It is insisted that the circuit court obtained no jurisdiction to amend or correct the records of the county court under the appeal from the order mentioned. Sec. 4032, R. S. 1878, is comprehensive in its terms, and seems certainly to warrant such appeal. It says: “In all cases not otherwise provided for, any executor, administrator, trustee, or any person aggrieved by any order, judgment, decree, determination, or denial of the county court . . . may appeal therefrom to the circuit court for the same county,” etc. The act appealed from was within the ordinary judicial functions of the county judge, exercised in conformity •with a plain provision of statute, and involved a substantial right, properly the subject of review. There is no force in the argument that the statute as to appeals does not apply because the. provisions in regard to the amendment of records are grouped by themselves and separate from those portions treating of the general powers of the county court. The remaining question is one of much more difficulty. It is insisted that, upon the record in county court and the proof given in the circuit court, there was nothing to show that a proper notice to heirs and others interested was ever given of the application to admit the Reynolds will to probate, as required by sec. 3787, R. S. 1878. The fact is admitted that there was no proof, by way of affidavit, of the publication of such notice, in the record of the county court, nor is there any entry relating to the same in any of the books in his office. If no such notice was in fact given, all subsequent proceedings based thereon were void as to such persons in interest as did not appear or assent thereto, or have not since supplied such want of appearance by acts *505clearly indicating an assent thereto or a ratification thereof. O'Dell v. Rogers, 41 Wis. 136; Melms v. Pfister, 59 Wis. 186. In Gibbs v. Shaw, 17 Wis. 197, where an administrator’s sale of land was challenged, the sale was held void, because the record failed to disclose any notice to the heirs at law of the time and place of the hearing of the application for leave to sell. In this case the giving of the notice of the time and place of proving the will, as required by statute, was necessary to give the county court jurisdiction to bind the parties in interest. Unless we can say from the record itself and the proof offered that such notice, in fact, was given, the judgment of the circuit court cannot be sustained.
The will of Reynolds was presented to the county judge for probate on June 6, 1891. On that day the judge made an order fixing the time and place for hearing proofs of its due execution. E. M. Lawrence appeared as attorney with Mrs. Heminway. On the hearing in circuit court, the former testified that he was present on July 3d, and remembered getting money from Mrs. Heminway, which he paid to one of the printers of the Dodge County Yolksfreund for printing notice of the proof of the will of Reynolds; that an-affidavit of the publication of the notice was made out and filed by him with Judge Lamoreux; and that he did not pretend to remember the contents of the notice. Mrs. Hem-inway testified that she gave Lawrence money to pay the printers’ fees, and she thought she remembered seeing the notice in the paper, but did not know what kind of a notice it was that she saw. This is substantially all the testimony to be found in the case relating to the notice. It will be noted that no proof was offered as to the contents of the notice or the length of time it was published. It is sufficient, however, to support the finding of the trial court that a notice ivas published.
' We are left to deal with the substance of the notice on the basis of inference. These inferences must be derived *506from the state of the record, and the recitals found in the papers and documents on file. In the order for hearing proofs of the will we find the following: “ It is ordered that the proofs of said instrument be heard before the judge of this court on Saturday, the 3d day of July, A. D. 1891,” etc.; also, “and it is further ordei’ed that public notice thereof be given to the heirs at law of said deceased, and to all other persons interested, by publishing a notice according to law for three successive weeks,” etc. The proceedings were had before the county judge on Friday, July 3d, instead of Saturday, which was the 4th and a legal holiday. The caption of the decree allowing the will is as follows: “ At a general term of county court within and for the county of Dodge, and begun and held at the office of the county judge on the 1st Saturday of July, A. D. 1891, to wit, this 3rd day of July, 189 .” In the body of the decree is found the following recital: “And it appearing that due notice of the time and place of such hearing has been duly given, as required by the order of the court herein made on the 6th day of June, A. D. 1891.” The decree bore date “ July 3d, 1891.” It is not claimed that the order for hearing the proofs of will was published as is sometimes the practice, but that some kind •of a notice was printed, presumably a notice in conformity with sec. 4050, N. S. 1818. So far as material to this discussion, the form of the notice prescribed by this statute reads as follows: “Notice is hereby given that at the-term of the county court to be held ... in said county, on the first Tuesday of-, A. D. 18 — , the following matter will be’ heard and considered,” etc.
We have referred to these matters at length because the contention has arisen that the recitals in the record, with the proof offered, are sufficient to sustain the findings of the circuit court. Unsupported by the record, the evidence is entirely insufficient to support a finding that a proper and legal notice was given — First, because it fails to disclose anything *507regarding the contents of the notice, and this is material because of the mistake in the order naming the day of the hearing as Saturday, July 3d, instead of Friday; second, because it fails to show that the notice, whatever it was, was published for three successive weeks. The authorities are uniform that, in proceedings of this kind, the requirements of the statute as to obtaining jurisdiction must be followed with a reasonable degree of strictness. It is also true that, in an action like this directly attacking the proceeding of the court by which it claims to have attained jurisdiction, there is not the same liberality of intendment to support the proceeding as in cases where it comes in review collaterally. If the recitals in the decree allowing the will had said that notice had been given according to law, or had used words of similar import, we should not hesitate to support the jurisdiction of the county court. Such recitals would' import a compliance with statutory requirements. But the decree in question is quite imperfect in this respect. It says substantially, that notice has been given as required by the order of June 6, 1891. Turning to that order, we find the date of the hearing fixed as Saturday, July 3d. We know that Saturday was July 4th, and a legal holiday upon which the court could do no work. We find, further, that the order directs a publication of a notice “according to law.” Upon reference to the form of the notice prescribed by law, we discover that no day of the month is mentioned in it, and that such hearings are usually advertised for some designated Tuesday of each month. We are thus driven to the inference either that the notice published fixed the day of hearing on the first Saturday of July, or that it fixed said date as mentioned in the order, on “ Saturday, the 3d day of July.” The courtis unanimous in the opinion that a notice of either kind would be deceptive and misleading.
As before remarked, in proceedings of this kind, which involve the disposition of large property interests and the *508settlement of large estates, the requirements of the statute-must be followed with a reasonable degree of strictness in the attempt to secure jurisdiction. Jurisdiction cannot be-supported upon doubtful and uncertain inferences. If the notice in question followed the order fixing the date of hearing, the conclusion that a person glancing at it might easily be deceived or misled is too plain for argument. If the time fixed was the first Saturday in July, the notice was clearly illegal. The deductions to be drawn in either case are not helped out by the parol evidence in the case.
We are not unmindful of the rule that, where the jurisdiction of a matter depends upon the existence of certain facts which the court has authority to determine, its finding thereon is final and conclusive until reviewed in a direct proceeding. In this case the county court had undoubted jurisdiction to hear proofs of the will, but it had no jurisdiction to bind parties in interest unless it secured that right in the manner provided by statute, or it was waived. When the day of hearing arrived, the court might determine for itself whether it had a right to proceed to bind all parties in interest; but that decision is not conclusive, unless supported by the facts. Much greater latitude of intendment is indulged in to support the jurisdiction of such courts when the matter comes up collaterally than in a case where a direct attack is made. In absence of proof of facts upon which the question of jurisdiction rests, no intendments in favor of jurisdiction can be indulged in except such as are supported by the record, if the record attempts to deal with that question. As we have already seen, the record in this case tends rather to confuse than to aid in the solution of this question. We cannot give our assent to the support of proceedings so. manifestly irregular, deceptive, and misleading as are shown by the records in this case.
By the Oourt.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to affirm the order-of the county court.