Lexicographical Neighbors of Inhibiter
Literary usage of Inhibiter
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Institute of the Law of Scotland: In Four Books : in the Order of Sir by John Erskine, George Mackenzie, James Ivory (1824)
"But any co-creditor of the inhibited, whose debt is struck at by the inhibition,
or a purchaser from him, has a right, on payment to the inhibiter of the ..."
2. The Scots Revised Reports: Morison's Dictionary, 1 to 9424 (1908)
"It is personal to the inhibiter, and no third party is entitled to avail himself
of it : is was found, 26th January 1636, Lady Borthwick contra Kerr, No. ..."
3. Leading Cases in the Law of Scotland: Prepared from the Original Pleadings by George Ross (1849)
"And, on the other hand, as the inhibiter cannot be hurt by debts contracted after
his diligence, neither can he avail himself of them, so as to enlarge his ..."
4. Principles of the Law of Scotland by John Erskine, George Moir (1881)
"Hence also, debts, though contracted after inhibition, are not reducible where
the inhibiter would have been totally excluded from the debtor's funds by ..."
5. Cases Decided in the House of Lords, on Appeal from the Courts of Scotland by Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords, Sydney Smith Bell (1843)
"Of these cases, it is enough at present to say, that they do not apply; for
supposing that, upon an alienation of the estate, where the inhibiter may ..."
6. Cases Decided in the House of Lords: On Appeal from the Courts of Scotland by Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords, Sydney Smith Bell (1843)
"Of these cases, it is enough at present to say, that they do not apply; for
supposing that, upon an alienation of the estate, where the inhibiter may ..."
7. The Law of Bankruptcy, Insolvency, and Mercantile Sequestration, in Scotland by John Hill Burton (1845)
"To counteract a reduction by the inhibiter, the purchaser acquired other debts,
and adjudged. It was found that as the sale was valid so far as regarded ..."
8. Lectures on Conveyancing by Alexander Montgomerie Bell (1867)
"equivalent, the inhibition would clearly prevent the creditor from voluntarily
assigning the debt so as to prejudice the inhibiter. ..."