delivered the following separate and dissenting opinion:
In view of the importance of many of the questions involved in this case, I deem it proper to state my views at length upon them, as well where I concur as where I dissent from the view expressed in the majority opinion of the’court.
The appellees claim title to the premises in question, as heirs at law of Charles O’Conner, deceased, and the appellant claims title to the same property, under certain mesne conveyances from the purchaser at an administratrix’s sale of said property, to pay the debts of the said decedent. The important question involved in the case is, whether the proceedings had in the county court pass the title of the heirs to the property in controversy, to the purchaser at the administratrix’s sale. The answer to this inquiry involves two questions, arising upon the state of the facts presented in the record. First, did the county court have jurisdiction to make the order of sale, on the 16th day of September, 1858, under which the premises were after-wards sold to the grantor of the appellant? Second, what effect did the birth of the posthumous child, Ann O’Conner, born after the order of the sale was made, and before the premises were actually sold under the order of the court, have upon the sale? And herein is involved the further inquiries : first, what estate does a posthumous child take in the lands of the ancestor? and, second, were the rights of the posthumous child, in this case, affected by the sale, if it rvas in all things regular as to the other heirs ?
The terre-tenants entered their appearance in the county court, but it is objected that the court did not have jurisdiction over the persons of the minor defendants, Charles B. and Mary.
The return on the summons issued is in the language following: “Served this writ on the within named Mary O’Conner and Charles R. O’Conner, the others not found in my county, the 26th day of August, 1858. John L. Wilson, Sheriff, by S. Miles, Deputy.”
Manifestly, this return is defective, in not showing the manner of the service. Flo other substantial objection can be taken to the return. The date shows, with sufficient accuracy, the time of the service, and the fact that the writ was served by a deputy, in the name of a sheriff, is lawful. It is a defective service alone in not showing the manner, whether by reading or by copy, in which the writ was served. The decree finds, that the petitioner shows to the court that due service of process was had on Mary and Charles R. O’Conner.
In a collateral proceeding like this, will the finding of the court, that due service of process was had, be deemed sufficient evidence of that fact, or will it be presumed, against the solemn finding of the court to the contrary, that the court acted on the defective service ?
Cases illustrative of the one at bar have frequently been before this court, and it is believed that when the decisions bearing on this question are examined^ it will be found that they are entirely consistent with one another. It will be found that they are in harmony with the policy of the law in this and other States, where the common law prevails, to maintain the jurisdiction of the court, where parties have acquired property rights under its judgment or decree, until the contrary is made to appear. This rule is founded on considerations of public policy, and was established for the protection of purchasers on the faith of judicial process.
I will briefly notice the cases that have been passed upon by this court.
The case of Wilson v. Greathouse, 1 Scam. 174, to which the attention of the court has been called, is not in point on the question under consideration. It was a case that originated before a justice of the peace, and the return of the officer did not show the date of the service, the constable who served the process being dead. The rule is there laid down, that if the court does not have jurisdiction of the parties, its proceedings are corain nonjudice. Nor is the case of Ogle v. Coffey, 1 Scam. 239. That was on error to' reverse a judgment rendered on default, where the return neither showed the date or manner of service, and it was held bad for that reason.
The case of Ball v. Shattuck, 16 Ill. 299, was a direct proceeding. The return was defective, in not showing how the summons was served. The case simply holds, .that the mode of service, when not otherwise provided for by statute, is by reading, and the return must show the time when, and on whom, the service was made.
The case of Pardon v. Dwier, 23 Ill. 572, was an action of ejectment. The defendant claimed title under a deed made in pursuance of a judgment rendered before a justice of the peace, a transcript of which had been filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court. The record recited that the summons was “ returned, duly served by reading to the defendant.” When the return was produced, it read “ duly served by reading, June 16, 1848.” It was held that the transcript of the justice, or rather the record, was sufficient,prima fade, to show a proper return of service, but that it was not conclusive, and might be contradicted by the return itself, and that when the return was shown, it did contradict the statement in the record, and showed what had often been held to be an insufficient service to give the justice jurisdiction. I am unable to see how the return in this case, when produced, contradicted the finding of the court. It was entirely consistent with the finding, but not to the same extent. The decision, however, can be supported upon a different ground. It was the finding of a court of inferior and limited jurisdiction, and no liberal intendments are ever made in favor of its jurisdiction.
