72 Md. 264 | Md. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the Court,
The appellants filed a bill in equity, in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City for the sale of certain real estate lying in said City. The land in question was devised by the will of one Solomon Betts, and the appellants set up a title to a portion of it by virtue of certain proceedings in the Superior Court of Baltimore, on the equity side of the Court. The appellees are devisees under the said will. The Circuit Court dismissed the bill of complaint.
As the appellants’ title is founded on these proceedings, it is necessary to examine them with particularity. Solomon Betts, who died in the year 1841, devised a tract of land in the City of Baltimore, to certain trustees for the sole and separate use of his daughter Sarah Hitch for the term of her natural life, without being subject to the control of her husband, and without being liable for
We shall pass by Avithout special comment the irregularity of a suit by married women in their own names, and without making their husbands parties on either side of the record. Matters of more serious moment now
The decree cannot be supported under this statute, because the essential preliminaries required by the first section were not observed. The bill oug'hfc to have been filed b j prochein ami or guardian, and the infants should have been summoned, and there ought to have been an appearance for them by guardian ad litem, appointed by the Court. The statute does not require that an infant should sue himself, as has been suggested by the appellants’ counsel; but it directs that the guardian or prochein ami should file a petition and bring the infant before the Court as a defendant, and that the allegations of the petition should be proved as facts are proved against defendants. A most wise and salutary provision, as the present case may well serve to illustrate. It is vain to argue that the decree can be maintained under the jurisdiction which chancery had prior to the
It has been maintaiped that the sale under the decree may now be ratified by virtue of the Act of 1868, ch. 249. Twenty-nine years elapsed between the passage of this void decree and the filing of the bill to indue it with validity. The proposition in the abstract is rather startling. The Act of 1868, by its terms, has a retroactive operation, and it authorizes the Court to change the effect of decrees which had become final. It is an exercise of judicial power by the Legislature. In Dorsey vs. Dorsey, et al., 37 Md., 64, it was held that an Act of Assembly authorizing and empowering this Court to reopen and rehear cases, decided at a term already passed, was unconstitutional and void; and the decision was well
This case was decided' at the last term of the Court, and was ordered to be reargued. We have endeavored
Decree affirmed, with costs.