delivered the opinion of the Court,
The appellants filed a bill in equity, in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City for the sale of certain real estate lying in said City. The land in question was devised by the will of one Solomon Betts, and the appellants set up a title to a portion of it by virtue of certain proceedings in the Superior Court of Baltimore, on the equity side of the Court. The appellees are devisees under the said will. The Circuit Court dismissed the bill of complaint.
As the appellants’ title is founded on these proceedings, it is necessary to examine them with particularity. Solomon Betts, who died in the year 1841, devised a tract of land in the City of Baltimore, to certain trustees for the sole and separate use of his daughter Sarah Hitch for the term of her natural life, without being subject to the control of her husband, and without being liable for *267his debts; and after her death for the sole and separate use of the testator’s granddaughter Augusta Hitch for the term of her natural life; and after her death, for the use of her lawful issue, and for the heirs and assigns of such issue forever, if any child or descendant of hers should be' living at the time of her death, and if none, then in trust, for the sole and separate use of the testator’s daughter Mary Davies for the term of her natural life, and after her death for the use of his grandson Solomon Betts Davies, his heirs and assigns forever. By appropriate proceedings William George Krebs was substituted in the place of the trustees named in the will. In May, 1859, a bill in equity was filed in the Superior Court of Baltimore City in which Sarah M. A. Hitch, Augusta Waters, William' Francis Waters, Mary Augusta Waters and Edmund C. Waters, (the three last mentioned being infants) and William George Krebs, trustee, were named as complainants; Sarah Hitch and Augusta Waters were married women, the said Augusta being the Augusta Hitch named in the will of Solomon Betts. The defendants were Mary Davies and Solomon Betts Davies. The bill alleged that an ordinance had been passed for the opening of certain streets through the land devised by the will of Solomon Betts, and that the paving and grading of one of them had been commenced; that the property was liable for the expenses of paving and grading, that a large arrearage of taxes had accrued on the property from the year 1849, until the filing of the hill; and that Mrs. Hitch and Mrs. Waters had effected a loan of seventeen hundred dollars, secured by their life interests, to prevent a sale of the property and a sacrifice of the rights of all persons interested therein. It was further alleged that it would be for the interest and advantage of all parties concerned that a sale should be made of such part of the property as would he necessary to make the required payments. The prayer *268of the bill was that the sale might he made under and by virtue of the provisions of the Acts of Assembly in such case made and provided.' The bill was signed by “Hugh Davey Evans, proohein ami of infants” and by the trustee, and the married women, and by comjdainants’ solicitor. The defendants in their answer denied the right of the life tenants to encumber the property by their failure to pay the taxes, and by allowing assessments to accrue which were alleged to he uncalled for at the time; and also maintained that the sale of the property was- not sanctioned by any Act of Assembly. A sale was decreed in March, 1860, of so much of the property as might be required to pay the paving and grading taxes and assessments, and all other claims due and owing to the City of Balimore, and also of so much of the property as Avould repay the money borrowed to pay arrearages of taxes. Sales were made to George Presstman and George U. Porter and ratified by the Court. (The land sold to Presstman has been acquired by the appellants, and is that to which they claim title in the bill of complaint in this suit.) After the ratification of the sales, a petition was filed in the names of Mrs. Hitch and her husband, Mrs. "Waters and her husband, and the three infants by their next friend, reciting the above mentioned proceedings, and praying for a decree or order authorizing the mortgage of the property for a sum sufficient to pay the taxes and sums due for grading and paving. A subpoena was issued for the infants, and a guardian ad litem appointed for them, who filed an answer in the usual form. No further proceedings under this petition appear in the transcript of the record sent to this Court.
