1. Assuming that the sheep levied upon were purchased and paid for with the proceeds of cotton grown on the realty after it wras set apart as a homestead, and of hauling done by the debtor with animals embraced in the exempt personalty, (as a portion of the evidence in the record indicates, though other portions of it strongly tend to negative any such conclusion) the question is, do these sheep constitute a part of the homestead property, or are they out of the protection of the homestead and exemption laws, and subject to an ordinary judgment against the debtor ? According to the constitution of 1868, (Code, §5135), both realty and personalty are to be valued at the time they are set apart, and there is no intimation that if the value afterwards changes, any deficiency is to be made up, or any excess is to be pruned off. It is not the policy of the constitution to maintain permanently an estate in realty worth two thousand dollars, and an estate in personalty worth one thousand, but to allow these values as a maximum to start with, and leave families to the hazard of depreciation or loss, and to the chances of appreciation or gain. The property of both kinds is valued once for all, and no subsequent valuation is contemplated. And from the time it is set apart, the constitution dedicates it “ to the sole use and benefit” of the family. Neither the debtor nor his ordinary creditors are to have any rights in it, or powers over it, inconsistent with the enjoyment by the family of this use and benefit. One of the uses of land is to produce crops : and to enjoy the use of land is to take the crops, while they remain in specie, and their proceeds, after thej are converted by sale or exchange into other property. The use of animals fit for labor, is in the labor, or what it produces, or that into which 3uch produce is converted. As to the labor of the debtor himself, that is subject to his own will. If he employs it on the homestead land, or in connection with the exempt personalty, what it produces inures to the family ; but if he employs it sepa*565rately from these, its produce is subject to his debts. We cannot suppose that in making provision for families, the constitution intended that the head of a family should not be allowed to cultivate the farm or haul with the animals, without subjecting the proceeds, or a part of them, to seizure by his creditors. In many instances, perhaps in most instances, vain indeed would be the homestead and exemption, if the labor and management of the head of the family were'not added to make the property productive. If by industry, economy and thrift, a surplus is produced, over and above what is consumed by the family, and this surplus is invested, the investment, we think, goes to enlarge the corpus, just as it would do in the case of an ordinary trust estate. There is a public policy in encouraging families to save, and in not pressing them with motives to spend or waste all their income. To stimulate production and discourage extravagant living, is for the best interest of the state. In average human nature, there is a deep seated antagonism on the part of debtors, and often on the part of their families, towards creditors who press for payment; and if the surplus income from homesteads, whether before or after investment, was exposed to seizure by those very creditors to baffle whom, perhaps, the homestead right was asserted, the practical effect' would be, surplus income from such estates would soon become very scarce. None would be produced, or if produced, the scale of consumption would be varied so as to absorb and exhaust it. The right to seize would thus prove barren to creditors, and the wealth of the state receive no accession from the millions of capital locked up in homesteads. Both policy and principle are with the rule as we lay it down, and we know of no precedent against it. Of course, after the termination of the homestead estate, whatever remains, either of original corpus or of the accumulations, will be accessible to creditors.
2. The evidence was such as to authorize the verdict notwithstanding the error of the court in charging the jury, but not such as to constrain it. With correct instructions, *566the finding might have been different, inasmuch as it is not clear under the evidence, without settling the credibility of the conflicting witnesses, whether the sheep were purchased and paid for as the debtor contends, or whether he merely reclaimed them after having sold them to a purchaser who died without paying for them. There had best be a new trial.
Judgment reversed.
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