This was a bill filed in the chancery court of Lee county to contest the will of T. T. McCoy, *602made on June 19, 1905, -which was probated in the' probate court of Lee county on the 11th day of December, 1905. The bill was filed by Nettie Kate Bowdoin, a married woman over the age of 18 years, who at the time of the filing of the bill, resided in the state of Georgia, but who was married in the state of Alabama after she had attained the age of 18 years, and by Rosa J. Bealle, a married woman under the age of 18 years, who sued by her next friend, Albert H. Bealle. The bill was filed against Sarah Hays (who was formerly S'arah McCoy), the wife of the. testator, over 21 years of age and residing in Lee county, Ala., and against Millard Frank McCoy, William Tillman McCoy, and Theophilus McCoy, minors, residing with their mother, Sarah McCoy, in Lee county; that is to say, the bill was filed by two of the children of testator against the wife and other children of the testator.
The respondent Sarah McCoy, who subsequently married one Hays (and who will be hereafter referred to as Sarah Hays), demurred to the bill, assigning as grounds, first, that Nettie Kate Bowdoin was a non-resident and under the age of 21 years; second, that the said Nettie Kate Bowdoin could not join as a complainant in her own name; third, that she was not a proper party plaintiff; fourth, that the minor children, Millard Frank, William Tillman, and Theophilus McCoy, were not proper parties respondent, because not beneficiaries under the will; fifth, inconsistency of averments in the bill, in that it is averred'that the testator was of unbound mind, and, further, that undue influence was exerted upon the testatoor to make the will; sixth, insufficiency of averment to show testamentary incapacity, or ■to show that the will was procured by fraud or undue influence. Respondent also demurred to that part of the prayer of the bill which asked that the estate of the tes*603tator be divided according to the laws of Alabama, and, further, because botli complainants were infants and could not maintain the present bill, either in their own name or by next friend. The case was submitted for decree upon demurrer, and, after its being duly argued and considered by the court, it was the order, judgment, and decree of the court that the demurrers were not well taken, and they were therefore overruled, from Avhich judgment and decree this appeal is taken, Avith a summons and severance, and separate assignments of error by Sarah Hays alone.
We are unable to find any error in the decree of the chancellor overruling these demurrers. The bill Avas properly filed by these complainants under our statute, and it Avas also properly filed against the respondents. Though one of the complainants was under 21 years of age, the bill avers that she Avas married in the state of Alabama after attaining the age of 18 years. Under our statute this had the effect to remove her disabilities of nonage, and her removal to Georgia thereafter could not have the effect to make her a minor again, so far as the laws of Alabama are concerned. Consequently the bill was properly filed by her in her OAvn proper name. The other complainant Avas a minor, though a married woman under the age of 18 years, and the bill Avas therefore properly filed in her behalf by her next friend. Section 2476 of the present Code of 1907 (section 17, Code of 1896) provides that infants not having guardians must sue by next friend, and must be defended by a guardian of the appointment of the court. Under section 2531 of the Code of 1896 (section 4499 of the present Code of 1907) the marriage of a woman over the age of 18, or the attainment by a married woman to the age of 18 years, has the effect to remove the disabilities of minority; and section 2527 of the Code of 1896 (section *6044493 of the present Code of 1907) provides that a married woman must sue alone, as if she were sole, except as to certain actions, of which, this is not one. These statutes are remedial in their nature, and should be construed to effect the purpose of the Legislature. — Knight v. Coleman, 117 Ala. 266, 22 South. 974.
While no relief is sought by the bill against the minoi respondents, and while it is true they take nothing under the will, yet the bill is to set aside the probate of the will and to annul the will, which, if done, would leave the testator intestate and, as a consequence, leave the complainants and respondents sole heirs and distributees of the deceased father and husband respectively. In other words, they are the parties interested in' this contest, and for that reason are proper parties; and under sections 4298 and 4299 of the Code of 1896 the complainants clearly had the right to come into a court of chancery for the purpose of contesting the probate of the alleged will, and the mere fact that all of the heirs or distributees did not or could not join as parties complainant does not affect the right of the complainants to maintain the bill under the statute, and the question of the extent and character of their relief is one to be determined by a final decree. All of the children of the testa, tor, but for the will, would have been heirs and distributees of his estate, and if he had died intestate his widow would have been interested in his estate, or if the will, which passed to her all his property, should be set aside, she would be interested. Consequently all of the parties interested’ are before the court, and they are therefore proper parties.
In a court of chancery, unlike a court of law, if all of the parties interested in the subject-matter are before the court, it is often immaterial whether they are before the court in the capacity of complainants or in that of *605respondents. All remedy and relief to which they may appear entitled can he afforded, whether they appear as complainants or as respondents. The minor children who are made respondents conld have been made complainants, as no relief is asked against-them* It does not appear that they would be injured by any decree of the court which could be rendered, but, on the contrary, that they might be benefited if the relief prayed should be granted. Yet it is not necessary that they be made complainants, but only that they be made parties. Probably they were not willing to join as complainants, which would not be sufficient to bar or prevent the right. of the complainants to file the bill and to malee them respondents. They can yet have themselves made complainants if they so desire. Nor can their co-respondent complain or object that they are improperly made par-lies respondent. This is a defense purely personal to them, to be made for them by their guardian ad litem when appointed by the court.
On the contest of a will, the party contesting is not confined to any single ground of contest, but may allege any ground which goes to the invalidity of the alleged will as a ground of contest. He may allege any or all of the grounds mentioned in the statute. — Section 4287 of the Code of 1896. There is no force in the objection that the bill alleges that the testator was of unsound mind at the time of the alleged execution of. the will, and that the execution of the will was procured by undue influence of the beneficiary upon the testator. Either ground of the contest is good, and the two are not necessarily inconsistent. We think the aver ments of the bill, as to grounds of contest, are sufficiently certain, and that there is no inconsistency or repugnancy between the averments, and that the question as to the relief to be awarded, if any, upon a final determination of the suit, is one to be determined by a final *606decree, and not- one properly raised by demurrer to the bill. ' '
Many of the questions by the appellant raised on this appeal were decided by this court in the recent case of Ellis v. Crawson, 147 Ala. 294, 41 South. 942, and upon the authority of that case and that of the statutes heretofore referred to, for the reasons set forth in this opinion, the decree of the chancellor must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Dowdell, C. J., and Simpson and Denson, JJ., concur.