NATIONALITY. ' ? T?s?ems 1. A fir,,m*.n, who, under the etrenm?moe? of this c?e, ?m.?. at ht? mtnainr poet where hta ordinary' duty ea? him, k not ?ilty of oantsibt?ry ne?i?ence bee?tme he doe? not avail intoself of permiasion to oeeupy& ?:X? FRIEND. NOTI0g. ?ee CO,?wraxo-rtO?L Law, 7. OFFICEP,8 OF THE UNITED 8TATES. 8? Pa?-:?,?. ? Aal?r, 2. The holder of a heritable of? in Cutm which had been ?l oli? prior to the extinotion of 81?niah sovece?nty, but who, pending coml? for its condemns?on, was n?elving the emolumant? of one of the graat? of the office, ? in th? mine to lmve no property righte tl?t survived The Attorney General of the 8rate of Minnesota, under his common hw power and the state statutes, has the general authority imposed u?xm him of enfordng constitutional stetutm of the State ?ud is a prol?r party defendant to a suit brought to prevent the enforcement of a state statute on the ?round of it3 unconstitutionality. Ez part? Yowl, 123. It is not necessary that the duty of a ?ate officer to enforce a statute be declared in that statute itself in order to permit his being joined as a party defendant from enforcing it; ff by virtue of his office he has some connection with the enforcement of the act it is imm?terinl whether it arista by common general law or by statute. /b. ? Across, 4; Loc? Law (Oklshoma);. J?c-r?oN, B 1, 5; M?,?vs, 1, 2.
