{"schemaVersion":1,"recordType":"legal-article","id":"law:eri:code:civil:2015:article:324","workId":"law:eri:code:civil:2015","expressionId":"law:eri:code:civil:2015:en","title":"Appeal","number":"324","language":"en","canonicalUrl":"https://eriatlas.com/law/civil-code-2015/article/324/","hierarchy":{"book":"BOOK I - PERSONS","title":"TITLE II. - CAPACITY OF PERSONS.","chapter":"Chapter 3. - Insane Persons and Infirm Persons","section":"Section 2. - Judicial Interdiction.","paragraph":null},"paragraphs":[{"id":"lead","number":"","text":"The insane or infirm person himself, his spouse, any of his relatives by consanguinity or affinity, or the public prosecutor may enter an appeal against a judgment of interdiction.","canonicalUrl":"https://eriatlas.com/law/civil-code-2015/article/324/#lead","sourceTargets":[{"sourceId":"civil-code-2015-en","pdfPage":98,"url":"https://eriatlas.com/sources/civil-code-2015/page/98/?article=324&paragraph=lead#article-324-lead"}]}],"caution":"This is the 2015 English-language edition attributed in its front matter to the Ministry of Justice. Eri Atlas has not independently verified the translation, later changes, or whether the text is currently in force. Nine passages are incomplete in the available scan and are identified where they occur."}