citator

Etymology

From Latin citator, agent noun of citare (“to cite”).

noun

  1. An index of citations of legal cases and other sources“A citator will tell you the history and treatment of a case or of a statute or constitutional provision.”
  2. One who makes a citation; a citer or citor“Should the perfon who is summoned conceal himself, letters are written to those among whom he is hid, signifying that he ought to surrender himself at a given time and place ; and if he has taken an asylum in a fortified castle, the citator goes either by night or by day, on foot or on horseback, cuts out three slips from a wooden rail, and places in the incision a coin and the writ of citation.”