lessee

from WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)
lessee
    n 1: a tenant who holds a lease [syn: {leaseholder}, {lessee}]
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Lessee \Les*see"\ (l[e^]s*s[=e]"), n. [F. laiss['e], p. p. of
   laisser. See {Lease}, v. t.] (Law)
   The person to whom a lease is given, or who takes an estate
   by lease. --Blackstone.
   [1913 Webster]
    
from Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)
LESSEE. He to whom a lease is made. The subject will be considered by taking 
a view, 1. Of his rights. 2. Of his duties. 
     2.-1. He has a right to enjoy the premises leased for the term 
mentioned in the lease, and to use them for the purpose agreed upon. He may, 
unless, restrained by the covenants in the lease, either assign it, or 
underlet the premises. 1 Cruise, Dig. 174. By an assignment of the lease is 
meant the transfer of all the tenant's interest in the estate to another 
person; on the contrary, an underletting is but a partial transfer of the 
property leased, the lessee retaining a reversion to himself. 
     3.-2. The duties of the lessee are numerous. First, he is bound to 
fulfill all express covenants he has entered into in relation to the premises

leased; and, secondly, he is required to fulfill all implied covenants, which

the relation of lessee imposes upon him towards the lessor. For example, he 
is bound to put the premises to no other use than that for which it was 
hired; when a farm is let to him for common farming purposes, he cannot open 
a mine and dig ore which may happen to be in the ground; but if the mine has 
been opened, it is presumed both parties intended it should be used, unless 
the lessee were expressly restrained; 1 Cruise, Dig. 132. He is required to 
use the property in a tenant-like and proper manner; to take reasonable care 
of it and to restore it at the end of his term, subject only to the 
deterioration produced by ordinary wear and the reasonable use for which it 
was demised. 12 M. & W. 827. Although he is not bound, in the absence of an 
express covenant, to rebuild in case of destruction by fire or other 
accident, yet he must keep the house in a habitable state if he received it 
in good order. See Repairs. The lessee is required to restore the property 
to the lessor at the end of the term. 
     4. The lessee remains chargeable, after an assignment of his term, as 
before, unless the lessor has accepted the assignee; and even then he 
continues liable in covenant on an express covenant, as for repairs, or to 
pay rent; 2 Keb. 640; but not for the performance of an implied one, or, as 
it is usually termed, a covenant in law. By the acceptance, he is discharged 
from debt for arrears of future rent. Cro. Jac. 309, 334; Ham. on Parties, 
129, 130. 
     Vide Estate for years; Lease;, Notice to quit: Tenant for years; 
Underlease. 
    
from Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
22 Moby Thesaurus words for "lessee":
      board-and-roomer, boarder, hirer, homesteader, incumbent,
      leaseholder, lodger, occupant, occupier, paying guest, renter,
      resident, roomer, squatter, sublessee, subtenant, tenant,
      tenant at sufferance, tenant for life, transient, transient guest,
      underlessee

    

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