delivered the opinion of the court.
Several defects in the administrator’s sale are pointed out by plaintiffs, but we think none of them fatal to the jurisdiction except one. Sections 1254, 1255, L. O. L., allow parties cited to appear and show cause against a proposed sale ten days after the service of notice in which to make an appearance. This requirement was not observed in this case, and the order of sale was made ten days too soon and is confessedly void, unless certain curative acts passed by the legislature in 1907 and 1913 remedy the defect. The act of 1907 (Section 7156, L. O. L.), reads as follows:
“When any real estate of a decedent has been heretofore, or shall be hereafter, sold by any executor or administrator, under or by virtue of any license or order of any county or probate court of this state, and the purchaser shall have paid the purchase money for the same, and said sale shall have been made in good faith, in order to provide for the payment of the claims against said estate (and the money derived from such sale shall have been used for the payment of such claim),- and such sales shall not have been set aside by such county or probate court, but shall have been confirmed or acquiesced in by such county or probate court, and the period of five years shall have elapsed after the making and confirmation of said sale, then in such case all such sales shall be and are hereby confirmed and approved, notwithstanding any irregularities, defects, or informalities in the proceedings prior to said sale, and shall be sufficient to sustain an executor’s or ad*356ministrator’s deed to such purchaser, conveying all the right, title, and interest that such decedent had in such real property, and in case such deed shall not have been or is not given, it shall entitle such purchaser to such deed, or if such deed has been or is given, and if through mistake or omission in said deed, or defect in its execution, the same shall be inoperative, the same is hereby made sufficient to convey the title to the real property described in said deed; and when such facts shall be made to appear, either by plaintiff or defendant, in any suit in equity to quiet title to such real property ■ against the heirs, or their assigns, of the deceased person whose property shall have been sold in the proper court for such suits, then such court shall make its decree quieting such title, and when necessary compelling and ordering conveyances of the same to be made to such purchaser, his heirs or assigns, as if a valid contract to convey said real property had been made by such deceased pérson in his lifetime; and no action shall be maintained by such heirs, or their heirs or assigns, to dispossess any such purchaser, his heirs or assigns, after the expiration of five years from any such sale and confirmation thereof.”
The act of 1913 (Section 3 of Chapter 363, Laws of 1913) is more specific; reading in part as follows:
“When any real estate of a decedent has been heretofore sold by any executor or administrator under or by virtue of any license or order of any county or probate court of this state and the purchaser shall have paid the purchase money for the same and said sale shall have been made in good faith and such sale shall not have been set aside by such county or probate court, but shall have been confirmed or acquiesced in by such county or probate court, and the period of one year shall have elapsed after the confirmation of such sale, then in such case, such sale shall be and is hereby confirmed and approved, notwithstanding that 10 days shall not have elapsed or expired since the service by publication of the citation, or any other irregularities, defects, or informalities in any application for such *357license or order, or in the issuance or service of citation or in any other proceedings prior to such sale, and shall he sufficient to sustain an executor’s or administrator’s deed to such purchaser conveying all the right, title and interest that said decedent had in such real property, and in case such deed shall not have been given it shall entitle such purchaser to such deed, or if such deed has been or is given and is in any way defective, the same is hereby declared sufficient to convey the title to the real property described in such deed. ”
The remainder of the section contains substantially the same provisions as Section 7156, supra. On behalf of defendants it is urged in a brief and argument, exhibiting much research into the authorities, that the proceeding to subject the real property of a decedent to the payment of debts by an administrator’s sale is purely a proceeding in rem; that it was competent for the legislature to have provided in the first instance that such sales could be made without notice to the heir, and such being the case that the legislature can by a curative act heal any defect arising from a want of compliance with any requirement of a statute which it could lawfully have omitted in the first place. In discussing this branch of the subject we are naturally led to first consider how far with reference to our statute the proceedings in an administrator’s sale are in rem and to what extent they are in personam. One of the leading cases on this subject is Grignon’s Lessee v. Astor, 43 U. S. (2 How.) 318 (11 L. Ed. 283), wherein a statute of Michigan provided that when the goods and chattels of a person deceased should not be sufficient to pay his debts, upon representation thereof, and the same being made to appear to the supreme judicial court or to the county court, said courts should be authorized to license the executor or administrator to *358sell real estate so far as necessary to satisfy the same. Another section of the act provided that ‘ ‘ every representation made as aforesaid shall be accompanied by a certificate from the judge of probate,” the contents of which are particularly described. It also provided that the court, previous to passing on the representation, should cause due notice to be given to all parties or their guardians to show cause against the granting of the license; and for the publication of such notices for three weeks in some newspaper. The administrator by its terms was required to post notices of the sale for thirty days preceding the same. The plaintiff brought ejectment claiming under the heirs of G-rignon. The defendant asserted title by virtue of an administrator’s sale and deed and introduced the order of sale, license to sell, and said deed. It was stated in defendant’s brief:
“The plaintiff did not attempt by any evidence directly to impeach the proceedings, by showing want of notice, want of evidence, want of strict conformity to law, although Paul G-rignon, the administrator, and Augustine G-rignon, the purchaser, had both united to defeat the sale under the order by a subsequent conveyance, and were both produced as witnesses for the plaintiff.”
