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Home » Law Dictionary » D » DEBTOR

DEBTOR

TheLaw.com Law Dictionary & Black's Law Dictionary 2nd Ed.

contracts. One who owes a debt; he who may be constrained to pay what he owes. 2. A debtor is bound to pay his debt personally, and all the estate he possesses or may acquire, is also liable for his debt. 3. Debtors are joint or several; joint, when they all equally owe the debt in solido; in this case if a suit should be necessary to recover the debt, all the debtors must be sued together or, when some are dead, the survivors must be sued, but each is bound for the whole debt, having a right to contribution from the others; they are several, when each promises severally to pay the whole debt; and obligations are generally binding on both or all debtors jointly and severally. When they are severally bound each may be sued separately, and on the payment of debt by one, the others will be bound to contribution, where all had participated in the money or property, which was the cause of the debt. 4. Debtors are also principal and surety; the principal debtor is bound as between him and his surety to pay the whole debt. and if the surety pay it, he will be entitled to recover against the principal.

Law Dictionary – Alternative Legal Definition

One who owes a debt; he who may be compelled to pay a claim or demand. Common debtor. In Scotch law. A debtor whose eflFects have been arrested by several creditors. In regard to these creditors, he is their common debtor, and by this term is distinguished in the proceedings that take place in the competition. Bell. Debtor’s act 1869. The statute 32 & 33 Vict. c. 62, abolishing imprisonment for debt in England, and for the punishment of fraudulent debtors. 2 Steph. Comm. 159-164. Not to be confounded with the Bankruptcy Act of 1869. Mozley & Whitley. Debtor’s summons. In English law. A summons issuing from a court having jurisdiction in bankruptcy, upon the creditor proving a liquidated debt of not less than 50 pounds, which he has failed to collect after reasonable effort, stating that if the debtor fail, within one week if a trader, and within three weeks if a non-trader, to pay or compound for the sum specified, a petition may be presented against him praying that he mny be adjudged a bankrupt.

Related Posts:

  • CO-OBLIGOR
  • CONTRIBUTION
  • NONRECOURSE DEBT
  • SOLIDARY OBLIGATION
  • INSTALLMENT
  • JOINT DEBTOR

Filed Under: D

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