It would read; Judge John Smith and Mrs. Edith Smith; or Mr and Mrs. John Smith. You don't have to put the job titles in. If one has a PhD you could include that.
You can address the letter with "Dear Judge [Court Name]" or "To Whom It May Concern." Be sure to include the court's address on the envelope and in the letter itself.
You can address the envelope to a retired judge by using their full name followed by "Retired Judge" on the line below, and then their mailing address. For example: "John Doe Retired Judge 123 Main Street Anytown, USA."
You may always address the Jude as Judge for life as a courtesy, but the spouse never did or never will have an official title unless they acquire one on their own merit.
The envelope salutation for a judge is typically "The Honorable [Full Name]" followed by the official title of the judge, such as "Judge" or "Justice." This formal and respectful address is commonly used in official correspondence.
Use the term Honorable Judge on the envelope. For example Honorable Judge Smith and Mrs. Smith. On the invitation Judge Smith and Mrs. Smith would be fine.
This will depend upon if it is an official or social invitaion as to how to address. If this is for a Judge of a Lower Court the Envelope for official should be addressed as:The HonorableJohn DoeUnited States Court of (name the court)(City, State, zip)For a social addressing of the envelope:The HonorableJohn Doeand Mrs. DoeThe inside invitation would be addressed as: Judge (and Mrs. ) Doe
it may depend on the country, but The Honorable Justice (then initials and name) and include any post nominals after the name
Address a judge unknown
* Assuming that we're talking about court judges not pie eating contest judges: If introducing them, "Their Honors, Judge Samuel Swift, and Judge Ruth Swift" If meeting them "How do you do Judge Swift, (looking to the other) Judge Swift" Do not denigrate the one by saying "Judge Smith and his wife, or " Judge Smith and Mrs Smith" It is a lot like dealing with two judges, both with the name Fred Jones. The name and title of each should be used, there is no collective address. * Honors Samuel and Ruth Swift.
The proper way to address an envelope to a judge is to write "The Honorable [Full Name]" on the first line. On the second line, write the judge's title and the name of the court they preside over. Finally, include the court's address on subsequent lines.
He was an Australian judge after his job of Prime Minister
The judge is the criminal's father.