Locator

Legal Definition and Related Resources of Locator

Meaning of Locator

In civil law. He who leases or lets a thing to hire to another. His duties are, first, to deliver to the hirer the thing hired, that he may use it; second, to guarantee to the hirer the free enjoyment of it; third, to keep the thing hired in good order in such manner that the hirer may enjoy it; fourth, to warrant that the thing hired has not such defects as to destroy its use. Poth. du Contr. de Louage, note 53.

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Related topics Locator in the World Encyclopedia of Law

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This definition of Locator is based on the The Cyclopedic Law Dictionary . This entry needs to be proofread.

Vocabularies (Semantic Web Information)

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https://legaldictionary.lawin.org/locator/ The URI of Locator (more about URIs)

Grammar

This term is a noun.

Etimology of Locator

(You may find locator at the world legal encyclopedia and the etimology of more terms).

c. 1600, “one who lets (something) for hire,” a legal term, from Latin locator “one who lets,” agent noun from locare “to put, place, set,” from locus “a place” (see locus). As “one who settles upon land by legal right of possession,” 1803, American English. Of things which locate, from 1902.

Concept of “Locator”

Traditional meaning of locator in English (with some legal use of this latin concept in England and the United States in the XIX Century) [1]: (in Latin) A lessor; a lender.

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Notes and References

  1. Based on A Concise Law Dictionary of Words, Phrases and Maxims, “Locator”, Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1911, United States. It is also called the Stimson’s Law dictionary. This term and/or definition may be absolete.

See Also

Locator


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