We shall pass by Avithout special comment the irregularity of a suit by married women in their own names, and without making their husbands parties on either side of the record. Matters of more serious moment now *269demand our consideration. The city taxes were due by the life tenants, and they were bound to pay them in full without contribution from these infants. The prayer of the bill is that the property in question may be sold for the purpose of paying certain paving and grading assessments, and also of reimbursing the life tenants for the expenditure which they made in payment of their own debt. The reason alleged for the sale; the sole ground on which it is asked; the special jurisdictional fact which is supposed to authorize it, is that it would be “for the interest and advantage of all parties concerned.'” We shall proceed to inquire into this ground of jurisdiction. It is aside from the present purpose to consider the question whether by virtue of its general care and superintendence of infants and their property, the Chancery Court of England has power to sell their inheritance, when it appears to be manifestly to their interest that it should be sold. Because it is firmly held in this State that a Coui’t of equity had the right to convert the real estate of an infant into money previously to the legislation on the subject of these sales. But the jurisdiction has been Arery greatly enlarged by a series of statutes. Of course, Ave have no concern with any of these statutes which were passed subseqAiently to the decree in question. The Act of 1185, ch. 12, is entitled “ An Act for enlarging the power of the High Court of Chancery. ” By the tAvelfth section the Court is authorized, on the conditions therein named, to sell lands in which an infant, idiot or person more compos mentis has a joint interest in common Avith any other person or persons. In Gill vs. Wells, 59 Md., 499, it was held that the jiudsdiction thus given does not exist where the parties hold separate consecutive interests in the land, but is confined to cases where they hold concurrent interests. The Act of 1816, ch. 154, was entitled “An Act to authorize the Chancellor and the several County Courts of this State *270to order and decree the sales of real estate of minors in the cases therein mentioned.” The effect of this statute, so far as the present question is concerned, is neatly summarized in the opinion in the case just cited, and we will quote an extract from it. Speaking of the decree passed in that case, the Court say: “But the Act of 1816, ch. 154, and section 9 of the Act of 1831, ch. 311, exactly meet the case, and it is to them the jurisdiction' to pass this decree must be referred. By the first section of the Act of 1816, power was given to the equity Courts to decree a sale of an infant’s real estate upon petition of his guardian or prochein ami, provided the infant he summoned and appear by guardian ad litem, and it be made to appear to the Court that it will be for the interest and advantage of the infant that the sale should he made; and by section thirteen of the same Act, as amended and enlarged hy section nine of the Act of 1831, it was provided that the whole estate might he sold with the consent of the life tenant, where the infant was the reversioner.” 59 Md., 499.
The decree cannot be supported under this statute, because the essential preliminaries required by the first section were not observed. The bill oug'hfc to have been filed b j prochein ami or guardian, and the infants should have been summoned, and there ought to have been an appearance for them by guardian ad litem, appointed by the Court. The statute does not require that an infant should sue himself, as has been suggested by the appellants’ counsel; but it directs that the guardian or prochein ami should file a petition and bring the infant before the Court as a defendant, and that the allegations of the petition should be proved as facts are proved against defendants. A most wise and salutary provision, as the present case may well serve to illustrate. It is vain to argue that the decree can be maintained under the jurisdiction which chancery had prior to the *271passage of these statutes. While the Court had power under some circumstances to sell an infant's land, when his interest demanded it, no precedent or analogy justified a sale where an adult • had a part interest in the land. It was contrary to the theory and practice of chancery to sell a man's interest in land on the ground that it would benefit somebody else, or even that it would benefit himself. Even in cases of partition, sales could not be decreed until a statute gave the jurisdiction. The Act of 1785 and the Act of 1816, and their supplements authorized sales where adults and infants owned interests in the same land; and the Act of 1831, chapter 311, section seven, first conferred power to decree a sale where all the owners were of full age, in case it was to the advantage of all of them. As a matter of course, infants may sue both at law and in equity when their rights are invaded; and they may be sued, and their responsibilities (as recognized by the law of the land) may be enforced against them. But in this case the infants were not asserting a right against an adversary. On the contrary, they were alleging that certain liens existed against their own property; they were setting up a burden upon themselves, and they were praying that their own property should be sold, because it was for their benefit, and that of the other owners, that the sale should be made. No interests whatever were involved in the case except those of the owners, and the only question proposed for the Court's consideration was whether these interests would be promoted by a sale. The only jurisdiction of the Court over such a question was conferred hy the Act of 1816 and its supplements; and the infants were not subjected to this jurisdiction in the mode made necessary hy this statute. It may be worth while to remark that under the Act of 1816, the infant's benefit alone was made the ground of sale; while under the Act of 1785, the benefit *272of all persons concerned was the inducement to the sale. It could not in this case be for the interest of the infants that the land should be sold to reimburse the life tenants for paying taxes, which it was their duty to pay without contribution from the infants. The bill was filed before the adoption pf the Code of 1860, but the decree was passed after it went into effect. However, the first section of the first Article of this Code provided that all suits and actions pending should be prosecuted to final determination, as if the Code had not been adopted. Legislation since the passage of the decree has extended considerably the powers of the Court in regard to sales alleged to be advantageous to the parties in interest; for instance, there are the Acts of 1862, chapter 156, and 1868, chapter 273. We have not alluded to the statutes authorizing sales of land finder bills for partition, because we are at a loss to conceive how they can affect the present question. It will be perceived that we think that the decree of the Superior Court was void for want of jurisdiction. The subsequent petition contains statements in the name of the infants made by the prochein ami; these do not bind them and can have no influence on their rights.
