Alexander Short, of Mobile, and his wife, executed at different times three several mortgages, duly acknowledged and recorded, of the lot and houses thereon in which they lived, and the title to which was in him, to secure payment of three several debts to creditors of said Alexander. The mortgages were all made after the constitution of 1867-8 was put in force, and the mortgagor, Alexander, died in May, 1872, leaving surviving him his wife, the said "Virginia, and three minor children. Against these, and two of the mortgagees, the other mortgagee filed a bill for the ascertainment of the amounts due to the creditors respectively, and for a sale of the property to pay them. The widow made no defense, and a decree fro confesso was rendered against her. Eor the minors, their guardian ad Mem claimed a homestead right in their favor; and the property having been sold, under a decree of the chancellor, for a sum less than the amount of all the debts, he ordered $2,000 of the proceeds to be withheld from the mortgagees, and invested in other property for a homestead of that value.
*315Tbe questions presented for revision arose under article XXV of tbe constitution referred to, relating to “Exempted property..” Tbe sections to be construed are as follows:
Ҥ 2. Every homestead, not exceeding eighty acres of land, and the dwelling and appurtenances thereon, to be selected by the owner thereof, and not in any town, city, or village, or, in lieu thereof, at the option of the owner, any lot in the city, town, or village, with the dwelling and appurtenances thereon, owned and occupied by any resident of this State, and not exceeding the value of two thousand dollars, shall be exempted from sale on execution, or any other final process from a court, for any debt contracted after the adoption of this constitution. Such exemption, however, shall not extend to any mortgage lawfully obtained; but such mortgage, or other alienation of such homestead, by the owner thereof, if a married man, shall not be valid, without the voluntary signature and assent of the wife to the same.
Ҥ 3. The homestead of a family, after the death of the owner thereof, shall be exempt from the payment of any debts contracted after the adoption of this constitution, in all cases, during the minority of the children.
“ § 5. If the owner of a homestead die, leaving a widow, but no children, the same shall be exempt, and the refits and profits thereof shall enure to her benefit.”
These sections, with the same numbers, are retained in article X of the constitution of 1875, modified, however, by a provision which does not affect the case now before us. The policy which is the subject of these constitutional provisions has been adopted in this country at a recent date, but is already established in many of the States. It encountered violent opposition, and has been vindicated with a zealous advocacy. Hence, we can plainly see in the judicial discussions that have arisen out of it, and in the decisions made by the courts, the influence of contrariant prepossessions. The want of harmony in the adjudications it has produced, causes much embarrassment, and can be corrected only by time and legislation.
The clauses above copied from our constitution, it may be difficult to construe, so as to obviate every plausible objection. In the language of them, there is a lack of the precision and fullness requisite to make the meaning clear in its application to each of the great variety of cases to which they may seem to relate. But we must endeavor so to interpret the several sections concerning the subject, as to make the policy of which each outlines a part consistent as a whole. And this we should frankly accept, and carry into *316operation, according to tbe intention of tbe people in adopting it, so far as we are enabled by tbe language employed to ascertain and give effect to such intention. In doing this, however, we are not at liberty to stretch words and expressions beyond their legitimate meaning, or to disregard limitations that are written on the face of the constitution. What are the main features, the substance, rather, of the policy under consideration?
In this State, and in the country generally, it was, until recent times, a well established rule, that all of a person’s property should be subject to the discharge of his debts— that what he lawfully contracted to pay must be paid, though wife and children be deprived of every comfort. Even this was a mitigation of the severity of a former period, which added imprisonment in jail if the debt was not discharged. The law was so rigorous as to produce not only distress, but, in popular opinion, great evü, also, by impairing the efficiency, and discouraging the exertions, of those who were engaged in the various pursuits that promote the welfare of a community. Hence, a change was introduced, which, in the language of the Supreme Court of Michigan, has “a deeper meaning than a mere purpose to secure a present shelter for the husband and wife. It looks to the needs of the social state, as connected with the public welfare, and aims to promote and secure the integrity and unity of those little commonwealths known as families; not merely for the benefit of the members considered as individuals, but with a view to the general good, as found to be measurably bound up with the well-being of these domestic establishments.”— Comstock, v. Comstock, 27 Mich. 101.
