The ¡daintiffs in the court below claimed •, title to the land in controversy as the heirs at law of Glover Hal], . deceased, and the defendant claimed to have acquired the title by virtue of a sale directed to be .made by a decree of the Orphans’ Court of Shelby, which was rendered upon the petition ..of John Singleton, the administrator of,.the decedent, Hall, ,'f he only question, therefore, in reference to the titles, is, whetli- . ,er the proceedings of the Orphans’ Court, and the sale under ;.them, divested the.title .of .the,.plaintiffs as heirs at law. The ^petition.of the .administrator sets forth that the personal estate , of the intestate.w;as insufficient .to joay his debts.,, and.therefore prayed that the land be sold .for .that purpose. In .his .petition Jic gave a description of,the land .and set forth, the heirs at law, -.who were then infants. The court directed notice to the heirs, •appointed guardians, ad litem.for.them, ..and on. the 17th clay of ..January, 1834, proof having.been.taken as in chancery causes, . a decree was rendered,' ordering the land to be sold in pursuance ,pf .the statute, in such casos.ma.de and. provided, and by the do-*371¡cree, Henry Robertson, William Thweate, and-George B.Nashc, were appointed commissioners to sell the same to the highest bidder, for cash, and to make report to the said-Orphans’ Court at a term to be holden on -the first Monday in March.next.thereafter. At the Ju’y term of said court the commissioners reported that they sold.the land on the first-day of March, 1831, to John Singleton, for the sum of three hundred and fifty dollars. This report was ordered to be received and recorded, but no further decree was rendered, nor were the commissioners directed to convey the land to the purchaser. They however did, on the 16th of October, 1834, execute to him a deed, purporting to bo by virtue of the power in them vested by the decree of the Orphans’ Court.
This is a brief statement of the defendant’s title, and the only ■question raised on this point of the case is whether the commis-sioners had authority to execute the deed 1 That the court had jurisdiction under the act of 1822 to order a sale of the land for the reason set forth in the petition, is clear; but this act contemplates that the final decree shall be rendered, and the •commissioners empowered to make titles, after their report of the sale has bec-n returned to the court. The language of this poiv •tion of the act is, <£ The said court shall, upon coming in of the •commissioners’ report, render a final decree in the cause, and if •the terms of the sale have been complied with by the purchaser .of i/ he estate, the commissioners shall be directed by such final de_--oree to convey the estate sold, to the purchaser.” — Clay’s Dig.. 225, § 21. We consider it as a question settled by the decisions of this court, that when the sale is ordered under this act the decree directing the sale is interlocutory, and docs not give the commissioners appointed to make the sale the power to execute a deed to the purchaser. Before they can exercise this power they must make report to the Orphans’ Court, upon which a confirmatory decree may be rendered, and the commissioners thereby authorized to execute the deed, But, until this is done, until a decree is rendered ordering a ponvcyance or deed to be executed, the conunissioners have uo authority to .execute one, and their deed without authority does not divest the title of the heirs at law.—Lightfoot v. The Heirs of Lewis, 1 Ala. 475; Cummings et al. v. McCullough, Adm’r., 5 ib. 324, 337; Perkins v. Winter, 7 ib. 864. As it is necpss.ary th$f the final de^ *372cree should direct the commissioners to execute a deed to'the purchaser in order to divest the title of the h'eirs,-it is manifest that-the deed shown to hav'e been executed by the commissioners in this case does not hav'e that effect,- for it cannot be pretended' that there was a final dteeree directing a conveyance to be made. At law, therefore, the title still remains in the plaintiffs,- and they' iuust recover in an action in which the legal title alone can1 be considered.
2. The defendant also1 showed a? deed for the same land exe--cuted by Beverly Blaxton and Emily, his wife; and it appeared that Emily Blaxton was the wife of Glover Hall at the time of his death, and was entitled, as his widow,- to dower in the land-in question, but her dower had never been assigned or allotted to-her by metes and bounds. After the death of Glover Hall, she' and her children resided on; the land, and upon her intermarriage with Blaxton,-they both joined in a conveyance of the whole land,, purporting to convey all their interest therein for the sum of one hundred dollars. The question' raised- upon this evidence isr whether a widow who is entitled to dower in the lands of her deceased husband can sell the same under our statutes, and by'her deed enable her alienee to defeat an ejectment brought by the heirs at law,, her dower not having been assigned or allotted to her. Under our law a widow is entitled to- retain the dwelling-house in which her husband most usually dwelt next before his death, together with the outhouses and plantation thereunto- belonging, free from molestation,, or rent, until her dower is assign-ed her, (Clay’s Dig.-173,) and we have held that she may occupy the premises, either in person or by her' tenants, until her' dower is allotted to her, (Inge v.- Murphy, 14 Ala. 289,-) and notwithstanding her'second marriage, she and" her husband cannot be ejected by the heir until her dower is assigned.—Shelton v. Carroll et al. 16 Ala. 146. I do- not intend to controvert the propriety of these decisions.- I think they are in accordance with a fair'and just exposition- 'of the statute,- which intended to give to the widow the means of support until her dower was allotted to'her.- It was on this ground that we held, in- the case of Inge v. Murphy, that she could-occupy either in person or by' her tenant, and it was said- im that case “ that it might be that she could only derive a support from the premises by renting them, and to hold that herremoval from- the premises would de*373feat ber right, might in many instancesfiefeat the very object -of the statute, which is .a provision for the wife until her dower is allotted to her.” I also think it .clear that the marriage of the widow does not work a forfeiture of this statutory right. We so held in the case of Shelton v. Carroll et al., but we think these decisions carry the right of the widow as far as it -can legally go, and wc are not disposed to press it further.
At the last term, in the ease of Cook et al. v. Matilda Webb, we held that the widow had not such an estate in the lands of her deceased husband as was the subject of levy and sale under execution at law, before her dower was assigned her; that the right given her by our statute until dower was assigned, was personal to herself, a mere privilege to occupy the premises, and receive the profits for her support and maintenance. Now I think it .clear that if she has no such estate as can be sold under execution at law, she has none that she can alienate by deed, so as to enable her alienee to defeat an ejectment by .the heir at law. If she had any fixed or determinate interest or title that she could sell to another, I could see no reason why that interest could not be sold by her creditors under execution. But as it is settled that she lias no such interest or estate in the premises as can be sold under execution, this is conclusive to my mind that she has no such interest or estate as she .can alienate to another. If a widow, before her dower is allotted to her, sell her right or privilege to another, the heir'at law may bring ejectment against her vendee and recover. The court correctly expounded the law to she jury, and the judgmentmust beaffirmed.