
    O’Dell and others vs. Rogers and others.
    Peobate oe Will: Notice: Jurisdiction: Infants: Estoppel: Waiver. (1) Notice of probate. (2) Waiver of notice. ('3,4-) Estop-pel of adult heirs to dispute probate. (5-8) Infant heir; necessity of guardian. How infant not originally bound may be estopped to dispute probate.
    
    Executor’s Sales of Land: Purchase by Executor and Attorney: Infant: Estoppel. (9-12) Disqualification of executors and attorneys to purchase: Copurchasers, with Jenowledge of disqualification: Temporary intermediate estate. (13, 11) Estoppel of adult heirs to question sales. (15) Estoppel of infant heir. (IS) What law determines majority. (TJ) Time given for disaffirmance after reaching majority. (18-21) Evidence.
    1. Notice of the time and place of proving a will, given by publication, must be published “ for three weeks successively, previous to the time appointed ” (R. S., ch. 97, sec. 18); and where an order fixing the 27th of May for that purpose, signed and dated May 6th, was published May 4th, but the first and last publication after its date were respectively on the 7th and 19th of that month, the notice was insufficient.
    2. Where, however, the proper county court, after a hearing at the time and place duly appointed therefor, has admitted a will to probate, issued letters testamentary to the persons named in it as executors, etc., the proceedings, while invalid as to persons not duly notified, who did not appear or assent to them, and have done no acts of ratification, are valid as to all who were duly notified, or who appeared or assented to them.
    3. The wife and one of the hens of a testator were named as executrix and executor in the will, proposed it for probate, took letters testamentary, made sales of the estate, received their shares of the proceeds, and made final settlement with the county court. Held, that they are estopped to deny the validity of the proceedings admitting the will to probate, and granting letters testamentary. And they cannot set up the fact that they acted under the direction and undue influence of one of the defendants as their attorney, where subsequently, with full knowledge of all the facts, they voluntarily confirmed and ratified all the proceedings.
    4. Two of the heirs, being of full age, appeared by attorney at the probate of the will, received their shares of the proceeds of the executors’ sales, and executed receipts, releases and deeds of confirmation. Held, that they are estopped from questioning the validity of the probate and of the issr/ of letters testamentary.
    
      5. Although the statute is silent as to the appointment of a guardian to represent infant heirs and others under disability at the x^robate of wills, such appointment is necessary in all cases where notice to persons interested in the estate is required; the proceedings, though regular and sufficient as to all others, are void as to such persons not so represented; and an infant not so rexncsented cannot be charged with laches, consent or ratification during minority.
    6. Where a guardian is appointed for such an infant only during the final settlement of the estate, and acts in his behalf in such settlement, and in receiving the proceeds of sales made under the will, and in executing- receipts and acquittances therefor, this does not give validity, as against i such infant, to the prior proceedings; but, within a reasonable time after / becoming of age, ho may disaffirm them on the ground of infancy.
    7. One who seeks to take advantage of a failure of the court to acquire jurisdiction of his person, must object for want of jurisdiction alone, and keep out of court for every other purpose. If he asks relief which can be granted only on the hypothesis that the court has jurisdiction of the subject matter and of his person, this is a waiver of all defects in the service of process.
    8. An hem, who was an infant at the times of the probate of the will and subsequent proceedings touching the estate, joined in a petition to the probate court after she became of age, alleging want of notice of the time and place of probate by personal service or due publication, but not the fact of her infancy and nonrepresentation by guardian, as showing lack of jurisdiction in the court to admit the will to probate; and, after alleging various acts of fraud or undue influence to impeach subsequent proceedings of the executors, and denying the jurisdiction of the probate court to make orders directing and confirming sales, etc., prayed that the probate of the will and all orders and proceedings in the matter of the estate might be set aside, and also for general relief. The complaint in this action (in which she joins) also sets up the alleged fraudulent dealings with the estate since the decree of probate, and, without questioning the validity of the will or its due proof, asks relief consistent only with a valid probate, and the due appointment of executors. Held, that the petition and complaint operate as an assent and submission on her part to such probate and appointment.
    9. Executors, unless expressly authorized by the will, cannot become purchasers at sales of the estate directed by the will, even whore the statutory prohibition (R. S., ch. 94, sec. 27) may not apply.
    10.One of the purchasers at the executors’ sale of the property was an attorney-at-law, who had been the attorney and legal adviser of the testator in his lifetime; advised with him as to the making of the will, in his last sickness; drew the will, and suggested the executor and executrix named therein (-who were incompetent for such a trust), agreeing to advise them in the management of the estate; became, on the testator’s death, the attorney and legal adviser of the executors and of the heirs; and, until the final settlement of the estate, had virtual control of all the proceedings. Held, that, at the option of parties interested in the estate, and without proof that the sales were not made fairly and for a price apparently adequate at the time, such attorney might be charged as trustee of the property so purchased, and required to account therefor as fully as the original trustees.
    11. Persons who united with such attorney in the purchase, with full knowledge of the facts affecting his disability, are also chargeable, with him, as trustees of the property.
    12. Land of the estate, conveyed by the executor and executrix to said purchasers, and by them reconveyed to the executrix in part payment of her share of the proceeds of the estate, and by her subsequently conveyed to N., afterwards came back to said attorney and one of his original copur-chasers. Held, that it then became chargeable with the same trusts as if purchased directly from the executrix, whatever may have been the relation of 3ST. to it. Ely v. Wilcox, 26 Wis., 91.
    13. The executor and executrix, who were parties to all improper dealings with the estate, and received the proceeds thereof, cannot be heard in equity to impeach the sales of the property and settlement of the estate.
    14. One of the heirs, being of full age, with full knowledge of the facts, and having been fully advised by her legal counsel of her right to have the sales avoided, voluntarily abandoned her rights, received her share of the proceeds, and executed a quitclaim deed of a part of the property to one of the executors, and an instrument under seal in the nature of a release, ratification and confirmation of the whole proceedings. Held, that she cannot be heard to question said transactions.
    15. Another heir was an infant during all the transactions here complained of, and, since her majority, has remained in the silent enjoyment of what she received while an infant as her share of the proceeds of the estate, but has done no other act to confirm the sales, etc.; and, within a reasonable time after her majority, joined in this action to avoid such sales and compel ain accounting by the original purchasers, etc. Held, that she may maintain the action against such purchasers, notwithstanding acts done by or for her during her minority,-which, if done by a person of full age, would have created an estoppel.
    16. The property, and the testator’s domicile, being in this state, transactions between said plaintiff arid the executors or the purchasers of the property, which are relied on as an estoppel, must be held to have taken place in this state; and the question when she became of full age, must be determined by the laws of this state, and not by those of Minnesota, in which she resided with her husband.
    
      17. The question what constitutes the “reasonable time” within which the contracts of a minor must be disaffirmed after ho reaches his majority, depends on the circumstances of each ease; and the minor heir in this case, who was a resident of Minnesota when she became of age, and does not appear to have been thereafter in this state, or in the vicinity of the estate, or to have known of any change in the situation and value of the property, until, nearly three years after her majority, she brought suit to disaffirm, cannot be held guilty of laches.
    
    18. Evidence offered at the trial (in 1877) to show that the original purchasers at the executors’ sales (here sought to be charged as trustees) had sold part of the land, and the prices obtained, and the amounts realized from their sales prior to June, 1812, though pertinent in an accounting, was immaterial in ascertaining the value of the property at the time of the sale to said defendants (in 1870); evidence showing the prices obtained at the same time for lots of land of the same character, and facing or abutting upon that here in question, would have opened a controversy upon side issues; and both were properly rejected.
    19. Evidence of the existence of a stone quarry on a part of the land sold by said defendants to a witness was properly admitted as going to the quality of the land; while evidence of the price paid for it, nearly three years after the sale to said defendants, was properly rejected.
    20. One of the heirs, who had executed a release and quitclaim deed of the property sold, was asked, as a witness for the plaintiffs, what he would have done at that time if he had supposed that the sale could he ln-olcen up. Reid, that the question was properly rejected; the proper subjects of inquiry being only, what the witness in fact did, and whether at the time he knew the facts.
    
    APPEAL from the Circuit Court for Milwaul&ee County.
    Galutia O’Dell died at Milwaukee, in this state, April 26, 1870. The plaintiff Oelestia A. O'Dell is his widow, and the plaintiffs George W. O'Dell, Zeruiah A. Reynolds and Emma A. JELewitt, and the defendant Mary G. Brewer, are his children and heirs; and • the defendant Erederiek Brewer is the husband of said Mcvry O. Brewer. Emma A. Hewitt did not become twenty-one years of age until October 17,1873. At and since the time of her father’s death, she was and has been a married woman, and a resident of the state of Minnesota, by the statutes of which state a woman of the age of eighteen years is considered of full age for all purposes. Zer-
      
