delivered the opinion of the court.
This case is before us upon an assignment of errors. The errors assigned are, that since the death of Henry Babcock, one of the plaintiffs, there has been no service of the amended petition filed by his widow and heirs, and no citation or notice, and that the defendant has been condemned by default without such service of citation, and that no regular judgment by default was taken against him.
In order to understand the true state of the question, it is necessary to premise, that one of the original plaintiffs died, pendente lite, and that the District Court proceeded to judgment, notwithstanding a suggestion of his death, which was brought to its knowledge during the trial. That judgment was reversed by this court, on appeal, and the case remanded in order to enable the legal representatives of the deceased partner to make themselves parties to the suit. Accordingly, they came forward, and the court having previously ordered that the suit be revived in the name of the legal representatives of Henry Babcock, presented themselves in that character, and joined the other plaintiffs in claiming judgment, as prayed for in the original petition. On the following day, a judgment by default was taken ; but it does not appear that any service was made or formal notice of this proceeding. The only question, therefore, is, whether the *430law requires a new citation in such cases, together with a copy of amended petition, as it has been called in the argument.
The Supreme theTcase of’xíc" guet’s Heirs vs. fma°e> Reports’, 36i, that the supplemental petition of the heirs sentatn-eVof1'^ d^eased^piain-issue joined,) is a" re\dvaf o’fthe Uianan a^endment; and be-■ant cau he ruled betifiedmby ■■service of the new petition and •citation. the^co-piaintíffs in a joint action, died atter issue joined, the suit totheodiers^and an order to rename of the representatives1 píaintifi'le°being made contradictorily -with tlie ■defendant: Held, that no service petition, and a on^the °adverse party is necessary ; nor even judgment by default is required, in order to proceed to final j udgmcnt.In the case of Licquet's Heirs vs. Peirce, 5 Louisiana 1 Reports, 361, upon which the counsel for the appellant re^es’ court held, that the supplemental petition of the heirs and representatives of a deceased plaintiff, forms a revi-vaI ‘°^ action, rather than an amendment, and before the defendant can be ruled to trial he must be notified by service . . . it J . . of the new petition and citation, or by direct and positive notice to his counsel, (if such would suffice,) in order to answer and plead de novo, as the case might require.
That appears to have been a case in which there was but one plaintiff. In the one now before us, one of the co-plain-*a a j°'nt ac(-i01b died, and the suit did not certainly abate as to the others. As to the deceased partner, the suit was ordered to be revived in the name of his heirs, and that °Mer was made contradictorily with the defendant. When the heirs, therefore, presented themselves, and assumed that , 1 _ . • •• ti quality on. the record, it sumces, m our opinion, that the opposite party had an opportunity to contest their quality, error in the first case alluded to, consisted in forcing the ' * ^ defendant into a trial without giving them an opportunity to answer the new allegations. In this, the cause appears to i^ye peen tried on the original issues, and the same evi-dence given on the former trial, was admitted by consent of parlies. Having consented to go into a trial, without object-iQg to the capacity the new parties, it appears to us the defendant ought not now to complain of the proceedings as eiTOHeOUS.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be affirmed, with costs.