually a Challenge Cup for friendly competition
between foreign countries"; and
WHEREAS, by the second Deed of Gift dated January 4, 1882,
it was provided that the yacht challenging for the Cup and
the yacht defending must be "constructed" in the country
to which the challenging and defending Clubs respectively
belong; and the above recited provision that the Cup should
be "perpetually a Challenge Cup for friendly competition
between foreign counties" as again set forth; and
WHEREAS, by the third and present Deed of Gift dated October
24, 1887, it was again provided that the Cup should be a
"perpetual Challenge Cup for friendly competition between
foreign counties," and the second paragraph thereof contained
the provision above referred to that the challenging and
defending yachts shall be constructed in the countries they
respectively represent;
NOW, THEREFORE, in view of the expressed intent of the donors
of the America’s Cup that is should be "perpetually a Challenge
Cup for friendly competition between foreign countries,"
and the fact that in accordance with that intent and commencing
with the first race for the Cup in 1870 down to the present
time every challenger has been both designed and constructed
in the country of the defending Club so that every challenger
and every defender has been in all respects truly representative
of the countries of the challenging and defending club and
the Cup has become by tradition the symbol of the yachting
supremacy of the country of the Club winning the challenge
match:
RESOLVED that the word "constructed" wherever it appeared
in the Deed of Gift of the America’s Cup shall always be
construed as "designed and built".
W. Mahlon Dickerson,
Secretary
"THE 1962 RESOLUTION"
RESOLUTION ADOPED BY THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES ON DECEMBER
7, 1962
[Abrogée le 15 juillet 1980]
"THE FIRST 1980 RES0LUTIONS"
RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES ON JULY
15, 1980 AND AMENDED ON MARCH 9, 1982
WHEREAS by Resolution adopted March 27,
1958 (the "1958 Resolution") this Board interpreted the
word "constructed" as used in the Deed of Gift of the America’s
Cup (the Deed of Gift") to mean "designed and built"; and
WHEREAS by Resolutions adopted December 7, 1962 (the "1962
Resolution") this Board set forth its interpretation of
the words "designed and built" as used in the 1958 Resolution
and set forth certain procedures relation to the application
of such interpretation; and
WHEREAS because of the great increase in recent years in
the exchange among the world’s yachtsmen, yacht designers,
yacht builders and sailmakers of technology, techniques,
material and facilities for the design and construction
of yachts, their rigs and their sails, the interpretations
set forth in the 1962 Resolutions are no longer workable
or meaningful;
WHEREAS the purposes of the Deed of Gift, particularly the
provision thereof that the America’s Cup "shall be preserved
as a perpetual Challenge Cup for friendly competition between
foreign countries", will be furthered by a requirement that
the members of a candidate’s crew shall be nationals of
the country in which the club represented by the candidate
is located; it is
RESOLVED that he 1962 Resolutions be, and the same herby
are rescinded; and
RESOLVED that the 1958 Resolution be, and the same hereby
is, ratified and confirmed; and
RESOLVED that for the purposes of the 1958 Resolution:
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a. A yacht shall be deemed to be "designed"
in a country if the designers of the yacht’s hull, rig
and sails shall be nationals of that country; and
b. A yacht shall be deemed to be "built" in a country
in a country if the hull of the yacht, including all
framing and all planking, plating or other form of surfacing
of the hull, shall be fabricated and assembled, and
if the yacht’s sails shall be manufactured, in that
country; provided that the foregoing provisions of this
clause (b) shall not prevent the modification of the
hull of any challenger, or candidate, in the country
in which an America’s Cup Match is to take place so
long as the modification or manufacture |
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(i) is effected when the challenger
or candidate is in such country and
(ii) meets the requirements of clause (a) above; and |
RESOLVED that, for a candidate to be eligible
for an America’s Cup Match in any year subsequent to 1980,
every member of the candidate’s crew must be a national
of the country in which the club represented by the candidate
is located; and
RESOLVED that henceforth any reference to the Deed of Gift
shall be deemed to include reference to the 1985 Resolution
and to these Resolutions, which shall hereafter be known
as the "1980 Resolutions" and that whenever hereafter the
Deed of Gift is printed or otherwise reproduced, the 1958
Resolution and the 1980 Resolutions shall be printed or
reproduced as an integral part thereof.