      uiah A. Reynolds was a married woman, and a resident of the state of Minnesota, from October 1, 1870, until October 15,1871. At the time of his death, Galutia O’Dell was owner in fee of certain real estate in thé 8th ward of the city of Milwaukee, embracing about 140 acres; but this property was almost wholly unproductive, and he could not obtain sufficient income from it to support his family and pay the taxes and other expenses incident to such ownership, and had been obliged for those purposes to mortgage the property; and there were four of such mortgages outstanding at his death, to the aggregate amount of $12,000. All these bore interest at ten per cent.; the last of them, for $2,000, 'was made about three weeks before his death; and one of them, for $3,000, was then due. Apart from this real estate, he left no property, except a few articles of personal property of less than $200 value, and a trifling sum of money insufficient to pay the expenses of his funeral.
    By his last will, executed three days before Ms death, he appointed Gelestia A. and Geo. W. O'Dell executor and executrix, and devised and bequeathed to them all his property in trust to pay his debts, etc., with pojtver to sell and dispose of the whole of it at public or private sale, at such times, in such portions, in such manner, and upon such terms, as they should think proper; and he further directed that, as soon after his decease as the real estate could be sold to advantage, they should sell the same, and that, after payment of debts, etc., the funds remaining in their hands from such sale should be distributed, one-third to the widow, her heirs and assigns, in lieu of dower, and the remaining two-thirds in equal shares to the four children.
    On the 6th of May, 1870, an order was made by the Milwaukee county court in probate, which recited that the above instrument had been filed in said court, and that application had been made by Gelestia A. O'Dell and George W. *O'Dell for its admission to probate, and for their appointment as ex-editors; and it was ordered that the application be beard on tbe 27th of the same month, and that notice be given by publishing a copy of the order for three successive weeks, once in each week, prior .to the hearing, in a certain newspaper of that city. The order seems to have been published in fact on the 4th of May prior to its date; its first subsequent publication was May 7th, and the last, May 19th. On the 27th of that month, the county court received proofs of the will, admitted it to probate, issued letters testamentary to the executors therein named, and appointed appraisers. On the 9th of June, 1871, said court made an order appointing the 3d of July following as the time for examining and allowing the accounts of the executors and assigning the residue of the estate; and on said 3d of July, it made what purported to be a final decree in the matter of said estate. This decree recited, among other things, that the executors, under the power given them by the will, had sold the whole of the testator’s real estate, and had duly paid over to each of the heirs and devisees the several amounts devised to them; that each of said heirs and devisees had duly executed and delivered to said executors a full and final release of all claims against them, as such, and against the testator’s estate, under the will or otherwise, as appeared •by the releases attached to the decree; and that each of them had ratified and confirmed the sales made by the executors, and other acts done by them, under the power given them by the will. The decree thereupon allows and approves the accounts of administration, ratifies and confirms the several acts of the executors and the sales made of the real estate under the power granted by the will, and discharges the executors. The instruments annexed to the decree, and described therein as releases, are executed severally by the plaintiffs Zeruiah A. .Reynolds, George W. O'Dell and Emma A. Dewitt, and the defendant Mary 0. Brewer, and by Charles L. Hewitt, as guardian of said Emma A. Dewitt. The last named instrument is dated March 31,1871, and recites, among other things, that 
      Emma A. Hewitt is “ now a minor under the age of twenty-one years,” and is the wife of Charles L. Hewitt; that on the 29th of March,. 1871, said Charles L., on due application, etc., was duly appointed guardian of said Emma A. Hewitt by said county court, filed his bond, took the usual oath, etc., and was then acting as such guardian; and that, as such, he thereby acknowledged the receipt from said executors of one-sixth of the proceeds arising from the sale of said estate by them, under said will, to wit, $6,057.97, so bequeathed to Emma A. Hewitt; and that, as such guardian, in behalf of said Emma A., and in his own behalf, he thereby released, acquitted and discharged said executors from all demands and claims whatever due to said Emma A. Hewitt under said will or out of said estate, and ratified and confirmed the sales of the estate made by the executors, etc. To this instrument was attached another of the same date, signed by Emma A. Hewitt, which recites that she is the wife of Charles L. Hewitt, and is nearly nineteen years of age, and requests said executors to pay over to her husband and guardian the amount due her for the sale of her father’s estate, which is recited to be $6,057.97; and she thereby releases all her claims upon said executors or against said estate, upon payment of said sum to her husband and guardian, accepting such payment as a payment to herself, and ratifying and confirming all acts done by him, and all receipts and releases given or to be given by him, in regard to said estate. The character of the other instruments sufficiently appears from the decree above described.
    The defendant Rogers was during 1870, and ever since has been, an attormey-at-law of said circuit court, residing at Mil waukee; he was the attorney of Galutia O’Dell in his lifetime, and drew said will; and he was also the attorney and counselor of the executors in procuring the several orders made by the county court in the matter of said estate and its settlement.
    In view of the condition of the estate at the death of Galutia O’Dell, tbe widow and lieirs were desirous to rid themselves of taxes and of the interest of the outstanding mortgages, neither of which could be met with the income of the property; and accordingly the executors took early steps to have said property, or some part of it, sold for the extinguishment of the incumbrances, and for the division of the net proceeds as required by the will; and, shortly after procuring probate of the will, they offered to sell about 15|- acres to the defendants Burnham and Rogers, at $500 per acre; and on the 28th of July, 1870, said two defendants purchased said land, and received from the executors a conveyance thereof, at the price above named, which was its full value. Of this purchase money, the sum of $5,266.13 was paid by Burnham and Rogers to extinguish two mortgages upon a part of the property; and the balance of said purchase money was paid partly to the executors, and partly, at the request of the latter, to the legatees. There then remained incumbrances or mortgages on portions of said estate yet unsold, to the amount of $7,000 of principal, besides accrued interest. During the summer and fall of 1870, the executors, and particularly Celestia A. O’Dell, made efforts to effect further sales, but without success, until November, 1870, when, at her request, the defendant Bwmham made an offer to the executors to purchase all the remaining real estate (about 122 acres) at $350 per acre. The executors had said offer under consideration for several days, and advised with their friends in respect thereto, and with all the heirs excepting Reynolds and Hewitt-, and on the-24th of November, 1870, they deliberately accepted said offer, and entered into a written contract with Bv/rnham for the sale of such real estate, including all the unsold lands of the estate, except a small parcel described in the contract (about 4J acres), which was omitted at the request of the executors. Burnham made this offer, and entered into this contract, expecting that his brother would join him in the purchase; but said brother after-wards declined to do so; and thereupon Burnham, not wishing to complete and manage the purchase alone, and desiring the aid of defendants Rogers^ and Beeher (who were then real estate brokers in the southern portion of the city of Milwaukee) in the platting, management and sale of said property, on the 2Sth of November, 1870, offered them a share in said purchase; but Beeher refused to take an interest in the purchase, and it was thereupon on the same day agreed between Burn-ham and Rogers, that Burnham should sell and transfer to Rogers an equal interest in the land so purchased, less 19.52 acres, which were to be conveyed to Celestia A. O'Bell, and which included the parcel of about 4-J- acres reserved by the contract of November 24th. On the next day, Beeher consented to join Rogers in his purchase from Burnham, so that the three should hold said land (102.64 acres) as equal owners. On said 29fch of November, the executors and Burnham met at the office of Rogers and Beeher, to complete the sale according to the contract of November 24th, and the executors then and there executed and delivered to Rogers, Burnham and Beeher a deed of the 102.64 aeres. Said grantees executed to the executors their eight several promissory notes of the same date for part of the purchase money of said lands, viz., for $23,722.63, in the aggregate, with interest, secured by mortgage of the same property. They also assumed the incumbrances on the property, then amounting to $7,203.13; and they claim to have paid the remainder of the purchase money ($5,000) in cash. Said purchase-money notes were made for such amounts as would represent the balances regarded as due the legatees respectively, in order that each legatee might receive his or her balance in such notes, secured by mortgage upon the lands, and that the executors might be able to close their trust without waiting for the collection of the notes. On December 1, 1870, the executors conveyed to Bv/rnham the 19.52 acres above mentioned; and the next day, Burnham conveyed the same to Celestia A. O’Dell. The consideration of the deed was $350 per acre,, amounting to $6,748, which was paid by the application of that amount by said Oelestia A. as a payment on her distributive share of the estate; and in the apportionment and distribution of the estate, that sum was treated as a part thereof, and was charged to said Oelestia A. on account of her share. The total purchase money for all the real property of the estate was $50,401.50; of which, $12,467.50 were used for payment of incumbrances. At the times of the several transactions above mentioned, commencing with the contract of November 24th, the plaintiffs Reynolds and Hewitt were not present, but were then residing in Minnesota.
    The several purchase-money notes given by Rogers, Burn-ham and Beoher were indorsed and delivered to the respective legatees, as part of their shares unde)' the will; and all the legatees j>rocured their respective notes to be taken up and discounted by the makers before the end of 1871; and thereupon the executors released the mortgage by which the notes were secured. In April, 1871, Rogers and Beoher sold and conveyed to the city of Milwaukee over an acre and a half of the land so conveyed to them; and immediately thereafter the city commenced the erection thereon of a public school-house. During the year 1871, considerable portions of the land were platted by Rogers, Burnham and Beoher, and a number of the lots sold at auction; and during that and the three following years, a great number of small dwellings were erected on said lots by persons who acquired the same at or under said sales; and during the greater part of the time, the plaintiffs Reynolds and Oelestia A. O'Bell lived upon or adjacent to the lands, and they and George W. O'Dell had actual knowledge of these improvements. On the 10th of July, 1871, Oelestia A. O'Dell purchased nine acres of the land from Rogers, Burnham and Beoher; and in 1872-3, she mortgaged the same, with the lands previously conveyed to her as above mentioned, to secure loans of money obtained by her on the faith thereof; and in April, 1874, she sold and conveyed all said lands to one New-kirk, by whom they were afterwards conveyed to Burnham 
      and Rogers. All tlie defendants except Rogers, Burnham and Beoher and their wives, and Mary 0. Brewer, purchased, before the commencement of this action, parts of said real estate from Rogers, Burnham and Beoher or their grantees, or have taken and hold mortgages on parts thereof for loans of money made to such purchasers; and said defendants loaned such moneys, or paid the full value of the lands so purchased by them, in good faith, without notice in fact of any fraud or other matter affecting their grantors’ title.
    On the 21st of August, 1876, Zeruiah A. Reynolds and Emma A. Hewitt filed their joint petition in the Milwaukee county court in probate, in the matter of said estate, praying to have the probate of the will, and all subsequent orders and proceedings touching the estate, vacated and annulled. The contents of this petition are more fully stated in the opinion, infra. On tire same day, said petitioners, together with Ge-lestia A. and George W. O'Dell, commenced tlie present action in the circuit court, to have the various orders and decrees of the county court in the matter of said estate, and the deeds above described, and the releases annexed to the final decree of the probate court, set aside and declared void. The complaint further prayed that Burnham, Rogers and Beoher might be adjudged to execute to the heirs of the estate, or to legally constituted executors or administrators thereof, deeds of conveyance of said estate; that they might be required to account to the heirs for all ■ property, moneys, etc., which had come into their possession, belonging to the estate or the heirs, and for the rents, issues and profits of said property while in their possession, and to pay and deliver over the same to said heirs or lawfully appointed executors or administrators; that they might also be required to render an account of moneys paid to the plaintiffs, or either of them, on account of said estate, which sum, when ascertained, plaintiffs offered to repay; and there was a further prayer for general equitable relief, etc.
    The answer of the defendants Rogers and Burnham denies all allegations of tlie complaint charging fraud, abuse of trusts, etc. It then alleges certain of the facts above stated, and others, as an equitable defense, claiming that plaintiffs are precluded from equitable relief by their acts of approval and confirmation, and by long acquiescence and gross laches. It then pleads the same facts and others by way of counterclaim, and prays that their title and that of their grantees may be affirmed and established, and that plaintiffs may be enjoined from setting up any claim to the lands, and from prosecuting their petition in the county court. As to the sale and conveyance of July 28, 1870, it also pleads the statute of limitations. The answer of Beeher sets tip the same defenses, except the statute of limitations. The answers of the other defendants need not be specially noticed.
    The fdct-s above stated are such as appear from the record to be undisputed.