As to the jurisdiction, the Supreme Court held:
“No other requisites to the jurisdiction of the County Court are prescribed than the death of Grignon, the insufficiency of his personal estate to pay his debts, and a representation to the County Court where he dwelt or his real estate was situate, making these facts appear to the court.”
The opinion then suggests that the papers showing the facts upon which orders of this kind are made are frequently lost or mislaid, and, in effect, holds that the *359jurisdiction having once attached by the filing of a petition, regular upon its face, and an order and license having been made, compliance with the other statutory requirements will be presumed. Among other things, the court observes:
“But though the order of the court sets forth no facts on which it was founded, the license to the administrator is full and explicit showing what was considered and adjudicated on the petition and evidence, and that every requisition of the law had been complied with before the order was made, by proof of the existence of all the facts on which the power to make it depended.”
The sum and substance of the whole case is that in the absence of proof to the contrary, and order of a probate court to sell realty, accompanied by its license reciting compliance with all the jurisdictional requirements, will be taken as absolute verity. Herein that case differs from the one at bar where the record itself discloses an absolute failure on the part of the administrator and the court to comply with an important jurisdictional requirement in the matter of giving notice to absent heirs. In the case cited, the court assumed that notice had been given. In the case at bar, it affirmatively appears and is admitted that legal notice had not been given. In a dictum, which seems wholly outside the question actually involved, the court, following the case of M’Pherson v. Cunliff et al., 11 Serg. & R. (Pa.) 432 (14 Am. Dec. 642), holds that in a proceeding to sell realty to pay the debts of an intestate there are no adversary parties; but the proceeding is m rem and analogous to proceedings in admiralty, where the seizure of the res is supposed to give notice to all the world of the pendency of the suit. The parallel is not a happy one. A ship, for instance, is usually in charge *360of some person having either a property interest or an interest in her nse and always representing her owners. The constructive possession by the administrator of a tract of land situated in a distant state which, as in this instance, is in the actual possession of nobody, is surely not such that infant or resident heirs should be deemed to have constructive notice of a proceeding to subject their inheritance to the payment of alleged debts of their ancestor; and this is particularly the case where the law has expressly prohibited the administrator from disposing of their property without notice to them. The Pennsylvania case cited by Mr. Justice Baldwin in the opinion just quoted, does, in fact, hold that the proceedings in the Orphan’s Court of Pennsylvania for the sale of lands by an administrator are in the nature of a proceeding in rem, but it nowhere intimates that any statutory requirement necessary to authorize a sale or to bring the parties into court may be dispensed with. It merely holds that after a lapse of many years the courts would presume that the requirements of the statute had been complied with; saying:
“Whenever the sales are called in question, we find the courts declaring that these irregularities must be overlooked; after a lapse of years, all must be presumed to have been solemnly transacted. * # The presumption always is, that they were regular, and it lies on the party impugning them to show their irregularity. * * A purchaser is not bound to look into all the circumstances, nor to go through all the proceedings from beginning to end; on the contrary, the general impression the decisions give is this, that a purchaser has a right to presume that the court have taken the necessary steps to investigate the rights of the parties, and that it has, on that investigaion, properly decreed a sale. Then he is to see that all proper parties are before the court; and he is further to see *361that in taldng the conveyance, he takes a title that cannot be impeached - aliwnde; and he has no right to call on the court to protect him from a title, not at issue in the cause.”
