Eish, C. J.
(After stating the facts.)
1, 2. Under the will of Elias C. Jenkins, the grandfather of the plaintiffs, the trust created was for the life-estate of their mother only, the remainder to her children being a vested legal remainder; for the estate in remainder was not conveyed to the trustee named in the will, and no duty in reference thereto was imposed upon him". Luquire v. Lee, 121 Ga. 624 (49 S. E. 834); Smith v. McWhorter, 123 Ga. 287 (51 S. E. 474, 107 Am. St. R. 85). As the trust was only for the life-estate, if the deed from Calhoun to the trustee, which was executed in 1869, had been in accordance with the provisions of the will, the trust, under the operation of the married woman’s act of 1866, would have been executed when the deed was delivered to the trustee, if the life-*109tenant then was, as seems highly probable from the evidence, of age, and if she were not, it would have become executed when she attained her majority. Smith v. McWhorter, supra. So, if the deed had followed the trust declared in the will, there would have been no trust estate for a trustee to represent in 1881, when the trustee applied for and obtained leave to sell the land in which he had invested the trust funds, and the order or decree of the court authorizing such sale would be void for want of jurisdiction over the subject-matter. But the deed from Calhoun to W. E. Jenkins, trustee, did not follow the provisions of the will, nor did it in any manner refer to the will, or indicate the existence of any other instrument whereby the grantee .had been created a trustee. It must, therefore, be construed according to its own terms. So it was held in Trammell v. Inman, 115 Ga. 874, 877 (42 S. E. 246), where a deed to one who had by a previous marriage settlement been made trustee for a married woman merely described the grantee as trustee for such woman, without referring in any manner to the marriage settlement, or to any'other writing by which he had been made trustee. The common source of title in this case is Calhoun, who in 1869 executed the deed to W. E. Jenkins, trustee for Mary A. Beynolds and children. The title to the land being in Calhoun at the time this deed was executed, when it passed out of him by that conveyance it passed to the grantee named therein as the grantor conveyed it to him. How did the grantor convey it to him? The conveyance was, as before stated, to W. E. Jenkins, trustee for Mary A. Beynolds and children. Before the adoption of our first code, such a deed might, under the ruling in Trammell v. Inman, supra, have conveye'd the title to the grantee individually, the words “trustee for Mary A. Beynolds and children” being held to be descriptio personae only. But as to a deed executed, as this one was, after the first code went into effect, the rule of construction is different, and such words are held to create a trust in favor of Mrs. Beynolds and her children in life when the deed is executed. For the law as declared by our successive codes is, that no formal words are necessary to create a trust, and whenever a manifest intention is shown that another person shall have the benefit of the property conveyed, the grantee shall be declared a trustee; and that “The appointment of a trustee, or any words sufficient to create a trust, shall operate to create a *110separate estate.” Civil Code, §§3148, 3150. The deed created a trust in favor of Mrs. Reynolds and her children as joint usees, as, but for the fact that the legal title was conveyed to a trustee, they would under the common law have been joint tenants, and under our law tenants in common, and tenants in common they would be whenever the trust became executed. Loyless v. Blackshear, 43 Ga. 327; Lee v. Tucker, 56 Ga. 9; McCord v. Whitehead, 98 Ga. 385 (25 S. E. 767). But only the children of Mrs. Reynolds who were in life when the deed was executed took any interest thereunder: Hollis v. Lawton, 107 Ga. 105 (32 S. E. 846, 73 Am. St. R. 114). Ordinarily this" fact would be a very important and controlling one in the case; for although the plaintiffs proved that Mrs. Reynolds, their mother, was dead when the suit was brought, and that they were all of her children, except one who .died in childhood, they failed to prove that they were all in life- when this deed was executed, which was necessary in order for any of- them to recover in a joint action, as all had to recover or none. In fact, the plaintiffs did not prove that any of them was in life when this conveyance was made; but the evidence offered by the defendant tended to show that two of them were. But we shall treat the case as if the plaintiffs were all beneficiaries of the trust created by this deed; for so it has been treated by counsel for defendant in error both in argument and brief; and the defendant introduced and relied upon the record of the proceedings upon the application of the trustee for leave to sell the land, and the record of the subsequent proceeding by him for a confirmation of such sale and the acts of'the trustee thereunder, and it appears from these records that the trustee, in both these applications, represented himself as trustee for Mrs. Reynolds and all her children, and named all the plaintiffs as beneficiaries of the trust. Such a trust as the one created by this deed remains executory during the minority of any one of 'the cestuis que trust. Askew v. Patterson, 53 Ga 209; Boyd v. England, 56 Ga. 598; McCrary v. Clements, 95 Ga 778 (22 S. E. 675); Clarke v. East Atlanta Land Co., 113 Ga. 21 (38 S. E. 323). Upon the face of the proceeding in 1881, wherein W. E. Jenkins, the trusteee named in the deed, was granted leave to sell the land, it appears that the children of Mrs. Reynolds were then still minors, a guardian ad litem being appointed to represent them as such. This being true, the trust was then executory *111eñe legal title to the land was in the trustee, and the interest of the beneficiaries therein was equitable. Therefore, the question whether the order authorizing the trustee to sell the property should be, as contended by plaintiffs in errors considered as an order granted by the court at chambers, or, as contended by defendant in error, as one granted in term and in open court, is immaterial, as the court at chambers, and in vacation, would have jurisdiction to authorize the sale of the equitable estate of minors. Iverson v. Saulsbury, 65 Ga. 725; Obear v. Little, 79 Ga. 386 (4 S. E. 914). See also, Sharp v. Findley, 71 Ga. 666; Richards v. Fast Tenn., Va. & Ga. Ry. Co., 106 Ga. 614, 632 (33 S. E. 193, 45 L. R. A. 712).