But, it was not considered that “the general good,” in this busy age and country, required that families should be tied down to particular portions of the earth’s surface — become adscripti glebce — or that the most valuable property of the country should, under the constraint of a rigid system, be made inalienable, so that the owner of a homestead could not, in any exigency, or by any means, charge a debt upon it, notwithstanding he might be thereby enabled to make his skill and labor available and productive to the greater advantage of himself and his family. The idea was strong, on the one hand, that the property a man owned he should have the right to dispose of; and on the other, that the State ought not to send its officers, on behalf of his general creditors, to take away for their benefit the home in which their debtor sheltered and supported his wife and children, or rested and refreshed himself to strengthen him for his daily work. While, therefore, the fundamental law forbade this to *317be done, without the previous act of the owner authorizing it in a manner which it prescribed, it permitted him, as such owner, and as the natural and most trustworthy guardian of his household, to sell or mortgage his homestead; requiring only, if he was a married man, that his wife should signify her approval of the transaction, by also signing and assenting to the instrument.
But, the property belonging to a man’s homestead might be of large extent and value. It was not the intention of the State to secure to him or his family the means of living in opulence, or in ease, at the expense of his creditors. It is presumed that he who does not pay his debts is poor, and it is only a homestead of moderate extent or value, adapted to a family in that condition, which the constitution makes sacred against invasion by creditors. Therefore, that instrument, in the section first above recited, defines the extent or value of the homestead which it intends to protect, as well as the manner in which it may be aliened or mortgaged. And it was the homestead thus prescribed, with the power of the owner over it so declared, which is referred to in the other sections above cited of the same article in the constitution. If the homestead be of greater extent than eighty acres, or of greater value than $2,000, all beyond was left by the constitution subject to be proceeded against, as authorized by the legislature, for the payment of the owner’s debts ; and with that extent or value, the homestead was made subject to be alienated or rdortgaged by him, or by him and his wife. By statute, the homestead right now is extended to a tract of one hundred and sixty acres situated in the country.
But section 2, while prescribing what shall be the extent of the homestead which the constitution provides for, declares also that it shall be exempt — that is, while it is the homestead of the owner — from sale under execution, or any other final process from a court, for any debt of his contracted after the adoption of the constitution. It says nothing of what shall be done with it, or become of it, when, by reason of the owner’s death, it ceases to be his homestead. In this section 2, the homestead is spoken of only as his. If, Í here-fore, he die, without leaving wife or children, and his e-,. '•ate in the homestead is a fee simple, it must, like his other i\ al estate, being released from the homestead right, descend or go to his heirs or devisees, subject to the payment of his debts, according to the law of descent. — Rev. Code, § 1888. But what shall be done with it, if he leave wife and minor children, or either, surviving him ? Provision was intended to be made for these cases, in sections 3 and 5. By the former it is enacted, that “ the homestead of a family, after *318the death, of the owner thereof, shall be exempt from the payment of any debts contracted after the adoption of this constitution, in all cases during the minority of .the children.” But, though exempted from the payment of debts, the constitution does not declare to whom it shall go. Suppose there be adult children, or heirs, having homes of their own, as well as minors: is the homestead preserved for the former, as well as the latter ? and was it for this exonerated from liability to the claims of creditors ? Suppose the deceased leave a widow also, and minor children: does the widow take any interest in the homestead ?