1. So it would seem that whether we treat an administrator’s sale as a proceeding in rem or in personam, a failure to bring the interested parties into court when the statute requires this to be done is fatal to the jurisdiction. In Furth v. United States Mortgage & Trust Co., 13 Wash. 73 (42 Pac. 523), it was held that the administration of an estate was a proceeding in rem and that a citation directed to “all persons interested” without giving the names of the heirs, being within the terms of the statute, was sufficient to give the court jurisdiction. It was further held that where the statute required that the notice should be published in such paper as the court should designate, and the order made by the court failed to designate a particular paper, proof that the notice had been published regularly in a newspaper of general circulation was sufficient; the omission to designate the particular paper being a mere irregularity not going to the jurisdiction. It is safe to say that if it had appeared that the notice had not been published at all, or had required the party to appear within a time short of that required by law and the hearing and order of sale had been made with such defects, the same court would have held it invalid for want of jurisdiction in the probate court to make it. In re Smith’s Estate, 188 Pa. 222 (41 Atl. 542), it was held that notice of application by an executor to sell the real estate of a decedent for the purpose of paying debts need not be served upon the heirs, and the same is held in a number of Pennsylvania cases, notably: Murphy’s Appeal, 8 Watts & S. (Pa.) 165; Weaver’s Appeal, 19 Pa. St. 416; West Hickory Mining *362Association v. Reed, 80 Pa. St. 38. The reason given for this holding is that there is no statute in Pennsylvania requiring such notice. Although not cited in the opinion it is evident that these cases all hark back to M’Pherson v. Cunliff, supra, wherein it is held that the proceeding is strictly in rem; and where the law does not prescribe notice the courts will not require it. These cases have been followed in other states, in some to the extent of holding that statutes requiring notice may be disregarded by the courts without rendering a sale void; but the conclusions of the courts of this state and the recent decisions of a majority of the states are to the effect that such a sale is absolutely a nullity: Fiske v. Kellogg, 3 Or. 503; Smith v. Whiting, 55 Or. 393 (106 Pac. 791); Marks v. Wilson, 72 Or. 5 (143 Pac. 906). In fact, counsel for defendant does not question this proposition and discusses it only with reference to the effect of the curative statutes referred to. His proposition may be stated briefly thus: (1) The sale was void for want of service of a citation upon the heirs. (2) Being a proceeding in rem the legislature might have dispensed with service of citation in the first instance. (3) What the legislature might have originally dispensed with it can cure by subsequent legislation. (4) It has so legislated, and, therefore, defendants’ title is now perfect. The first proposition being conceded need not be discussed.
2, 3. The answer to the second is that in this state proceedings to subject the realty of a decedent to the payment of debts are not proceedings in rem. They are not even common-law proceedings, but purely statutory. At common law the real property of a decedent could not be subjected to his simple contract debts. It descended directly to the heir, and in case *363of deficiency of personal property such, creditors could. not collect the debts: 11 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 ed.), 838. To remove this injustice of the common law, Oregon, as well as most of the states of the Union, enacted a statute providing that such property should descend to the heir subject to the debts of the decedent: Section 7348, L. O. L. It being found that possession by the heir during administration was attended with many inconveniences, it was further enacted in many of the states, including Oregon, that the administrator should be entitled to the possession and control of the property, both real and personal, until the administration was completed: Section 1185, L. 0. L. It will be seen, then, that under the statute as well as at common law the heir was still the owner of the real estate of the decedent subject by statute only to' the lien of such debts as might be proved against the estate and not solvable from personalty and to the temporary possession of the administrator for the purpose of administration. Having thus impressed upon the property of the heir a special burden or liability unknown to the common law, the statute prescribed the mode by which that liability should become fixed and the realty disposed of to extinguish it. It recognizes, as it should, the fact that the actual fee and ownership of the property is in the heir, and by way of giving him his day in court requires that a petition shall be filed showing: (1) The amount of sales of personal property; (2) the charges, expenses, and claims still unsatisfied; (3) a description of the property and its probable value, and the amount and nature of the liens thereon; (4) the names, ages, and residence of the heirs so far as known, and other particulars not necessary here to mention. Then it requires that a citation shall issue, and in certain cases, like the present, it is required that it shall *364be published for not less than four weeks, and a notice to the heir to appear within ten days after the service of the citation to show cause against the prayer of the petition.
