Etiquette (and yes, it's still used) is the man's name goes first. Examples: * Mr. & Mrs. John Doe * Mr. John Doe & Jane Doe, M.D. * Mr. John Doe and Dr. Jane Doe * Dr. John Doe and Mrs. Jane Doe * Drs. John and Jane Doe * Dr. John Doe & Dr. Jane Doe * Mr. & Mrs. J. Doe * Honorable John Doe and Mrs. Jane Doe (only used for invitations to the couple.)
John Doe & Jane Doe
When you are addressing a letter to married doctors it would be: Drs. John and Jane Doe.
The address should read: Drs. John and Jane Doe or, Dr. John Doe and Dr. Jane Doe.
The cast of Jane Doe - 2011 includes: Anna Broadley as Jane Doe Lee Cheney as John
The creater of Roblox created John Doe and Jane Doe for testing purposes
John Doe or Jane Doe is high on the list.
* Count John Doe and Countess Jane Doe or Count & Countess John Doe.
John Doe is a fictitious name used in legal proceedings to designate a person whose identity is unknown, or to protect a person whose identity is known but is confidential, or to indicate that a true defendant does not exist. The name is also used to refer to a male corpse or hospital patient whose identity is unknown. The female equivalent of John is Jane Doe. In U.S, the names John Doe, Jane Doe, Richard Roe, Jane Roe, and Peter Poe is used to identify a party to a lawsuit whose true name is either unknown or purposely shielded. The origin of this usage is unknown.
Outside of the traditional, formal "Mr. & Mrs. John Doe", the wife's name is ALWAYS first when using first names: "Jane and John Doe". In social importance, the woman is always first, then males, then children. Traditionally, the man's first and surnames are never separated. The confused idea of the man's name first (John and Jane Doe or Mr. John Doe and Ms. Jane Smith) is neither traditional nor appropriate. At Emilypost.com, she notes that traditionally, a man's name was first on an envelope adddress (Mr. and Mrs. John Doe), and his first and surname were not separated (Jane and John Doe). Miss Manners' Guide to Excruciatingly Correct Behavior and Crane's Blue Book of Social Stationery both either state outright or give examples consistent with the following: Married Couples- formally- Mr. & Mrs. John Doe; informally- Jane and John Doe In which woman kept maiden name- Ms. Jane Smith and Mr. John Doe In which man is a doctor- Dr. & Mrs. John Doe In which woman is a doctor- Mr. and Mrs. John Doe or Dr. Jane Doe and Mr. John Doe In which both spouses are doctors -Dr. and Mrs. John Doe, or The Doctors Doe, or Dr. Jane Doe and Dr. John Doe
John Doe has written: 'Barefaced impostors' 'John Doe v. Jane Doe' -- subject(s): Law and legislation, Domestic relations, Abortion
On a legal document she should sign her name as Jane Doe, or Jane Schmoh Doe (if her maiden name is Schmoh). If she wants sign personal letters Mrs. John Doe to stress the connection to her late husband, that is her choice.