¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Promisors
1. promisor [n] - See also: promisor
Lexicographical Neighbors of Promisors
Literary usage of Promisors
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Law of Contracts by William Herbert Page (1920)
"If two or more persons are promisors in a contract, their liability may be joint,
... If their liability is joint, each of the promisors is liable, ..."
2. Principles of the English Law of Contract and of Agency in Its Relation to by William Reynell Anson (1906)
"Joint and several promisors. The following rules govern the case of joint and
several ... (1) Joint and several promisors may all be joined in one action, ..."
3. Principles of the English Law of Contract and of Agency in Its Relation to by William Reynell Anson (1906)
"Joint and several promisors. The following rules govern the case of joint and
several ... (1) Joint and several promisors may all be joined in one action, ..."
4. Principles of the Law of Contract: With a Chapter on the Law of Agency by William Reynell Anson, Arthur Linton Corbin (1919)
"Joint and several promisors. The following rules govern the case of joint and
... (1) Joint and several promisors may all be joined in one ac- 1 Davis v. ..."
5. The General Law of Suretyship: Including Commercial and Non-commercial by Edward Whiton Spencer (1913)
"Same—Joint promisors. Though joint debtors, as we have seen, are in a sense
co-sureties,21 yet if two or more persons undertake as joint debtors or jointly ..."
6. Modern American Law: A Systematic and Comprehensive Commentary on the by Eugene Allen Gilmore (1921)
"The third situation contains two promisors and one promisee; and the fourth
possesses two ... promisors may be joint, or joint and several, or several. ..."
7. The Law of Contracts by William Herbert Page (1919)
"Consideration moving from promisee to one of two or more promisors. Since B's
giving up a right to a third person would be a consideration, B's giving up a ..."
8. The Law of Contracts by Samuel Williston, Clarence Martin Lewis (1920)
"[References are to sections: VI, §§ 1-600; V. II., §5 601 1287; V. Ш., §§
1288-2044 ] INABILITY—Continued effect of, on the part of both promisors to ..."