This was an action to enjoin the sale under an execution of a tract of land containing about twelve and a half acres, situated in Saline county, Nebraska, the plaintiffs claiming the land to be exempt as a homestead. The prayer for injunction was granted in the court below, and to reverse this judgment defendants appeal to this court.
The material facts underlying this controversy are that the plaintiff, Albert Palmer, purchased the land in controversy, in the year 1898; that at the time of the purchase plaintiff was a widower, with three minor children living with him, and that, with such children, he moved upon the premises, and has occupied the same ever since, claiming it as a homestead; that in the year 1901, one of the minor children died, another attained her majority, married and removed to the state of Iowa, and the other son also arrived at his majority and left the home, leaving the father alone in the possession and occupancy of the premises; that the year following, the judgment plaintiff in the court below, who was the administrator of the estate of Orazamus Palmer, deceased, procured a judgment against the plaintiff before a justice of the peace, in Saline county, for $162,85; that a transcript of *110this judgment was duly filed in the office of the clerk of the district court for Saline county, and execution was issued on this judgment, which was levied on the lands in controversy by defendant sheriff, who advertised same for sale. To enjoin this sale, the present action was instituted.
The question to be determined is whether or not plaintiff was entitled to claim this property as his homestead at the time the indebtedness accrued on which judgment was entered. It appears from the facts above stated that, when the action on -which the judgment was procured was instituted in the justice’s court, plaintiff was living alone upon the lands, with no dependent relatives under his care. It also appears equally clear that, when the lands were purchased, he was the “head of a family” within the meaning of section 15, chapter 36, Compiled Statutes, 1903 (Ann. St. 6214), so that the question to be determined is whether or not a homestead once acquired by the head of a family can be divested by any act other than the voluntary alienation, abandonment or waiver of the right by the party entitled to the exemption. Both sides of this question find strong support in the adjudications of the courts of last resort of the different states, as we shall presently point out. It is well to begin with an examination of our own statute, and the trend of our own opinions which interpret it.
Sections 1 and 2 provide as follows:
Section 1. “A homestead not exceeding in value; $2,000, consisting of the dwelling house in which the claimant resides, and its appurtenances, and the huid on which the same is situated, not exceeding 160 acres of land, to be selected by the owner thereof, and not in any incorporated city or village, or instead thereof, at the option of the claimant, a quantity of contiguous land not exceeding two lots within any incorporated city or village shall be exempt from judgment liens and from execution or forced sale, except as in this chapter provided.”
Section 2. “If the claimant be married, the homestead *111may be selected from tbe separate property of tbe husband, or with the consent of the wife from her separate property. When the claimant is not married, but is the head of a family, within the meaning of section fifteen, the homestead may be selected from any of his or her property.”
Section 3 provides for the liability of a homestead to sale on debts secured by merchants’, laborers’, or vendors’ liens, or for debts secured by mortgages on the premises, executed either by both husband and wife or by the unmarried claimant.
Section 5 makes provision for setting off exemption when execution is levied on land claimed as a homestead.
Section 15 defines the “head of a family” to include:
“Second. Every person Avho has residing on the premises with him or her, and under his care and maintenance, either: (1) His or her minor child, or the minor child of his or her deceased wife or husband.”
Section 17 contains the following provision:
“If the homestead was selected from the separate property of either husband or wife it vests, on the death of the person from whose property it was selected, in the survivor for life and afterwards in his or her heirs forever, subject to the power of the decedent to dispose of the same except the life estate of the survivor by will. In either case it is not subject to the payment of any • debt or liability contracted by or existing against the husband and wife or either of them previous to or at the time of the death of such husband^ or wife, except such as exists or has been created under the provisions of this chapter.”
