¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Interpleads
1. interplead [v] - See also: interplead
Lexicographical Neighbors of Interpleads
Literary usage of Interpleads
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Law of Interpleader as Administered by the English, Irish, American by Roderick James Maclennan (1901)
"But where a sheriff interpleads in the High Court, and has executions both from
the County Court and from the High Court, a successful claimant is entitled ..."
2. South Eastern Reporter by West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, West Publishing Company, South Carolina Supreme Court (1905)
"Where defendant in claim and delivery retains the property by filing an undertaking
for plaintiff's benefit, a claimant who interpleads may, by filing the ..."
3. A Treatise on Equity Jurisprudence: As Administered in the United States of by John Norton Pomeroy (1905)
"0* A very common class of interpleader suits is that where a bank, holding the
relation of debtor to its depositor, interpleads the depositor and one ..."
4. Reports of Cases Argued and Adjudged in the Supreme Court of the United States by United States Supreme Court, William Cranch, Henry Wheaton, Richard Peters, Benjamin Chew Howard, Jeremiah Sullivan Black (1903)
"... in his answer, interpleads, submits to any order the court may make, and prays
their protection by such a decree as will save him from future litigation ..."
5. Lawyers' Reports Annotated by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company (1905)
"... or object to it, or refuse to pay the policy, but, when sued, other persons
are claiming the fund, and it interpleads, and pays the money into court. ..."
6. The American State Reports: Containing the Cases of General Value and by Abraham Clark Freeman (1899)
"One who interpleads in an attachment wrongfully sued out may recover all costs,
and damages that may accrue to him by reason of the attachment, ..."
7. A Law Dictionary, Adapted to the Constitution: And Laws of the United States by John Bouvier (1874)
"... the interest of the plaintiff, which it is his interest to defeat. He differs
from the intervene!-, or he who interpleads in equity. 4 Bouvier, Inst. n. ..."