We cannot concur in the view taken by His Honor. The most that can be said towards impeaching the decree of the court of equity, the vacation of which is the purpose of the present action, is, that it was irregular. It was the work of a court of competent jurisdiction pertaining to the whole cause, its subject matter, and its parties, and was but an instance of that general authority over the estates of infants, which the courts of equity have so long exercised, that it is now found impossible to trace the source from which it was derived. 2 Story Eq., § 1328.
The plaintiff’s counsel indeed insisted, that in this state *201the power of the court of equity to sell the lands of an infant at the instance of his guardian, was a special one, and wholly derived from the statute of 1827 (Rev. Code, ch. 54, § 32), and that unless every requirement of the statute was strictly complied with, no attempted sale of an infant’s lands could be valid ; that in such case it would be an act void, because done wholly without authority, and not one irregularly done within the scope of the court’s authority.
If the premises assumed by counsel be true, then certainly his conclusion is correct. For all the authorities agree in saying, that those powers which are created and conferred specially by statute, are to be strictly construed, and whatever formalities are prescribed must be punctually fulfilled, as the courts have no power to dispense with the requirements of a statute, and most especially is this principle rigidly adhered to', in the case of judicial and probate sales. Freeman on Void Judicial Sales, § 53; Leary v. Fletcher, 1 Ired., 259.
But since the decision made in Williams v. Harrington, 11 Ired., 616, there can be no longer room for doubt as to the extent of the jurisdiction vested in the courts of equity of this state, to dispose of the estates, whether real or personal, of infants for their benefit. That was an action at law it is true. But the very point upon which it hinges, was the character and extent of the jurisdiction of the court, whose decree was then the subject of attack — if general, it could nor be collaterally impeached, but if special, then it was open to attack. Without any sort of reservation, it was declared that in this state the courts of equity, as constituted by the act of 1782, had the full jurisdiction and authority over the estates of infants, that was ever lodged in the court of chancery, than which no jurisdiction over any subject could be more extensive; and that in its exercise, the acts of those courts were to be regarded as those of a tribunal possessing a general jurisdiction over the subject, *202and nut a limited one, with power to proceed only for special purposes, or in a particular way. To the same effect is Campbell v. Baker, 6 Jones, 255, in which it is also said that the act of 1827 was never understood either by the courts or the profession, as having ousted the prior jurisdiction of the courts over the subject. Also Rowland v. Thompson, 73 N. C., 504, in which it was held that a court of equity, as the guardian of infants, had full power in its discretion to authorize or confirm a private sale of lands belonging to such a person.
We have been thus particular in determining the question of jurisdiction, because upon it depends another principle decisive, as we regard it, of the rights of the parties, and indicating very clearly that so much of the judgment in the court below as annulled the title acquired by the purchaser at the master’s sale, is erroneous.
The title acquired at a judicial sale of lands made by a court of competent jurisdiction, is not rendered invalid by reason of the reversal of the decree for irregularity in the proceedings, of which the purchaser could have no notice. There is no case in our reports, coming within our observation, that goes the full length of this doctrine. The nearest approach to it is in Chambers v. Brigman, 75 N. C., 487, in which the title of the purchaser (he being also the plaintiff in the proceeding) was held inoperative, upon the ground that the defendant had not been really a party to it, and Mr. Justice RodmaN expresses a doubt whether it could have been done, in case a stranger without notice had been the purchaser. A similar doubt as to the effect of a decree reversing for fraud a judgment at law, upon the title of a purchaser at execution sale, was expressed in Dudley v. Cole, 1 Dev. & Bat. Eq., 429. We find, however, the principle broadly laid down in Rorer on Judicial Sales, §§ 138, 139, expressed almost in the very terms we have stated it. In Gaudy v. Hall, 36 Ill., 313, the supreme court of that state *203thus state it: If the court has jurisdiction to pronounce the decree, that is, if it has jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter, then upon principles of universal law, acts performed, and rights acquired by third persons, under the authority of the decree and while it remains in force, must be sustained, notwithstanding its subsequent reversal. And again the principle was recognized and acted upon by that court in Fergus v. Woodworth, 44 Ill., 374. In Vorhees v. The Bank, 10 Peters, 450, and Gray v. Brignardillo, 1 Wall., 627, the supreme court of the United States sáy, that it is a well settled principle of law, that the decree of a court, which has jurisdiction of the person and subject matter, is binding until reversed; and although it may be reversed, yet all rights acquired under it while in force and which it authorized will be protected, and all that a third person is required to observe is, whether the court did in fact possess such jurisdiction and exercise it, and that the order, upon the faith of which he purchased, was made and authorized the sale.
In such cases the law proceeds upon the ground, as well of public policy, as upon principles of equity. Purchasers should be able to rely, upon the judgments and decrees of the courts of the country; and though they may know of their liability to be reversed, yet they have a right so long as they stand, to presume that they have been rightly and regularly rendered, and they are not expected to take notice of the errors of the court, or the laches of parties.
A contrary doctrine would be fatal to judicial sales and values of title derived under them, as no one would buy at pfices at all approximating the true value of property, if he supposed that his title might, at some distant day, be declared void, because of some irregularity in the proceeding altogether unsuspected by him, and of which he had no opportunity to inform himself. Under the operation of this rule, occasional instances of hardship (as this one of the present plaintiffs seems to be) may occur, but a different *204one would much more certainly result in mischievous consequences, and the general sacrifice of property sold by order of the courts. Hence it is, that a purchaser who is no party to the proceeding, is not bound to look beyond the decree, if the facts necessary to give the court jurisdiction appear on the face of the proceedings. If the jurisdiction has been improvidently exercised, it is not to be corrected at his expense, who had á right to rely upon the order of the court as an authority emanating from a competent source— so much being due to the sanctity of judicial proceedings.
In the case of Williams v. Harrington, supra, the plaintiff’s land had been sold under an order of the court of equity, upon a petition filed for him by one Chalmers, professing to be his guardian. He sought to avoid the sale upon the ground that he had no such guardian, and as a means of testing its validity sued at law for the land. The court held that, admitting it to be true that his petition was filed by one not truly his guardian, its only effect was to render the proceeding irregular, and that it could not be collaterally assailed. So we say in this case, the proceeding under which the plaintiff’s land was sold was certainly irregular; but being nothing more, and possessing so much virtue as not to admit of its impeachment by any other tribunal, then, upon every principle of policy, or strict right, it should not be allowed to be reversed (though in a direct proceeding in the same court) at the cost of an innocent purchaser.
If injured, the plaintiff must look for redress, either to him who falsely assumed to be her guardian, or the officer who incautiously passed her estate into his hands. Though, if it be true that an appointment of a guardian for her was really, made, and that the omission of the clerk to record the same is the source of trouble between the parties, it .would be better, perhaps, to have the record of the county court so amended as to show the truth— which amendment can be *205made under the sanction of the superior court. Stanly v. Massingill, 63 N. C., 558.
The plaintiff’s action must be dismissed with costs to all the defendants except the defendant Schonwald.
Error. Judgment accordingly.