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Definition of Mandator
1. Noun. An authority who issues a mandate.
Definition of Mandator
1. n. A director; one who gives a mandate or order.
Definition of Mandator
1. Noun. A director; one who gives a mandate or order. ¹
2. Noun. (legal) The person who employs another to perform a mandate. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Mandator
1. one that mandates [n -S] - See also: mandates
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mandator
Literary usage of Mandator
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Commentaries on the Law of Bailments: With Illustrations from the Civil and by Joseph Story, James Schouler (1878)
"Obligations of mandator. 197. In relation to Expenses of Mandatary. 198.
In relation to Incidental Contracts of Mandatary. 199. ..."
2. Roman Private Law in the Times of Cicero and of the Antonines by Henry John Roby (1902)
"mandator. The principal can demand surrender of the middle man's actions against
the actual executant (D. iii 5 fr20§3, 27). (j) In two cases of mandate the ..."
3. The Institutes of Justinian: With English Introduction, Translation and Notes by Thomas Collett Sandars, Emperor of the East Justinian (1917)
"The mandator was considered sometimes more responsible. It was, for instance,
doubted by the jurists whether, if an adolescent who had borrowed under a ..."
4. A Treatise on the Law of Contracts and Rights and Liabilities Ex Contractu by Charles Greenstreet Addison (1849)
"he had a right to call upon the mandator for the expenses of their keep and
nourishment. If he was obliged to incur expense in procuring car- riages or ..."
5. Institutes of American Law by John Bouvier (1854)
"Of the obligations of the mandator. 1074. Although the mandate is to be without
reward, yet, upon the plainest principles of justice, the mandator must be ..."
6. The Civil Laws of France to the Present Time: Supplemented by Notes by France, David Mitchell Aird (1875)
"Obligations of the mandator. A mandator is bound to perform the obligations ...
The mandator is bound to reimburse the mandatory for advances and expenses ..."
7. Introduction to Roman Law by William Alexander Hunter (1880)
"Termina- A mandate might be revoked, or, as we have Mandate, seen, renounced.
It was also put an end to by the death of either mandator or ..."
8. A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities by William Smith (1859)
"The person who gave the commission was the mandans or mandator: he who received it,
... The mandatum might be either on the sole account of the mandator, ..."