    The following facts were also found by the court; but exceptions were taken by the plaintiffs. They will sufficiently show the further grounds relied upon by the plaintiffs to sustain the action. The court found that the proceedings taken by the executors for the probate of the will and the issue of letters testamentary, were taken with the knowledge and concurrence of the plaintiff Reynolds/ that the sale and conveyance of 15-J- acres to Burnham and Rogers, July 28, 1870, were made by the executors with the full knowledge and approval of all the plaintiffs except Emma A. Hewitt, who did not know of the same at the time they were made, and that said plaintiffs, with knowledge of the sale and its terms, shortly afterwards accepted portions of the proceeds from the executrix to apply on their shares of the estate; that at the time when the contract of November 24, 1870, between the execuiors and Burnham, was negotiated and made, and for three or four days after its execution, Bwrnham was alone interested therein as purchaser, and had no agreement or understanding that Rogers or Beeher should become in any manner interested therein, or in any portion of the lands so purchased, and there had been no negotiation between Burn-ham and Rogers and Becher, or either of them, with reference to the acquisition by the last two, or either of them, of any such interest with or from Bivrnham; that two or three days after said contract was made and delivered, O ¿Lesbia A. O’Dell became desirous to procure for herself a part of the premises so agreed to be sold to Burnham., and it was thereupon agreed between them that Bwmham should sell and convey to her a certain portion of the land included in his said purchase [being 19.52 acres], at the same price per acre ($350), which was stipulated to be paid by Burnham; that when the executors and Burnham met at the office of Rogers and Becher on the 29th of November, for the purposebf completing the sale provided for by the contract of November 24th, they (said executors) were informed of Burnham’s agreement to sell and convey a part of said lands to O¿lesbia A. O’Dell, and an interest in the' remainder tq Rogers and Becher, and, with full knowledge thereof, freely assented thereto, and the deed then executed by them to Burnham, Rogers and Becher was made in that form (instead of running to Bv/mham alone) to save the trouble and expense of making and recording a second conveyance; that the eight promissory notes of said grantees for the aggregate sum of $23,722.63 (above described), were made and delivered to the executors, on said 29th of November, or the next following day; that at and shortly after the date of such conveyance to them, Burnham, Rogers and Becher paid $5,000 of the purchase money in cash; that before the execution of said purchase-money notes, the executors caused an account between them and the legatees tq be stated; that the deed of conveyance of December 1, 1870, from the executors to Burnham, was made pursuant to the contract of - November 24th, and that Burnham sold said land to Oelestia A. O’Dell; that of the total consideration paid for all the real property of said estate sold by the executors ($50,401.50), §1,609.15 were required to pay sundry debts of the estate and costs and expenses of administration; that the remainder of said purchase money (after deducting the sum last mentioned and also the amount of the incumbrances), “ being §36,324.85, constituted the net proceeds of the estate, to be divided among the heirs and widow of the deceased;” that the purchase-money notes made as above described by Rogers, Burnham and Beeher, added to the amounts 'before received by the several legatees on account of their shares, made up the full amounts to which they were severally entitled; that at the times of the contract of 'November 24, 1870, and of the several conveyances above described, and the making of said purchase-money notes and mortgages, and the settlement of their accounts by the executors with the several legatees, “ all parties interested in the estate were present and fully informed thereof, and assented to and approved the action of said executors in that behalf, except the plaintiffs Reynolds and Hewitt/ ” that on December 1, 1870, Mary 0. Brewer, and on March 4, 1S71, George W. O'Bell, with full knowledge of all the facts connected with said sales, of the terms and conditions thereof, and of the acts of Rogers and the executors in respect to the disposition and distribution of the estate, deliberately accepted and received their respective shares, and, for the purpose of acknowledging such receipt and expressing their approval of the acts of the executors, executed to them their receipts or releases above described; that the plaintiffs Reynolds and Hewitt were, in January, 1871, fully informed by Gelestia A. O'Bell in regard to the sales and disposition-of the estate by the executors; that in March, 1871, said Reynolds, and said Hewitt accompanied by her husband, Charles L. Hewitt, visited Milwaukee, inquired into and were fully informed of all the circumstances of t rid sales and disposition of the estate, the terms and conditions thereof, and the disposition made of the proceeds; that said Reynolds then caused a thorough examination into' the matter of said sales and tbe execution of their trusts by the executors to be made by a disinterested attorney, employed by her for that purpose, and received his counsel and advice in regard thereto; that afterwards, in the same month, Celestia A. O’Dell and said Reynolds and Ilewitt, together with said Charles L. Hewitt, consulted another disinterested attorney, communicating to him all the facts and circumstances attending said sales, etc., and received his counsel and advice in regard thereto; that said Reynolds, after such consultation and advice, with full knowledge of the facts and of her legal rights in the premises, on the 27th of March, 1871, deliberately and voluntarily received and accepted her distributive share of the estate, being proceeds of said sales, and, for the purpose of acknowledging such receipt and expressing her approval and ratification of such sales, etc., gave her receipt and release of that date, above described; that said Hewitt, also, after such consultation and advice, and with full knowledge, etc., on the 31st of March, 1871, procured her husband to be appointed her general guardian by said county court, and caused her distributive share of the estate to be paid over to him for her, and both she and her said guardian, on that day, for the purpose of acknowledging the receipt thereof and expressing their approval and ratification of such sales, etc., gave the receipts or releases of that date signed by them respectively, as above described; that with the same purpose of approving said sales, etc., and especially of ratifying and confirming the title of Celestia A. O’Dell to the portion of said estate conveyed to her, the plaintiffs Reynolds, Hewitt and George W. O’Dell, and the defendant Mary O. Brewer, in March and April, 1871, executed and delivered to said Celestia their quitclaim deed of the said land, with full knowledge of the facts attending the making of the deeds of said land from the executors to Bu/rnham, and from Burnham to Celestia A. O’Dell, and of the consideration thereof, and said quitclaim deed was made at the request of the said Celestia, with intent to confirm her title to the land; and that the purchase of said lands by Burnham, and his several sales and transfers thereof to Oelestia A. O'Dell and to Rogers and Becher, were made fairly, in good faith, and the price per acre paid upon such sales was the full and fair average value of the lands so purchased and conveyed.
    The court further found that it is not true, as charged in the complaint, that Rogers was attorney and counselor of the plaintiffs Reynolds and Hewitt in the matter of said estate and its settlement; or that, as attorney for the executors and heirs, he took entire control of the estate, or of its settlement and administration; or that he made any sales thereof; or that he took entire management and control of the estate and its proceeds, to the exclusion of the heirs and executors; or that he represented to or advised Oelestia A. O'DellAi&t the executors could not act beyond one year from the decease of their testator, or that after that time their authority would cease, or that they were obliged to convert and distribute the entire; estate within said year; or that he represented to her that the estate had been appraised at $500 per acre, or that it was necessary to have it appraised low so that the executors could give bonds; or that Oelestia A. or George W. O'Dell believed or acted upon such representations; or that Rogers, as attorney for the executors and heirs, or either of them, made the sale of fifteen and a half acres of said land to himself and Burnham; or that the executors conveyed said land to them by his advice and direction; or that said land was worth $10,-000; or that Rogers advised said sale, or induced the making of the deed thereon, for the purpose of getting title himself, or without paying full value therefor, or took any advantage of the heirs in the purchase or in obtaining a deed for said fifteen and a half acres, or in any way abused the trust and confidence reposed in him as attorney in the matter of said purchase; or that he retained any sum as a fee for selling said parcel to himself and Bw'nham; or that he kept the remainder of the proceeds after paying off the mortgages, and refused to pay it to the heirs, or to the executors; or that he refused to pay them money in his hands, for the payment of interest, or required the executors or heirs to borrow it of him and pay him interest therefor; or that, as attorney for the heirs or otherwise, he made the sale of 102.04 acres to himself, Burn-ham and Becher; or that said tract was worth, November 29, 1870, $71,000, or more than $35,924; or that he falsely represented to Oelestia A. O’Dell, at the time of such sale, that it had been made to Bu/rnham alone, or concealed from her or the other heirs any fact in relation to the sale or his interest in it, or made any representation to her as to the value of the tract, or counseled or advised the executors or either of them to make a deed thereof to himself, Burnham and Becher; or that said Oelestia refused to make such deed on account of being deceived as to the interest of Rogers, or that he told her that she could or would be compelled to make such deed, or would be imprisoned by order of some court if she did not make it; or that she demanded of Rogers said contract of sale; or that he refused to deliver it to her or to rescind it; or that she and Oeorge W. O’Dell, or either of them, made said deed by reason of any threat used by Rogers, or believing that she was without redress for any wrong or injury, or influenced by any threats of imprisonment or promises of any kind; or that Rogers agreed to reserve out of said tract, or to so draw the deed as to reserve out of it, any part of said 102.64 acres, or represented that he had so drawn the deed; or that she believed, when she signed the deed, that such reservations were made therein; or that Rogers promised her, to induce her to sign the said deed, that she should have the remainder of the land belonging to the estate for $6,748 on account of her distributive share of the estate; or that he induced the executors to sign a deed thereof; or that the deeds thereof from said executors to Burnham, and from him to said Oelestia, were without consideration, or were used as a device to convey the title from the estate aud heirs to her, as an inducement for her to sign said deed to Rogers, Burnham, and Beeher, for an inadequate consideration; or that Rogers, Burnham and Beeher conspired together to obtain said, land without paying full value for it, or to defraud the estate and heirs of the same; or that George IF. O'Dell acted wholly by the advice, counsel and direction of Rogers; or that Rogers never accounted to the executors or heirs for the money arising from said sales, or for moneys received and expended by him in that behalf; or that he never exhibited an itemized statement of account; or that the plaintiffs were or are ignorant of the amounts of moneys received or paid out by him for said estate; or that he never paid to the heirs the full shares apportioned to them respectively; or that he represented to the heirs, or any of them, that the estate could not be settled, or that they could not receive their respective shares, until they should make a deed of said 19.52 acres to Gelestia A. O'Dell; or that they or either of them made such deed in consequence of any deception or imposition upon them by Rogers, or of any false advice given them by him as to the law or their rights; or that he represented to said heirs, or either of them, that they were required by said county court to sign the releases signed by them respectively in March, 1871, or that they could or would be compelled to sign the same; or that said releases were obtained by fraud, imposition or undue influence, or false representations, on the part of Rogers; or- that he had been guilty of any fraudulent practice, or had taken any fraudulent or unfair advantage of the plaintiffs, or either of them, while acting as their attorney in the matter of said sales and conveyances and the settlement of said estate.
    Upon these facts, the court held that .none of the plaintiffs were entitled to the relief sought, or any relief; that defendants Burnham, Rogers and Beeher were entitled to a judgment establishing in them, their heirs and assigns, title in fee to all of said real estate, and barring the plaintiffs from any claim of title thereto or interest therein, in law or equity, and forever restraining plaintiffs and all persons claiming under them from asserting any title to or interest in the said real estate as against said defendants or persons claiming under them; that defendants Rogers, Burnham, Bechar, and the City of Milwaukee, were also entitled to judgment restraining the plaintiffs Reynolds and Hewitt, their agents, etc., from prosecuting tlieir petition aforesaid in said county court, or any other proceeding in probate in the matter of said estate, to vacate the order admitting the will to probate or any other order or proceeding in the matter of said estate; and that certain other defendants were entitled to judgment dismissing the complaint as against them.
    Judgment was rendered in accordance with these conclusions; from which the plaintiffs appealed.
    The cause was argued at the August term, 1877, by J. O. MeKenney for the appellants, and by L. 8. Dixon and Joshua Stankfor the respondents; and was reargued, by order of the court, at the January term, 1878, by Mr. MeKenney and George B. Goodwin for the appellants, and by Mr. Dixon and Mr. Stark for the respondents. There were separate briefs for the appellants by Mr. MeKeivney and Mwrphey ds Goodwin. For the respondent there was a general brief signed by Mr. Stark and Mr. Dixon, 'and separate briefs by each of them.
    For the appellants it was argued, 1. That the court erred in various rulings respecting the admission of evidence, which will appear from the opinion. 2. That the publication of notice of the hearing of the application for probate was insufficient (Tay. Stats., 1206, §18; Sibley v. Waffle, 16 N. Y., 180;' Eaton v. Lyman, 33 "VVis., 34; Chase v. Ross, 36 id., 267; MeCrubb v. Bray, id., 333; Mohr v. Tulip, 40 id., 66); and the county court never acquired jurisdiction. Tay. Stats., 1206, §18; Smith v. Rice, 11 Mass., 507; Gay v. Minot, 3 Cush., 352; Bloom v. BurdicJc, 1 Hill, 13Q; Denning v. Cor-win, 11 Wend., 647; Ford v. Walstoorth, 15 id., 449; Dakin 
      