"THE SECOND 1980 RESOLUTIONS"
RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES ON JULY
15, 1980
For the purposes of the 1958 Resolution:
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a.A
yachts shall be deemed to be "designed" in a country
if the designers of the yacht’s hull, rig and sails
shall be national of that country; and
b.A yacht shall be deemed to be "built" in a country
if the hull of the yacht, including all framing and
all planking, plating or other form of surfacing of
the hull, shall be fabricated and assembled, and if
the yacht’s sails shall be manufactured, in that country;
provided that the foregoing provisions of this clause
(b) shall not prevent the modification of the hull of
any challenger, or candidate to be challenger, for the
Cup, or the manufacture of sails for such challenger
or the candidate in the country in which an America’s
Cup Match is to take place so long as the modification
or manufacture (i) is effected when the challenger or
candidate is in such country and (ii meets the requirements
of clause (a) above. |
For a candidate to be eligible for an America’s
Cup Match in any year subsequent to 1980, every member of
the candidate’s crew must be a national of the country in
which the club represented by the candidate is located.
FOOTNOTES IN AMPLIFICATION
(March 9, 1982)
A foreign designer—however he is designated—participating
in the design of a boat or a sail would violate both the
letter and spirit of the above Resolution, and any boat
or sail so designed would be ineligible for use in America’s
Cup competition. Similarly, a hull or sails which are merely
copies of those of a foreign designer would also be ineligible
for use in America’s Cup competition.
Regardless of whether a challenge has been accepted by the
Defending Club in the belief that a boat complies with the
Deed of Gift and subsequent Interpretive Resolutions, such
acceptance does not immunize the boat form being challenged
as to eligibility by another Challenging Club.
Vincent Monte-Sano, II
Secretary
"THE FIRST 1984 RESOLUTIONS"
RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE AMERICA’S CUP COMMITTEE OF
THE ROYAL PERTH YACHT CLUB ON MAY 15, 1984
WHERAS by resolution adopted July 15,
1980 and duly amended on March 9, 1982, to which Footnotes
were included in amplification of such amendments (The "1982
Amendments") the then Board of Trustees noted that "The
requirement that a person be a national will be satisfied
if the person is domiciled in, or as a principal place of
residence in, or had a valid passport of that country since
January 1, 1982"; and
WHEREAS such note, by its slated date, has been interpreted
to apply to the 1983 Challenge Match only; and WHEREAS the
1987 and future Challenges for the America’s Cup would be
better served by a definition which would be applicable
to all challenges beyond the 1983 Challenge Match; and
WHEREAS it is considered that two years provides a reasonable
residential or documentary period for definition of a national;
it is
RESOLVED that Footnote (1) of the 1982 Amendments be, and
the same hereby is rescinded; and
RESOLVED that Footnote (1) of the 1982 Amendments be, and
the same hereby replaced with the words "The requirement
that a person be a national will be satisfied if the person
has been domiciled in, or has had a principal place of residence
in, or has had a valid passport of that country for no shorter
period than the two years before the date of the first race
of the applicable America’s Cup Match" [Amended July 1,
1990]; and
RESOLVED that henceforth any reference to the Deed of Gift
shall be deemed to include reference to these Resolutions,
which shall hereafter be known as the "First 1984 Resolutions,"
and that whenever hereafter the Deed of Gift is printed
or otherwise reproduced, as reproduced, the Second 1984
Resolutions shall be printed or reproduced as an integral
part thereof.
D. Noel Robins
Executive Director
"THE SECOND 1984 RESOLUTIONS"
RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE AMERICA’S CUP COMMITTEE OF
THE ROYAL PERTH YACHT CLUB ON MAY 15, 1984
WHEREAS by Resolution adopted July 15,
1980 and duly amended on March 9, 1982, to which Footnotes
were included in amplification of such amendments (the "1982
Amendments") the then Board of Trustees noted that "Designers
of sails my cooperate on an international basis until March
1, 1982; after which date, sail designers of different countries
may not collaborate. Sail designs done before that date
may be copied exactly, while after that date the designers
in a company may use the computer system and data bank of
pre-March 1982 data freely but must not put back into the
system post-March 1, 1982 information and must execute nationally
independent sail design"; and
WHEREAS because of the great increase in recent years in
the exchange among the worlds’ sailmakers of technology,
techniques, material and facilities for the design and construction
of sails, due primarily to the greater accessibility of
computerized systems and data banks; and
WHEREAS restrictions on the freedom of this accessibility
are no longer enforceable in a practical sense; and
WHEREAS the purposes of the Deed of Gift cannot be furthered
by the retention of the Footnote (2) of the 1982 Amendments;
it is
RESOLVED that Footnote (2) of the 1982 Amendments be, and
the same hereby is, rescinded; and
RESOLVED that Footnote (3) of the 1982 Amendments be, and
the same hereby is renumbered "(2)"; and
RESOLVED that henceforth any reference to the Deed of Gift
shall be deemed to include reference to these Resolutions,
which shall hereafter be known as the "Second 1984 Resolutions",
and what whenever hereafter the Deed of Gift if printer
or otherwise reproduced, the Second 1984 Resolutions shall
be printed or reproduced as an integral part thereof.