The sufficiency of the service in Maher v. Bull, 26 Ill. 348, Avas questioned on an appeal, and is not pertinent to the present inquiry. The case simply holds that a return, where the officer states that he served the writ by explaining the contents to the defendant, and that he accepted service, Avas not sufficient.
In Clark v. Thompson, 47 Ill. 25, the decree of the circuit court was attacked collaterally, as in the present case. The service was manifestly insufficient to confer jurisdiction. The court say: “ if the record shows service Avhich is insufficient, and the record fails to show that the court found that it had jurisdiction, then the presumption ” (that is, in faAmr of the jurisdiction of the court) “ is rebutted, and it must be held that the court acted upon the insufficient service.” That case can clearly be distinguished from the one now before the court. In that case, there was no finding of the court from which it could be inferred that there was service, and, therefore it was held that the court must have acted on the defective service. Hot so in this case. Here the court found that it was shown that due service of process was had.
In Reddick et al. v. The State Bank, 27 Ill. 145, the court modified, to some extent, the rule stated in Randall v. Songer, 16 Ill. 27, and in Vairin v. Edmonson, 5 Gilm. 272, and say, “ it is to be presumed that no court will state of record the existence of facts which had no existence, or pass a decree, or render a judgment, unless proof of service or notice were actually produced. The record, therefore, stating such facts, and nothing to the contrary appearing, it should be received as evidence of their existence.”
In Banks v. Banks, 31 Ill. 162, service was acknowledged by defendant, on the back of the summons, and it was objected that there was no evidence in the record that it was the genuine signature of the defendant; but the decree recited that it appeared to the court that process had been duly served on the defendant. The court there approved the principle of Timmerman v. Phelps, 27 Ill. 496, and say: “ this finding, as in that case, is conclusive, unless the defendant, on a motion to set aside the default, would show the court unadvisedly found the fact.”
In Rivard v. Gardner, 39 Ill. 125, it was objected, that the return of the sheriff on the summons, did not show the date of service, and, non constat, that the court had jurisdiction to pronounce a decree at the time it did so. But the decree recited that the defendants were duly served, and on the authority of Banks v. Banks, Reddick v. The State Bank, and Timmerman v. Phelps, this recjtal in the decree was held to cure the defect in the return, and the court say, “ although the return was without date, we must suppose the court was satisfied, in some legitimate mode, that the service was in season.”
In Moore v. Neil, 39 Ill. 256, it was objected, that the notice was defective in not stating the first and last days of publication, as the statute required. The decree, however, recited that “it appearing to the court that notice, according to law, was given, of the pendency of this cause.” It was held that this recital in the decree was sufficient evidence that the proper notice had been given. The court approve the cases of Gibson v. Roll, 27 Ill. 92, and Goudy v. Hall, 36 Ill. 319, and say, “although the certificate of the printer was defective, yet we must presume, from this recital, that the court received other evidence of the date of publication.”
The case of Miller v. Handy, 40 Ill. 448, is a well considered case, and, on the authority of Reddick v. The State Bank, and Goudy v. Hall, the court say, “ the record, therefore, stating the fact of the return of two nihils, and nothing to the contrary appearing, must be held prima facie evidence, at least, of the existence of that fact, and there is nothing in the case to show that the finding of the court was not in strict accordance with the fact.”
The case of Russell v. Brown et al. 41 Ill. 183, is to the same effect, and is in harmony with all the cases on this question.
It will be observed that there is a marked distinction preserved in all the cases, where the decree or judgment of the court is assailed on error or on appeal, and where the same is attacked in a collateral proceeding. This distinction explains the apparent conflict in some of the cases.
There are errors which can only be reviewed by an appellate court. Courts not having appellate jurisdiction, have no power to revise the errors of a court of general jurisdiction. Where a court of general jurisdiction has found the existence of a fact, such finding, in all collateral proceedings, must be regarded as having been correctly found, until the contrary is made to appear. The reason for the rule is this: On the inspection of such proceedings, collaterally, we can only see what the court has done, and not whether it has proceeded erroneously, or found incorrectly, according to the proof before it. In the case before the court, the circuit court found tha,t there had been due service of process on certain of the defendants, and nothing appears in the record to show that the court found incorrectly.
