These proceedings are clearly irregular and invalid, and must be adjudged void.
Nothing is better settled in the law than the rule that a person under age, being deemed incompetent to enter into contracts or to manage and control his own affairs, cannot employ an attorney or do any act to represent his interest or defend his rights, in legal proceedings. Ebsworth’s Law of Infants, 123. Bingham on Infancy, (2d Amer. ed.) 118, 123, note. It has for this reason been often adjudged that an action at law or a suit in equity for the enforcement of a contract cannot be duly prosecuted against an infant without the appointment of a guardian ad litem, and a judgment at law obtained without such appointment will be reversed on error. Crockett v. Drew, 5 Gray, 399. Swan v. Horton, 14 Gray, 179. This rule applies with all its force *120to proceedings like those now before us. An application by a creditor for a warrant against the estate of his alleged debtor is in its nature an adversary proceeding, and an adjudication in favor of such application operates as a judgment in rem, by which the entire property of the debtor is made liable to sequestration and appropriation to the payment of his debts. The warrant is in effect like an execution on a judgment. It would certainly be a great anomaly in the law, if a proceeding of such a nature, involving consequences so important to the rights and interests of an infant, could be prosecuted without the appointment of some one, acting under the authority of the tribunal having jurisdiction of the subject matter, to represent the infant in the preliminary hearing on the question of his insolvency, and the right of the creditor to ask for a warrant against his estate. In the absence of any express legislative enactment, or some clear implication arising from an existing provision of law, we cannot sanction proceedings in their nature judicial, which involve so wide a departure from the principles and practice on which civil suits against infants are uniformly conducted in courts of law.
The objection urged by the defendants, that the plaintiff is not entitled to maintain this petition, is not tenable. As a creditor having a legal and valid attachment' on the estate of the alleged insolvent, she has sufficient interest to maintain a bill to set aside the proceedings, being a party aggrieved, within the meaning of Gen. Sts. c. 118, § 16. Merriam v. Sewall, 8 Gray, 316. Nor does it affect her right to prosecute this bill, that her own debt, to secure which she has made an attachment, is one which the infant may avoid on plea and proof. Until so avoided, the action against the infant is lawfully prosecuted, and the attachment of his estate legal. Whether the interest of the infant may require the plaintiff’s suit to continue, and to ripen into a judgment, so that the property attached may be duly seized on execution, we cannot now determine. It is sufficient that it appears that the plaintiff has a legal claim to ask the interference of this court as a party aggrieved by the proceedings in insolvency, and that it is made to appear that those *121proceedings are irregular and invalid. In such a case the party that is better in right has the better equity.
We have not deemed it necessary to decide in the present case whether the provisions of our insolvent laws are at all applicable to infants; that is, whether proceedings by or against them can be maintained, if they are duly represented by a prochein ami or guardian ad litem. In England it is well settled that an infant cannot be a bankrupt. The reason for the rule is, that the bankrupt acts are intended only for traders, and that an infant cannot be properly deemed a trader, or be declared a bankrupt for debts which he is not obliged to pay. Ex parte Sydebotham, 1 Atk. 146. Rex v. Cole, 1 Ld. Raym. 443. Ex parte Henderson, 4 Ves. 163. Ex parte Barwis, 6 Ves. 601. There is certainly fair reason to doubt whether the legislature intended to include infants among those who are entitled to the benefit or subject to the duties and limitations created by the insolvent laws. A discharge in insolvency would not relieve them from debts incurred for necessaries; and from all other debts they can be relieved by plea and proof of infancy. A debtor in insolvency is required to make and execute deeds, indorse bills and notes, and enter into such other contracts as may be required of him and which may be necessary and useful in the settlement of his estate and recovering his assets. Gen. Sts. c. 118, §§ 70, 71. Was it intended by these provisions to confer on infants legal capacity to act as if of full age 1 These and other suggestions of a like nature will be entitled to grave consideration, when a case arises which renders it necessary to decide the main question to which they relate. But in the case at bar, for other reasons already given, the proceedings in insolvency cannot be supported. Proceedings adjudged void.