4. The interest of the heir in the real estate of his ancestor is a valuable property right. The land is his burdened only with the debts of his ancestor, and when it is attempted by statutory means to deprive him of his property, the procedure pointed out by statute should be at least substantially followed. It may well be questioned whether since the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution it is competent for the legislature to pass any law that-would deprive an heir of his right to the lands of his ancestor without notice and without his day in court. It is true that it would be competent for it to pass a law abolishing or changing the law of descents, but so long as this is not done and the estate is permitted to descend as at common law, due process of law must be observed before his property can be taken from him. That proceedings for the sale of a decedent’s property are not in rem is settled in this state by Fishe v. Kellogg, supra, where the same contention was made as in the present case with the result that the court, adopting the language used in Schneider v. McFarland, 2 Cow. 462, says:
“The administrator is not, therefore, the sole representative of the real estate of the deceased in these proceedings. He is the moving party in behalf of the creditors. His object is by special proceeding before a court of limited jurisdiction to turn the real estate into personalty with a view to the payment of debts. The heir has a right to contest his allegations, and show that no such necessity exists. * * It is a proceeding by which the infant heir may be deprived *365of Ms inheritance, and to which he is an adversary and necessary party.”
Bnt in onr view it is not important to speculate upon the proposition as to whether or not the legislature might have dispensed with notice of the application of an administrator to sell land. The fact remains that it has not done so, and that in the instance before us the notice to heirs required by law was not given; and the sale was absolutely void for want of jurisdiction in the court to order it made.
5-8. This narrows the question down to a single proposition, viz.: Do the curative acts of 1913 and 1907, or either of them, have the effect of doing’ away with the lack of jurisdiction of the court to order the sale and operate to confirm or rather to pass title to the property from the heirs and vest it in the defendants? On principle it would seem plain that they could not. Let us consider first the act of 1913. It must be conceded that if the legislature had power to cure a defect of the character involved here, that act has done so. We would then have this situation: On the first day of June, 1913, plaintiffs had the legal title and the right to recover from defendants the property in controversy, and tMs suit to so recover it had been commenced and was actually in progress. ' On the 2d of June, 1913, when this act went into effect their title passed to defendants and their cause of suit, perfectly good upon the facts, had been extinguished by legislative fiat so that in no event could they recover upon it. This final analysis of the effect of the alleged curative act, if it is valid, suggests to the average lawyer, educated in the atmosphere of respect for vested rights, the right of every man to his “day in court,” and the right to due process of law guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment, a proposition so re*366pugnant that it would seem at first glance to be beyond discussion; and were it not that many eminent jurists, including a venerated and able justice of this court, have approved curative acts possessing many of the features of the one under consideration, and the further fact that it has been presented here by eminent counsel and argued with consummate skill and ability, we would be disposed to say, without further consideration of authorities, that the act violates the constitution in that it attempts to deprive the plaintiffs of their land without due process of law and is a legislative interference with pending litigation and a usurpation of the judicial power forbidden by the constitution.
To consider all or even a tithe of the cases in which curative statutes have been unheld would be to write a treatise upon that class of legislation. We will, however, consider a few of the leading cases upon the subject beginning with Mitchell v. Campbell, 19 Or. 198 (24 Pac. 455), which must be overruled if the decision of the lower court in the instant case is affirmed. In that case the proceedings were even more defective than in the case at bar. The petition stated almost no jurisdictional facts, but the court made an order directing that a citation issue to the heir, and beyond this the record is silent. There was nothing to show that the citation ever in fact issued or was served, that any notice was ever published, that any hearing was had, any order of sale made, or any confirmation of sale — nothing but the petition, order for citation, and administrator’s deed to the property. The supreme court, speaking through Mr. Chief Justice Thayer, held the curative acts of 1874 and 1878 in many respects similar to the one at bar were sufficient to pass the title. The opinion itself does not specify the par*367ticular defects which the appellant complained of and the briefs are not clear upon that subject, but an examination of the transcript discloses the facts to have been as stated above. Now, the act of 1874 only assumed to cure such sales as had been licensed and approved by the County Court, and there was not a particle of testimony that the court had either licensed or approved the sale. The act of 1878 only professes to legitimatize sales which had been “confirmed or acquiesced in by the court,” and yet there was no testimony as to any confirmation or acquiescence. The case was reversed on another ground, but the opinion bears the earmarks of a very cursory examination of the law and the facts.
