The want of the summons and return, were, by an express provision of the statute, required to give the court jurisdiction of the persons of the non-resident defendants. Without this formality, they were not properly before the court, and all its proceedings as to them were void. And the first question to be considered is, whether the finding of the jury, which was void in law as to them, could be rendered valid and binding upon them by the passage of the act of the 12th February, 1857. If it was competent for the legislature to make a void proceeding valid, then it has been done in this case. Upon this question we cannot for a moment doubt or hesitate. They can no more impart a binding efficacy to a void proceeding than they can take one man’s property from him and give it to another. Indeed, to do the one is to accomplish the other. By the decree, in this case, the will in question was declared void, and, consequently, if effect be given to the decree, the legacies given to those absent defendants by the will are taken from t hem, and given to others, according to our statutes of descents. Until the passage of the act in question, they were not bound by the verdict of the jury in this case, and it could not form the basis of a valid decree. Had the decree been rendered before the passage of the act, it would have been as competent to make that valid as it was to validate the antecedent proceedings, upon which alone the decree could rest. The want of jurisdiction over the defendants was as fatal to the one as it could be to the other. If we assume the act to be valid, then the legacies, which before belonged to the legatees, have now ceased to be theirs, and this result has been brought about by this legislative act alone. The effect of the act upon them is precisely the same as if it had declared, in direct terms, that the legacies bequeathed by this will to these defendants should not go to them, but should descend to the heirs at law of the testator, according to our law of descent. This it will not be pretended that they could do directly, and they had no more authority to do it indirectly, by making proceedings binding upon them which were void in law.
As to another portion of these defendants, the proceeding was erroneous, if not void. The infants, who may have been regularly before the court, were not protected by the appointment of a guardian ad litem, as the statute required. This was indispensable, according to the express provisions of the statute, as has been often held by this court. This was a fatal irregularity as to them.
Nor is the objection a valid one that these appellants, as to whom all the proceedings may have been regular, cannot take advantage of defects and irregularities as to parties who are not here complaining, and who, if they were consulted, might prefer that the decree should stand. Any one who is a party to the decree may take advantage of these objections as well as the infants or non-residents themselves. These appellants have a right to see and insist that all the other defendants shall be bound by the decree as well as themselves. Nor does this right rest upon any mere technical ground, but is based upon substantial rights, as a moment’s examination of the position of the parties will show. Admit this decree to be binding upon the appellants, and not upon the legatees, and they lose the devises given them by the will, and thus also lose their portion of the bequests given to the legatees, to which they would be entitled by the statute of descents, as heirs of the testator; for the infants, not being bound by the decree, would be entitled to take by the will, or, at least, it would compel these appellants, in order to secure their distributive shares of the amount bequeathed to the infants, either to contest this matter again, on a writ of error, at any time after the infants, as to whom it is only erroneous, shall have attained their majority; and as to the other defendants, who were not before the court at all, they would be obliged to attack the will de novo, and run the hazard of finding another jury who would be of opinion that the testator was not of sound and disposing mind when he published the will, which, admitting that they could always be able to produce all the evidence which was exhibited on this trial, must always be a matter of great uncertainty. The appellants have a right to know that all the other parties are bound by this decree, whenever it becomes conclusive upon them.
As the case will have to be submitted to another jury, we deem it improper to express any opinion upon the evidence, as the decree must be reversed on other grounds, which, to the mind of the court, are conclusive.
The decree must be reversed, and the suit remanded.
Decree reversed.