Judice is an unincorporated community in Lafayette Parish, Louisiana, United States.
After the end of slavery, many of Smith's slaves stayed on the land and worked as tenant farmers and continue to live in the Judice area today.
During the Great Depression of the 1930s, Gerard Foreman's land was repossessed for the purpose of building Judice High School, named after Alcide Judice, a successful merchant and political activist who contributed to the parish's education.
This area of Lafayette Parish was, as it is today, mostly rural, and still involved in agricultural pursuits.
Today, rice and crawfish are the major uses of agricultural property in the vicinity, along with dairy farming, oil and mineral leases, and horse training.