Opinion of the cpuET by
JUDGE HOBSONReversing.
Sam Morrow, on October 11, 1884, bought of J. W. Givens i% acres of land, for which he agreed to pay him $237.50, and Givens made him a deed, retaining a lien, for-the purchase money. Morrow at once erected a cabin on the land, and moved into it with his family. In the years 1S85, 1880 and 18S7 he raised crops of tobacco, the proceeds of which were paid Givens on the land. About the year 1891 he sold off to four other parties nearly 3% acres of the land, and they paid the purchase money to Givens. This left about acres, which he still owned free of .in-cumbrance for the purchase, money, except $5 due by one of the vendees, and still unpaid. Previous to this, however, in the year 1889, Sam Morrow became indebted to the appellee, Bailey, in the sum of $25, for which Bailey recovered a judgment against him. In October, 1892, Bailey caused an execution on his judgment to be- levied on 1V2 acres of the land. still owned by Morrow, and had it sold, and in due time obtained a writ of possession against Morrow for it. About the time that the- execution was levied on the land, Morrow conveyed it by deed to appellants, and they died this suit against Bailey to prevent h;is disturbing them in the enjoyment of the property or executing his writ of possession against them. The court below, on final hearing, dismissed their petition.
The deed from Sam Morrow to appellants was without valuable consideration, and was void as against his creditors, if the- land was then subject to execution. But if the land was then exempt as a homestead, appellee, as a creditor, was not prejudiced by the conveyance; for he *362could not have subjected the land to his debt in that event, if the conveyance had not been made. The proof is clear that the whole land was not of value over $300; that the improvements were all erected on it several years before ap-pellee’s debt was created; and that Morrow had resided on it with his- family since about the time of the purchase.
The only ground upon which it is claimed that the land was subject to appellee’s execution is that when his debt was created the land had- not been paid for, and that, as it was paid for after the creation of his debt, it was not exempt as a homestead. Moseley v. Bevins, 91 Ky., 269; (15 S. W., 527).
But it will be observed that, although the land was paid for in part after the creation of appellee’s debt, the payment was made by selling off parts of the original tract, the vendees paying the purchase money directly to Givens, and thus releasing the remainder of the land. The case would be essentially the same if Sam Morrow had reconveyed to Givens the lots he thus sold to these parties, and Givens had, in consideration of the conveyance to him of these lots, released his lien upon the remainder still held by Morrow. The statute provides that the homestead shall not exist “if the debt or liability existed prior to the purchase of the land, or of the erection of the improvements thereon.” Kentucky Statutes, section 1702. The fact that Morrow bought more land than he could pay for, and extinguished the lien on the land by selling off the part that he could not pay for, so as to leave him a part of the land not unincumbered does not bring him within the letter or spirit of this statute. He in fact purchased and paid for that part of the land which was left to him, and erected his improvements -on it, before appellee’s debt was created. The vendor’s *363lien was tbe first charge on all of the land. If this had been foreclosed, and the three acres sold to satisfy it, undoubtedly Morrow would have been entitled to his homestead in the remainder of the land, and when he did himself what the court would have done the result must be the same.
It follows, therefore, that the land was exempt from execution as a homestead at the time of the levy and sale under the execution, and that appellants were entitled to the relief sought.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a judgment and further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.