Charles Henry Huberich (February 18, 1877 – June 18, 1945) was an American lawyer and scholar of
international law. In 1906, he served as the acting executive head of
Stanford Law School.
In 1907, Huberich spent three months researching commercial law in Australia and Polynesia.[3] He taught at
Stanford Law School from 1907 to 1912.[1] Between 1919 and 1938, he practiced in London, The Hague, Berlin, and Paris.[2]
Scholarship
In 1915, Huberich wrote two monographs on
prize law in two languages: one on English prize law in German; and another on German prize law in English, in collaboration with Richard King.[5][6]
Huberich's The Law Relating to Trade with the Enemy (1918) is an account of the legal issues involved in administering various
trading with the enemy acts in the United Kingdom and United States,[7] with a particular focus on the American
Trading with the Enemy Act of 1917.[8]
The Political and Legislative History of Liberia, published posthumously in 1947, is a detailed two-volume survey of the legal development of
Liberia from its founding onwards.[9] Although it largely focuses on legal history, the work also describes everyday life.[10] It argues that Liberia was always an independent state and never a
colony.[11]