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Definition of Colessee
1. n. A partner in a lease taken.
Definition of Colessee
1. Noun. A joint lessee; a partner in a lease. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Colessee
1. a joint lessee [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Colessee
Literary usage of Colessee
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Ruling Case Law as Developed and Established by the Decisions and by William Mark McKinney, Burdett Alberto Rich (1917)
"There is authority, however, which apparently supports the view that a transfer
by one colessee to the other is not a breach of a general covenant not to ..."
2. An Historical Account of the Most Celebrated Voyages, Travels, and by William Fordyce Mavor (1803)
"... leaving the comedy, to which the marquis immediately assented, and ordered
his coachman to drive them to the colessee as all the world would be there. ..."
3. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Court of Queen's Bench: And by Great Britain Court of King's Bench, Great Britain Court of Exchequer Chamber (1854)
"Must not his possession under the lease be construed the possession of himself
and his colessee ? Branthwaite being lawfully in possession under the lease, ..."
4. The Law of Real Property and Other Interests in Land by Herbert Thorndike Tiffany (1903)
"A cotenant may, however, purchase a title which is not adverse; and so a colessee
may purchase the reversion. Ramberg v. Wahlstrom, 140 1ll. ..."
5. A Treatise on the Modern Law of Real Property and Other Interests in Land by Herbert Thorndike Tiffany (1903)
"... •oa colessee may purchase the reversion. Ramberg v. Wahlstrom, 140 111.
182, 33 Am. St Rep. 227. The rule referred to In the text has been considerably ..."
6. The Revised Reports: Being a Republication of Such Cases in the English by Frederick Pollock, Robert Campbell, Oliver Augustus Saunders, Arthur Beresford Cane, Joseph Gerald Pease, William Bowstead, Great Britain Courts (1907)
"Must not his possession under the lease be construed the possession of himself
and his colessee? Branthwaite being lawfully in possession under the lease, ..."