The constitution does not, in terms, answer either of these questions. But, noticing the change in the phraseology, and that in section 3 the homestead is spoken of as that of the family, instead of as that of the owner, it must be held, that the exemption is for the benefit of the family, and not of the adult heirs, and for the benefit of the widow as a part of the family. And construing this section in connection with section 5 (supra), we are of opinion, that the widow’s right to the homestead would continue during her life, if the estate which her husband had in the homestead property should continue so long. But, whether there be a widow or not, and, if there be, whether she live long, or die soon, the homestead shall be exempt “in all cases during the minority of the children.” And it was probably in contemplation of such contingencies, and of the possible claims of adult heirs, or of devisees, that the clause, “in all cases during the minority of the children,” was added to section 3.
2. Let us next inquire, what title the owner of a homestead must have in the property composing it, and how it may affect the duration of the homestead right. In Pizzala v. Campbell (46 Ala. 35), our predecessors held, that a homestead right could not exist in a lease-hold estate — property held by lease. They were of opinion, that the interest of the widow (who was a party to that cause) must be a life estate in the homestead — a freehold; and that it, therefore, could not be supported by an estate less than a freehold. But this unnecessarily limits the benefit of the law, to the disadvantage of the needy persons for whose comfort it was enacted. 'Why should the widow be turned out from the shelter of a home, immediately after her husband’s death, only because, the estate being a leasehold, she might not be able to occupy it during her whole life ? If the doctrine be correct in reference to a lease for a short term, it would be so in respect to one for thirty, or fifty, or ninety-nine years; and this, although the rent may have been paid in advance, or be only a peppercorn, payable annually. It seems to us, that the reason of *319the law, and the purpose to provide for persons in a necessitous condition, which inspired the, adoption of it, were lost sight of in the formation of the opinion in that case; and we are unable to yield it our assent.
In several other States, decisions directly contrary have been made. “A homestead right,” says Smyth in his work on Homestead and Exemption, “ may exist in lands which are held by a less estate than a fee simple; in fact, it may exist where a person has no estate whatever, but a mere naked possession. The homestead right does not depend upon the character of the title held by the party claiming it: it is impressed on the land, to the extent of the interest of the claimant in it; not on the title merely.” — § 114. In Spencer v. Geissman (37 Cal. 96), it was held, that “a party having a naked possession only of land, the title being in a stranger, may acquire a homestead right thereto, as to every body but the owner.” And in Brooks v. Hyde (Ib. 367), the same court said, of persons wrongfully in possession of land: “By a dedication to homestead use, they, of course, acquire no title to the land, which they did not have before, and no additional protection against the claim of the true owner; but, as against their creditors, the possession of the land is as much protected by the homestead law, as if they had a fee simple.”
These citations are made, only to show the view courts have taken of the nature of what is called the homestead right. We refer to another decision which has our unqualified approval: It is that made in Blue v. Blue (38 Ill. 10), in which it was maintained, that “ one who holds the equitable title to land, under a contract of purchase, is the owner thereof within the meaning of the homestead law; he holds that character of estate to which a homestead right may attach, and which will be protected from levy and sale as against third persons. Whether the debtor holds in fee simple, for life, or for a term of years, the reasons for affording the exemption apply with equal force.” The law, doubtless, intends, if the estate which the owner of a homestead had was an estate in fee simple, that his widow’s right to the homestead shall continue during her life; but there does not seem to be any good reason for not also holding, that if the estate does not endure so long, the widow’s homestead right shall continue while the estate lasts.
What, now, was the right, if any, which the family of Alexander Short took in the homestead, when he died ? He and his wife mortgaged it in the manner authorized by the law then in force. We have no doubt of the validity of the mortgages, and that they were sufficiently proved. By them, his *320estate in tbe property was reduced to an equity of redemption. The legal title passed from him, and could be regained only by payment of the mortgage debts. He stood, in relation to the title, in the situation of one who has contracted for the purchase of real estate upon credit, and for the right to take possession of and occupy it, with his family, under a stipulation that he should receive a conveyance of it only upon payment of the purchase-money. In one case, there is (as in Blue v. Blue, supra) a right or equity to purchase; in the other, a right or equity to repurchase, or redeem. Mr. Short’s homestead was of property in which he had only such a right. If he, or his representatives, had made, or should make, the stipulated payments to the mortgagees, the homestead right, if any, would have been or would be enlarged by the consequent defeasance of the titles of the latter. Otherwise, it must cease, when the right by which it was held is overthrown by the superior titles outstanding in the mortgagees.