      v. Hudson, 6 Cow., 221; Oonuin v. Merritt, 3 Barb., 341; Schneider v. McFarland-, 2 Corns., 459; Falkner v. Guild, 10 Wis., 563; Stark v. Brown, 12 id., 572; Pollard v. Weg-ener, 13 id., 569; Sitzman v. Pacquette, id., 291; Ely v. Tail-man, 14 id., 2S; Gibbs v. Shaw, 17 id., 197; Bresee v. Stiles, 22 id., 120; Blodgett v. Mitt, 29 id., 169; Buthv. Oberbrun-ner, 40 id., 238j and tbe cases cited above. Tbe order of probate, being absolutely void, could not be rendered valid by voluntary appearance or consent or otherwise. Broom’s Philosophy of Law, 46; Shcefer v. Gates, 2 B. Mon., 453; Gay v. Minot, supra; Oallis v. Bay, 33 Wis., 646. The petition filed in the county court for vacating its orders and decree is not a submission by the petitioners to its jurisdiction, rendering valid its former proceedings. They ask no relief inconsistent with an utter want of jurisdiction in that court. Blackburn v. Sweet, 38 Wis., 578. ' 3. That under our statute (Tay Stats., 1207, § 21), the will never having been duly proved and allowed, the real estate of the testator has not passed to any person under it. It is therefore competent for the county court to grant the relief asked, and it should not be restrained from doing so. Proctor v. Wanmaker, 1 Barb. Ch., 302; Pewv. Hastings, id., 452; Sipperlyv. Bau-ms, 24 N. Y., 46; Boy v. Segrist, 19 Ala., 810; Lawrence''s Will, 7 N. J. Eq., 215; In re Fisher, 15 Wis., 513 ; Archer v. Meadows, 33 id., 166. 4. That Mrs. Hewitt, having been a minor during all the proceedings, and having done no act confirming them since becoming of age, may disaffirm them all within a reasonable time. Tyler on Infancy, etc., 84; Ack-ley v. Bygert, 33 Barb., 176; Wilkinson v. FiTby, 24 Wis., 441; Mohr v. Ttolip, supra. Upon the question of her minority, the laws of this state govern. Schouler’s Bom. Rel., 520; Hiestcmd v. Huns, 8 Blackf., 345. 5. That the three deeds from the executors conveying away the entire estate, and the deed from Burnham back to Mrs. O’Bell, are voidable at the election of the appellants: (1) Because the will was never proved, and the executors acted wholly without authority. (2) Because Rogers was acting at the time as the attorney for the executors. The pretended sale to Mrs. O'Dell is absolutely void by statute (Tay. Stats., 1187, §27), and would unquestionably be voidable, without regard to its fairness, independently of the statute. What is the rule with reference to the purchases made by Rogers jointly with Burnham and Becher? “(a) “ Where a trustee buys from or contracts with himself, or several trustees of whom he is one, * * * the contract is voidable absolutely at the instance of the cestui gue trust, without regard to its fairness.” This rule is not confined to trustees properly so called; it includes executors, administrators, assignees in bankruptcy, guardians and others. Kerr on F. and M., 155 n., 160, 161. It applies iri this case to the attorney of the executors. Ex parte James, 8 Yes., 337, 345-6, 348, 351; Hawley v. Gramer, 4 Cow., 737, 734; In re Taylor Orphan Asylum, 36 Wis., 534, 550, 552. (b) “ Where the dealing of the trustee is with a cestui gue trust who is sui jioris, and competent to deal independently of the trustee in respect to the trust estate, * * * although the presumptions of law are against the contract, yet permission is given the trustee to show the perfect bona fieles of the transaction, and circumstances relieving it from the censure of the law.” Some of the cases, however, insist that this class of cases should be governed by the same principle as the former. Kerr, ubi supra. If it be held that this is the rule applicable to the attorney here, still he did not establish affirmatively that the purchase was fair and above suspicion. Even if the purchases had been made by the attorney from a .client who held the property in his own right, they could not be sustained under the principle here stated. Kerr, 165; Hill on Trustees, 156-9, 162; Story’s Eq. Jur., §§ 308-324; 2 Yes., 547; Gibson v. Jeyes, 6 id., 266; Morse y. Royal, 12 id., 355;.. Huguenin v. Baseley, 14 id., 273; Wood v. Downes, 18 id., 120; 1 Cox, 112-143; 1 Ball & B., 99; Dent v. Bennett, 7 Sim., 539; 
      Bulldey v. Wilforcl, 2 Clark & Fin., 102, 177-181; Holman v. Loynes, 4 DeG., M. & G., 270; Gasborne v. Barsham, 2 Bear., 76; Da/ooue v. Fanning, 2 Johns. Ch., 252; Howell v. Hansom, 11 Paige, 538; Brown v. Post, 1 Hun, 303; 8. G., 62 N. Y., 651; Pears v. Shafer, 6 id., 268; Galbraith v. Elder, 8 Watts,'94; Leisenring v. Black, 5 id., 303; Cleavinger v. Reimar, 3 W. & S., 486; Greenfield's Estate, 14 P'a. St., 4S9; Henry v. Raiman, 25 id., 354; Mills v. Mills, 26 Conn., 213; Jennings v. McGonnell, 17 Ill., 148; TJhlichv. Muhllce, 61 id., 499, 534; Gray v. Emmons, 7 Mich., 533; Glayv. Hoys-ráclt, 8 ICans., 74; Valentine v. Stewart, 15 Cal., 387; Taylor Orphan Asylum, supra, and cases there cited; Gook v. Berlin Woolen Mills, 43 Wis., 433. Counsel examined the evidence at length to show that Rogers had not brought himself within this rule. To the point that where tire accounts as to advances and payments by the attorney are .confused, the burden of proof is upon the attorney, they cited Kerr on F. and M., 166; Lewes v. Morgan, 5 Price, 42. ' (c) Burnham and Becher, having joined Rogers in the purchase with full knowledge of his relations to the estate, are affected by his incapacity. Hoffman Steam Goal Co.v. Cumberland Go., 16 Md., 456; Howell v. Baker, 4 Johns. Ch., 118. 6. That the appellants were not precluded from relief in equity by their delay in seeking such relief, nor by any acts of confirmation. (1) Not by delay in bringing suit. The statute (Tay. Stats., 1625,.§ 17) limits actions for relief on the ground of fraud to six years from discovery of the facts constituting the fraud; and that statute is applicable to this action. McMahon v. McGraw, 26 AYis., 614. The party aggrieved has an absolute right to bring the action at any time within the six years. Ward v. Smith, 3 Sandf. Ch., 592; Sears v. Shafer, 6 N. Y., 268; Foot v. Farrington, 41 id., 164; Erickson v. Quinn, 47 id., 410; Potter v. Smith, 36 Ind., 231. In the case of minors and married women, the statute did not run. Tay. Stats., 1627, §29; Wiesner v. Zaim, 39 Wis., 188. But apart from the statute there has been no laches such as to create an estoppel. Gresley v. Mousley, 4 DeG-. & J., 78; Hall v. Hallett, 1 Oox Oh., 134; Prevostv. Grata, 6 Wheat., 4S1; Michoud v. Girod, 4 Ilow., U. S., 503, 561; Drury v. Poster, 2 Wall., 24; Pierre-pont.v. Barnard, 5 Barb., 364; Lounsbiory v. Depew, 28 id., 44; Miles v. Lingerman, 24 Ind., 385; Baines v. Burbridge, 15 La. An., 628; 5 id., 586; Morrison v. Wilson, 13 Cal., 494; Mohrv. Tulip, supra; Bigelow on Estoppel, 474 et seq. (2) None by acts of confirmation. As to Mrs. Hewitt, all acts done by her were during her minority. Mrs. Reynolds testifies that Rogers refused to give her her notes until she signed the release; that she supposed the laud was all sold; that she did not then commence suit because she had no money to do it; that she had no money at all; and that she was forced to accede to the bargain. George W. O'Dell testifies that ho signed the release because Rogers asked him to do so, and that he could not read it. The court would not allow him to say whether he would have signed it if he had known that? the sales could be broken up. Mrs. O'Dell refused to sign such a release. The releases executed all recite the receipt of $6,057.97 by each heir; and these recitals are untrue in every instance. Rogers never advised these parties, as it was his duty to do, that the sales were impeacliablé. As to the quitclaim deed from the heirs to Mrs. O'Dell for 19-Jr acres, all the signers deny that it was voluntarily made, or with knowledge of its object or effect. To constitute a valid confirmation, the person to be bound must be aware that the act he is doing will have the effect of confirming an impeachable transaction. And the act of confirmation will not be valid if done in distress and difficulty, under the pressure and influence of the former transaction. 1 Lead. Cas. in Eq., 175. No act is a confirmation of a transaction, if done while laboring under its effects ( Wood v. Downes, 18 Ves., 120; Wright v. Proud, 13 id., 136); nor if done under an idea that the old instrument may be enforced; nor if the party be poor or distressed. Growe v. Ballard, 1 Yes., Jr., 
      215; S. G., 2 Cox Ch., 253. Acquiescence does not go for anything during the continuance of the same situation. Rowland v. JDe Faria, 17 Ves., 20. In Purcell v. M* Ñamara, 14 id., 91, deeds were set aside and an accounting ordered after fourteen years, for various reasons, among others the confidential relations of the parties; and acts done under the same influence and control as brought about the first conveyances were held no confirmation. In Wiseman v. Beake, 2 Vernon, 121, such pretended confirmations are spoken of as contrivances to double-hatch the cheat; and in TJhlich v. Muhlke, supra,' TiroRNTON, <7., speaking of the original fraudulent transactions and the instruments relied upon as confirmations, says: “They emanated from the same brain; were nurtured and produced under the same influences; were for the same illegal purpose — to grasp possession of the estate.” A party maybe relieved from an instrument executed under a mistake of law, where the party benefited cannot in conscienoe retain the benefit. Kerr on E. & M., 398. Equity will grant relief where there is a marked disparity between the parties in position and intelligence, though both acted under a mistake in the law. “And there would be still stronger reasons for granting relief in such a case, if the party from whom the property had been obtained, had been led into his mistake of the law by the other party.” Jordan v. Stevens, 51 Me., 78; Green v. Railroad Co., 1 Beasley, 165. As to the effect of the statement of an untrue consideration in a deed between attorney and client, or any suppression of truth or suggestion of falsehood in the transaction, they cited Kerr on E. & M., 167; Taylour v. Rochfort, 2 Ves., Sr., 281; Broderick v. Broderick, 1 P. Wins., 239; and on the general subject of confirmation or condonation of fraud in such cases, they cited further, Cole v. Gibson, 1 Ves., Sr., 503; Morse v. Royal, 12 Ves., Jr., 355, 373; Beaumont v. Boultbee, 5 id., 485; Moxon v. Payne, L. R, 8 Ch. App., 881 (7 Eng., 442); Miles v. Wheeler, 43 Ill., 123; Hoffman Steam Goal Go. v. Cumberland 
      