3. This order, however, is attacked upon another ground. It is contended that it is void, because the record of the proceeding in which it was granted does not show any service upon the children of Mrs. Eeynolds, who were the minor beneficiaries of the trust. It is true that it is not affirmatively shown by this record that, in this proceeding to sell the land, personal service was perfected upon these minor cestuis que trust. But in Pease v. Wagnon, 93 Ga. 361 (20 S. E. 637), wherein a trustee had been, in vacation, .authorized to execute a mortgage upon the trust property, it was held that “a judge of the superior court, though acting in vacation and at chambers in passing lawful orders touching trust estates, acts as a court of equity, that court being always open. Hence, the presumptions which attach in favor of judgments and decrees by a court of general jurisdiction apply to orders of this kind.” And in the same case, when it was again before this court, and when the record disclosed that the trust estate involved the interests of minor beneficiaries, it was held, that “such an order is not to be treated as void because it fails to recite who are the beneficiaries of the trust; nor because the record of the proceedings upon which it was based does not affirmatively show that service upon all parties at interest was duly made.” Wagnon v. Pease, 104 Ga. 417 (30 S. E. 895). The order there in question was granted in February, 1885. In the opinion which was then delivered by Lumpkin, P. J., it was said: “Again, this order is attacked as void on the ground that as the record of the proceedings had before the judge does not show upon its face that service was perfected upon any of the cestuis que trust, and as *112there was certainly no waiver of service by the minor beneficiaries, it follows conclusively that there was no service. If this conclusion of fact necessarily resulted from the premises stated, the particular contention now under consideration would undoubtedly be a good one. But, as will have been observed from the abovi' statement of'what this record shows, the real truth of the matter' is, that while it does not affirmatively appear that service was in fact duly made, there is absolutely nothing going to show the contrary. In other words, the record is merely silent as to this £oint. This being so, everything is to be presumed in favor of the validity of the order of court, which, as ruled when this case first made its appearance here, is to be regarded as having all the sanctity which attaches to a formal judgment rendered by a court of general jurisdiction. It follows, of course, that in the absence of proof showing a failure to serve the parties interested in the proceeding, the presumption would be that every one to be affected thereby was properly before the court, else the order would not have been passed.” This ruling, made by a full bench, was followed in Reinhart v. Blackshear, 105 Ga. 799 (31 S. E. 748), a ease involving the validity of an order or decree authorizing the sale of trust property wherein a minor beneficiary was interested,, the decision being concurred in by five Justices, Lumpkin, P. J., who delivered the opinion in the former case, being absent. The order involved in Reinhart v. Blackshear was granted in 1865,-though no stress was placed, in the ruling made, on the fact that the order was granted prior to the act of 1876, codified in Civil Code, §4987; indeed, the date of the order appears not to have been considered in passing on the point involved. In the opinion as published, the date of the order is erroneously stated as being in 1895. In Hughes v. Treadaway, 116 Ga. 663 (42 S. E. 1035), at page 672, Justice Little, delivering the opinion, in discussing the necessity of a trustee bringing before the court all persons at interest, when he seeks the granting of an order authorizing him to exercise powers not conferred upon him by the instrument creating the trust, said: “This whole subject was carefully considered and ably discussed by Mr. Presiding Justice Lumpkin in the case of Wagnon v. Pease, 104 Ga. 417 [30 S. E. 895], in which prior decisions of this court bearing upon the question in hand were reviewed.” The point now under consideration was *113not involved in Maryland Casualty Co. v. Lanham, 124 Ga. 859 (53 S. E. 395). There a minor was sued and personally served. It appeared that no guardian ad litem had been appointed for him. It was held that the suit was not in a proper .condition to proceed to judgment by default. Under the former decisions which we have cited, when the order or decree authorizing the trustee to sell the property was shown, the presumption arose that service had been duly.perfected upon all the cestuis que trust; and as no evidence was introduced to overcome this presumption, such order or decree could not be held to be invalid because it was not affirmatively shown by the record that personal service had been perfected upon the minor beneficiaries of the trust in the proceeding in which it was granted. Therefore the sale of the land by the trustee to Nancy E. Hendricks, under whom the defendant holds, in pursuance of the order of the court, must be held to have been duly authorized; and hence the plaintiffs could not recover upon title to the premises in dispute acquired under the deed from Calhoun to W. E. Jenkins, trustee for Mary A. Eeynolds and children.
