The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Mr. Chiee Justice McIver.This is an appeal from the judgment of his Honor, the late Judge Earle, which is fully set out in the “Case,” and which, together with the exceptions thereto, should be incorporated in the report of this case.
All that we know of the nature of this action and of the' defenses thereto is derived from the following language, found in the Circuit decree: “The object of the present action is to recover from the defendants, Samuel C. Cave, one of the sons of the testator, and others, purchasers from him and other sons of the testator, of parts of the lands devised by said will, her said legacy, which she alleges has never been paid to her, and claims is a charge upon all of the land of the testator. The defendants set up in their answer various defenses, only one of which has been considered, and upon which the cause is decided, namely, the defense of res judicata." The only question, therefore, before us is, whether there was error in sustaining the defense of res judicata, and to that alone we shall confine our attention.
It appears that the plaintiff is the daughter of the late Tarlton Cave, who, by his will, disposed of the land described in the complaint as follows: “Unto my sons, John M. Cave, Harrison B. Cave, William E. Cave, Anderson T. Cave, and Samuel C. Cave, I give and devise all my lands and real estate, share and share alike, to them and their heirs forever; and I hereby direct that as soon after my death as it shall be practicable and convenient, my lands and real estate shall be valued and appraised by five disinterested and discreet persons, to be appointed by my sons, *508or a majority of them, and that, after such appraisement, my said sons shall pay to Caroline M. Anderson and Imogene McDonald each one-eightli part of the appraised value of my said land and real estate.” The defense of res judicata rests upon the following statement, found in the Circuit decree: “It appears from the testimony that on the 31st day of August, A. D. 1870, an action was commenced in the probate court for Barnwell County, in which John M. Cave and the other sons of the testator were plaintiffs, and John Henry Anderson, his wife, Caroline Anderson, the plaintiff hererein, and others, were defendants, for the partition of the real estate of the said testator. The petition •in said case is missing, and is unaccounted for. All of the other papers usual in such a proceeding are on hand, and seem to be regular, from which it appears that Mrs.-Anderson, the plaintiff here, was personally served with the summons on the 6th day of September, A. D. 1870; that she made default, and on the 11th day of February, A.'D. 1871, an order pro confesso was entered against her. On the 13th February, A. D. 1871, an order directing a writ of partition to issue was made by the probate judge. On the day of February, A. D. 1871, a writ of partition was duly issued, under the seal of the probate court, directed to five persons named therein as commissioners; three of whom qualified as such by taking the required oath, on the 17th day of February, A. D. 1871. The said commissioners made their return under their hands and seals, whereby they appraised the land of the testator at $7,035, and assigned the land to t\i&four sons of the testator, as tenants in common (why the land was assigned the four sons instead of five sons of the testator, does not appear, though that seems to be immaterial to the present inquiry). On the 18th day of February, A. D. 1871, the probate court passed a decree confirming the commissioners’ return and making it the judgment of the court. On the day of January, A. D. 1872, the four sons of the testator, John M. Cave, Samuel C. Cave, William D. Cave, and Harrison B. Cave, executed among *509themselves a deed of partition of said land.” The following statement is found in the “Case:” “So much of the record of the action in the probate court mentioned and referred to in the decree as was before the Court at the trial does not mention any legacy to the plaintiff, Mrs. Anderson, or contain any reference thereto.” Upon this state of facts the Circuit Judge sustained the plea of res pidicata, and rendered judgment dismissing the complaint with costs.
It seems to us that the Circuit Judge has fallen into two errors. 1st. In assuming that the proceeding in the probate court was for partition. 2d. In holding that, if so, then the plaintiff, who was made a party to that proceeding, was bound to set up her claim for her legacy in that proceeding, and not having done so, such claim must now be regarded as res judicata.
