Lexicographical Neighbors of Indorsers
Literary usage of Indorsers
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. United States Supreme Court Reports by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company, United States Supreme Court (1885)
"... with instructions to demand payment of them, and if they were not paid to
protest them and send notice of non-payment to the indorsers. ..."
2. The Encyclopædia of Pleading and Practice: Under the Codes and Practice Acts by William Mark McKinney, Thomas Johnson Michie (1899)
"In some states successive indorsers of a negotiable instrument may be joined as
defendants in an action thereon.2 But where such joinder is permitted it is ..."
3. The Law and Practice in Bankruptcy Under the National Bankruptcy Act of 1898 by William Miller Collier, William Horace Hotchkiss, Frank Bixby Gilbert, Fred Eugene Rosbrook (1921)
"A corporation prior to bankruptcy executed a trust mortgage to secure bonds issued
and delivered to secure indorsers of its notes. On the foreclosure of the ..."
4. Rose's Notes on the United States Supreme Court Reports (2 Dallas to 241 by Walter Malins Rose, Charles Lawrence Thompson, United States Supreme Court (1917)
"Crane, 16 NH 75, holding where accommodation indorsers each pay half of note,
... 691, refusing instruction that accommodation indorsers of bill are ..."
5. Handbook of the Law of Suretyship and Guaranty by Frank Hall Childs (1907)
"indorsers—In General. The rights and liabilities of indorsers will be considered
... indorsers are sureties in the broad sense of the word,8 unless they ..."
6. The Law of Contracts by Samuel Williston, Clarence Martin Lewis (1920)
"Liabilities of various indorsers. Section 67. ... As respects one another indorsers
are liable prima facie in the order in which they indorse; but evidence ..."
7. A Treatise on Commercial Paper and the Negotiable Instruments Law: Including by James Webster Eaton, Frank Bixby Gilbert (1903)
"Agreement between indorsers.— The statute expressly provides, and the rule has
existed at common law, that an agreement may be made between the indorsers of ..."
8. A Treatise on the Law of Bills of Exchange, Promissory Notes and Checks by Mackenzie Dalzell Edwin Stewart Chalmers, Wayland Everett Benjamin (1889)
"When a bill of exchange is dishonored by non-acceptance, and the holder, without
lawful excuse, omits to protest it, the drawer and indorsers are discharged ..."