This аction is to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff, who was a passenger upon the cars of the defendant. The negligence charged is that defendant suddenly and violently started a train from which plaintiff was about to alight, whereby she was hurled to the ground, sustaining a fracture of the skull, hеmorrhage of the brain, and other injuries. Plaintiff at the time of the commencement of her action was sixteen years of age. Section 373 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that “when a guardian ad litem is appointed by the court he must be appointed . . . when the infant is plaintiff, upon the appliсation of the infant, if he be of the age of fourteen years.” The record shows that a petition was presented to the court by Charles Hanson for the appointment of himself as guardian ad litem of Gertrude Johnston, a minor; that the petitioner is the stepfather of the minor, and that the minor is of the age оf sixteen years. The order of the court made upon the petition declares “it satisfactorily appearing to the court from the petition of Charles Hanson that he is the stepfather of Gertrude Johnston, a minor, aged sixteen years, and that the minor is about to commence an action etc., . . . and that it is necessary that a guardian be appointed for her for the purpose of maintaining this action. Therefore, it is ordered that Charles Hanson be and he is hereby appointed guardian ad litem for the purpose of this action.” The due appointment of the guardian was pleadеd in the complaint. An issue was joined upon this allegation *537 by the answer. Upon the trial, by various motions and objections, defendant raised the question of the due appointment of the guardian, and of the right of the plaintiff to proceed with her action under the appointment disclosed. These objections were overruled, and here present the first proposition for consideration.
Respondent, in answer to the plaintiff’s objection, urges that as the proceedings were before a court of record, every reasonable presumption will be indulged in to support the order which thе court made, and that in indulging in such presumption it will even be assumed that the minor was present and orally requested the appointment to be made. There is, however, a well-defined limit to an appellate tribunal’s power in indulging in such presumptions. It can indulge in no presumption which does violence to thе facts as presented by the record of the inferior court, and while it is true that an order of a court of general jurisdiction will be treated as void only in the event that its invalidity appears upon the face of the record, ever since the case of
Hahn
v.
Kelly,
*538
Unquestionably the order appointing the guardian was erroneous. Not only was it made in violation of the express direction of the statute, but as made it denied to the minor a substantial right of nomination accorded her by law. Indeed, there is very respectable authority for holding that the minor’s right of nomination under a statute such as our own must be exercised, or good reason be shown for its non-exercise, else the appointment is void. Such a view of .the law makes the nomination a jurisdictional prerequisite.
(Palmer
v.
Oakley, 2
Doug. (Mich.) 433, [
Other states, however, have adopted a rule of decision in conflict with that laid down in
Palmer
v.
Oakley, 2
Doug. (Mich.) 433, [
To sum up on this proposition, therefore, were it not for a saving fact hereafter to be considered, it would be held that the appointment of the guardian
ad litem
in this case was so irregular as to justify a repudiation and disaffirmance by the minor, had the judgment been adverse to her. Such a judgment would lack the mutuality of responsibility and
*540
obligation which must belong to every valid judgment, and as the defect was called to the attention of the trial court, and no offer made there to cure it, as was done in the Foley case, a reversal.of the judgment would be necessitated. But it was made to appear to this court upon the hearing that the minor had now attained her majority, and made and declared her affirmancе of the proceedings which had been taken and her willingness to be found in all future matters by the proper judgments and orders of the court. Here, then, is the situation which was presented in
Childs
v.
Lanterman,
Plaintiff offered proof touching the nature of her injuries, that it had been necessary to remove a portion of the skull. Physicians were called on her behalf to testify to this and to other matters of personal injury connected with it. The ease presented was that of a plaintiff complaining of and seeking damages for objective physical injuries. Defendant requested of plaintiff that an opportunity .be offered it to have a physical examination of the person of the plaintiff to be conducted by two рhysicians, plaintiff being permitted to have her own physicians present and to select a reasonable place for the examination. This application was first made in the form of a request to plaintiff, and was refused by her attorneys. It was then addressed to the discretion of the court, and an order was asked to that effect. No objection was made that the application was not timely; that the physicians selected were not reputable; or that the circumstances in any way or for any reason were other than modest and proper. Indeed, the court in ruling, as shown by the rеcord, declared that if the authorities bore out defendant’s contention, it would make the order. Its refusal to make the order, there
*541
fore, was founded upon the belief. that it was powerless so to do. This is the first time this question has come before the court for adjudication, and what is here said must be regarded as applicable strictly to civil actions. It is a principle of criminal law that the defendant may not be compelled to give evidence against himself. In civil actions, where a plaintiff is seeking affirmative relief, the adverse party may compel him to give such evidence even to becoming a witness. As to the power of a court to order such examination in proper cases, the overwhelming weight of authority is that it exists. The supreme court of the United States substantially alone has denied the power in
Railroad Co.
v.
Botsford,
We have examined the other propositions presented by appellant, but deem them to be without substantial merit, but for the foregoing reasons the judgment and order are reversed and the cause remanded.
McFarland, J., Lorigan, J., Sloss, J., and Beatty, C. J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
