(аfter stating the facts). The only question presented for consideration is, whether the debts reduced to judgments are еntitled to be paid from the real estate, and this defence be open to the heirs-at-law.
The act of 1869-70, fоund in Bat. Rev., ch. 55, sec. 26, forbids the sale under execution for any debt, of “the reversionary interest in any lands included in a homestead,” until after its termination, and meanwhile, “that the statute of limitations shall not run against any debt owing by the holder of thе homestead affected by this section during the existence of his interest in the homestead.” This enactment is construed in
McDonald
v.
Dickson,
Of the heirs-at-law of the intestate made defendants in the рroceeding, two were under age when it commenced, and the youngest, though married, remains still an infant, so that the limitаtion has not yet expired, and, under the statute, the action is premature. The statute itself, however, is not brought forwаrd in The Code, and ceased to operate on and after the 1st of November, 1883, when the statute of limitations again began to run for the protection of the debtor’s estate against the judgments.
*655
The only land left by the intestate so far as the record discloses, is that assigned as exempt in his life-time, ’and again, unnecessarily, after his death, at the instance of his infant children, assigned to them, and which land it is now sought to subject to the judgment debts. As the judgments were rendered upon contracts entered into in 1866, and can be enforced only against the homestead, the petitioner asks that it be sоld and converted into assets for their satisfaction. The homestead allotment is not
ipso facto
void even as against debts made prior to the adoption of the constitution. It becomes so only when the debtor has no other proрerty which can be subjected to their payment, and the appropriation of this becomes necessary.
Albright
v.
Albright,
The creditors, by their long delay, have acquiesced in the allotment of the exemption in the land, and as they nоw are compelled to protect their judgments under the provision for suspending the statute of limitations to prеvent a bar, they cannot be allowed to impeach the validity of the exemption on the ground that it is ineffectual against them. If the exemption is repudiated, and the land is thus declared to have been exposed to thеir demand, then the judgments are ban-ed, for.it is only when the creditor is interrupted by the lawful assignment of the land, and cannot, рroceed against it, that the suspending claim has any force or operation upon the debt. The creditors cannot now occupy any better position than results from regarding the homestead as effectual against them. So that the judgments could only be enforced as others, after the expiration of the exemption, and this рeriod has not arrived. The repeal of the act, which puts in force the statute of limitations, must, however, remit thе creditors to their original .rights to proceed against this property, and unless they can do so, they may lose their remedy altogether.
It is true, as is said in
Markham
v.
Hicks,
We have already said that the creditors having recognized, by their inаction, the assignment of the homestead, and seeking themselves exemption from the statute of limitations under the рroviso of the act, could not now claim the benefit and repudiate the burden. But when the statute is revived and beсomes active by its repeal, the creditors ought also to be at liberty to proceed and assert their lеgal rights, otherwise, while not now barred, they may be barred by waiting until the children all arrive at full age. The action, therefоre, though prematurely brought, it would seem ought to be allowed now to go on and its legal results reached. In other words the petitioner ought to be allowed to sell the land subject to the homestead, as but for his recognition afоresaid, he could have sold the land free from it.
This conclusion has been arrived at upon a full consideration of what has transpired, and a fair adjustment of the conflicting claims of the parties to the action.
There is nо sufficient reason for arresting the proceeding and to compel its institution anew, when no advantage is to аccrue to the defendants thereby.
We have not adverted to the irregular manner of this proceeding in pаssing under the jurisdiction of the Superior Court, for it seems not to have been raised, but we do not wish our silence to be misconstrued into an approval of it.
We therefore declare the ruling in the court below, dismissing the petition, erroneous, and it must be reversed, and the cause proceed in the manner indicated in this opinion. To this end let it be certified.
Error. Reversed.