As to the law the learned justice followed the case of Wilkinson v. Leland, 2 Pet. 627 (7 L. Ed. 542), which went to the Supreme Court of the United States from the state of Ehode Island, and arose in this wise: In 1787 one Jonathan Jenckes, a resident of New Hampshire, died in that state leaving property there and also property and many debts in the state of Ehode Island. Cynthia Jenckes, his wife, was his New Hampshire executrix. Without being appointed executrix in Ehode Island she applied to a probate court in that state for a license to sell the Ehode Island realty for the purpose of paying debts, and the license was granted. The land was sold by her under this license, but the purchaser being doubtful as to her authority to sell under the circumstances she covenanted to apply to the legislature of Ehode Island for an act confirming the sale, which she did and the act was passed. Thirty-six years afterward Leland as successor to Jenckes’ heirs brought ejectment against Wilkinson, who succeeded to the title made by the executrix, to recover the property, claiming that the *368deed of the executrix being void the act of the Rhode Island legislature was also ineffectual. Being defeated in the Circuit Court, the case went on a writ of error to the Supreme Court. There was certainly no lack of talent in the case, as Daniel Webster was one of counsel for the plaintiff in error and William Wirt was of counsel for the defendant, and Mr. Justice Story rendered the opinion, which held that the legislature of Rhode Island had ample power to pass the act and that it violated no provision of the Constitution of the United States and disturbed no vested right; but it is to be noted that Rhode Island at that time had no constitution, as its fundamental law was a charter from the British crown giving it the same right of legislation possessed by the British Parliament. We use the language of counsel for the defendant in error:
“Acts authorizing foreign executors to sell real estate, and acts confirming void deeds, have been passed, ever since the settlement of the state. Having no written constitution, usage is the law of Rhode Island. The papers in the case clearly show that the legislature of that state has always exercised supreme legislative, executive, and judicial power (citing a great number of instances where judicial power had been exercised by the legislature). There is an executive magistrate, but he is totally destitute of executive power. He cannot pardon the slightest offense; he has no veto on legislation; and he cannot appoint a single officer in the state; all the executive powers are exercised by the legislature. So of its judicial powers. We have courts acting under standing laws; but one of those standing laws authorizes the legislature, upon a petition for a new trial, to set aside judgments at its pleasure. Originally, the legislature was the only court in the state; it exercised common law, chancery, probate, and admiralty jurisdiction. Its chancery jurisdiction it has never parted with. It is the best court of chancery in the world. Its probate power, *369though conferred upon inferior courts, has always been exercised concurrently with them.”
We cite this excerpt to show how inapplicable the case of Wilkinson v. Leland is to a case arising under our Constitution. There was a case occurring where there was no Constitution, no separation of the legislative and judicial powers, no restraint upon legislation, except those which the court might assume were the necessary restrictions of a republican form of government. Here we have the Fourteenth Amendment prescribing that no state shall deprive any person of his property without due process of law. We have in our state Constitution a separation of the executive, legislative, and judicial power and a prohibition against officers of one of these departments exercising the power of any other. We have a constitutional provision giving to the County Court the powers incident to probate courts, and in addition to this we have general laws prescribing the procedure of these courts and specifying just what shall give them authority to divest the heir of an estate of his property in favor of the claims of creditors. If all these wise restrictions, which Rhode Island has now adopted, and which the national government has found necessary to supplement by the Fourteenth Amendment, are to be disregarded it would be just as well to repeal all restrictions upon encroachments on the right to hold and enjoy property.
Another case cited by Mr. Justice Thayer is Watson v. Mercer, 8 Pet. 88 (8 L. Ed. 876). This arose upon a Pennsylvania statute validating defective acknowledgments of deeds. It was claimed that such a statute divested antecedent vested rights and impaired the obligations of contracts. To this Mr. Justice Story answered :
*370“As to the first point, it is clear, that this court has no right to pronounce an act of the state legislature void, as contrary to the Constitution of the United States, from the mere fact that it divests antecedent vested rights of property.”
As to the second point he held that the act did not impair the obligations of a contract, as it certainly did not because it only confirmed what the parties had themselves attempted to accomplish. Statutes confirming voluntary contracts of this character which have been ineffectively executed stand upon an entirely different foundation from those in which judicial interposition is invoked to divest a person of his property against or without his consent, and it is concerning these the maxim quoted by Mr. Justice, Thayer may well be invoked, “No man has a vested right to do wrong.”