D. Noel Robins
Executive Director
"THE THIRD 1984 RESOLUTIONS"
RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE AMERICA’S CUP COMMITTEE OF
THE ROYAL PERTH YACHT CLUB ON MAY 22, 1984
WHEREAS, by Resolution adopted March 27,
1958, the then Board of Trustees interpreted the word "constructed"
wherever it appears in the Deed of Gift of the America’s
Cup shall always be construed as "designed and built"; and
WHEREAS, by Resolutions adopted July 15, 1980, and amended
March 9, 1982, the then Board of Trustees set forth its
interpretation of the words bot "designed" and "built" as
they appeared in the 1958 Resolution; and
WHEREAS, such interpretations of "designed" and "built"
make no reference to testing and thereby leave doubt as
to whether testing should be considered as part of the design
process; and
WHEREAS, the purpose of the Deed of Gift, particularly the
provision thereof that the America’s Cup "shall be preserved
as a perpetual Challenge Cup for friendly competition between
foreign counties," will be furthered by a requirement that
design testing should, where practicable, be carried out
in the country of the club defending or challenging; and
WHEREAS, certain yacht clubs which qualify under the Deed
of Gift of the America’s Cup, and which yacht clubs are
desirous of challenging for the America’s Cup, have raised
the question as to whether their use of testing facilities
closely aligned to the design process such as towing tanks
would be accepted by the defending club if such testing
facilities were located outside the country of the challenging
club; it is
RESOLVED, that the defending club at the instance of a challenging
club, shall consider a request for permission to use towing
tank facilities in any country other than that of the defending
club, and may grant such permission should the defending
club have evidence that adequate facilities do not exist
in the country of the club requesting permission; and
RESOLVED, that towing tank facilities in any country other
than that of the defending club may be used for the defending
club when similar evidence exists that adequate facilities
do not exist in the country of the defending club; and
RESOLVED, that henceforth any reference to the Deed of Gift
shall be deemed to include reference to these Resolutions,
which shall hereafter be known as the "Third 1984 Resolutions",
and that whenever hereafter the Deed of Gift if printed
or otherwise reproduced, the Second 1984 Resolutions shall
be printed or reproduced as an integral part thereof.
D. Noel Robins
Executive Director
"THE ARM OF THE SEA INTERPRETATION"
JUDGEMENT OF THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
DATED SEPTEMBER 20, 1984
An application having been made by the
petitioner The Royal Perth Yacht Club of Western Australia
Incorporated for an order interpreting certain provisions
of a Deed of Gift of the America’s Cup dated October 24,
1887 between George L. Schuyler and The New York Yacht Club,
as amended by order of the Court dated December 17, 1956
(index No. 12696/56);
NOW, upon reading and filing the order to show cause dated
August 8, 1984 (Alfred M. Ascione, Jr., J.) with proof of
due and timely service of the Attorney General of the State
of New York, the petition of the Royal Perth Yacht Club
of Western Australia incorporated, verified the 30th day
of July 1984, and annexed exhibits, and the affidavit of
Eugene M. Kinney, sworn to the 20th day of July, 1984 and
exhibits thereof, all in support of the petition, and the
notice of appearance and consent of Attorney General of
the State of New York, acknowledged the 13th day of August,
1984, consenting to the petition;
AND, a memorandum decision and order dated September 4,
1984, having been rendered granting the petition; NOW, upon
the motion of DeForest & Duer, attorneys for the petitioner
The Royal Perth Yacht Club of Western Australia Incorporated,
it is
ORDERED and ADJUDGED, that the petition of The Royal Perth
Yacht Club of Western Australia Incorporated is granted
with the consent of the Attorney General of the State of
New York, representative of the public interest in the Deed
of Gift, to the extent of declaring that the Deed of Gift
entitles the Chicago Yacht Club, a yacht club of a foreign
(i.e. competing) country as contemplated in the Deed of
Gift, to enroll and compete as a contestant for the "America’s
Cup."
"THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE AMENDMENT"
ORDER OF THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK DATED
APRIL 5, 1985
An application having been made by petitioner
The Royal Perth Yacht Club of Western Australia Incorporation
for an order amending a certain provision of a Deed of Gift
of the America’s Cup dated October 24, 1887 between George
l. Schuyler and The New York Yacht Club, as amended by the
Court dated December 17, 1956 (Index No. 12696/56);
NOW, upon reading and filing the order to show cause dated
February 27, 1985 (Stanley Parness, J.) with proof of due
and timely service on the Attorney General of the State
of New York and The New York Yacht Club, the petition of
The Royal Perth Yacht Club of Western Australia Incorporated,
verified the 27th day of November, 1984, and annexed exhibits,
and the affidavit of Charles E. Kirsch, sworn to the 26th
day of February, 1985, and annexed exhibits, all in support
of the petition, and the notice of appearance and consent
of the Attorney General of the State of New York, acknowledged
the 7th day of March, 1985, consenting to the petition;
and there being no opposition;
AND, a memorandum order dated March 11, 1985 having been
rendered granting the petition on default;
NOW, upon the motion of DeForest & Duer, attorneys of petition
The Royal Perth Yacht Club of Western Australia Incorporated,
it is
ORDERED, that the petition of The Royal Perth Yacht Club
of Western Australia Incorporated is granted; and it is
further ORDERED, that the Deed of Gift is amended, and the
trust established pursuant to the Deed of Gift shall hereafter
be administered, as if, following the phrase "No race shall
be sailed in the days intervening between November 1st and
May 1st", there were added the following language: "if
the races are to be conducted in the Northern Hemisphere;
and no race shall be sailed in the days intervening between
May 1st and November 1st in the Southern Hemisphere."
Enter,
Hon. Elliot Wilk J.S.C.
Justice
"THE FIRST 1988 RESOLUTIONS"
RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE
SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB ON AUGUST 19, 1988
[Abrogée le 30 octobre 1991]
"THE SECOND 1988 RESOLUTIONS"
RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE
SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB ON AUGUST 19, 1988
[Abrogée le 30 octobre 1991]
"THE FIRST 1990 RESOLUTIONS"
RESOLUTION ADOPTED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE
SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB ON JULY 1, 1990
WHEREAS by Resolution adopted March 27,
1958 (the "1958 Resolution") The then Board of Trustees
interpreted the word "constructed" as used in the Deed of
Gift of the America’s Cup (the "Deed of Gift") to mean "designed
or built"; and
WHEREAS by Resolutions adopted July 15, 1980, and amended
March 9, 1982, the then Board of Trustees set forth its
interpretation of the words both "designed" and "built"
as they appeared in the 1958 Resolution; and
WHEREAS the fourth Resolution adopted by the then Board
of Trustees on July 15, 1980 (hereafter "the Fourth 1980
Resolution") provided: "Notwithstanding the provisions of
the foregoing resolution, any yacht which was eligible as
a candidate for the America’s Cup Match in 1980 shall continue
to be eligible thereafter provided that any material modification
of the hull, rig or sails thereof shall be designed in accordance
with the requirements of clause (a) of the foregoing resolution
and any material modification of the hull thereof shall
be completed in accordance with the requirements of clause
(b) of the foregoing resolution"; and
WHEREAS the Fourth 1980 Resolution was intended by the then
Board of Trustees to apply only to the class of yacht then
used in competition in the America’s Cup Match, namely,
yachts of the International Twelve Metre Class; and
WHEREAS the Deed of Gift provides that the club challenging
for the Cup and the club holding the same may make any arrangement
satisfactory to both as to rules; and
WHEREAS on September 8, 1988, The San Diego Yacht Club,
as Trustee under the Deed of Gift, issued a statement (the
"San Diego Protocol"0, with which the two previous Trustees
under the Deed of Gift concurred, by the terms of which
a method for agreement upon the class of vessel to be used
in the Twenty-eighth Defense of the America’s Cup (the "1992
Match") was identified; and
WHEREAS all of the clubs challenging for the 1992 Match
have agreed to be bound by the terms of the San Diego Protocol,
and in accordance therewith have proposed, and the club
holding the Cup has agreed to, competition in yachts of
the new International America’s Cup Class for the 1992 Match;
and
WHEREAS yachts of the International Twelve Metre Class would
be unable to comply with the rules of International America’s
Cup Class; and
WHEREAS if the challenging and defending clubs agree to
the class of yacht to be used in a Match, the purposes of
the Deed of Gift, particularly the provision thereof that
the America’s Cup "shall be preserved as a perpetual Challenge
Cup for friendly competition between foreign countries:
, will be furthered by allowing competition only between
yachts which comply with the rules of that class; it is
RESOLVED that the Fourth 1980 Resolution be, and the same
hereby is rescinded;
RESOLVED that henceforth any reference to the Deed of Gift
shall be deemed to include reference to this Resolution,
which shall hereafter be known as the "First 1990 Resolution",
and that whenever hereafter the Deed of Gift is printed
or otherwise reproduced the First 1990 Resolution shall
be printer or reproduced as an integral part thereof.
