The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Fenner, J.From the mass of facts and issues presented, we select the following as decisive of the case.
Gilmer, plaintiff herein, specially mortgaged to Hamilton & Co. his plantation, in Bossier parish, to secure a debt of $9974 11. This mortgage was executed on March 18,1872. At that date Gilmer was not living on this plantation, and had no homestead right therein. He subsequently established his residence there.
The debt and mortgage of Hamilton & Co. were duly assigned to Templeman, the defendant herein.
Thereafter, one Taylor, holder of a mortgage of anterior date, on the same property, brought suit and obtained judgment against Gilmer, upon which execution was issued, and the property seized and sold. It *981was adj udieated to W. W. Sebastian, son-in-law o£ Gilmei’, at a price which left nothing to be attributed to Templeman’s mortgage, and title was made to Sebastian, who entered into apparent ownership.
Templeman then brought suit against Gilmer, Taylor and Sebastian, asking judgment against Gilmer for his debt and recognizing his mortgage; averring that the title of Sebastian was a fraudulent simulation, the result of collusion between him and Gilmer, that Gilmer was the real purchaser, and that Sebastian was merely an interposed person holding title for Gilmer as the real owner, and asking for judgment declaring the property to belong to Gilmer, and to be subject to Temple-man’s mortgage. To this suit Gilmer filed answer, denying that he owned the property.
After trial on these issues, judgment was rendered in favor of Tem-pleman and against Gilmer and Sebastian, declaring the latter’s title to be the title of Gilmer, and the property to belong to Gilmer, condemning Gilmer to pay the amount due Templeman, and decreeing that his special mortgage be recognized and enforced, and that the property be seized and sold to pay and satisfy the same.
From this judgment no appeal was taken, and it is res judicata. We find it unnecessary to detail the proceedings had under the first execution which was issued on this judgment, and the unexecuted agreements in reference thereto.
In July, 1877, a second execution was issued, under -which the property was seized and advertised for sale on September 1st, 1877. On August 11th, an agreement in writing was made between Gilmer and P. B. Cash, who was the owner of a judgment of Lydia Watson against Gil-mer, enforcing a-mortgage against the same property, ranking that of Templeman, and who was also the assignee in pledge of Templeman’s judgment. By the terms of this writing, it was agreed that Cash should buy in the property at the execution sale, provided it did not bring more than the amount due on the judgments controlled by Cash, and that Gilmer should have the right to redeem the property by paying $2600 on the 1st of December, 1877, and certain other stipulated sums at subsequent dates therein fixed. It was further agreed that, in the mean time, Gilmer should be left in possession to manage and cultivate and gather crops, and to devote proceeds, after payment of necessary ■ expenses, to his payments under the agreement; and, finally, that if Gilmer failed to make the payments as agreed, he should “lose all right of redemption, and forfeit any payment he might have made.”
On the day of sale, a further written agreement was made between Gilmer, Cash and Templeman, and filed with the sheriff, by which it was stipulated that “all the land should be offered and sold at one time, and not in legal subdivisions.”
*982At the sale Gilmer handed the sheriff a written document, as follows : “ September 1st, 1877. Sir, I claim as a homestead 30 acres in north of H. W. J of N. W. J of section 17, and 30 acres, etc. (describing land,) signed: T. M. Gilmer.”
The property was sold and adjudicated to Cash, and the title passed to him without interference from Gilmer. Gilmer was left in possession, as agreed, and gathered and disposed of the crops, and a large portion of the proceeds thereof enured to his benefit.
He totally failed to make the payment of $2600 on the 1st of December, 1877, as required by his agreement, and, by the terms thereof, he thus forfeited absolutely his right of redemption, and the title of Cash became indefeasible. Thereafter Cash sold to Templeman, as he had a right to do.
On the 23d of January, 1878, Gilmer filed his petition in the present action, averring his homestead claim, alleging that Templeman and the sheriff, O’Neal, were proceeding to dispossess him thereof, to his irreparable injury, and prayed for an injunction and for judgment, maintaining his possession and ownership of said homestead.