      Go., Michoud v. Girod, and Mohr v. Tulip, supra. 7. That the relief demanded was the appropriate relief. Ha/wley v. Gramer, 4 Cow., 744; Rrnoue v. Fanning, 2 Johns. Cli., 252; Bassett v. Warner, 23 Wis., 673.
    For the respondents it was argued, among other things, 1. That plaintiffs were not entitled to the relief sought by reason of the alleged want of jurisdiction of the county court to admit the will to probate. (1) The death of the testator at the city of Milwaukee, owning real estate in Milwaukee county, gave the court jurisdiction of the subject matter. R. S. 1858, ch. 117, secs. 5, 6; Reynolds v. Schmidt, 20 Wis., 380, 400; Warner v. RovRand, 10 id., 8, 13; Ramp v. Town of Dane, 29 id., 419, 431; Redfield’s L. & Pr. of the Sur. Cts., 12. (2) The probate of a wil-1 as to the subject matter is a proceeding in rem, but as to the parties interested it is lis inter partes. Brush v. Holland, 3 Rradf., 240. The same acts which in civil actions are held to waive or cure defects of service and to confer jurisdiction of the parties, will work the same result in matters of probate. Redf., 13: Abila v. Padilla, 14 Cal., 103; Potter v. Adams’ Ex'rs, 24 Mo., 159; Everts v. Everts, 62 Barb., 577, 581. The appearance of the parties at the time and place of hearing without objecting to the proceedings for want of statutory notice, confers jurisdiction of their persons. State v. Richmond, 26 N. II, 232; Barnumv. Fitzpatrick, 11 Wis., 81; Upper Miss. Trans. Go. v.Whittaher, 16 id., 220; Horthrup v. Shephard, 26 id., 220; Klaise v. The State, 27 id., 462; Grantierv. Rosecrance, id., 488; Anderson v. Gobu/rn, id., 558; Baizer v. lasch, 28 id., 268; Ins. Go. of-W. A. v. Swinford, id., 263; Ramp v. Town of Rane, 29 id., 419; Alderson v. White, 32 id., 308; Blackburn v. Sweet, 38 id., 578; Goad v. Goad, 41 id., 23. Mrs. O’Roll and George W. O'Roll appeared in person at the hearing. The complaint alleges that Rogers was the attorney of all the plaintiff’s in all these proceedings; and appearance by attorney is sufficient. Warren v. Glyivn, 37 N. II., 340; 
      McCormick v. Railroad Go., 49 N. Y., 303; Danforth v. Thompson, 34 Iowa, 243; McNorton v. Robeson, 9 Ired., 256. (3) The supposed defect of jurisdiction as to Reynolds and Hewitt was cured by their petition filed in that court August 14, 1876, in which they sought to have all the proceedings of that court in the matter of said estate set aside, not only on the ground that the court had failed to acquire jurisdiction, but also for alleged frauds on the part of the executors and others in the execution of the trust created by the will, etc. Anderson v. Goburn, siipra. (4) Mere want of jurisdiction in the county court to make its former orders and decrees would not entitle plaintiffs to the relief here sought, in equity. The county court has exclusive jurisdiction of the probate of wills, and is competent to set aside its own orders and decrees. Archer v. Meadows, 33 Wis., 166. 2. That the other facts in evidence did not entitle plaintiffs to have the sales made by the executors set aside. (1) A purchase by attorney or trustee, of the trust estate, is not void, but is voidable only at the election of the cestui que trust, if exercised within a reasonable time. Willard’s Eq., 186, 187; Tiffany & Bullard on Trustees, 146; 1 Lead. Cas. in Eq. (last ed.), Part 1, pp. 256, 257, and cases cited; Fox v. Maclereth, 1 L. Cas. in Nq. (4th Am. ed.), 188, 208, 217; Davotie-v. Fanning, 2 Johns. Oh., 257; JBrueh v. Lantz, 2 Eawle, 392, 417, 418; Harrington v. Brown, 5 Pick., 519; Eisling v. Shaw, 33 Cal., 425. This doctrine applies to a purchase by an attorney or trustee, at his own sale. Willard’s Éq., 189. (2) An attorney is under no positive incapacity to purchase from his client. When he buys from his client that in respect to which he is attorney, the burden is on him to prove that the transaction was open and fair. Willard’s Eq., 172,175; Story’s Eq. Jur., §§ 308-324; Smith’s Manual of Eq., 78-81, 310-313, and cases cited; Fox v. MacTcreth, 1 L. C. in Eq.-, 220; Pearson v. Benson, 28 Beav., 598; Waters v. Thorn, 22 id., 547; Spencer r. TophamAA, 573; Holman v. loynes, 4 DeG., M. ’ & G., 270; Tomson v. Judge, 3 Drewry, 306; Savery v. King, 5 IT. L. Cas., 627; Gibbs v. Daniel,4 Griff., 1; Cowdry v.Day, 1 id., 316; Gresley v. Mousley, id., 450. In respect of transactions not in litigation, the law will not imply undue influence from the mere relation of attorney and client. In such cases more must be shown — fraud or imposition, gross disproportion between value and price, or some appearance of overbearing influence on the one side and tame submission on the other. Willard’s Eq., 174; Wendell v. Van Rensselaer, 1 Johns. Oh., 350; Bibb v. Smith, 1 Dana, 582. (3) Equity will not relieve a eestui que trust, who, with full knowledge of the misconduct of a trastee, has for a long time either acquiesced in it or slept on his rights. Tiffany &Bull. on Trustees, 146, 148; Hubbard v. Otimmings, 1 Greenl., 11, 14; Lawson v. Lovejoy, 8 id., 405; Jones v. Emery, 40 N. TL, 348; Bassett v. Brown, 105 Mass., 551; Arnold v. Lroov Works, 1 Gray, 434; ALUs v. Billings, 6 Met., 415; Kli/ne v. Beebe, 6 Conn., 494; The Matteawan Go. v. Bentley, 13 Barb., 641; Wheaton v. Baker, 14 id., 594; Roof v. Stafford, 7 Cow., 179; Masson v. Bovet, 1 Denio, 69; Delano v. Blake, 11 Wend., 85; Kegley v. Lindsay, 67 Pa. St., 217; Pear soil v. Ghapi/n, 44 id., 9; Andrews v. Hobson, 23 Ala., 219; Vanee v. Crawford, 4 Ga., 457; Jones v. Smith, 33 Miss., 215; Follansbe v. Kilbreth, 17 Ill., 522; WilUams v. Ketchum, 21 Wis., 432; Marsh v. Whitmore, 21 Wall., 178; Kiely v. MeGlynn, id., 503. (4) .Inadequacy of price must be gross, amounting to fraud, to constitute ground for relief in equity. Story’s Eq. Jur., §§ 244-250; Booker v. Anderson, 35 Ill., 66; Kuelkamp v. Ridding, 31 Wis., 503, 511. (5) Any clear, deliberate act of ratification by the beneficiary, with full knowledge of the facts, will bind him and bar all claim to relief. Willard’s Eq., 169; Kerr on F. & M., 296 et seq.; Kempson v. Aslibee, L. R., 10 Ch. App., 15; Parsons v. Hughes, 9 Paige, 591; Dunláp v. Mitchell, 10 Ohio, 117; Faueett v. Faueett, 1 Bush, 511; Bassett v. Brown, supra. No new consideration is necessary. Negley v. Lindsay, supra. Receipt of tbe proceeds of the sales, as such, after the fullest knowledge, is such a ratification. Anderson v. Mather, 44 N. Y., 249,261. The doctrine of equitable estoppel by election has become elementary. Blodgett v. Hitt, 29 Wis., 191; Arnold v. IronWorks Co., sxipra; Clough v. Railway Co., L. R., 7 Exch., 26. The receipt, by the owner, of the damages awarded for his land taken for a highway, is a conclusive waiver of all irregularities. Burns v. Railroad Co., 9 Wis., 450; Karber v. Nellis, 22 id., 215; State v. Banger, 29 id., 68. The receipt, by a judgment creditor, of the amount of his judgment, out of the proceeds of a sheriff’s sale, bars him from afterwards procuring the sale to be set aside. Stroble v. Smith, 8 Watts, 280; Adhim v. Yard, 1 Rawle, 171. Acceptance, by the mortgagor, of the surplus proceeds of a foreclosure sale, estops him from showing invalidity of service. Southard v. Perry, 21 Iowa, 488. Receipt of purchase money affirms the sale of lands, whether void or voidable. Maple v. Mussart, 53 Pa. St., 348; Smith v. Warden, 19 id., 426; State ex rel., etc., v. Stanley, 14 Ind., 409-412. An heir, receiving, after majority, proceeds of an unauthorized - sale by administrator with the will annexed, is barred from denying the purchaser’s title. Deford v. Mercer, 24 Iowa, 118, and cases cited in note; In re Place, 5 Bradf., 278. A minor, settling with his guardian after majority, and receiving proceeds of estate sold, as such, is estopped. Corwin v. Shoup, 76 Ill., 246; Pursley v. Mays, 17 Iowa, 310; Scott v. Searles, 7 Sm. & M., 499. Where minor heirs, after majority, with full knowledge of the facts, received their proportion of the proceeds of a sale of lands in partition, they were held estopped from asserting title to the lands sold, and from denying the validity of the sale on any ground. Penn v. Meisey, 19 Ill., 295; Walker v. Mul-ueam, 76 id., 18. (6) One seeking to rescind for fraud must do so promptly on discovery of the facts. By delay, or further steps in execution of the contract, or acts recognizing its validity, after discovery, he loses all right to equitable relief. 1 Story’s Eq. Jur., 203 a; Bigelow on Estoppel, 5'78, and cases cited; 2 Parsons on Con., 780-82; Kerr on F. and M., 298; Bas-sett's. Brown, Cloughv. Railway Co., Jones v. Smith, Kielyv. MoGh/nn, and Vance v. Crawford, supra; Grymes v. Sanders, 93 U. S., 55; Woodruff v. Garner, 39 Ind., 246; Weave',' v. Carpenter, 42 Iowa, 343; Pairo v. Vickery, 37 Md., 467; Edwards v. Roberts, 7 Sin. & M., 544; Hanson v. Field, 41 Miss., 712; AJeerhj v. Vilas, 21 Wis., 88; Williams v. Ketch-urn, id., 432; Ilolden v. Meadows, 31 id., 284, 290-3; Booth v. Ryan, id., 45, 49; Grannis v. Hooker, id., 474; In re Holden, 37 id., 98; Reed v. Kueps, 38 id., 352, 355. (7) The deed of Burnham to Oelestia A. O'1 Dell, of December 2, 1870, conveyed to her a good title. Assuming that the written contract between Burnham and the executors was fairly made and binding on the parties, and made without agreement or understanding at the time, direct or indirect, that Mrs. O'Dell should acquire any interest through or under Burnham, the purchaser, it was competent for Burnham, the sole purchaser, in good faith, thereafter to sell to any one, even to the executrix, any share or portion of the property he had so purchased. Even a parol sale of real property by executors, partly executed by possession, is held to pass an equitable interest to the vendee, of which one of the executors may become the purchaser for himself, provided there was no mala fides in the original sale. Silverthorn v. McKinster, 12 Pa. St., 67; Watson v. Sherman, 84 Ill., 263. And the validity of such subsequent purchase by the executor is not affected by the fact that the consideration is paid by him in whole or in part with notes of the original vendee, given to and held by the executors for the purchase money of the land. Silverthorn v. McKin-ster, supra. (8) The same doctrine applies also to the purchase by Rogers and Becher from Burnham, negotiated and made after his contract with the executors. (9) The executors, Ce-lestia A. and George W. O'Dell, are estopped by their deeds as executors to deny their authority to convey, or to challenge the validity of the title of their grantees under such deeds, except for fraud on them. Stow v. Wyse, 7 Conn., 214; Potter v. Adams* JEx'rs, 24 Mo., 159. (10) Mrs. O'Dell is barred of relief as to the sale of November, 1870, on her own showing, by the principle that where two or more persons engage in a fraudulent transaction to injure another, neither law nor equity will relieve them as against each other from the consequences. Stewart v. Ackley, 52 Barb., 283; Dolt v. Rogers, 3 Paige, 154. (11) To constitute actual fraud, in its legal or equitable sense, the acts charged must result in loss or damage to another. Story’s Eq. Jur., §§ 1S7, 203; 2 Parsons on Con., 771; Alloman v. Roth, 12 Wis., 81, 90; Gastleman v. Griffin, 13 id., 535; Barber v. Kilbourn, 16 id., 492, 517. (12) In order to entitle a party to relief on the ground of fraud, it must appear that he confided in and trusted to the false and fraudulent representations, and acted upon them, and did not act upon information previously acquired from others, or upon knowledge or advice derived from independent sources. Kerr on P. & M., 297, 298; Smith v. Mariner, 5 Wis., 551; Miner v. Medbury, 6 id., 295; Bowman v. Page, 11 id., 301; Kuel-karrvp v. Ridding, stipra. 3. That the plaintiff Mrs. Hewitt was estopped, as well as the other plaintiffs. (1) She was not a minor when she received her share of the estate, in March, 1871. Upon marriage, her domicile merged in that of her husband (Wharton on Conf. of Laws, § 43), and by the law of Minnesota she became sui jwris at the age of eighteen (October 17, 1870), and was competent to deal for herself with the executors in respect to her interest in the estate. She .was a mere legatee, having no interest in the real estate as such. The executors might properly have paid over her share to her, and a guardian was unnecessary. There have been great conflict and confusion among writers on the civil law as to the rule by which the validity of contracts, depending on the age of the contracting parties, should be determined. Story’s Conflict of Laws, cli. IT. Many of the ablest writers maintain that majority in the place of actual domicile is a personal quality or capacity, which accompanies the person everywhere. Others hold that the lex loci contractxis cout actus generally governs. The supreme court of Louisiana ha^ held that a foreign major does not lose his majority on visiting a country in which by the local law he is a minor. Saul v. His Creditors, 5 Martin, N. S., 569. That case sustains the principle that, “ where there are two conflicting domiciles as to capacity, that will be selected which most favors a contract entered into by the person whose capacity is disputed;” and the doctrine of that case “ now obtains throughout the German Empire, and may be regarded as the law both in England and the United States.” Wharton’s Conflict of Laws, §§ 114,115. See also 3 Parsons on Con. (5th ed.), 575; In re Tlellmann, L. R., 2 Eq. Cas., 363. (2) Even if she was a minor, payment to her general guardian was payment to her. He was authorized to receive and receipt for her share; and his acts, done in good faith and not impeachable for fraud, bound and barred her as if they had been her own after majority. Ewell’s L. C., 232-4; see also Metcalf v. Lomax (in the Sup. Ct. of Alabama, December, 1876), 4 Cent. L. J., 78. (3) She was barred by her own acts, in 1871 and later, done in Minnesota, viz., in procuring and accepting payment there of $5,000 from defendants, upon their purchase-money note, held by her as her share in part of the proceeds of the lands sold; and in investing that sum in lands in her own name, in the erection of a dwelling in that state, and in various purchases and loans there made. These were all the acts, not of a minor, but of a person of full age for all purposes; and they were a clear affirmance of the sales and settlement of the estate. Iler title to and control over her separate property was fully secured by the laws of Minnesota. Her coverture did not qualify her power to contract, except in the conveyance of her real estate; and in respect to all subjects except her real estate, she could constitute her husband her agent, and could contract with him, as fully as though the relation of husband and wife did not exist. Gen. Laws of Minn. of 1S69, ch. 56, secs. 1, 2 and 4. (4) And finally she was barred by keeping silence for nearly six years after her majority there,-and for nearly three years after she had reached the age of twenty-one, with full knowledge of the facts concerning the sales, and also of the fact that defendants wore platting, improving and selling the lands. A minor must disaffirm his contracts within a reasonable time after attaining majority. If he acts so as to indicate plainly his intent to affirm, or delays long after his disability is re'moved, he is barred. Ewell’s L. 0., 158-160; Emmons v. Murray, 16 N. II., 385; Pursley v. Hays, Penn v. Heisey, Walker v. Mulvean, and Gorwi/n v. Slump, sujpra; Ferguson v. BelVs Aclrn’r, 17 Mo., 347; Balter v. Hennett, 54 id., 8S; Hoyle v. Stowe, 2 Dev. & Bat., 320; Wheaton v. East, 5 Yerg., 62. Estoppel by receipt of proceeds after majority applies as well to void as to voidable sales. Deford, v. Mercer, supra; Nelson's Heirs v. Lee, 10 B. Mon., 502. Affirmance by an infant may be inferred from any act totally inconsistent with an intention to disaffirm. 56 Mo., 202, 211; Gallis v. Day, 38 "WIs., 643. In Summers v. Wilson, 2 Cold. (Tenn.), 469, acquiescence by a minor for more than three years after her majority, in the sale of a slave during her minority, held to estop her from disputing the validity of the sale. Continuing in possession and selling with warranty, after reaching full age, affirms the contract of a minor. Lynde v. Budd, 2 Paige, 191. 4. That in fact the sales were fair, made for full value, and without fraud. Counsel argued this point at great length upon the evidence.
   ObtoN, J.

