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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Bailee

Bailee \Bail`ee"\ (b[=a]l`[=e]"), n. [OF. baill['e], p. p. of bailler. See Bail to deliver.] (Law) The person to whom goods are committed in trust, and who has a temporary possession and a qualified property in them, for the purposes of the trust.
--Blackstone.

Note: In penal statutes the word includes those who receive goods for another in good faith.
--Wharton.

Wiktionary
bailee

n. (context legal English) One who holds bailed property; one who takes possession of the property of another (called a bailor) in order to keep that property safe for the other.

WordNet
bailee

n. the agent to whom property involved in a bailment is delivered

Usage examples of "bailee".

Village in its capacity as bailee, however inadvertently and unhappily arrived at, failed in its duty to bailor under the requisite standard of care and through such alleged negligence is liable for damages so incurred.

The issue involved is whether the Village in its capacity as bailee, however inadvertently and unhappily arrived at, failed in its duty to bailor under the requisite standard of care and through such alleged negligence is liable for damages so incurred.

Central to actions in bailment are the concepts of possession, by the bailee, and of ownership by the bailor.

Broadly beaming, the Bailee slapped both big hands on the tabletop and arose.

The test of the theory of possession which prevails in any system of law is to be found in its mode of dealing [165] who have a thing within their power, but not own it, or assert the position of an owner for with regard to it, bailees, in a word.

It is therefore, as a preliminary to understanding the common-law theory of possession, to study the common law with regard to bailees.

All the above peculiarities reappear in the Anglo-Norman law, and from that day to this all kinds of bailees have been treated as having possession in a legal sense, as I shall presently show.

The meaning of the rule that all bailees have the possessory remedies is, that in the theory of the common law every bailee has a true possession, and that a bailee recovers on the strength of his possession, just as a finder does, and as even a wrongful possessor may have full damages or a return of the specific thing from a stranger to the title.

The point which is essential to understanding the common-law theory of possession is now established: that all bailees from time immemorial have been regarded by the English law as possessors, and entitled to the possessory remedies.

Jailers in charge of prisoners were governed by the same law as bailees in charge of cattle.

This is repeated in Southcote's Case, and appears to involve a double distinction,--first between paid and unpaid bailees, next between bailees and servants.

Chief Justice [183] Popham probably borrowed his distinction between paid and unpaid bailees from that work, where common carriers are mentioned as an example of the former class.

In truth, there were two sets of duties,--one not peculiar to bailees, arising from the assumpsit or public calling of the defendant, as just explained.

It had begun to totter when the reporter cautioned bailees to accept in such terms as to get rid of it.

Bernard whenever a peculiar responsibility was imposed upon bailees, we find that sometimes an assumpsit was laid as in the early precedents, /2/ or more frequently that the bailee was alleged to be a common bargeman, or common carrier, or the like, without much reference to the special nature of the tort in question.