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50 Ark.] NOVEMBER TERM, 1887. 329 Stayton v. Halpern. STAYTON V. HALPERN. HOMESTEAD: Right of minor child. TJnder the constitution of 1874 the fee to the real estate of a decedent cannot be sold by order of the probate court for the payment of his debts, subject to the homestead right of his minor child. McCloy v. Arnett, 47 Ark., 445. APPEAL from Monroe Circuit Court. M. T. SANDERS, Judge. John C. Palmer, for appellant. A sale by an administrator, to pay the debts of the intestate, of the homestead, while it was occupied as a homestead by the minor heirs, conveys no title. The sale is void. 31 Ark., 140; 41 Id., 97; 40 Id., 74; 43 Id., 434; 45 Id., 384; 47 Id., 445; Thomp. Homest. & Ex., secs. 78, 40, 165, 170-3; Const. Ark. 1874, art. IX, sec. 10. J. N. Cypert, for appellee. The sale was valid. The homestead right of the widow . and minor under Const. 1874 is analogous to dower. It is only the use during life of widow and minority of children. They do not own the fee. The probate court has power under sec. 171, Mansf. Dig., to order the sale. The Const. of 1868 was very different from that of 1874. See Const. 1868, sec. 5, art. 14, which exempts the homestead from payment of debts in all cases during minority of the children, &c. There is no such provision in the Coast. of 1874. The case in 47 Ark., 445, does not apply. The inheritance cast upon an heir can be sold for his own debts, and the same right would be liable for the debts of his ancestor.
330 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS, [50 Ark. COCKRILL, C. J. The question arose upon demurrer to the answer of the appellee, who was sued by the appellants in ejectment, and is thus stated by the appellee's counsel : "Can the fee to real estate be sold by order of the probate court, upon the petition of an administrator, for the pay- ment of the debts of his intestate, subject to the homestead right of a min2r child, under the constitution . of 1874?" Mceloy v. Afnett, 47 Ark., 445, where the subject is fully treated, answers a similar question, which arose under the homestead provisions of the constitution of 1868, in the negatiVe. The policy of exempting the homstead from sale after the death of the debtor for the benefit of the widow and the minor children, was continued by the constitution of 1874 without abating the right as it existed under the constitution of 1868 and the act of 1852. Garibaldi v. Jones, 48 Ark., 236; Art.. 9, see. 6,.Const., 1874. The case of ilicCloy v. Arnett, therefore, controls this. See too Nich-ols v. Shearon, 49 Id., 75. Reverse the judgment and remand the cause, with instructions to sustain the demurrer.
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