It will be noticed that the provisions of these statutes reserve the homestead right to every person who is the head of a family as defined in section 15, Avliether married or unmarried at the time of the acquisition. When the homestead right is acquired by a married person, it cannot be conveyed or incumbered, unless the instrument by Avhich it is conveyed or incumbered is executed and acknov»Tedged by both husband and wife, under section 4. *112This section of the statute, in the case of Whitlock v. Gosson, 35 Neb. 829, was declared to make the conveyance of a homestead executed by the husband alone void, not only as to the interest of the wife, but also as to the interest of the husband who executed it. This decision is important in establishing the principle that, when a homestead right is acquired, it can only be divested in the manner prescribed by statute, and on this principle it is supported by a line of decisions of this court cited in the opinion, and has been subsequently followed in Giles v. Miller, 36 Neb. 346; Clarke v. Koenig, 36 Neb. 572; Violet v. Rose, 39 Neb. 660; Havemeyer v. Dahn, 48 Neb. 536. If the homestead in controversy had been selected from the lands of the deceased wife, there could be no doubt but that, under the provision of section 17, supra, on the death of the wife, the homestead right would have descended to the husband for life, whether any children had. been born of the marriage or not. And now the question arises as to whether or not we shall construe this statute as giving a higher right by reason of inheritance from the OAvner of the homestead than attaches to the owner himself. While this question has never been specifically determined by this court, Cobb, J., in rendering the opinion in Dorrington v. Myers, 11 Neb. 391, did not hesitate to say Iioav he Avould have determined the question, if it had been necessary, AAhen he used the folloAving language:
‘‘While placing my vieAvs of this case upon the above ground, I by no means Avish it understood that the plaintiff’s right to homestead exemption depends upon the fact of his ability to provide for his son and daughters-in-law, and to hire servant girls. When as the head of a family he entered into possession of this homestead, he became vested, so to speak, of a homestead estate therein, which Avas alienable only by sale or abandonment. Neither the death of the wife, nor her abandonment of her husband, nor the arrival at full. age and departure from the parental roof of all the sons and daughters, would have the *113effect of dismaní ling tlie homestead of the protection of the exemption law.”
This opinion was rendered under the homestead law of 1867, which has been broadened and extended by the enactment of 1879. The question Avas subsequently adverted to in the opinion in Hyde v. Hyde, 60 Neb. 503, but the decision there turned on another question, and no expression of opinion on the point uoav in controversy Avas given.
In Galligher v. Smiley, 28 Neb. 189, Reese, C. J., in rendering the opinion, said:
“In its inception a homestead is a parcel of land on Avhich the family resides, and Avhich is to them a home. It is constituted by the two acts of selection and residence, in compliance with the terms of the law conferring it. When these things exist tona fide, the essential elements of the homestead right exist, of which the persons entitled to it cannot be divested by acts or'influences beyond their volition.”
This opinion Avas rendered in a case in which the family still resided on the original homestead Avhich, when selected, Avas farm land, but which was subsequently incorporated into the city of Omaha, Avithout the consent of the OAvner. It was contended that the incorporation of the lands by the ordinance of the city council, extending its area, operated to diminish the area of the homestead to the limits prescribed for a homestead in city and village lots. And in determining the question, the language above quoted was used. While the facts differ from those now in issue, yet the principle announced, that, Avhere a homestead is selected, it cannot be divested by acts or influences beyond the volition of the party claiming it, is clearly in point in the determination of the instant case.
