Intervention in civil proceedings
Abstract
As a general rule, a civil suit requires at least two primary parties, the plaintiff and the defendant, but may be multiple plaintiffs or defendants in one case, if the purpose of this multiplicity is to serve the case and its parties through the economy of expenses and judicial proceedings And to avoid the prolongation of its procedures, and to prevent the issuance of contradictory provisions in multiple cases in which the link is clear between the parties or the subject or cause.The lawsuit does not freeze in terms of the parties in the way it started, but it develops during the course of the exit of the opponents and enter other opponents, and the flexibility of the rules of the lawsuit to allow the change of parties, this, of course, is to highlight the positive role of the Court in the management of the case through its important role in this regard. One of the most prominent manifestations of this role is the power of the court to take out the litigant while continuing the proceedings with the rest of the parties, or if it is found that he is not qualified or that he lost this status during the proceedings, and the court may order to take out the litigant at his request if the guarantor enters the case.
References
- Third: Laws:1. Iraqi Civil Procedure Law No. 83 of 1969.2. Egyptian Civil and Commercial Procedures Law No. 13 of 1968.3. Lebanese Civil Procedure Law No. 90 of 1983.4. Saudi Legal Proceedings System for the year 1421H.