And here, since this expression has been adopted in the brief of defendants- in this case, we will digress from the topic under discussion to ask what wrong the heirs of deceased are doing, or have done, in this case? They come into court and say, “Our ancestor, Charles Fletcher, was,the owner of the land in controversy,” and it is proved beyond doubt. They say that the property was sold without notice to them, and this was substantiated. They say that the sale was void, and this is admitted. The court in a spirit of entire fairness and in accordance with the rule laid down in Browne v. Coleman, 62 Or. 454 (125 Pac. 278), while holding the sale and conveyance void, gave defendants a lien upon the property for every cent that ,had been paid for it at the sale and for all taxes which had been paid with legal interest thereon. In this state equity will never permit a purchaser at a void sale who has bought in good faith to lose the money *371he has paid and which has gone to discharge claims against the estate or for the protection of the property after the sale.
Returning now to the discussion of the effect of curative acts, it cannot be successfully controverted that in this state the County Court sitting in probate acts judicially: Haile v. Hill, 13 Mo. 612; Wicks-Nease v. James, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 151 (72 S. W. 87); Fitzsimmons v. Johnson, 90 Tenn. 416 (17 S. W. 100). It is also settled that an administrator’s sale of land by order of the probate court when made to pay debts of the estate is a judicial sale: Maule v. Hellman, 39 Neb. 322 (58 N. W. 112); Mauney v. Pemberton, 75 N. C. 219; Noland v. Barrett, 122 Mo. 181 (26 S. W. 692, 43 Am. St. Rep. 572). Starting out with the propositions that all probate powers are vested in the County Court by the Constitution, that these powers are judicial in their nature and cannot be exercised by the legislature, that the proceeding to divest an heir of his interest in the estate of his ancestor for the payment of debts is statutory, that a failure to give the notice required by statute renders the sale void, we will inquire why such failure renders the sale invalid! The answer is, first, that where power to do an act is given by the statute, the mode prescribed is the measure of the power, and a failure to follow substantially the prescribed mode renders the proceeding void for want of jurisdiction. Second, that notice to the heir being required by law any attempt to divest him of his title without such notice is an attempt to take his property without due process of law. What is “due process of law”?
“ ‘Due process of law’ means a course of legal proceedings according to the rules and principles which have been established in our system of jurisprudence *372for the protection and enforcement of private rights”: Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U. S. 714, 733 (24 L. Ed. 565).
“Due process of law cannot mean less thars a prosecution or suit instituted and conducted according to the prescribed forms and solemnities for ascertaining guilt or determining the title to property”: Taylor v. Porter, 4 Hill (N. Y.), 140, 146 (40 Am. Dec. 274).
“By ‘due process of law’ is meant that which follows the general rule established in our system of jurisprudence for the security of private rights, is appropriate to the case and just to the parties affected. It must be pursued in the ordinary mode prescribed by the law. It must be adapted to the end to be attained, and, wherever it is necessary for the protection of the parties, it must give them an opportunity to be heard respecting the justice of the judgment sought”: Hagar v. Reclamation Dist. etc., 111 U. S. 701 (28 L. Ed. 569, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 663).
See generally this title in Words and Phrases.
In the case at bar the heirs were not given an opportunity to be heard and the means provided for bringing them into court were not observed and the purchaser at the administrator’s sale got no title. Then the legislature interferes, saying in effect:
“It is true that the statute was disregarded. It is true that the court did not proceed by due process of law and the title to the property is still in the heirs, but you thought you were getting a good title and you paid your money. Therefore, we will dispense with all these safeguards which have been erected for the protection of absent heirs and give you the property. ’ ’
The legislature seems to have proceeded according to the adage of the old drunkard who said, “If getting drunk interferes with your business, cut out the business.” So here, “If the requirement of due process of law interferes with your getting this property, we will cut out ‘due process of law.’ ” The industry *373and research of counsel for defendants have brought to our notice many cases sustaining curative statutes similar to the one now under consideration, and did space permit it would be a pleasure to discuss them. Some may be distinguished from the one under consideration, while others flatly sustain counsel’s contention. It may be said that none of them go further than Mitchell v. Campbell, supra, and that we consider unsound and overrule.
