Our statute, unlike former legislation in this State, and unlike ohe statutes in many other States, does not confine the exemption of the homestead to the head of the family. Section 2507 of the Code of 1886, following the provision of our constitution, secures this right “to every *731resident of this State.” The plaintiff in this action, Beard, claims the land in controversy, as purchaser at mortgage sale, the mortgage executed by Johnson and wife in 1884. That mortgage Avas executed, acknowledged and certified, in sufficient form to convey lands not a homestead, but not sufficient to convey the homestead. The sole question in this case is, Avhether the claim of homestead exemption, set up by Johnson in the court beloAV, was a bar to the action. The trial court held that it was.
The Code of 1886 Avent into effect December 25, 1887. Section 2507 of that Code stands in the place of section 2820 of the Code of 187 6. The language of the later compilation differs from the former one, and from the provision of the constitution. Under the former, the phrase “owned and occupied by any resident of this State,” is expressed as one of the conditions of exemption. These words are omitted from section 2507 of the Code of 1886. Whether this omission requires us to give to the language a different interpretation as to occupancy, or whether the word “homestead,” and other words found in that section and in sections 2539 and 2544, Code of 1886, are tantamount to the adjective “occupied,” we need not inquire in this case. It is possible, if not probable, that the phrase Avas omitted, because it was considered superfluous. Homestead, ex vi termini, means the family seat or mansion. The source of Beard’s title being anterior to the adoption of the Code of 1886, the issue in this case must be determined by the terms of the Code of 1876, § 282U.
As we have said, the headship of a family, under our statute, is not made a condition of the right of homestead exemption. Hence, in Bender v. Meyer, 55 Ala. 576, we decided that, in a proceeding under our former.statute, to subject the statutory separate estate of the wife to the payment of a debt for articles of comfort and support of the household, she could successfully claim her homestead exemption. In this case, the homestead was on lands of her statutory separate estate.— Weiner v. Sterling, 61 Ala. 98.
It is manifest that ownership, entire or partial, in fee or for a term, is one of the essentials of rightful claim of homestead exemption. If there is no ownership, there is no liability to execution, and no occasion, or field of operation, for the claim of exemption. And there can not, at one and the same time, “be two separate valid homestead claims, the one by the husband, and the other by the wife.” — Smyth’s *732Law of Homesteads, § 157. The debt being against one, and not against the other, it is clear that only the property of the one whose debt is sought to be enforced, can be the subject of the claim of exemption, and only the one owing the debt can assert the claim. To come within the statute, the debt sought to be enforced must be one to which the property, in the absence of the exemption, would be subject. And husband and wife can not unite in the claim of exemption, unless, possibly, the execution is for the collection of a joint debt of the two. On this proposition we decide nothing.
In the case before us, the homestead, or family residence, was on the lands of the wife. The husband owned adjoining lands, cultivated a portion of them in connection with his wife’s tract, and put the residue to rent, by annual lettings. The two tracts combined were twenty acres in excess of the greatest quantity allowed as an exempt homestead — one hundred and sixty acres. The wife’s land was the homestead, and, if claimed, was clearly exempt from any debt due by her. She owned it, and, together with the family, occupied it. We think it is manifestly against both the letter and spirit of the law, that the two holdings, being not in common, but by different persons, should be tacked, the one to the other, and thus become an individual homestead, claimable by either. She, owning, and, together with the family, occupying the homestead proper — the land on which they resided — was, without doubt, entitled to claim its exemption from debts. This disabled him, so long as that ownership and occupancy lasted, to assert homestead in other lands, on which the family did not reside.
This ruling must not be understood as at all conflicting with the decisions in Tyler v. Jewett, 82 Ala. 93, and Dicus v. Hall, 83 Ala. 159. In each of those cases, the ownership relied on was in one and the same person. In the first named of the cases, one part of the realty claimed was freehold, and the other leasehold; a mere difference in the quantity of the estate the occupant owned. In the other, the only question was, whether the detached parcels of land, collectively not in excess of the limit, could be set apart as exempt, when they were shown to have been owned and occupied by the same person, as one and the same homestead and direct source of family support.
If the salé under the mortgage was regular, and a conveyance made to the purchaser (these are not questioned in the present appeal), the plaintiff was entitled to recover.
Reversed and remanded.