The case before us is one of not unfrequent occurrence in this state, where money has been secured as a loan, upon the faith of a hen as security upon a lot or lots of land, and in which the homestead indications are attempted to be made to appear *500much stronger upon the trial than they did actually appear at the time the loan was secured.
Here, Peregoy was occupying a lot, upon which was situated a dwelling, outhouses and other appliances necessary to constitute a home. Adjoining this he had purchased another lot, upon which was also situated a dwelling, outhouses, etc., necessary to make it a home. To all appearances he owned two places,- occupying the one and renting the other. Under this condition of affairs he applied to Sam Sterne, who, as guardian of the minors, had money to loan, and succeeded in obtaining a loan, upon the faith of a deed of trust upon the place not occupied by him, as security therefor. Subsequently he conveyed the place to his son, taking his notes for the purchase money thereof; he delivered the son’s notes to the appellee, Kottwitz, who had then become the guardian of the minors.
Mrs. Peregoy did not sign and acknowledge either the trust deed or conveyance to the son. Kottwitz sued on the notes, secured the foreclosure of the hen, and purchased the property. He then sued Peregoy and Waters for the place. Mrs. Peregoy intervened and asserted the homestead claim, averring that they had used and claimed the same as part of their homestead; that the use consisted in planting and cultivating a garden thereon, getting water out of the cistern, etc. This was denied by the plaintiffs. The issue of fact thus made was submitted to the jury for their determination, and the finding thereon was against the appellants.
It is urged by appellants that the court erred in its charge to the jury; that an erroneous statement of the law applicable to the case was thereingiven; that the jury was misled by the same; and that it was a charge upon the weight of evidence.
The charge must be taken and considered as a whole. And after carefully considering the same in this way, we *501have been unable to find any such error in the charge as would warrant a reversal of the judgment.
If the money was loaned, and the deed of trust executed, before appellants asserted a homestead claim to, and used the place as a homestead, then the homestead right could not thereafter attach to the same so as to defeat the trust deed. And in such case the husband, independent of the wife, could make any disposition of the property that he saw proper, to discharge the hen.
The charge of the court was in accord with this view of the law, and was a correct exposition of the same. Nor do we think that the charge is subject to the other objections taken thereto.-
No exceptions were taken, and no special charge asked upon the trial. This being the fact, it is not every error in the charge that will be ground for reversal. We think the verdict of the jury is amply sustained by the evidence.
The constitution protects from forced sale the homestead of a family in a city, town or village, consisting of a lot or lots, not to exceed in value five thousand dollars at the time of their destination as such, without reference to the value of any improvements thereon. It may be assumed that the real and important object and purpose of the provision was to protect our women and children in a home against the rapacity of the eager creditor, and the improvident husband or father. It is the home, whether it consists of a lot or lots, that is thus protected by an unyielding and inflexible constitutional provision. Anri it is the home, only, around which this protecting shield is thrown, by the law of the land. Our state stands pre-eminent in this respect; and that eminence is due to the wisdom and statesmanship of such of the fathers of our jurisprudence as the lamented Hemphill, Lipscomb and Wheeler, whose names are hallowed with the most cherished memories of the young republic and the infant state.
*502No more sacred duty can be imposed upon the courts of justice than to preserve and vigorously enforce this provision in its true spirit and intent, to carry out its prime object and purpose, and thus not only to attain that object, but also that there might eventuate therefrom all the cumulative and incidental benefits that werefiiscovered and appreciated by those jurists who originated the idea and formulated it into a constitutional provision. Its enforcement is the bulwark that protects the babe and the mother, the orphan and the widow, from penury, destitution and want. Its enforcement concentrates our affections upon the home and the soil upon which we five, and in a manner makes us fixtures and permanent citizens.
But while the courts should be urged by such considerations to promptly extend the arm of justice in protecting these rights, there is a corresponding duty to prevent the right from being converted into a cover for covin and fraud.
Evil attends the greatest good. So, as a rule, the greater the benefit conferred by law, the more insidious and active the fraud in attempting to pervert it. There will ever be two sides to the question; and should the courts devote entire attention to the one, corruption and fraud will steal in upon the other, and convert the right into the wrong and benefits into curses.
The constitution protects the home, but will never tolerate a fraud.
We are of "the opinion that there is no error in the judgment, and that it ought to be affirmed.
Affirmed.
[Opinion delivered March 22, 1881.]