A judgment, irreversible by a superior court, can not be declared a nullity by any authority of law; if it has been rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction of the parties, the subject matter, with authority to use the process it has issued, it must remain the only test of the respective rights of the parties to it. Voorhees v. The Bank of the United States, 10 Peters, 400. Under any other rule, there would be no stability to judicial proceedings, or security for purchasers at judicial sales.
The jurisdiction of the county court, in all matters within its jurisdiction, is general and unlimited. In matters pertaining to the settlement of estates, that court is a court of general and original jurisdiction, and when acting on subjects within its jurisdiction, as liberal intendments will be made in its favor as in favor of the jurisdiction of the circuit courts. The general presumption will be indulged, and in all cases it will be presumed to have acted within its jurisdiction, until the contrary is made to appear. Propst v. Meadows, 13 Ill. 157.
The return of service in this case is entirely consistent with the finding of the court, but not to the same extent. The officer returns that he has served the writ upon the within named Mary and Charles R. O’Conner, and the court found that it Avas shoAvn that due service of process Avas had. There is nothing in all the record to sIioav that the court found, unadvisedly or incorrectly, on this jurisdictional fact. It was the province of the court to determine Avhether it had jurisdiction of the persons of the defendants in that proceeding, and that question it did determine, and recorded its solemn finding and j udgment. Upon the authority of Reddick v. The StateBank, supra, the record stating such fact, and nothing to the contrary appearing, it should be received as eAÚdence of the existence of that fact.
It would be a hard rule of law, indeed, that would require that a purchaser at a judicial sale should himself determine, with entire accuracy, and at his peril, whether the court tho.t pronounced tbe judgment or decree, found correctly on the facts necessary to confer jurisdiction. Such a rule would deter all prudent men from becoming purchasers at judicial sales.
In the case of Voorhees v. The Bank of the United States, supra, the court said, “ it would be a well merited reproach to our jurisprudence, if an innocent purchaser, no party to the suit, who had paid his money on the faith of an order of court, should not have the same protection under an erroneous proceeding, as the party who derived the benefit accruing from it. A purchaser, under a judicial process, pays the plaintiff his demand on the property sold; to the extent of the purchase money he discharges the defendant from his adjudged obligation. Time has given an inviolable sanctity to every act of the court preceding the sale, which precludes the defendant from controverting the absolute right of the plaintiff to the full benefit of his judgment, and it shall not be permitted that the purchaser shall be answerable for defects in the record, from the consequences of which the plaintiff is absolved. Such flagrant injustice is imputable neither to the common nor to the statute law of the land. If a judgment is reversed for error, it is a settled principle of the common law, coeval with its existence, that the defendant shall have restitution only of the money. The purchaser shall hold the property sold, and there are few, if any, States in the Union which have not consecrated this principle by statute.”
Consistently with the adjudged cases in this court, and in harmony with the uniform current of authorities, as I understand them, I hold that, from the finding of the court, it was shown that due service of process was had, and nothing to the contrary appearing, that the court had jurisdiction of the persons of the defendants, Charles R. and Mary O’Conner.
I will now consider, briefly, the remaining questions involved in the case:
First. What estate does a posthumous child take in the lands of its ancestor ?
By the statute (Gross' Comp. 808, sec. 70,) it is provided that in all cases, where a person shall die intestate, leaving estate, real and personal, in this State, and a posthumous child shall be born unto him after his death, such child shall come in for its just proportion of the estate, in all respects, as though it had been born in the life time of the intestate.
It is insisted by the appellant, that such child does not inherit like a child living at the death of the parent, but its interest is limited to its “just share,'' which is only what remains after payment of debts. I do not think the statute will bear that construction. It is the duty of courts to so interpret the statutes as to do equal and exact justice to all parties, if, in doing so, no violence is done to the language used. It would be much more equitable to hold that the terms used in the statute, “shall come in” for its “justproportion,” mean that such a child shall inherit, in equal proportion, and in like manner, with children born in the life time of the common parent. And that is the plain and obvious meaning of the statute. It has been twice so held by this court. Detrick v. Migatt et al., 19 Ill, 146; McConnel v. Smith, 39 Ill. 278.
In the case of Detrick v. Migatt, it was held, that the posthumous child takes the estate by force of the statute, directly from the parent, with the same effect as if in being at the death of the parent.
