¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Disponers
1. disponer [n] - See also: disponer
Lexicographical Neighbors of Disponers
Literary usage of Disponers
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Cases Decided in the Court of Session by Scotland Court of Session, Patrick Shaw, Scotland, Court of Session (1831)
"... lady of an open charter, that although trustees under her marriage-contract
concurred as disponers, yet no conveyance in their favour was produced.—2. ..."
2. The Acts of the Parliaments of Scotland, 1424-1707 by Scotland (1908)
"... vses than the will of the disponer vpon some specious pretences contrarie or
different frome the disponers intentione to the evill example of others And ..."
3. The Scottish Jurist: Containing Reports of Cases Decided in the House of by House of Lords, Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords, Parliament, Great Britain (1855)
"It was also provided that the conveyance was to be effectual only in so far as
the disponers respectively had power to grant the same, and should in no way ..."
4. The Scots Revised Reports: Morison's Dictionary, 1 to 9424 (1908)
"... and one of the articles was, That Henry should be allowed to retain as much
of the price as should pay him two debts due by one of the disponers. ..."
5. The Scots Revised Reports: Court of Session, Second Series by Scotland Court of Session (1905)
"With regard to the right of the disponers to char and calcine on their own ground,
it may or may not subsist otherwise, but it cannot be made to rest on the ..."
6. The Scots Revised Reports, [Court of Session]: Faculty Collection, 1807-1825 by Scotland Court of Session (1906)
"... that he had fully satisfied the disponers anent payment of the said stipulated
price, of which he and his heirs were thereby forever discharged. ..."
7. Cases Decided in the Court of Session, Court of Justiciary, and House of Lords by Scotland Court of Session, Scotland High Court of Justiciary, Scotland Parliament. House of Lords (1898)
"I assume with the Lord Ordinary that the disponers were themselves bound to
observe similar conditions to those they had undertaken to impose on their ..."