42 Ill. 50 | Ill. | 1866
delivered the opinion of the Court:
George B. Means filed a hill against the heirs of Joseph Means, praying for a conveyance of certain real estate claimed to have been contracted to him by Joseph Means in his lifetime. The adult defendants made default, and the court decreed a conveyance. The master made the conveyance, and at a subsequent term reported it to the court, whereupon a decree was pronounced approving the deed and report, and at the same time directing another parcel of land, not included in the former decree, to be conveyed to Bichardson and Bullock as purchasers from George B. Means. This was done without any thing being placed upon the files or records of the court as a foundation for this new and most material order, and was error. If Bullock and Bichardson had acquired any rights in the subject matter of the suit, in regard to which they desired the action of the court, they should have filed their petition, asking to be made parties, and stating the facts from which their interest arose. So, too, of the amendment of the original decree. It is a matter of doubt, and probably in the future progress of the suit will be the subject of controversy, whether the parcel of land newly embodied in the decree by the amendment, was really described in the original bill, and in the contract between Joseph Means and George B. Means. An amendment of so grave a character should not have been allowed without a formal motion made for that purpose, with notice to the defendants of its pendency. True, they were nominally in court, but the decree settling their rights, and with which they might have rested content, had been made at a former term. As nothing remained but to execute it, they and theff counsel would cease to give the suit any further attention. The court should not have opened it for the purpose of a new adjudication upon its merits without such notice to them as would give them the opportunity of being heard. The decree is reversed and the cause remanded.
Decree reversed.