We will now consider some of the-cases holding an opposite view. In McCulloch v. Estes, 20 Or. 349 (25 Pac. 724), decided shortly after the case of Mitchell v. Campbell, Mr. Justice Lord says:
“The claim for the plaintiff is, that the sale by the guardian should have been in the county where the real property is situated, and that the sale was rendered void in not so making it. Assuming, without deciding that the contention for the plaintiff is correct, the case presented is that of a court having jurisdiction in the premises exercising it erroneously. In such case, after jurisdiction has attached, no principle of law is better settled than that mere defects or irregularities which may have resulted from the exercise of jurisdiction, cannot be taken advantage of in a collateral way, as' is sought to be done in the present action. The defect was not of a jurisdictional character. Upon the fact presented the court was authorized to make the order for the sale of the property. This is conceded as well as the jurisdiction of the person, and the defect, if defect it be, crept in after jurisdiction was acquired. In a word, it is admitted that the record contains a recital of all the facts necessary to confer jurisdiction, and within the principle laid down in Heatherly v. Hadley, 4 Or. 1, it is conclusive when attacked collaterally. In Walker v. Goldsmith, 14 Or. 125 (12 Pac. 537), it was said: ‘Where the question as to a guardian’s sale of the lands of his ward arises collaterally, and the pleadings do not attack the proceedings for want of jurisdiction, and where the rec*374ord discloses on its face jurisdiction, both of the parties and of the subject matter, the sale must be sustained.’ And in Wright v. Edwards, 10 Or. 307, it is said: ‘Where there is matter of substance upon which jurisdiction can hinge, mere errors or defects, although material in some respects, but which might have been avoided on appeal, cannot avail to condemn a judicial proceeding when, by lapse of time, an appeal is barred, which has become the foundation of title to property.’ ”
After quoting the curative act. of 1878 he continues:
“The case before us comes directly within the purview of this statute, which was intended to obviate or cure such defects or irregularities as is sought to be made available in this action. Where the defects are not jurisdictional in their character, it is held that they may be validated by a subsequent curative act of the legislature. Mr. Fréeman says: ‘But mere irregularities of proceeding, though of so grave a character as to render a judicial or executive sale inoperative, may be deprived of their evil consequences by subsequent legislation.’ (Freeman, Void Jud. Sales, § 55.) So that, however we may regard this case, no error is discovered, and the judgment must be affirmed.”
In Fuller v. Hager, 47 Or. 242 (83 Pac. 782, 114 Am. St. Rep. 916), Mr. Justice Bean observes:
“It is a well-recognized rule of law that the legislature may, unless prohibited by the Constitution, validate or legalize, retrospectively, judicial or executive sales, even though the defects or irregularities therein are of so grave a character as to render them inoperative, so long as it does not undertake to infuse life into proceedings utterly void for want of jurisdiction: Freeman, Void Judicial Sales, 57; Endlich, Interp. Stat., § 291; Wilkinson v. Leland, 27 U. S. (2 Pet.) 627 (7 L. Ed. 542); Sohier v. Massachusetts Gen. Hospital, 3 Cush. 483; Sanders v. Greenstreet, 23 Kan. 425; Smith v. Callaghan, 66 Iowa, 552 (24 N. W. 50); Boyce v. Sinclair, 3 Bush (Ky.), 261.”
*375In Browne v. Coleman, supra, this court said:
“It is claimed that the curative statute (Section 7156, L. O. L.) bars the right of defendants in this case, but such statute is limited in its operation to ‘irregularities, defects, or informalities,’ and it is evidently not intended to extend to sales which are absolutely void, and such has been the holding of this court. ’ ’
In Noon’s Estate, 49 Or. 286 (88 Pac. 673, 90 Pac. 673), we held that the widow and children of a decedent became seized of his real property immediately upon his decease and that their rights therein could not be affected by a subsequent act of the legislature attempting to subject their land to a liability not existing when they became invested with the legal title. In McCartney v. Shipherd, 60 Or. 133 (117 Pac. 814), we held that an act passed February 21, 1911 (Laws of 1911, p. 195), which attempted to validate appeals taken after the six months prescribed by statute had expired, was void because the statute was retroactive and interfered with vested rights obtained by judgment, and was an interference with the judicial power.
The large number of decisions in other jurisdictions render it impracticable to give a synopsis of all, but we refer to a few, most of which were cited by counsel for plaintiffs. In McDaniel v. Correll, 19 Ill. 226 (68 Am. Dec. 587), which arose upon a bill in chancery to set aside a will where there was no service of summons upon certain nonresident defendants and the legislature passed an act professing to validate the proceeding, it is said:
“If it was competent for the legislature to make a void proceeding valid, then it has been done in this case. Upon this question we cannot for a moment doubt or hesitate. They can no more impart a binding efficacy to a void proceeding than they can take *376one man’s property from Mm and give it to another. Indeed, to do the one is to accomplish the other.”
