Definition of Interdictors

1. interdictor [n] - See also: interdictor

Lexicographical Neighbors of Interdictors

interdependently
interdependentness
interdepending
interdepends
interdepositional
interdevour
interdialectal
interdicted
interdicting
interdiction
interdiction fire
interdictions
interdictive
interdictor
interdictors (current term)
interdictory
interdicts
interdiffuse
interdiffused
interdiffuses
interdiffusing
interdiffusion
interdiffusions
interdigit
interdigital
interdigital folds
interdigitate
interdigitated
interdigitates

Literary usage of Interdictors

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A Digest of the Law of Scotland: With Special Reference to the Office and by Hugh Barclay, Scotland (1855)
"... from alienation or incumbrances of a gratuitous nature, without consent of the interdictors. He cannot recall the interdiction except with the ..."

2. Conveyancing According to the Law of Scotland Being the Lectures of the Late by Allan Menzies (1863)
"Here a party, who had been interdicted as a simple youth, was found not to need the consent of his interdictors to uplift a sum in a personal bond. ..."

3. An Institute of the Law of Scotland: In Four Books : in the Order of Sir by John Erskine, George Mackenzie, James Ivory (1824)
"All deeds granted with consent of the interdictors are as valid as if the granter had been laid under no restraint, insomuch that though gross lesion should ..."

4. Principles of the Law of Scotland by John Erskine, George Moir, William Guthrie (1870)
"(2) No deed, granted with consent of the interdictors, is reducible, though the strongest lesion or prejudice to the granter should appear. ..."

5. A Manual of Conveyancing: In the Form of Examinations Embracing Both by John Hendry, John Thompson Mowbray, John Philip Wood (1881)
"What is the duty of interdictors, and how do they incur personal responsibility ? The duty of interdictors is to judge of the propriety of deeds by the ..."

6. Encyclopaedia Britannica; Or A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and (1823)
"Where the bond of interdiction requires a certain number as a quorum, the restraint ceases, if the interdictors shall by death be ..."

7. The Revised Reports by Robert Campbell, Frederick Pollock, Oliver Augustus Saunders, Arthur Beresford Cane, Joseph Gerald Pease, William Bowstead, Great Britain Courts (1898)
"By the law of Scotland, a man of weak understanding may appoint interdictors by a deed, which binds him to do no act affecting his estate without the ..."

8. A Digest of the Law of Scotland: With Special Reference to the Office and by Hugh Barclay, Scotland (1855)
"... from alienation or incumbrances of a gratuitous nature, without consent of the interdictors. He cannot recall the interdiction except with the ..."

9. Conveyancing According to the Law of Scotland Being the Lectures of the Late by Allan Menzies (1863)
"Here a party, who had been interdicted as a simple youth, was found not to need the consent of his interdictors to uplift a sum in a personal bond. ..."

10. An Institute of the Law of Scotland: In Four Books : in the Order of Sir by John Erskine, George Mackenzie, James Ivory (1824)
"All deeds granted with consent of the interdictors are as valid as if the granter had been laid under no restraint, insomuch that though gross lesion should ..."

11. Principles of the Law of Scotland by John Erskine, George Moir, William Guthrie (1870)
"(2) No deed, granted with consent of the interdictors, is reducible, though the strongest lesion or prejudice to the granter should appear. ..."

12. A Manual of Conveyancing: In the Form of Examinations Embracing Both by John Hendry, John Thompson Mowbray, John Philip Wood (1881)
"What is the duty of interdictors, and how do they incur personal responsibility ? The duty of interdictors is to judge of the propriety of deeds by the ..."

13. Encyclopaedia Britannica; Or A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and (1823)
"Where the bond of interdiction requires a certain number as a quorum, the restraint ceases, if the interdictors shall by death be ..."

14. The Revised Reports by Robert Campbell, Frederick Pollock, Oliver Augustus Saunders, Arthur Beresford Cane, Joseph Gerald Pease, William Bowstead, Great Britain Courts (1898)
"By the law of Scotland, a man of weak understanding may appoint interdictors by a deed, which binds him to do no act affecting his estate without the ..."

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