(Concurring). I concur for the purpose of calling special attention to Mr. Justice Battle’s dissenting opinion in Merrill v. Harris, 65 Ark. 355, 46 S. W. 538, 41 L. R. A. 714, which dissenting opinion I think should be adopted — to operate prospectively — as the correct interpretation of Art. IX, § 6, of our Constitution: the effect of adopting such dissenting opinion would be to prohibit the sale of a homestead — in all instances except under lien foreclosure proceedings — while any of the children remained under 21 years of age.
The said Art. IX, § 6, of the Constitution, provides:
“If the owner of a homestead die, leaving a widow, but no children, and said widow has no separate homestead in her own right, the same shall be exempt, and the rents and profits thereof shall vest in her during her natural life, provided that if the owner leaves children, one or more, said child or children shall share with the said widow and be entitled to half the rents and profits till each of them arrives at twenty-one years of age — each child’s right to cease at twenty-one years of age — and the shares to go to the younger children, and then all to go to the widow, and provided that said widow or children may reside on the homestead or not; and in case of the death of the widow all of said homestead shall be vested in the minor children of the testator or intestate.”
This Constitutional provision says that while a child is under 21 years of age, said child shall be entitled to the “rents and profits” of the homestead. If the homestead is sold under any guise whatsoever, then certainly the child is deprived of the “rents and profits” of the homestead: to allow the homestead to be sold is to defeat the protection and rights which the Constitution guarantees to the minor children.
Justice Battle expressed it this way:
“A sale of such lands during the minority of the children tends to'defeat the magnificent policy of the constitution, and should be treated by all courts as void.
“It follows that the probate court cannot sell the fee in the land without defeating the spirit and intent of the constitution. It seems to me that no argument or authority is necessary to prove that the constitution, from which it derives its jurisdiction, did not vest the probate court with the authority to defeat its policy or violate any of its provisions.”
When the majority held — as it did in Merrill v. Harris, supra — that the homestead could be sold when the ancestor left no debts, then this Court had to point out in Tipton, Ex parte, 123 Ark. 389, 185 S. W. 798, that the homestead could not be sold when there were debts. Then the Legislature, by § 226 of Act No. 140 of 1949 (§ 57-639 Ark. Stats.), sought to broaden the holding in Tipton, Ex parte. The majority holding in the present case is that the Statute, (§ 57-639 Ark. Stats.) is unconstitutional insofar as it affects the rights of a minor in the homestead of an ancestor who owed debts.
To my mind, the simple solution of the whole problem is to adopt — with prospective application — Justice Battle’s dissent in Merrill v. Harris; and when such result is achieved, we will get back to the spirit of the Constitution and to the protection which it accords to minors. In the hope that this may some day come to fruition, I am writing this concurring opinion.