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Definition of Stipulator
1. n. One who stipulates, contracts, or covenants.
Definition of Stipulator
1. Noun. A person who stipulates ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Stipulator
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Stipulator
Literary usage of Stipulator
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Institutes of Justinian by John Thomas Abdy, Bryan Walker (1876)
"... or that the stipulator may obtain the right of dealing with the article, or
that the thing may cease to be his own property: but it is void at once. ..."
2. The Judicial Dictionary, of Words and Phrases Judicially Interpreted, to by Frederick Stroud (1903)
"... is, probably, confined to the Enemies of the Sovereign of the stipulator ; it
certainly includes them ; RESTRAINTS OF KINGS being generally added to ..."
3. The American and English Encyclopedia of Law by John Houston Merrill, Charles Frederic Williams, Thomas Johnson Michie, David Shephard Garland (1893)
"... money may be deposited with the clerk or brought into court as a substitute
for a stipulation.6 A stipulator in admiralty is regarded as a surety for ..."
4. Roman Private Law in the Times of Cicero and of the Antonines by Henry John Roby (1902)
"In such an obligation each stipulator may at his choice demand the whole from
any one promiser, or part from one and part from another. ..."
5. The Institutes of Justinian: With English Introduction, Translation and Notes by Thomas Collett Sandars (1905)
"1); or (b) for a thing of which the stipulator has not the commercium, as for a
res sacra or a freeman; and in such cases the stipulation is invalid at once ..."
6. The Institutes of Justinian: With English Introduction, Translation and Notes by Thomas Collett Sandars, Emperor of the East Justinian (1917)
"1)'; or (h) for a thing of which the stipulator has not the commercium, as for
a res sacra or a freeman; and in such cases the stipulation is invalid at ..."
7. The Institutes of Justinian: With English Introduction, Translation, and Notes by William Gardiner Hammond (1876)
"or (b) for a thing of which the stipulator has not the commercium, as for a res
sacra or a freeman ; and in such cases the stipulation is invalid at once, ..."
8. A Compendium of Roman Law Founded on the Institutes of Justinian: Together by Gordon Campbell (1878)
"A promise to pay a sum to a stipulator and a third person, according to Justinian,
would entitle the stipulator to receive one-half the sum stipulated for. ..."