The publication of notice of the time and place of proving the will of Galutia O’Dell was clearly insufficient. The statute, sec. 18, ch. 97, R. S., provides, that the county court shall appoint a time and place for proving a will, “when all concerned may appear and contest the probate ” thereof, and shall cause public notice thereof to be given by personal service on all persons interested, or by publication, under au order of such court, in such newspaper printed in this state as the judge shall direct, three weeks successively previous to the time appointed; and no will shall be proved until notice shall be given as herein provided.” By this language the object and purpose of the notice are, that all persons interested may appear and contest the validity and probate of the will; and if such notice is not given, and any party interested does not appear or otherwise consent to the proceedings, as to such party, at least, they are invalid..

The object of such notice, and the consequences of a failure to give the proper notice, are expressed or clearly implied by the statute itself.

The jurisdiction of the county court, though limited and defined, is original and exclusive over the subject matter of the probate of wills, and fully attaches upon the death of the testator and proof of his domicile or the situation of his estate. It is said that death of the testator gives to courts of probate general jurisdiction; and proof of the domicile and situation of the estate, both the general jurisdiction of the subject matter, and jurisdiction of the particular case. 3 Bedfield on W., 120.

To understand fully the statute, and the application of the authorities cited on the question of jurisdiction, it may be proper to consider the former methods and practice in probate.

Fonuerly, in England, the ecclesiastical court had jurisdiction only of the probate of wills of jpersonal property, and the courts of common law over devises of real estate; and the decrees of the ecclesiastical court in reference to the personal estate were final and conclusive as to all persons; but the judgments of the common-law courts, in the case of wills of real property, were conclusive only as between the parties to the suit. In most of the states, courts of probate hava jurisdiction of wills of both personal and real property; and the statute confers upon our county courts snob jurisdiction, by the language, “ of all cases of the probate of wills;” and thus full and complete jurisdiction of the probate of all wills is given; not, however, to proceed as in common-law courts, by suit, but in a particular manner defined by statute; and it has been held that the decrees of such courts, in respect to all wills, are final and conclusive as to all parties having notice. 1 Jarman on W., 213; Potter v. Webb, 2 Greenl., 257.

The only form of probate in our practice is the solemn form; of which all parties interested must have notice, or they are not bound; but the decree is final and conclusive as to all persons having notice. In some of the states, it assimilates to the practice in common-law courts, and an issue of clevisavit vel non is made up, to which persons interested appear and file a caveat, and the issue may be tried by a jury; and it is held in such cases that the proceeding is in rem, to which persons interested may appear or be notified to appear, and if they appear or consent to the proceedings, they are bound by the decree, which, to all such parties and their privies, is final and conclusive. Redmond v. Collins, 4 Dev., 439. From the very nature of the proceedings, the distinction between jurisdiction of the subject matter, and of the persons or parties interested in it, is, if anything, more clearly marked than in suits at common law in courts of general jurisdiction; and this distinction is expressly recognized in Bloom v. Burdick, 1 Hill, 130, cited by appellants’ counsel. Indeed, so strongly do the courts lean in favor of the jurisdiction of the court of probate in the proof of wills, that in some of the states it is held that the decree, being in a proceeding in rem, is final and conclusive even as to infants and persons under disability (3 Redfield on¥., 63, and cases there cited); and in some of the states the statute provides for infants and persons under disability coming in to contest the will within certain time aftei disabilitv removed. 4 N. II., 406.

It will be observed that whenever the courts, deciding upon the question of the effect, upon a decree of the court of probate, of a want of notice to persons in interest, or of their nonappearance, use the word “ void,” it is used not in the sense of an absolute mollity, but of invalidity, and as to such persons only.

In Smith v. Rice, 11 Mass., 507, Israel Smith died, leaving an estate in lands, no children, but one brother and three sisters, his only heirs; and the demandant was the brother. The probate court appointed commissioners to partition the estate between them, if it could be done, or to assign the whole to one upon payment of three-fourths of its value to the others. The commissioners did assign the whole estate to one of the sisters upon payment to each of the other three of the sum of $581.51 and interest, as their share of the estate. The report was confirmed by the court, and a decree entered accordingly. The statute of Massachusetts provided that in such case persons interested in the estate residing in the state, or, if absent from the state, their attorneys, if they had any within the state, must be notified of the proceeding; and in the case of minors, provided for the appointment of a guardian, and in case of persons residing out of the state, for the appointment of some discreet person to represent them in the proceeding. The statute also provided, in such assignment of the whole estate to one of the heirs, that the male heir should have preference, and might demand the assignment to himself. The three sisters were present and consented to the assignment; and the two received their share of the moneys allotted to them. The brother, the demandant, resided out of the state, and no person was appointed to represent him, and he had no notice. The court, in its opinion, said:. “If it appear that the judge of probate has exceeded his authority, or that he has undertaken to determine the rights of parties over whom he has no jurisdiction, .... the party aggrieved, if, without any laches on his part, he has had no opportunity to appeal, may consider tbe act or decree as void; ” and in the conclusion of the opinion: “Upon the whole, we are satisfied that the demandant, in the case at bar, is not concluded by the decree of the probate court. It is void as to him; and he is entitled to receive his share of the estate of his brother as if the partition and assignment had not been made; ” and in another part of the opinion: “If the demandant had after-wards accepted from the tenant the sum awarded by the probate court, this might have been a waiver of the objection to the want of notice, and an assent to the proceedings, which would have rendered them valid.” A fuller reference to this case has been made, because it seems to' make the distinction between jurisdiction of the subject matter and jurisdiction of the person, in proceedings before .the probate courts, which are conceded to have only special 'and limited jurisdiction, perfectly clear, and in every respect the same as in courts of general jurisdiction; and the case is, in many respects, parallel to this case; and because the counsel for the appellants seem to rely very much upon it as authority to show the nullity of this decree of probate.