William R. Munster
Secretary
"THE SECOND 1990 RESOLUTIONS"
RESOLUTION ADOPTED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE
SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB ON JULY 1, 1990
WHEREAS a questions has been raised on
behalf of certain individuals, citizens of a foreign country,
involved in a challenge for the America’s Cup, as to whether
a person who satisfies the conditions of nationality for
more than one country under the Resolutions interpreting
the Deed of Gift my design a hull, rig, or sails, or participate
as a crew member, for clubs located in different countries
for the same America’s Cup, or any selection therefore;
and
WHEREAS by the 1958 Resolution the then Board of Trustees
interpreted the word "constructed" wherever it appeared
in the Deed of Gift to mean "designed" and "built"; and
WHEREAS by the 1980 Resolutions and the 1982 Amendments,
the then Board of Trustees set forth its interpretation
of the words both "designed" and "built" as the appeared
in the 1958 Resolution; and
WHEREAS the Footnotes in amplification of the 1980 Resolutions
(the "1982 Amendments" adopted March 9, 1982) stated; "A
foreign designer—however he is designated—participating
in the design of a boat or a sail would violate both the
letter and the spirit of the above Resolution, and any boat
or sail so designed would be ineligible for use in America’s
Cup competition. Similarly, a hull or sails which are merely
copies of those of a foreign designer would also be ineligible
for use in America’s Cup competition."
WHEREAS by the 1980 Resolutions the then Board of Trustees
also interpreted that for a candidate to be eligible for
an America’s Cup Match in any year subsequent to 1980, every
member of the candidate’s crew must be a national of the
country in which the club represented by the candidate is
located; and
WHEREAS by inclusion of Footnote (1) of the 1982 Amendments,
the then Board of Trustees noted that "The requirement that
a person be a national will be satisfied if the person is
domiciled in, or has a principal place of residence in,
or has a valid passport of that country since January 1,
1982"; and
WHEREAS Footnote (1), by its stated date, was thereafter
interpreted to apply to the 1983 Challenge Match only; and
WHEREAS by the First 1984 Resolutions, adopted May 15, 1984,
the then Trustee determined that the 1987 and future Challenges
for the America’s Cup would be better served by a definition
of a "national" which would be applicable to all challenges
beyond the 1983 Challenge Match, and that two years provides
a reasonable residential or documentary period for definition
of a "national", and replaced Footnote (1) of the 1982 Amendments
with the words: "The requirement that a person be a national
will be satisfied if the person has been domiciled in, or
has had a principal place of residence in, or has had a
valid passport of that country for no shorter period than
the two years before the date of the first race of the applicable
America’s Cup Match"; and
WHEREAS because of the great increase in the popularity
of the America’s Cup competition in recent years it has
become customary for the yachts of the challenging clubs
and the yachts of the club holding the Cup to engage in
separate series of races to select the two yachts which
will compete in the America’s Cup Match; and
WHEREAS since the First 1984 Resolutions were adopted, challenging
clubs have begun training and practice exercises in the
country of the club holding the Cup sufficiently in advance
of the relevant America’s Cup Match that crew members competing
for challenging clubs may satisfy the conditions of nationality
so as to compete on behalf of the defending club in the
Match; and
WHEREAS because the great increase in the popularity of
the America’s Cup competition among clubs in foreign countries
in recent years, the great increase in the number of foreign
cubs for the Cup, and the prosperity experienced by various
countries throughout the world, designers and crew members
who are nationals of one country have begun changing their
places of residence to other countries far enough in advance
to satisfy the conditions of nationality to design or compete
for clubs located in more than one country; and
WHEREAS the original Deed of Gift dated July 8, 1857 and
the second Deed of Gift dated January 4, 1882 each expressly
provided, and the third and present Deed of Gift dated October
24, 1887, expressly provides, that the Cup should be "perpetually
