172 N.E. 770 | Ill. | 1930
Original proceedings were instituted in the county court of Woodford county to probate an instrument purporting to be the last will and testament of Adelbert H. Davison, deceased. On December 27, 1927, the probate thereof was denied, and the appellees, Margaret Heinrich and Junior H. Davison, who are minor grandchildren of Adelbert H. Davison and beneficiaries under his will, on the same day prayed for and were allowed an appeal to the circuit court. On the same day Ernest J. Henderson, who had been appointed guardian ad litem for Margaret Heinrich, and Horace H. Baker, who had been appointed guardian ad litem for Junior H. Davison, filed their appeal bond, in which they described themselves, respectively, as guardians for the minors, which bond was in all respects conditioned according to law and was approved by the county judge and filed with the county clerk on the same day. Some time during the following March they paid the appeal fee to the clerk of the circuit court, and on March 22 of the same year filed with him the record of the county court proceedings. On April 2, 1928, appellant, Lela Davison Heinrich, who is a daughter of Adelbert H. Davison, filed in the circuit court her motion to dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction, on the grounds that the *351 appeal fee had not been paid within twenty days from the entry of the order appealed from and that the appeal bond was executed by Baker and Henderson, respectively, in their individual capacities and not as guardians ad litem. She limited her appearance especially for the purpose of the motion. The motion was overruled. A hearing on the merits ensued, at which counsel for appellant participated, and which resulted in the entry of an order admitting the instrument to probate, from which order Lela Davison Heinrich has appealed to this court.
The questions raised by appellant are that the circuit court should have dismissed the appeal for the reasons that the bond filed was not the bond of appellees, that the appeal fee had not been paid and the appeal perfected in the time required by the statute, and that no guardians ad litem were appointed by the circuit court upon the hearing in that court.
The right to appeal from the county court to the circuit court in probate proceedings is purely statutory and a strict compliance with the statutory provisions is required. (Hall v. First Nat. Bank,
It is a well settled rule of statutory construction that where the reference in an adopting statute is to the law generally which governs the particular subject and not to a particular act, by title or otherwise, the reference will be regarded as signifying and including the law in force on the subject at the time it is invoked. (People v. Kramer,
The circuit court had jurisdiction of the subject matter of appeals from the county court in cases where wills have been admitted to probate or their probate rejected by the county court. When the guardians ad litem, in the county court after they had prayed and been allowed an appeal to the circuit court, had approved and filed in the county court their appeal bond within the required time and filed the transcript of the proceedings of the county court in the circuit court, the circuit court then had jurisdiction of not only the subject matter of such appeals generally, but had jurisdiction of this particular case to determine whether the appeal *353
had been perfected according to law. (Kemper v. Town ofWaverly,
As to appellant's contention that the circuit court erred in not appointing guardians ad litem for the minor appellees, suffice it to say that the abstract shows the appearance of H.H. Baker and Ernest J. Henderson as guardians ad litem for the respective minor appellees; that the attorneys for appellant recognized them as such by entering into a stipulation with them, and that the court allowed them to examine witnesses on behalf of the minors and in its decree recited "that Horace H. Baker, a regular practicing attorney at this bar, was appointed guardian ad litem for Junior H. Davison, and that Ernest J. Henderson, a regular practicing attorney at this bar, was appointed guardian ad litem for Margaret Heinrich." A guardian ad litem is appointed solely to see that the rights of his ward are properly protected, and when the decree entered fully protects *354
the rights of the minors it is no concern of the opposite party as to whether or not a guardian ad litem was appointed. When the decree recites the appointment of a guardian ad litem for a minor but the record shows no separate order of appointment it will be presumed that the appointment was regularly made. Tibbs
v. Allen,
No other questions arising from the record, the decree of the circuit court is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.