The United States–Mexico Convention relating to the Final Adjustment of Certain Unsettled Claims (in Spanish, Convencion entre los Estados Unidos de America y Mexico Relativa al Arreglo de Ciertas Reclamaciones Pendientes de Resolucion) was a bilateral agreement concluded between the US and Mexican governments in Washington, D.C. on November 19, 1941. It annulled most of claims by US and Mexican nationals against the other party's government, except for claims by US oil companies for property nationalized by the Mexican government, which remained to be determined by future agreements. The convention came into effect on April 2, 1942. It was registered in United Nations Treaty Series on March 26, 1952.
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