It has been maintaiped that the sale under the decree may now be ratified by virtue of the Act of 1868, ch. 249. Twenty-nine years elapsed between the passage of this void decree and the filing of the bill to indue it with validity. The proposition in the abstract is rather startling. The Act of 1868, by its terms, has a retroactive operation, and it authorizes the Court to change the effect of decrees which had become final. It is an exercise of judicial power by the Legislature. In Dorsey vs. Dorsey, et al., 37 Md., 64, it was held that an Act of Assembly authorizing and empowering this Court to reopen and rehear cases, decided at a term already passed, was unconstitutional and void; and the decision was well *273warranted by a great number of very high authorities. In Griffin vs. Cunningham, 20 Grat., 52, it was said: “But it is well settled that an Act of the Legislature directing a Court to rehear a cause or to grant a new trial, or any legislative action which retroacts upon past controversies, is an invasion of judicial power, which is arbitrary and unconstitutional.” Anda large number of decisions were cited to the same effect, including one from our own reports: Miller vs. State, use of Fiery, 8 Gill, 145. In Denny vs. Mattoon, 2 Allen, 379, it is said: “The Legislature have no power to grant a new trial or direct a rehearing of a cause which has been once judicially settled. The right to a review, or to try anew facts which have been determined by a verdict or decree, depends on fixed and well-settled jn’inciples, which it is the duty of the Court to apply, in the exercise of a sound judgment and discretion. These cannot be regulated or governed by legislative action. ’ ’ And the Court founds its opinion on well-established principles and well-considered adjudications. The Act of 1868, in its retrospective effect, would enable the Court, by new proceedings, to give validity to a decree which, when pronounced, was beyond its jurisdiction. An Act of the Legislature of Illinois of the same character came under consideration in McDaniel vs. Correll, 19 Ill., 226. A short passage from the opinion will show the views of the Court: “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 one man's property from him and give it to another. Indeed, to do the one is to accomplish the other.” It is true, as stated in Cooley on Constitutional Limitations, that “a retrospective statute curing defects in legal proceedings, where they are in their nature irregularities *274only, and do not extend to matters of jurisdiction, is not void on constitutional grounds, unless expressly forbidden.” Marg. p. 311. But it is also true, as stated in tbe same work, that “in judicial proceedings, if there was originally a failure of jurisdiction, no subsequent law can confer it.” Marg. p. 383. In Dorsey vs. Gilbert, et al., 11 Gill & John., 87, land of a deceased debtor had been sold by a trustee under a creditors’ bill. One-fifth of the land belonged to the minor children of the deceased debtor in right of their mother, and of course was not bound for his debts, and could not be validly sold under the decree. An Act of Assembly was passed authorizing the Chancellor to confirm the sale, provided a petition was filed by the purchaser-, and the answers of the infants were taken in the .ordinary way, and provided he was satisfied by proof that the sale was fair and advantageous to the infants; under these circumstances he was required to award to the infants one-fifth of the purchase money of the whole tract. The, Court say that this Act furnished infants with substantially the same safeguards as are provided by the Act of 1816, chapter 154. (Page 91.) The purchase of the land at the sale was simply an offer by the purchaser, which could have no effect unless accepted hy the Court. The Act of Assembly authorized the Court to accept this offer, provided it was shown to be advantageous to the infants in a manner similar to that required by the Act of 1816; and on the acceptance of the offer and confirmation of the sale, the infants were to be, awarded their due proportion of the purchase money. This case has been very earnestly pressed upon us, but it cannot be^tortured into an authority that it is competent for an Act of Assembly to authorize by retroaction the ratification of a void sale, simply and absolutely, without requiring compensation to the owners of the land.
This case was decided' at the last term of the Court, and was ordered to be reargued. We have endeavored *275to be very explicit in the statement of our views, as the former opinion was very much misapprehended. At the reargument something was said about the appellants’ claim for improvements made on the land, hut there is nothing in the transcript of the record showing that improvements have been made, or in any way referring to the subject. We are not to be understood, as saying that they will not be entitled to the value of any betterments which they may have made, on proper proceedings to that end.
(Decided 19th March, 1890.)Decree affirmed, with costs.