¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Mortgagees
1. mortgagee [n] - See also: mortgagee
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mortgagees
Literary usage of Mortgagees
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Concise Precedents in Conveyancing: With Practical Notes and with by Madgwick George Davidson, Samuel Wadsworth, Charles Davidson (1899)
">o THE USB of the mortgagees, their heirs and assigns: PROVIDED ALWAYS, that if
the mortgagor shall pay to the Proviso fur mortgagees, on the day of next ..."
2. The diplomatic protection of citizens abroad or the law of international claims by Edwin Montefiore Borchard (1915)
"mortgagees. mortgagees are secured creditors in a special sense. A mortgage is
in form a conveyance, vesting in the mortgagee upon its execution a ..."
3. Prideaux's Precedents in Conveyancing: With Dissertations on Its Law and by Frederick Prideaux, John Whitcombe (1889)
"(mortgagees), by an indenture bearing even date with these presents to secure
... (other mortgagees), by another indenture bearing even date herewith to ..."
4. A Treatise on the Law and Practice of Foreclosing Mortgages on Real Property by Charles Hastings Wiltsie (1889)
"Rights of senior and junior mortgagees to maintain a foreclosure. 190. When prior
mortgagees and lienors may be made defendants. § 191. ..."
5. A Treatise Upon Some of the General Principles of the Law: Whether of a by William Wait (1878)
"When a mortgage is conditioned to pay a sum of money, or well and truly to support
the mortgagees and the survivor of them during their natural lives, ..."
6. A Treatise on the Law of Mortgages of Real Property by Leonard Augustus Jones (1904)
"When a mortgage secures an indebtedness due to the mortgagees jointly, their
interest in the estate so far partakes of the nature of the debt that the ..."
7. Handbook of the Law of Real Property by William Livesey Burdick (1914)
"In some jurisdictions joint mortgagees present some of the aspects of joint tenants.
Generally they are regarded as tenants in common. ..."