The opinion of Mr. Justice McKinstry, in Pryor v. Downey, 50 Cal. 388 (19 Am. Rep. 656), is an instructive one upon this subject, and many of the decisions are cited and commented upon. To quote from it would be to mutilate it, but it meets every contention of defendants upon this branch of the case, and in the opinion of the writer shows conclusively that an attempt by the legislature to infuse life and vitality into a void proceeding of this character is wholly beyond its constitutional powers. We, therefore, adhere to the doctrine announced in McCulloch v. Estes, Fuller v. Hager, and Browne v. Coleman, supra, to the extent of holding that where there is a complete lack of jurisdiction by reason of want of service of citation upon the heirs or persons interested, the legislature cannot by a subsequent curative act pass the title to a purchaser at an administrator’s sale.
Much sympathy seems to be expended in many of the opinions upon the injury done to “innocent purchasers” by declaring these sales invalid, but it would seem that innocent and nonresident heirs ought to be entitled to some consideration. The method pointed out by statute for obtaining jurisdiction to make an administrator’s sale is very simple and easily complied with, and, as every step is required to be made a matter of record, it is not a difficult or expensive matter for the intending purchaser to have that record examined so as to ascertain whether the sale will pass title to the property. If he negligently fails to do this, or having-done it takes the chances that no possible heir will turn up to assert a claim to the property, he has only his own negligence to blame if he loses the benefit of his purchase.
*3779,10. It is claimed that Section 7156, L. O. L., operates as a statute of limitations against the heirs, and that not having brought suit to set aside the administrator’s sale within five years from the date thereof, they are barred from their remedy. It is conceded that the land is wild land not in the actual possession of anyone. The constructive possession must, therefore, be in the person holding the legal title. In Martin v. White, 53 Or. 319 (100 Pac. 290), this court held than when a tax proceeding was void and the tax sale purchaser not in possession, it is beyond the power of the legislature to transfer to the purchaser the title of the owner by lapse of time alone. The reasoning in that case and in the authorities there cited must resolve this proposition against the contention of the defendants here.
11,12. There is a cross-appeal by the plaintiffs from that part of the decree which adjudged that Mrs. Maggie Fletcher, now Young, was the lawful wife of Charles W. Fletcher and entitled to dower in the lands in controversy, which dower right had been assigned to defendants. Conceding for the purposes of this case that plaintiffs had a right to attack the legality of the divorce proceedings, we are not prepared to hold they were void. The complaint in the divorce proceeding states all the necessary jurisdictional facts as to residence and a good cause of suit, and is apparently verified by Fletcher before a Wisconsin officer, as is an affidavit filed in the course of the proceedings; and the proceedings are regular upon their face. It is attempted to be shown that he was not in the state of Wisconsin at the time, but was a resident of Coos County, Oregon. The whole evidence in the case indicates that Fletcher was a saw-filer by trade, that his residence for years was at or about Sheboygan, Wis*378consin, although he worked in mills in Michigan and Minnesota, and that he came to Coos County about 1875. Whether he came originally merely in pursuit of employment, intending to return to Wisconsin and considering that state his home, does not appear. The evidence of two witnesses, one of whom puts his first coming here ten years before the actual date, is to the effect that they knew him well, were intimate with him, and do not recollect of his ever going back to Wisconsin after he came out here. Nearly forty years had passed since these witnesses first became acquainted with deceased, and we are not prepared to find that he committed bigamy upon the statement of aged witnesses who, after the lapse of many years, are only able to testify that they do not remember the fact of his absence from Coos County and as to their impression that if he had been absent they would have remembered it. When the lips that could have spoken are sealed in death, we do not feel that plaintiffs have produced sufficient evidence to overcome the presumption of regularity which appears upon the face of the decree, as well as that other presumption that a person is to be presumed innocent of crime or wrong until that presumption is overcome by evidence.
13. The decree of the Circuit Court will be in all things affirmed, and, as both parties have appealed and both have failed in their appeal, neither party will recover costs in this court. Affirmed.
Mr. Chief Justice Moore, Mr. Justice Bean and Mr.. Justice Harris concur. Mr. Justice Eakin taking no part in the consideration of this case.