a Challenge Cup for friendly competition between foreign
countries", and
WHEREAS by the 1958 Resolution the then Board of Trustees
determined that in accordance with the expressed intent
of the donors of the America’s Cup and commencing with the
first race for the Cup in 1870 to the date of the 1958 resolution
every challenger had been both designed and constructed
in the country of the defending Club so that every challenger
and every defender had been in all respects truly representative
of the countries of the challenging and defending club and
the Cup had become by tradition the symbol of yachting supremacy
of the country of the Club winning the challenge match;
and
WHEREAS the determination made by the 1958 Resolution is
true to the present time, but unless declaration of nationality
is required where a person satisfies the conditions of nationality
for more than one country the expressed intent of the donors
will be frustrated; and
WHEREAS a question has been raised as to the appropriate
method for determining the issues of eligibility of designers
and members of a candidate’s crew; and
WHEREAS the Deed of Gift expressly provides that the club
challenging for the Cup and the club holding the same may,
by mutual consent, make any arrangement satisfactory to
both as to any and all conditions of the Match; and that
in case the parties cannot mutually agree upon the teams
of a Match, the races shall be sailed subject to the rules
and sailing regulations of the club holding the Cup so far
as the same do not conflict with the provisions of the Deed
of Gift; and
WHEREAS the Deed of Gift makes no other provision for determining
the eligibility of designers and members of a candidate’s
crew; and
WHEREAS the context of the Resolutions may, on occasion,
require reference to gender; it is
RESOLVED that Footnote (1) in amplification of the 1980
Resolutions, as amended May 15, 1984, be, and it hereby
is, further amended to add the following second sentence:
"However, no person may claim dual or multiple nationality.
If a person satisfies the conditions of nationality for
more than one country, he shall elect and declare a single
nationality, and may participate only on behalf of the country
whose nationality he declares",
RESOLVED that for the 1992 America’s Cup Match, a designer
who must declare nationality shall do so to the defending
club as soon as reasonably practicable after July 31, 1990.
The declaration shall include a statement that since July
31, 1990, he has designed only for the country whose nationality
he had declared.
RESOLVED that a member of a candidate’s crew who must declare
a nationality shall do so to the defending club prior to
the start of the challenger or defender selection series,
as appropriate.
RESOLVED that a question as to a person’s eligibility shall
be referred to the challenging club (or, if there is more
than one challenging club, then to the duly elected or appointed
Challenger of Record, or Committee elected by the challengers
and approved by the defending club, as applicable) and the
defending club for agreement. If they cannot agree, the
question shall be referred to the appropriate authority
under the rules and sailing regulations of the club holding
the Cup.
RESOLVED that for purposed of the Resolutions interpreting
the Deed of Gift, the masculine gender used includes the
feminine;
RESOLVED that henceforth any reference to the Deed of Gift
shall be deemed to include reference to these Resolutions,
which shall hereafter be known as the "Second 1990 Resolutions",
and that whenever hereafter the Deed of Gift is printed
or otherwise reproduced, the Second 1990 Resolutions shall
be printed or reproduced as an integral part thereof.
William R. Munster
Secretary
FOOTNOTES IN AMPLIFICATION OF THE JULY
15, 1980
RESOLUTIONS, INCLUDING THE AMENDMENTS OF MAY 15, 1984
AND JULY 1, 1990.
1. The requirement that a person be a
national will be satisfied if the person has been domiciled
in, or has had a principal place of residence in, or has
had a valid passport of that country for no shorter period
than the two years before the date of the first race of
the applicable America’s Cup Match. However, no person may
claim dual or multiple nationality. If a person satisfies
the conditions of nationality for more than one country,
he shall elect and declare a single nationality, and may
participate only on behalf of the country whose nationality
he declares.
