-2. —:--: judgment. II. Appellant claims that the confession of judgment is ■such written contract as is referred to in the statute. The only reference to the homestead in this confession is the following: “And if payment is not made 'hereon on or before the 20th day of January, A. D. 1870, .aforesaid, execution may issue on this judgment immediately thereafter against any property belonging to said defendants, homestead included. ”
Section 1993 of the Code requires an express stipulation that the homestead shall be liable for the debt. The confession of judgment contains no such stipulation. It contains simply a waiver of the exemption statutes, and a consent that execution may issue against any property of the defendants. It has been held that a similar provision in a promissory note is against public policy and will not be enforced. Curtis v. O’Brien & Sears, 20 Iowa, 376, and cases cited. There ’is greater reason for holding such a provision invalid in a confession of judgment, for after the debt has been created the original agreement furnishes no consideration for a waiver of ■the exemptions allowed by law.
The judgment is • Affirmed.