The idea of the chancellor seems to have been, that the mortgages having been executed during Mr. Short’s life, if not foreclosed, ceased to be valid when he died — that they could operate only against Ms homestead right, and during his life. Says the chancellor: “If Mrs. Short is left in the possession of the homestead till the death of her husband, either in connection with him, or singly, then * * the constitution endows her with the right to the homestead by a different rule; and having signed the mortgage, or other alienation, for another and a different purpose, such signature and assent will not deprive her of the right, or estop her from setting up the right, in the new relation into which she has entered by the death of her husband, as his widow.” "We can not perceive in the constitution any intention thus to defeat the title by mortgage, which it expressly authorized to be created; and we think it inconsistent with the manifest purpose of the article under consideration, to hold that a security which it declares may be made, shall be so ephemeral or infirm,
3. It has been suggested, also, that although not made void, yet, under section three, the mortgages can not be foreclosed after the death of Mr. Short, “ during the minority of the children.” What is said above is applicable to this idea also. And we may add, that if this view be accepted as correct, the lending of money upon bond, or note, and mortgage of real estate, must almost cease, and the sale of such property upon credit, for a part of the price, become a rare transaction. Eor who can know how soon the mortgagor or purchaser may die, and how long his widow may not survive, *321or tbe “minority of tbe children” continue? Mortgagees, moreover, would be compelled promptly, and often oppressively, to bave tbeir mortgages foreclosed, wben tbeir own feelings, and tbe interests of tbe mortgagor’s family, might otherwise incline' them to be indulgent. Indeed, it is difficult to foresee tbe embarrassment and distress that would result from the maintenance of such a doctrine.
Tbe constitutional .clauses under consideration, be it observed, exempt tbe homestead from liability for debts only- — • for tbe demands of creditors as such- — and intercept tbe descent to heirs or devisees, in favor of tbe widow, or minor children, or tbe family. They do not undertake or profess to secure it against the claims of persons having a superior title to that of tbe occupiers of tbe homestead, whether such title be wholly independent of, and paramount to that of tbe claimant of the homestead, or be that of bis lessor, or of bis vendor, who has retained tbe title as a security for tbe payment of tbe purchase-money; or of a mortgagee, who bolds it as a security for tbe payment of a debt. That a debt exists, collateral to tbe title, and for which it is held as a security, does not prevent the bolder from availing himself of that title, if it be valid, either in an action of ejectment, or in a suit in equity to carry it into effect. Power to make a mortgage being expressly conceded by a constitutional provision, we can not bold that tbe mortgage shall be invalidated, either permanently or for a time, by construction of a phrase of doubtful meaning, in a subsequent paragraph.
It results from the views we bave expressed, that, independently of any other objection to it, tbe homestead right of tbe widow and children of Mr. Short, being in property wherein be bad only an equity of redemption, and being dependent for continuance on tbe extinguishment of these duly executed mortgages, must yield to tbe rights of tbe mortgagees, and that tbe chancellor erred in withholding from tbe latter $2,000 of tbe proceeds of the sale, to be applied to tbe pinchase of another home.
If there bad been a surplus after tbe mortgages were satisfied, out of that it might bave been correct, under a subsequent statute on tbe subject, to reserve a sum not exceeding that mentioned above, for tbe benefit of tbe family of Mr. Short, against tbe claims of creditors, if there are any, who became such after tbe adoption of tbe statute.
So much of tbe decree of tbe chancellor as authorizes tbe withholding of $2,000 of tbe proceeds of sale of tbe homestead from tbe mortgagees, for tbe benefit of tbe children, or wife and children of Mr. Short, must be reversed and set aside, and tbe cause remanded.