Supreme Court of the United States, 1888

Marchand v. Livandais

Marchand v. Livandais
Supreme Court of the United States · Decided April 16, 1888 · Mr. Justice Miller:
127 U.S. 775; 8 S. Ct. 1389; 32 L. Ed. 324; 1888 U.S. LEXIS 2040 (United States Reports)

Marchand v. Livandais

Opinion

Me. Justice Miller:

A motion is made to dismiss this cause because Charles Lafitte, the husband of the defendant in error, is not named in the writ of error as a party to the proceedings. The judgment was in favor of his wife Josephine, and he was a party authorizing'her in the suit below, according to the forms of the Louisiana law, which require that the husband must be joined with the wife when she sues, whether he has any interest or not; and the plaintiff in error has served a citation on Lafitte, although he was not named in the writ of error. It may be doubtful whether Lafitte is a necessary party in this court, seeing he was not a party to the judgment. If for conformity’s sake he ought to have been brought here to aid his 'wife in the writ of error, the citation to him is sufficient for that purpose. The motion to dismiss the case is overruled.

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