2. A foreign designer—however he is designated—participating
in the design of a boat or a sail would violate both the
letter and spirit of the above resolution, and any boat
or sail so designed would be ineligible for use in America’s
Cup competition. Similarly, a hull or sails which are merely
copies of those of a foreign designer would also be
Regardless of whether a challenge has been accepted by the
Defending Club in the belief that a boat complies with the
Deed of Gift and subsequent Interpretive Resolutions, such
acceptance does not immunize the boat from being challenged
as to eligibility by another Challenging Club.
THE INTERPRETIVE RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED
BY THE TRUSTEES
Consolidated as of October 1, 1990
The word "constructed" wherever it appears
in the Deed of Gift of the America’s Cup shall always be
construed as "designed and built".
"THE 1993 RESOLUTIONS"
RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE
SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB ON APRIL 9, 1993
[Abrogée le 19 décembre
1996]
"THE 1996 RESOLUTIONS"
RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE FLAG OFFICERS
AND GENERAL COMMITTEE OF THE ROYAL NEW ZEALAND YACHT SQUADRON
ON DECEMBER 19, 1996
WHEREAS, by Resolution adopted March 27,
1958 (the "1958 Resolution") the then Board of Trustees
determined that the word "constructed" wherever it appears
in the Deed of Gift of the America’s Cup shall always be
construed as "designed and built";
WHEREAS, by Resolutions adopted July 15, 1980, and amended
March 9, 1982, May 15, 1984, and July 1, 1990, the then
Board of Trustees set forth their interpretation of the
words both "designed" and "built" as they appeared in the
1958 Resolution and in so doing made reference to "designers";
and
WHEREAS, by Resolutions adopted May 22, 1984 (the "Third
1984 Resolutions") the then Board of Trustees set forth
conditions whereby participating clubs in the America’s
Cup might use towing tank facilities and noted that where
practicable design testing should be carried out in the
country of the club defending or challenging; and
WHEREAS, the Third 1984 Resolutions govern only the use
of towing tank facilities and do not address the use of
other aids to design such as computer software and various
other types of testing facilities; and
WHEREAS, by Resolution adopted April 9, 1993 (the "First
1993 Resolution") the then Trustee set forth its interpretation
of those persons who were to be considered "designers";
and
WHEREAS, the First 1993 Resolution is unworkable; and
WHEREAS, the purposes of the Deed of Gift, particularly
in provision thereof that the America’s Cup "shall be preserved
as a perpetual Challenge Cup for friendly competition between
foreign countries" and the purposes of the various Interpretive
Resolutions particularly those governing nationality eligibility,
will be furthered by a clarification of who shall be considered
a "designer"; it is
RESOLVED that the First 1993 Resolution be, and the same
hereby is rescinded; and
RESOLVED that a designer in relation to a yacht, its hull,
rig, appendages and sails, is any person who applies or
who has applied substantial intellectual creativity and/or
judgement to the determination of the shape and/or structure
of that yacht, its hull, rig appendages or sails. A person
shall not be considered to apply or to have applied substantial
intellectual creativity and/or judgement to the determination
of the shape and/or structure of a yacht, its hull, rig,
appendages, or sails if that person merely develops, modifies,
operates, or provides instructions for the use of or the
interpretation of any data or information created by, any
machine, tool, instrument, device or apparatus including,
but without limitation, computer software, towing tank facilities
or sail testing facilities, which may be used to assist
in that determination. With the exception of towing tank
facilities the use of which is governed by the Third 1984
Resolutions, and wind tunnel facilities the use of which
is governed by the Third 1984 Resolutions as amended by
these resolutions, such computer software and/or facilities
may be used without regard to nationality; and
RESOLVED that the Third 1984 Resolutions be amended by adding
the words "and/or wind tunnel facilities" after the words
"towing tank facilities" in each of the first and second
resolutions but otherwise the same hereby are ratified and
confirmed.
RESOLVED that the 1958 Resolution and the Resolutions adopted
on July 15, 1980 as amended March 9, 1982, May 15, 1984
and July 1, 1990 be and the same hereby ratified and confirmed;
and
RESOLVED that henceforth any reference to the Deed of Gift
shall be deemed to included reference to these resolutions
which shall hereafter be known as "The 1996 Resolutions"
and that whenever hereafter the Deed of Gift is printed
or otherwise reproduced the 1996 Resolutions shall be printed
or otherwise reproduced as an integral part thereof. William
John Heise Commodore Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron
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