delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a contest between the appellant, who was the wife of G. G. Isaacs, and the appellee, guardian of H. B. Isaacs and others, as to the priority of their respective liens against the estate of G. G. Isaacs, who is now deceased, such estate being insufficient to pay the claims of both.
This case was once before in this court. Isaacs v. Isaacs,
In pursuance of the foregoing mandate the Circuit Court of Russell county referred the cause back to its commissioner to report the matters thereby directed. The report of the commissioner was returned in due time, ascertaining the real estate owned by G. G. Isaacs, subject to the liens of his creditors, and further ascertaining that under the decrees for alimony and suit money there was due the appellant, Minnie L. Isaacs, $2,028.25 as of April 1, 1914, which amount he found to be a prior lien to that of the appellee amounting as of the same date to $2,371.79. The circuit court sustained exceptions taken by the appellee to this finding and held that the appellant had a prior lien only for such sums as had accrued under her decrees up to the date of the judgment confessed in favor of the appellee, and that all instalments for alimony which fell due after that date were subsequent in priority to such judgment. From the decree carrying out this view of the circuit court the present appeal has been taken.
So far as we have been able to discover, the question here presented has never been before this court. As said, however, in our former opinion, supra, we have no doubt “that the lien, to the extent reported, in favor of Minnie L. Isaacs, is a valid and subsisting lien.” Our statutes have invested the courts with broad powers in the matter of granting alimony and otherwise'’compelling the husband to provide for his wife, and there can be no question that a decree for alimony and suit money constitutes, under section 3567 of the Code of 1904, a lien' upon all of the real estate of the debtor.
We are further of opinion that reason and the weight of authority favor the view that a decree for alimony payable in monthly instalments during the lifetime of the beneficiary, constitutes a lien in her favor upon' the husband’s real estate from the date of such decree, not only for the instalments presently due but for those that shall fall due under such decree in the future. If the whole alimony, due and to become due under the decree, were not thus secured by the lien of the decree making the allowance, the provision for the wife could be easily defeated by. the act of the husband in selling and conveying his real estate, or, as in the case before us, by confessing a judgment in favor of some creditor large enough to render wholly ineffectual the decree for alimony, thereby leaving the wife without the means of support. Under our statutes the powers of the court are broad in making, in addition to the divorce, such further decree as it shall deem expedient concerning the estate and maintenance of the parties. The power thus reposed in the courts would be practically abrogated unless the decree allowing alimony constituted a lien upon the husband’s real estate and as such extended to, covered, and secured the instalments of such alimony as thejr respectively fell due in the future.
In the case of Goff v. Goff,
We have examined the adjudications in the several States to which our attention has been called and find that, while there is conflict of authority, the better reason supports the conclusion that a decree for alimony creates a lien on the husband’s real estate which extends to and includes the instalments of such alimony falling due in the future.
It follows from what has been said that the decree appealed from must be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion.
Reversed.