And, second: Were the rights of the posthumous child, in this instance, affected by the sale?
To my mind, there is more seeming difficulty in this question than in any other' one in the whole case, and yet I think it is capable of solution on well known and well established principles of law.
It is an elementary principle, that before a party can be deprived of his interest in an estate by the judgment or decree either of a court of law or equity, the court that assumes to pronounce the judgment or decree, must have jurisdiction both of the subject matter of the suit, and of the person of the party whose interest is to be affected. I know of no exception to this rule in all the range of judicial proceedings. It applies alike to all courts, whether they are of general or statutory jurisdiction. It is difficult to conceive how a rule, so essential in all jurisprudence, can ever be relaxed or dispensed with, in a given case.
The effect of what we are asked to say is, that this posthumous child’s inheritance is cut off and effectually barred by a sale under a decree of a court, to which it was in nowise a party. It was born within the usual period of gestation, after the death of the parent, and more than a year before the order of sale was executed. Upon the birth of the child, its just proportion of the estate vested instantly, and although ample opportunity was afforded for making it a party to the proceedings had in the county court, and thus cutting off its rights in this inheritance, yet from inattention, or other cause, it was not done.
I am unable to distinguish this from the case of Detrick v. Migatt. The same principle was involved, and no reason is perceived why that case does not control this one.
We are reminded that courts have said, that a purchaser at a judicial sale need not concern himself about the errors of the court. That is true only where the court has jurisdiction of the subject matter, and of the person of the party by service of process, or where it will be presumed, from the findings of the court, that it had jurisdiction of those whose interests are to be affected by the sale. If the court has not such jurisdiction, then its whole proceedings are coram non judice, and the purchaser takes nothing under the sale. It was so held in the case of Wilson v. Greathouse, above cited. The converse of this rule is undoubtedly true, that if the court has such jurisdiction, though it proceeds irregularly and erroneously, still the purchaser will be protected. It has always been the policy of the law to protect purchasers at judicial sales; but in our efforts to do so, we must do no violence to the plainest principles of our jurisprudence.
The case of McPherron v. Cunliff et al. 11 Sergt. & Rawle 422, is certainly the strongest case to which our attention has been called, and yet we do not think that it fully sustains the position assumed by the counsel for the appellant. In that case, the ancestor, when he came to this country, left in Ireland a lawful wife and heirs. After his arrival here, he was secretly married to a woman, and children were born unto him. On his death, letters of administration were regularly granted on his estate, and a proceeding was instituted in the orphan’s court, to sell the real estate of the decedent, to which all his children, by the last marriage, were made parties—no others were then known to exist. The estate was sold, under the order of the court, and the .purchasers went into possession of the same. Twenty years after the sale, it was attacked, collaterally, by one of the illegitimate children, in this wise. • He went to Ireland, and there purchased the title to the premises of the true heirs, and then instituted his suit.
Much stress is laid by the court on the iniquitous conduct of the plaintiff. With the title thus purchased of the legitimate heirs, for a nominal sum, he undertook to attack a sale to which he was himself a party, and which was made, in part, for his own maintenance when a minor. The court held, that upon all principles of justice, and especially after the lapse of so great a period, he was both legally and equitably estopped from asserting such a title, to maintain which he must necessarily prove himself a bastard, and dishonor his own father and mother. There is great force and justness in the reasoning of the court on that point.
It is true, however, the court say, in that case4, that such a sentence as they were then considering, is definitive; that it passes in rem judieatum; that the proceeding is purely in rem against the estate of the intestate, and not in personam,. And to support this view, they liken it to a condemnation of goods in a court of exchequer, whose condemnation is final, in an action to try the right to the goods.
I can not say that the analogy will hold good. The proceeding, under our statute, to sell the real estate of an intestate to pay debts is not purely a proceeding in rem. Parties in interest are necessary thereto, by the positive provisions of thé law. To hold that such parties are not necessary, under our law, would be to blot out and obliterate the statute.
The heir, in the case before us, asserted her right in apt time, lío fraud or laches can be imputed to her. The court never had any control over her person, by the service of any process, nor is there any finding of a court that it had jurisdiction.
I, therefore, concur in the majority opinion of this court, in holding that the interest of the child, Ann O’Conner, was in nowise affected by the proceedings had in the county court, for the sale of the real estate of the intestate.