While the defendants introduced — unnecessarily, we think— the record of the subsequent proceedings by the trustee for a. confirmation of the sale of the land by him and his acts in connection therewith, there was nothing shown by such record which overcame the presumption of service upon the cestuis que trust in the former proceeding. It is true that the trustee, in his application for an order or decree of confirmation, stated that “it does not appear affirmatively from the record of [the former] proceedings, . . that service was ever had on said children as provided by law,' and to this extent petitioner apprehends that the title to this property is defective.” But this did not amount to an allegation, or an admission, that there had been no service upon the children of Mrs. Eeynolds. It simply appears from these statements, made in an application filed in 1891, that the trustee, som® ten years after the sale, had come to the conclusion that the sale might be defective, because the record of the proceeding in which it was authorized did not show service upon the minQr beneficiaries of the trust, whether they were in fact served or not. Certainly it can not be held that the defendant, by introducing the record of the proceeding for a confirmation of the sale, in effect admitted *114that there had been, in the original proceeding to sell the property, no service upon the minor beneficiaries of the trust. Without passing upon the extent to which defendant was bound by the allegations in the petitions for the sale and its confirmation, which, were put in evidence by him, it may be safely stated that, upon the question as to such service, he was bound by the settlement of the trustee in the application for a confirmation of the sale only to the extent to which it went, viz., that it did not affirmatively appear that such service had been perfected. So, notwithstanding the introduction of the record in the proceeding to confirm the sale by the trustee, the defendant could still rely on the presumption, arising from the existence of the order or decree of the court authorizing the trustee to sell the property, that all parties at interest had been duly served in the proceeding in which it was granted. For this reason we have not deemed it necessary to consider the effect of the order or decree confirming the sale.
4. Of course the plaintiffs could not recover, upon a legal title, as remaindermen under the will of Elias C. Jenkins; for the testator did not devise this land in remainder to them, and could not have done so, as he did not own it at his death. Whether, undethe form of action which they adopted, they could haw recovered upon proof of an equitable title, against.one whose losal title was inferior to their equitable one, it is not necessary to determine. For while the original lot purchased by the trustee named in the will with a portion of the fund which die testator had directed should be invested by him in a home for the sole and separate use of Mrs. Reynolds during her life, with remainder to her children, was, in equity, impressed with the trust declared in the will, instead of the one declared in the deed, this was a secret equity, which could not be asserted against a bona fide purchaser of the premises in dispute, who bought the same upon the faith of the title derived from one who had purchased the original 'lot from the trustee, under a sale duly authorized by the court, in a proceeding in which the court was dealing' with the trust estate created by the deed which conveyed the legal title from Calhoun to the trustee. The defendant testified that he did not know of or hear of the will of Elias C. Jenkins when he bought the land, and heard of it only when this suit was filed; and this testimony was uncontradicted. This would have protected him, even if it had *115been shown that the original purchaser of the land from the trustee was affected with notice of the plaintiffs’ equity therein. Besides, the defendant would have been protected even if he himself had notice of the secret equity of the plaintiffs at the time he bought the land, if any one of his .predecessors in title was a bona fide purchaser, without notice of such equity; and presumably all of them were, there being no evidence even tending to show that any one of them was not. Truluck v. Peeples, 3 Ga. 446; Colquitt v. Thomas, 8 Ga. 258; Lee v. Cato, 27 Ga. 637 (73 Am. D. 746); Douglas v. McCrackin, 52 Ga. 596; Ashmore v. Whatley, 99 Ga. 150 (24 S. E. 941).
5. It follows from foregoing that the court did not err in directing a verdict in favor of the defendant, as such a verdict was demanded by the evidence.
Judgment afjvrmed.
All the Justices concur.