In the case of Denning v. Corwin, 11 Wend., 617, the court acquired no jurisdiction of the subject matter, because no,affidavit to accompany the petition was made as the statute required; and no jurisdiction of the parties, for want of notice. In respect to other authorities cited, it is sufficient to say that none of them militate against this view, but rather establish it.

Attention has been called to our statute, sec. 21, eh. 97, R. S., “ No will shall be effectual to pass either real or personal estate, unless it shall have been duly proved and allowed in the county court,” etc., as making the decree of probate the inception of title; and if such decree be void absolutely for want of notice to the parties in interest, no title would pass to the executors in trust, and all sales made by them under the will would be void, and confer no title upon the purchasers. Aside from this mistaken view of the decree of probate in •cases where the court acquires jurisdiction of the subject matter by the death of the testator and his last domicile, this statute does not change the principle, existing without it, that the title does not spring from the probate, but from the will itself, and the probate operates as a mere authentication, or “ the authenticated evidence, and not at all as the foundation of the title to the property disposed of by the will.” 1 Jarman on ~W., 212; 2 Greenl. Ev., § 339. And it is so held in states having the same statute as ours. Strong v. Perkins, 3 N. H., 517.

In the cases cited in which the court of probate decreed the sale of the real estate to pay debts, the proceedings are in derogation of the common law, and hostile to the heirs, and can bnly be instituted in certain conditions of administration, and the facts in the petition must be such as by the statute authorize them; and even in such cases it is held that the petition and proof of the facts confer jurisdiction of the subject matter. Grignon's Lessee v. Astor, 2 How., 338; Sitzman v. Pacquette, 13 Wis., 325. Jurisdiction of the parties or persons interested, and due notice to them, are also unquestionably necessary to make the sale valid as to them; and such proceeding is in the nature óf a suit, and the defendants must have notice as in other cases of 'suits at law or in equity, and the •want of notice would be attended with the same consequences. Schneider v. McFarland, 2 Comst., 459. The cases decided by this court, Rape v. Heaton, 9 Wis., 328; Falkner v. Guild, 10 id., 563; Gibbs v. Shaw, 17 id., 197; Blodgett v. Hitt, 29 id., 174; Bresee v. Stiles, 22 id., 120; Ruth v. Oberbrunner, 40 id., 238, and other cases, in which this point is considered, do not in the least conflict with the principle that want of notice only makes such proceedings void as to the persons not appearing or assenting, and that such notice may be waived.

In the application of these principles to the decree of probate under consideration, it is clear that such decree, and the subsequent proceedings in the execution of the will, are void only as to such persons in interest as did not appear or assent thereto, or as have not since supplied such want of appearance by acts clearly indicating an assent thereto or .a ratification thereof. The respondents Celestia A. O'Dell and Geo. W O'Dell were the executrix and executor and trustees named in the will, and took administration thereof, and were the proponents of the will for probate, and it was their duty to give the requisite notice thereof, and they made all the sales of the estate, and received their shares of the proceeds, and made final settlement with the county court, and, of course, cannot now be allowed to say that the proceedings wTere void. And even if they claim that they acted under the direction and undue influence of their attorney, Rogers, they subsequently, with full knowledge 'of all the facts, voluntarily, fully and finally confirmed and «ratified all the proceedings, and are now estopped from questioning them.

The two heirs Zeruiah A. Reynolds and Mary G. Brewer, if not personally present at the probate, according to the allegation of the complaint, and which was a conceded point in the case, appeared there by their attorney Rogers, and they also subsequently consented to the proceedings by receiving their shares of the proceeds of the sales, and executing receipts and deeds of confirmation,

The respondent Emma A. Hewitt, at the times of all the proceedings of probate and of administration, was an infant, and became of age on the 17th day of October’, 1873. She was not represented in any of the proceedings by guardian or in other proper manner. And, although the statute is silent as to the appointment of guardian to represent infant heirs and' other persons under disability at the probate of wills, such appointment is incidental and necessary in all cases where notice to persons interested in the estate is required; and,if not so represented, the proceedings as to such persons will be void. The defective publication or the want of personal notice or appearance, as to them, are quite immaterial. If the notice had been sufficient as to all persons of proper age, and the proceedings otherwise regular, the infant heir would not be bound unless represented by guardian, and such infant could not be charged with laches, consent or ratification, during the time of minority. And in this case, if a guardian was appointed for Mrs. Hewitt at the time of the settlement of the estate, and acted in her behalf in such settlement and in receiving the proceeds of the sales under the will; and in executing receipts and acquittances therefor, this would not make valid the prior proceedings, in which she was not represented; and there can be no question that, within a reasonable time after becoming of age, she could disaffirm all such proceedings and ask the court to declare them void as to her and set them aside, on the ground of her infancy alone. Bresee v. Stiles, 22 Wis., 120. The only inquiry, therefore, as to her, in respect to the proceedings of probate and the appointment of executor and executrix and their authority to administer the estate under the' will, is, Has she done anything since becoming of age tantamount to an appearance at the time and place of the probate, or in assent thereto, or in recognition thereof? This court held, in Blackburn v. Sweet, imp., 38 Wis., 578, and many other cases, in effect, that when the moving party asks some relief which can only be granted upon the hypothesis that the court has jurisdiction of the cause’ and the person, this is a submission to the jurisdiction, and waives all defects in the service of process; and that where a party seeks to take advantage of a want of jurisdiction, he must object on that groimcl alone, and keep out of court for every other purpose. This is the only safe and consistent rule in all cases of a want of jurisdiction of the person, by defective service or notice, which may be waived by an appearance. In August, 1876, Emma, A. Hewitt, then being of full age, joined in a petition to the county court of Milwaukee county, setting forth the want of sufficient publication of notice of the time and place of the proving of the will, and that no notice was personally served on the persons interested therein, as the only ground for showing that the county court in probate had no jurisdiction to make the order or decree admitting said will to probate, dated the 27th day of May, 1870. It is not stated in said petition that she did mot appear by guardian, nor does she rely upon the fact of her infancy and not being represented by guardian, as a ground for such want of jurisdiction to make such decree; and she disaffirms in said petition only “ the acts, contracts and instruments made by her during her said' minority in reference to said estate, and the settlement, sale and disposition thereof; ” and she does not seek to disaffirm the said decree of probate on the ground of her infancy. She charges that Gelestia A, O’Dell and George W. O’Dell, pretending to act as executrix and executor, and Rogers, Burnham and Becher, took possession of the estate and converted it to their own use, and have never accounted; that said estate has been wrested from the petitioners and other heirs by a cunningly devised system of fraud, etc.; that Rogers was the attorney of the testator in liis lifetime, and drew the will, and acted as the attorney and «counselor of the heirs and the pretended executors of said estate, etc., and, while acting as such by fraud and imposition upon the pétitioners and their rights, and abusing trust and confidence, etc., he acquired title to a portion of the estate; and that Burn-ham had knowledge of it; that the estate was sold for a grossly inadequate consideration; that the conveyance to Oel-estia A. O’Dell was a fraud upon the petitioners; and that Rogers, as such attorney, by misrepresentation and fraud, caused the petitioners to receive their shares of the proceeds and to execute deeds and receipts, etc., and refused to give them the notes taken for such shares, and never paid them their shares in full; and generally charges that the said county court never acquired jurisdiction of said estate, or of the petitioners, and that all its pretended orders and decrees in this matter are absolutely void, and the pretended sales by the pretended executors are void, as being; to and for the benefit of the attorney for the heirs and pretended executors of said estate, and his privies, through fraud, imposition and the exercise of undue influence and unfair advantage on the part of said attorney, and under a mistake as to their rights and the facts in the case, and for a grossly inadequate consideration; that the pretended sale to Oelestia A. O’Dell is void, because she was acting as executrix of the estate; that no accounting was ever made to the court; and that the decree is void for want of authority in the court to make it, and by reason of the fraud practiced upon the court and the heirs of said estate. The prayer asks, first, “ that the probate of the will and all orders and proceedings in this matter be set aside; secondly, “ and for such other and f%irther relief as may he just and proper.’’

The complaint in this case is, if anything, much fuller and more explicit in respect to all the fraudulent and unfair deal'ings with the estate since the decree of probate, by the defendants Rogers, Burnham and Beeher, and the prayer much broader for relief; and in both the petition and complaint, relief is asked consistent only with a valid proof of the will, and the due appointment of executors, and holding them as trustees of the estate, as such; and no complaint is made against the validity of the will, or its due proof in court.

The petition and complaint most fully and clearly place the said Emma A. Hewitt in the attitude which this court has so frequently held is equivalent to an appearance to the proceeding sought to be declared void for want of notice; and operate as an assent and submission to the proceedings of the court in the probate of the will and the appointment of executors. For the purposes of this ease, therefore, we must hold said proceedings valid as to all the parties.

We have next to consider, first, the various' subjects of complaint other than that these proceedings are void; and secondly, the relation of the plaintiffs to the matters complained of.

The will of Galntia O’Dell appoints Oelestia A. O’Dell ex ecutrix and George W. O^Detl executor, and bequeaths to them, in trust, the whole estate, with full power to sell at public or private sale, at such time or times, and in such tracts and portions, and upon such terms, and in such manner, as to them shall seem meet, and as soon as possible after the death of the testator as the real estate can be sold to advantage, to sell the same, and, after the payment of debts, expenses, etc., to distribute the funds remaining, one-third to G ¿lesbia, A. O'Dell) the wife, and the remaining two-thirds, share and share alike, to the four children.

The will confers upon the trustees the very fullest power and discretion in the sale of the estate; and the terms of the will are not complained of. By the will, no title descends to or is conferred upon the heirs, and their relation to the real estate is only as cestuis que trust. They have, however, a direct interest in its sale, and may hold the trustees to the highest responsibility in the execution of their trust, and in the exercise of at least a reasonable discretion in such sale.

In assuming the trust under such an almost unlimited power and discretion, the law imposed upon them the obligation that they should act honestly and fairly, unbiased by any interest they had in the estate, except as a spur to diligence and an encouragement to make the most advantageous sale of the estate, for their own benefit and the equal benefit of all the other beneficiaries; and we think that the law also imposed upon them the prohibition that they should not become, directly or indirectly, the purchasers at their own sale as such trustees.

The statute, sec. 27, ch. 94, R. S., in terms, prohibits executors and administrators making sale of real property to pay debts, from purchasing, directly or indirectly, or being interested in the purchase of, any part of the real estate so sold, and makes all such prohibited sales void. This statute, in terms, may not be broad enough to include sales by executors by direction of the will; but the reason and necessity of the prohibition are greater in tlie latter case than iii tbe former, and it is held that, without such a statute, where the executors are made trustees by the will, with power of sale, they cannot become the purchasers,, unless the will expressly authorizes it. 3 Redfield’s Law of "Wills, 551.

We think that Gelestia A. O'Dell, the executrix, indirectly at least, if not directly, became purchaser of a portion of the estate, and that such sale to herself was void.