From a judgment of the Court a qua rejecting his demand, Gilmer has taken this appeal.
His counsel strenuously contends that, since the passage of the Constitution of 1879, the homestead provisions therein contained are to be taken as an authoritative interpretation by the Constitutional Convention of the true meaning and scope of the prior homestead law of 1865; that the two laws, being in pari materia, must be construed together; and that the express provisions in the Constitution, declaring that the homestead shall not be susceptible of mortgage, prohibiting the waiver or renunciation of homestead rights, and forbidding any court or ministerial officer of the State from enforcing any judgment, execution or decree against property set apart for a homestead, must now be considered as engrafted by implication upon the law of 1865.
We can by no means assent to these propositions. It would be easy to show that, on general principles, they would be utterly confounded, but it is unnecessary to discuss them in that light, because the constitution itself expressly declares that “ rights to homesteads or exemptions under laws or contracts, or for debts, existing at the time of the adoption of this constitution, shall not be impaired, repealed, or affected by any provision of this Constitution.” Article 220. The effect of this plain provision is to leave prior rights, arising under prior laws, entirely unaffected by the constitution, and to be controlled by such laws as construed and applied by the courts; and as the right of Gilmer is founded exclusively on the homestead law of 1865, we must construe *983and apply that law precisely as if the Constitution of 1879 had never been adopted.
The following objections are, each and all of them, fatal to Gilmer’s claim,' viz.:
First. — In a case recently decided by us at Monroe, and not yet reported, we held that where a special mortgage was given, the mortgage and homestead rights must be governed by the state of facts existing at the date of the mortgage. There the debtor owned and mortgaged the undivided three fourths of an immovable, which, by reason of the indivisión, was not subject to the homestead claim. (26 A. 156; 28 A. 355; lb. 608.) He subsequently acquired the remaining fourth, and then claimed the homestead, which we denied. For the reasons given in that decision, we now hold that, inasmuch as, at the date of the Templeman mortgage, Gilmer did not reside on the property, he had no homestead right therein, the property came under the mortgage free therefrom, and he could not alter, diminish, and pro tanto, destroy the effect of the mortgage by subsequently moving on the property and claiming the ex post facto homestead.
Second. — When Templeman sought to enforce his mortgage on this property, Gilmer not only failed to set up his homestead right, but denied that he owned the property, and sought to cover it from the pursuit of his creditor under a fictitious and simulated title, which he had placed in the name of another. After the judgment of the court had laid bare and annulled this simulation, and had subjected the property to' the mortgage, and directed it to be sold to satisfy the same. Gilmer was estopped from contradicting the'judicial allegations of his answer in order to reap a new advantage therefrom, and the title which he had denied and covered up with a view of defeating his creditor, could not, though unmasked and established by the efforts of his creditor, be considered as such bona ficle title as was necessary to maintain the homestead claim.
Third. — We consider the agreement between Cash & Gilmer, under which he consented, beforehand and on valuable considerations, that Cash should purchase at the execution sale, had the double effect, first of a waiver and renunciation of his homestead claim, and, second, of giving to the execution sale the force and effect of a voluntary sale. We concur in the latest decision of this Court, establishing the right of the debtor to waive his homestead claim in a special property, and in favor of a special creditor, and we are perfectly clear that a man had the right to alienate his homestead by voluntary sale. Nugent vs. Carruth, 32 A. 444. On both grounds, therefore, his homestead right was destroyed.
Fourth. — If Gilmer had had a homestead right, it would have been *984lost by his failure to assert it judicially before his title was divested by actual sale, and notice to the sheriff has been rightly held to be no substitute for such judicial proceeding. Kuntz vs. Baehr, 28 A. 90. At the time when he first j udicially claimed the homestead, he had no title, bona fide, or other. The title had passed to Cash with Gilmer’s approval and consent. He had held under Cash, with nothing but a right of redemption, which he had forfeited. The title had passed from Cash to Templeman. If, after this double transfer, Gilmer could still be heard to assert the homestead claim, we see no reason why his right might not have encumbered the property indefinitely.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from be affirmed, at cost of appellant.