1 The petition by which the proceeding in the probate court was commenced having been lost, and there being no evidence in this case as to what was its scope and object, except so far as may be inferred from the subsequent proceedings, which are before the Court, we have no means of determining, with any degree of certainty, what allegations were made in such petition or what relief was therein demanded. The statement made in the “Case,” that there is no mention of any legacy, or any reference thereto, in such portions of the record in the probate court as are now before the Court, certainly does not warrant the inference that there was anything in the petition in reference to plaintiff’s legacy, but rather the contrary. For the very fact that there is no allus'ion to the legacy in such portions of the record as are before the Court, affords the strongest inference that there was nothing said in the petition about the legacy, and no judgment demanded for its payment. The fact that there was no other reason for making the plaintiff a party to the proceeding in the probate court, except for the purpose of making some provision for her legacy, so much relied upon by respondents, is not sufficient to warrant the assumption that plaintiff’s claim *510for her legacy must be regarded as having been adjudicated in that proceeding, for several reasons. In the first place, we do not think that the proceeding in the probate court can properly be regarded as a proceeding for the partition of the lands of the testator amongst the parties entitled thereto under his will; for if that were its object, such object certainly was not accomplished by that proceeding. The only parties entitled to partition were the five sons of the testator, and all that was done by the commissioners was ’to appraise the lands and assign the same “to the four sons of the testator, as tenants in common” — thus leaving the lands precisely as they were left by the will, except that, for some unexplained reason, they were assigned to the four instead of the five sons of the testator, which of them constituted the four not being stated. It is quite certain, therefore, that there was no partition of the lands amongst the only parties entitled thereto. This was manifestly the view taken by the parties, for nearly a year after the so-called return of the commissioners was confirmed by the probate court, the four sons “executed among themselves a deed of partition of said land”' — showing conclu- . sively that the sons did not consider that there had previously been any partition made by the probate court. It seems to us that much the more reasonable inference is, that the sole object of the proceeding in the probate court was to obtain an appraisement of the value of the lands of the testator, with a view to ascertain the amount of the legacies due by the sons to the plaintiff and the other lady mentioned in the will, and that was certainly the only object accomplished by that proceeding; and when it was accomplished, no further action was taken under that proceeding; but, on the contrary, about a year after the proceeding in the probate court terminated, the sons made partition of the land by deed amongst themselves. This will afford a reason for the fact that the plaintiff was made a party to the proceeding in the probate court, which was so much relied upon by respondents. For it will be remembered that the will *511provided that the land “shall be valued and appraised by five disinterested and discreet persons, to be appointed by my sons, Qr a majority of them, and that after such appraise- ■ ment, my said sons shall pay to Caroline M. Anderson and Imogene McDonald each one-eighth part of the appraised value of my said land and real estate.” Now, as the mode prescribed by the will for ascertaining the value of the real estate of the testator, and thus fixing the amount of the legacies to the two ladies named, was not resorted to, there was nothing left but a resort to the-Court; and this, in our judgment, was the sole object of the proceeding in the court of probate, and was certainly the only object accomplished by that proceeding.
2 But even if the proceeding in the court of probate could be regarded as a proceeding for partition, we do not think that the plaintiff was bound to assert her claim now set up in that proceeding, and hence the judgment in that proceeding cannot support the plea of res pidi-cata in the present case. In the first place, it is more than doubtful whether the court of probate could take jurisdiction of the plaintiff’s claim. While it is quite true that the jurisdiction of the court of probate to make partition of real estate has been recognized, in so far as it is necessary to protect the title of a purchaser at a sale for partition, under the maxim, communis error facit jus (Herndon v. Moore, 18 S. C., 339), yet in that case, the preceding decision in Davenport v. Caldwell, 10 S. C., 317, denying the power of the legislature to confer upon the probate court jurisdiction in cases of partition, was affirmed. The practical result, therefore, is, that while this Court will recognize the validity of a judgment of the court of probate in partition, rendered prior to the decision in Davenport v. Caldwell, supra, under the maxim of communis error facit jus, in so far as it is necessary to protect rights vested by sale, or perhaps otherwise, under such judgment, it will go no further in recognition of such jurisdiction. In this case, it is apparent that no such vested rights are involved, as *512there was no sale for partition, and, in fact, no judgment for partition in kind. It is clear, therefore, that the court of probate had no jurisdiction in the proceeding relied upon as the basis for the plea of res judicata, and hence there was error in sustaining such plea; for it certainly cannot be claimed that the so-called adjudication of a question of which the Court has no jurisdiction can support a plea of res judicata.
3 But even if it should be conceded than the court of probate did have jurisdiction for the purpose of partition, it does not by any means follow that such court could take jurisdiction of plaintiff’s claim that her legacy was a chárge or encumbrance upon the land; for it never was supposed that the court of probate had jurisdiction to enforce the lien of a mortgage or any other lien.
4 But, waiving all questions of jurisdiction, we do not see how the plea of res judicata could have been sustained in this case. It is quite certain that there is no evidence that the claim of the plaintiff was either presented to or considered by the court of probate in the proceeding before that court; and, therefore, unless it was necessary that such claim should have been adjudicated in that proceeding before the judgment then rendered could have been reached, such judgment cannot be regarded as conclusive. In Hart v. Bates, 17 S. C., 35, the rule is laid down as follows: “A judgment is not conclusive of every question which might have been made in the case, as is sometimes erroneously said, but only of matters that had of necessity -to be determined before judgment could have been given;” and this rule is supported by cases of the highest authority there cited, and has been recognized and followed in Trimmier v. Thomson, 19 S. C., 254, which has, in turn, been recognized in the very recent case of Willis v. Toser, 44 S. C., 1. Conceding, then, for the purposes of this case, that the court of probate had full jurisdiction in the proceeding before it, and that the question of the plaintiff’s claim was there presented, or could have *513been presented, its adjudication was not necessary to enable that court to render judgment, and hence such judgment is not conclusive. For in Barber v. McAliley, 4 S. C., 49, it was held, that a sale of land for partition between heirs does not divest the lien of a judgment against the ancestor; the purchaser takes subject to the lien. Following the case of Moore v. Wright, 14 Rich. Eq., 132, and in the case of Barber v. McAliley, the case of Walton v. Copeland, 7 Johns. Ch., 140, is cited as holding that the judgment creditor would not even be a proper, much less a necessary, party to the partition. From these authorities, it follows that, even if the proceeding in the court of probate be given full force and effect as a proceeding for partition, it was not necessary that the claim of the plaintiff should have been there adjudged; and as there is not the slightest evidence that it was, in fact, adjudged, such proceeding cannot support the plea of res judicata.
The judgment of this Court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and that the case be remanded to that Court for the determination of the other issues in the case.