The respondent Rogers was an attorney-at-law, and was thoroughly acquainted with the situation of the estate and its true value, had been the attorney and adviser of the testator in his lifetime, advised with him as to the making of the will in his last sickness, drew the will, and suggested the executrix and executor, and became, on the death of the testator, their attorney and legal adviser, as well as the attorney and legal adviser of the heirs, and, down to the day of final settlement of the estate, had virtually the control of all the proceedings. Iiis trust was the greater, as he had advised the appointment of Gelestia A. O'Dell as ■ executrix, and George W. O' Dell as executor, and trustees by the will — two illiterate and most incompetent persons for such a trust — and against the inclinations at least of the testator, agreeing to advise them in the management of the estate; and, from the evidence, it cannot be doubted that he exercised a controlling influence over the trustees and the heirs, and that they had confidence in his advice and judgment. Under these circumstances, he became the purchaser jointly with Bwrnham and his law partner, Beefier, of a large part of the estate. Although there is no such preponderance of evidence as would justify this court in disturbing the finding of the circuit court as to the fairness of the sales or the adequacy of the price at the time they were made, and although we are willing to believe that there was no intentional fraud practiced or corrupt influence used by Rogers, the attorney, in bringing about the sales to Gelestia A. O'Dell, and to himself, Bwrnham and Beeher, yet we cannot avoid denouncing bis conduct, under tbe circumstances, as grossly improper, if not unlawful. It is evident that be used most remarkable, and perhaps not entirely disinterested diligence in hastening tbe sales, and probably considered it as advantageous to himself to secure an interest in tbe property as it would be to tbe heirs to have tbe sales made without unnecessary delay. Sales made by trustees and executors to their own attorney, under any circumstances, are held to be even more improper than if made to themselves, for the reason that they are supposed to be made under the influence, if not pressure, of legal advice, and induced by confidential relations which ought to be above suspicion; and this is especially true in this case, c: where there is great intellectual inequality, and comparative inexperience on the part of the clients.” Mills v. Mills, 26 Conn., 213. The law seems to be well settled, that in such cases the attorney will become the trustee of the projoerty so improperly purchased, at the option of the parties interested, and may be charged as fully with the administration of the trust, and be held as responsible for his dealings with the property, by the cestid que trust, and be called upon to account, as the original trustee, even where the sale to the attorney was fairly made, and for what at the time was considered by all the parties a fair price.” James, ex parte, 8 Vesey, 337.

In no court has this principle been more emphatically recognized, and more pointedly and clearly enforced, than in this, by the opinion of the late lamented Justice Paihe in Gillett v. Gillett, 9 Wis., 194, and by the able, learned and exhaustive opinions of the chief justice in the late cases, In re Taylor Orphan Asylum, 36 Wis., 534, and Cook v. Berlin Woolen Mill Co., 43 id., 433.

It is clear that both Celestia A. O'1 Dell and Daniel G. Rogers, the former the executrix, and the latter her attorney, and the attorney of the heirs also, after these sales, occupied the relation of trustees of the property, and from the evidence it must be held that both Burnham and Beoher had full knowledge of this relation, and participated with Rogers in the purchases, and stand affected with whatever disability to purchase attached to Rogers, and that they are equally chargeable with the trust. Hoffman S. C. Co. v. Cumberland C. & I. Co., 16 Md., 456.

The 19.52 acres deeded to Gelestia A. O'Bell, December 2, 1870, and the 9.361 acres deeded to her July 10, 1871, subse'quently came back, by deed from one Howard Newkirk, the grantee of Gelestia A. O'Dell, to Burnham and Rogers, in April, 1874.

Whatever might have been the attitude of Newkirk in respect to the property, as the purchaser from Gelestia A. O'Dell with knowledge of her relation to it as trustee, or in collusion with Rogers, or otherwise, when the identical estate caine back to Burnham and Rogers, it was chargeable with the same trusts as if the purchase had been made by them directly from Celestia A. O'Dell. Ely v. Wilcox, 26 Wis., 91.

So far as this case discloses, the title of Burnham, Rogers and Beeher to all third persons, whether defendants herein or not, is not affected by any alleged defects in the proceedings in probate or administration, or by any conduct of the trustees, and .must be held valid.

The present relations of the plaintiffs to this trust property remain to be considered.

Very little need be said in respect to the legal attitude of Gelestia A. O'Dell. She was a party to all of these improper dealings with the estate, and received the proceeds thereof, and can have no standing in a court of equity. And George W. O'Dell was a joint trustee,- and by his action, also, these proceedings occurred, and he fully assented thereto and received his full share of the proceeds thereof, besides being estopped by his deeds. Zerwiah A. Reynolds, with full knowledge of all the facts and proceedings, became dissatisfied with the disposition of the property, and with the conduct of the executors and of the attorney Rogers, and, before receiving her share of the estate, consulted with two competent lawyers of the city of Milwaukee, Judge Manu and Samuel Howard, Esq., and, from her statement of the facts, they advised her fully as to her rights, and that she could have the sales set aside and declared void. After this, she voluntarily abandoned her rights, with her eyes fully open, and received her share also, and executed a quitclaim deed to Celestia A. O'Dell, of the 19.52 acres, March 4, 1871, and an instrument, in effect a receipt, release, ratification and confirmation, covering the whole matter, under her hand and seal, on the 27th day of March of the same year. These acts of assent, confirmation and ratification are of the most conclusive character, and, by all of the authorities, must be held to preclude and estop these parties from now questioning the transactions complained of. Kerr on Frauds, 296; Pearsoll v. Chapin, 44 Pa. St., 9; Willard’s Eq., 169; Parsons v. Hughes, 9 Paige, 591; Karber v. Nellis, 22 Wis., 215; State v. Langer, 29 id., 69; Grannis v. Hooker, 31 id., 474; Booth v. Ryan, imp., id., 45; Mackey v. Stafford, 43 id., 653.

Mary C. Brewer makes no complaint or claim in this case; but it is obvious, she stands in the same relation to these transactions as her sister Mrs. Reynolds, and would be estop-ped by similar acts of confirmation.

In respect to Emma A. IDewitt, by force of the principles and authorities hereinbefore considered in relation to her, while yet a minor she could do no act and be guilty of no laches or neglect which would conclude her in relation to the trust property or the conduct of the trustees; and after becoming of age she had the option or election to affirm or dis-affirm all of the proceedings and transactions affecting her rights, or to treat the trust, as to her, as closed and fully settled, or as a subsisting trust in the property of the estate, and hold the trustees responsible for their dealings with it and management and disposition of it, and demand of them an accounting. By the bringing of this suit, she disaffirms all the acts of the trustees, and her own acts while yet a minor, and demands such accounting.

There is no proof that, since she became of age, she has done anything except remain in the quiet and silent enjoyment of what she received while still an infant as her share of the proceeds of the estate. No authority has been cited by the learned counsel, and it is probable none can be found, to show that this conduct alone wbuld amount to such acquiescence, assent or confirmation as would preclude her from demanding the relief asked.

As to the statute of which state, Wisconsin or Minnesota, fixing the time when an infant becomes of age, is tobe considered as affecting this plaintiff, Emma A. Hewitt, in her relations to the estate, and in the execution of the deeds, receipts, and confirmations alleged to have been made by her, we have no question but that the statute of Wisconsin governs. It is true that by the will she had no title in fee to the real estate of the testator, either by descent or devise; but her interests are connected with and grow out of the real estate situated in Wisconsin; and the statute of this state governs the entire administration, including the sale of the estate, distribution of the proceeds, and the final settlement, even as to persons residing abroad. The lex rei siten, as well as the law of the domicile of the testator, are both of this state. 3 Redfield on Wills, 31, 35; Chase v. Chase, 2 Allen, 101; 6 Jones’ Eq., 365.

Statutes fixing the age of majority are personal statutes, and unquestionably govern the contracts and transactions of persons within the states where they are in force; but all the transactions between this plaintiff and the executors and the defendants Rogers, Burnham and Beeher in relation to this estate, must be held to have taken place within this state, where by the statute she was still under the disability of infancy.

The only remaining question as affecting her rights is, Has so long a time elapsed since sbe became of age, as to warrant the presumption of her acquiescence in this disposition of her estate, and of her affirmance of her acts done in respect thereto during her infancy? Or in other words, has she been guilty of such laches or unreasonable delay since she became of age, before bringing this suit, as should debar her of the relief she would have been entitled to by greater diligence?

The law and the correct mile in this regard are well expressed in the language of the learned counsel of the respondents in their brief: “ A minor is bound to disaffirm her contracts within a reasonable time after attaining her majority.” This seems to be the rule in all cases, by the later and better authorities. The limit of such reasonable time depeuds upon the circumstances of each case. Hawley v. Cramer, 4 Cow., 717. We cannot hold that in this case such delay has been unreasonable, or that the court should deny the relief she asks, on the ground of laches. She was a resident of the state of Minnesota when she became of age; and there is no proof that she has been in this state, or in the vicinity of the property, or has had any knowledge of any change in its situation or value, since that time.

We shall therefore be compelled to hold that the plaintiff Emma A. Hewitt is entitled to the relief asked.

The court has received aid and assistance from the learned counsel on both sides, by their elaborate briefs and able arguments.

The first and second errors of the circuit court in the rejection of evidence, complained of, “in refusing to allow the plaintiffs to prove that Burnham, Bogers and Beoher had sold a part of the land, and for what price it had beeen sold, and also how much had been realized from sales, prior to June, 1872,” and “ in rejecting evidence showing what lots of land of the same character as the land in question, and which faced upon and abutted it, were sold for at the same time,” may be considered together. The first question might have been pertinent in matters of accounting, but was certainly immaterial in ascertaining the value of the property at the time of the sale; and the second would open a new controversy and side issue, involving an inquiry into various conditions, situations and circumstances of other property, which might not at last approximate to the point of showing the value of the land in question; and at best the evidence would be uncertain and of little weight; and we think the court properly rejected both.

The third error assigned is, as to allowing the witness O’Neal to testify as to the stone quarry on the land purchased by him, and a part of the land in question. The court very properly allowed it, for it showed the quality of the land, and its intrinsic character. And the evidence was properly rejected showing what O’Neal paid for that ¡Dart of the pro¡Derty in October, 1873, and what it was then worth. 1 G-reenl. Ev., §51.

As to the fourth error assigned, on the rejection of the evidence of Geo. W. CP Dell, on cross examination, as to what he would have done “ if he had supposed that the sale .of that land could have been broken up: ” the question involved two subjects of inquiry quite impertinent to the case; the first, as to what he would lime done, instead of what he did do; and the second, his supposition as to his legal rights, instead of his knowledge of the facts; neither of which could possibly have any bearing upon the question of confirmation.

We have now considered all the material questions raised; and it remains only to determine the legal consequences of their decision, in the future proceedings of the case in the circuit court.

The conclusion seems to be inevitable, that the judgment of the circuit court, so far as it affects the plaintiffs George W. O’Dell, Celestia A. O’Dell and Zeruiah Ann Reynolds, must be affirmed, with costs; that so far as it affects the plaintiff Emma A. Dewitt, it must be reversed, with costs; that the complaint and suit stand as to Emma A. Hewitt, plaintiff, against Daniel O. Rogers, George Burnham, and John A. Becker, defendants; and that she have judgment against them for the relief asked in the complaint; and the canse is remanded with directions to the circuit court to proceed according to the opinion.

By the Gourt. — So ordered.

RyaN, C. J., and Lyok, J., took no part.

The respondents asked for a rehearing on the ground that some parts of the “relief asked in the complaint” were inconsistent with the views of this court as expressed in the opinion, and that the instructions to the circuit court respecting the relief to be granted the plaintiff Emma A. Hewitt ought therefore to be modified. The motion was denied, with §25 costs.  