31 Mo. 513 | Mo. | 1862
delivered the opinion of the coxxrt.
James Eddie and Elizabeth his wife filed in. the circuit court of St. Louis county, at the February term, 1858, a petition to contest the validity of the will of Gx*eene Pax’ke, who died in October, 1857.
The petitioxx avers that said Parke left no widow, and no descendants except the said Elizabeth and her two infant children ; that by said will he gave to said Elizabeth a legacy of fifty dollars, and gave the residue of his estate, consisting of personal and real property, of the value of from three to six thousand dollars, to his grand-children, the children of said Elizabeth. The petitioners seek to set aside the will upon the ground that, at the time of the making thereof, the testator was xxot of sound and disposing mixxd. The petition was brought xxnder the statute relating to wills, which provides “ that if any person entrusted in the probate of any will shall appear withiix five years after the probate or rejection thereof, and by petition to the circuit court of the county contest the validity of the will, or pray to have a will proved which has been x’ejected, an issxxe shall be made ixp, whether the writing produced be the will of the testator or not; which shall be tried by a juxy, or, if neither party require a jury, by the coxxrt.”
It is also provided that the verdict of the jury, or the finding and judgxnent of the court, shall be final, saving to the coxxrt the right of granting a new trial, as in other cases, and to either party an appeal in matters of law to the supremo court.
It appears from the record that ixeitlxor the executor or devisees under the will were made parties in the petition;
Although this is technically a proceeding at law, yet in many respects it partakes of the nature of a proceeding in chancery; and the rules recognized in courts of equity, with respect to the persons necessary to be made parties to a bill, we think, is to a great extent applicable to a case of this kind. The general rule in equity is that all persons should be made parties to a bill who are materially interested, either legally or beneficially, in the subject matter of the suit. The general rule at law is more restricted, confining it to such as have a direct and immediate interest. Story, in his Commentaries on Equity Pleadings, p. 74, refers to this rule as necessary to enable the court to make a complete decree between the parties and prevent future litigation, by taking away the necessity of a multiplicity of suits, and to make it certain that no injustice is done either to the parties before it or to others who are interested in the subject matter, by a decree which might otherwise be grounded upon a partial view only of the real merits.
The Supreme Court of the United States, in Harding v. Handy, 11 Wheat. 103, held, that in a suit in equity, brought by heirs-at-law to set aside a conveyance obtained from their ancestor by fraud and imposition, a final decree for the sale of the property can not bo pronounced until all the heirs are brought before the court as parties, if they are within the jurisdiction of the court. Story, in his work above referred to, holds that if a bill is brought by the heirs of a vendor against the vendee for a specific performance of a contract for the purchase of lands, all the heirs of the vendor ought to be made parties either as plaintiffs or defendants.
In the case under consideration, the only parties interested in the estate are the children of James and Elizabeth Eddie ; yet neither of them are made parties to the proceeding,
The judgment will be affirmed ;