Turning uoav to the decisions of the courts of last resort in other states on statutes of somewhat similar construction to our own, we find an irreconcilable conflict in the various conclusions reached. This conflict in some instances is traceable to the different provisions of the *114statutes construed, and in other instances to the conception taken by the court of the intention of the legislature in the enactment of the statute. Those courts which look upon the statute as a statute of nurture, intended solely for the protection of the dependent members of the family from the improvidence of the head of the family, without any division arrive at the conclusion that, when the homestead has been selected and the dependent members of the family for whose benefit it was created have ceased to occupy, the protection of the homestead ceases, because the reason for the protection has ceased. The leading cases supporting this theory of construction are: Revalk v. Kraemer, 8 Cal. 66; Santa Cruz Bank v. Cooper, 56 Cal. 339; Johnson v. Little, 90 Ga. 781; Cooper v. Cooper, 24 Ohio St. 488; Galligar v. Payne, 34 La. Ann. 1057; Hill v. Franklin, 54 Miss. 632; Fullerton v. Sherrill, 114 Ia. 511, 87 N. W. 419. In opposition to this vieAV is another line of decisions based on. the hypothesis that the intention of-the legislature in enacting the various homestead statutes was to protect the home and all its inmates from any business misfortune and financial adversity that might befall them; that the protection extends to the head of the fatuity as Avell as to the dependent members. This theory leads to the conclusion that, Avhen a homestead has been selected by the head of a family,, he becomes invested Avith a right or estate in such homestead, Avhich cannot be defeated by the death or abandonment of the home by the other members of the family who occupied it at the time of its selection. The following are some of the leading cases supporting this view: Silloway v. Brown, 12 Allen (Mass.), 30; Kimbrel v. Willis, 97 Ill. 494; Stanley v. Snyder, 43 Ark. 429; Beckmann v. Meyer, 75 Mo. 333; Webb v. Cowley, 5 Lea (Tenn.), 722; Blum v. Gaines, 57 Tex. 119; Stults v. Sale, 17 S. W. (Ky.) 148.
In the case of Stults v. Sale, supra, an opinion was rendered under a statute very similar in its provisions to our own, in that it provided for the descent of the homestead *115right to the surviving husband or wife upon the death of the one from whose lands the homestead had been selected. In this case the husband owned the land from which the homestead was selected, and was the head of a family consisting of a Avife'and minor children; but at the time the levy was made, by reason of the death of the wife and the marriage or death of the other members of the family, the claimant occupied the premises alone. In rendering the opinion the court said:
“In this case * * * the property belongs to the husband, who is the debtor and is claiming it as exempt to him as a homestead. Undoubtedly the having of a family Avas necessary to the creation of the right in him, but is it necessary to the continuance of it? * * * The statute makes no express mention in this respect. We must, therefore, look to its general scope and spirit for guidance, the right being the creature of it. * * * Can it well lie supposed that the legislature intended that in the event of the death of the Avife owning the homestead, the benefit of it should continue to the husband during his occupancy, although he has no family,^and yet that if he be the owner of it, and his wife or children die, or the latter marry and leave him, his right • to the exemption ceases? If so, it is a singular state of case; and if so, it is equally true of the wife, Avhere.she owns the homestead. * * * Why should not the original OAvner have a right equal to the suivivor, and why should not the law favor the latter equally at least with the former? Is the party to be worsted because he oavus the property? Can any reason be given why the same right should not exist as to his own property as is given to him in his wife’s property after her death?”
We have quoted somewhat at length from the decision of the case last cited, because of the similarity of the statute construed to our own, as well as for the cogency of the reasons assigned in support of the conclusions reached. While the case decided (Stults v. Sale, supra) differs from the one at bar in that the husband selected *116the homestead from lands owned by him while his wife was living, yet the difference in nowise influenced the conclusion reached; for in each case the husband was the head of the family within the meaning of the statute at the time the homestead was selected. In neither case was the right a derivative one. There is no provision in our statute for the determination of the homestead right when once acquired, except by death or voluntary action of the party acquiring it. The statute which provides for a homestead for the head of a family, who is unmarried when the homestead is selected, does not limit the right of its enjoyment to the time during which the premises are occupied by the dependent members of the family jointly with the owner. As the statute does not limit the duration of the homestead right to the time of the dependency of the family on the claimant for support, if we follow the liberal construction accorded to this statute by our own court with a view of upholding its provisions, we can hardly escape the conclusion that, when a homestead is once acquired, the right to the continuous enjoyment of it can only be defeated by the voluntary act of the claimant. In this view*of the matter the learned trial judge was fully justified in enjoining the sale of plaintiff’s homestead.
We therefore recommend that the judgment of the district court be affirmed.
Ames and Letton, CC., concur.By the Court: For the reasons given in the above opinion, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.