Robert P. Wiener, John W. Wiener, and Henry B. Wiener, a minor, suing by his next friend, Robert P. Wiener, brought this suit, on December 3, 1907, against Mary A. Zwieb to recover 10% acres of land, situated within the corporate limits of the city of Houston. The action was one of trespass to try title. Pending the suit, thfe original defendant, Mary A. Zwieb, died intestate, and an administration was sued out on her estate. A certain deed of trust, executed by Mary A. Zwieb to Mrs. E. J. Ferguson on the land in controversy, was duly foreclosed, and at the foreclosure sale purchased by Mrs. E. J. Ferguson, and she and her husband, John I-I. Ferguson, were by amended petition made the defendants, in lieu of the original defendant. The cause was tried in the district court of Harris county with a jury, and the trial judge, after hearing the evidence, instructed a verdict for the defendants. Upon appeal the 'cause was, on April 27, 1910, affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fourth Supreme Judicial District (128 S. W. 699), and is before this court on writ of error.
All parties to the suit claimed the land through Henry Wiener as the common source, and the issue of title mainly, if not solely, depends upon the validity of a sale of the land in controversy, under a deed of trust executed by Henry Wiener on said land during the lifetime of his wife and while the property was their homestead, and without the signature of the wife. We make this summary of the issue involved in the case in deference to the chief complaint made by the plaintiffs below and the findings of fact by the Court of .Civil Appeals.
The complaint of plaintiffs below is to the action of the trial court in instructing a verdict for defendants; the contention being that there was conflicting evidence upon a number of material issues, and that these issues should have been determined by the jury. The Court of Civil Appeals found, as matter of fact, that there were a number of issuable questions which ordinarily should have been presented to the jury, but held, as matter of law, that the refusal to submit such issues to the jury did not constitute reversible error, for the reason that such *773issues of fact might be conceded to be in favor of plaintiffs, and yet they furnish no reason why the plaintiffs should recover, or why the defendants should not recover.
One of the material issues of fact was as to whether Henry Wiener, the mortgagor, died before or after the deed of trust was foreclosed by the trustee or his substitute under the terms of the instrument. It was shown without controversion that on January 1, 1868, Henry Wiener, the father of plaintiffs, executed a deed of trust on the land in controversy to M. P. De Bajligethy, trustee, for the purpose of securing Mary Zwieb, the original defendant, in the payment of about $700, which was a community debt of Henry and Hannah Wiener, plaintiffs’ ancestors. That at the time of the execution of this deed of trust the property in controversy was the homestead of Henry Wiener and his wife, who refused to join him in the execution of said deed of trust, but at the time the deed of trust was executed they did not live on the property. They had moved to the city of Houston proper, for the purpose of educating their children, and had lived there since the latter part of 1S66. Soon after • Wiener and his family moved from the land in controversy, the dwelling house was burn- • ed, and was never rebuilt, and Wiener and his family never thereafter occupied the property. Mrs. Hannah Wiener died on January 23, 1869, leaving her husband, Henry Wiener, and several minor children surviving her. It was shown that these children or some of them, lived with their uncle, Isaac Levy, on a portion of the property in controversy, in a house built there by Isaac Levy with the consent of Henry Wiener, for a number of years after the death of their mother, Hannah Wiener. It was found by 1 he Court of Civil Appeals that there was no administration on the estate of either Henry or Hannah Wiener, and that while there was no evidence of any probative force that Henry Wiener died before the deed of trust was foreclosed by sale by the substituted trustee, yet, for the purpose of determining the question of law7 involved, it was admitted that he died before the sale under the deed of trust; but it was also found that Henry Wiener never occupied or claimed the property as his homestead after the death of his wife, and, when requested by the attorney of Mary Zwieb to pay the note, stated that he was not able to do so, and that Mrs. Zwieb should proceed to foreclose the deed of trust he had given her. On January 3, 1874, Judge E. P. Hamblin, the substituted trustee, proceeded to sell the land in controversy under the trust deed executed by Henry Wiener on January 1, 1868, and concededly after the death of the constituent.
This brings us to one of the main questions of law to be determined, as presented by idaintiffs’ first proposition under their first assignment of error, as follows: “A sale made by a trustee, under a power of sale_ contained in a deed of trust, after the death of the grantor, and less than four years after such death, is void, and passes no title.” The Court of Civil Appeals, speaking through Justice Ply, in an elaborate and well-considered opinion, holds the view that where there was no administration on the estate of the grantor, and after the lapse of four years, the time within which an administration could be sued out, a sale under the deed of trust after the death of the grantor and before the lapse of four years was valid, and passed title to the land conveyed, and we approve that holding. This particular question will be considered, first, without reference to the questions of homestead and the validity of the deed of trust under the circumstances of its execution, as raised by plaintiffs’ assignments of error.
[1] As an independent and original proposition, we do not think it has ever been held in this state that the power to sell and convey property given in a mortgage or deed of trust was revoked by the death of the mortgagor or grantor, but, on the contrary, it seems to have been fully recognized by our court as an established principle of law that the power of sale given in such instruments was a power coupled with au interest, and continued in force and survived the death of the constituent. We are aware that in the case of Reeves v. Petty, 44 Tex. 252, this language was there used: “Nor is it doubted that the doctrine laid down in Robertson v. Paul, 16 Tex. 472, as to the revocation of the power to sell by the death of the constituent, has been questioned by some of our ablest lawyers. This rule, however, was adopted by the same judges that decided the other cases referred to, and it has been approved by this court in subsequent cases, and has become a rule of property, like the other, to an extent that it would be a great shock to society to disturb it.”
There was no issue involved in that case that called for a discussion of the subject of the revocation of the power of the trustee to sell after the death of the mortgagor or grantor. The statement of the case shows that Petty instituted the suit against the heirs of J. J. Reeves and wife, to subject the property in controversy in that suit to a deed of trust the ancestors had given in their lifetime; and there was never any administration on the estates of the decedents who had executed the deed of trust. There had been no sale by a trustee under the deed of trust, so that the discussion of the Robertson v. Paul Case, and the principles involved in the sale under the deed of trust after the death of the constituent, was not necessary in any particular to the decision qf the case then at bar, and what was said on that subject must be treated as obiter. Certainly that case, in so far as it holds, as an independent proposition, that the death of the *774constituent in a deed of trust or mortgage with power to sell revokes the power of sale, has never been followed by any decision of this court that we have been able to find.
The early case of Robertson v. Paul, 16 Tex. 472, recognizes that in cases of deeds of trust and mortgages with power of sale, such power of sale is coupled with an interest, and is not revoked by the death of the grantor or mortgagor; yet, in view of the fact that our probate law enumerates certain claims which have preference by statute, generally speaking, over debts secured by mortgages or other liens, as funeral expenses and expenses of last sickness, expenses of administration, etc., the power of sale in such mortgages and deeds of trust is suspended and held in abeyance, so as not to interfere with the orderly administration of estates, and where such administration exists such lien must be presented for allowance and payment by the administrator. . The language used in that opinion with reference to the revocation of the power to sell, given in deeds of trust or mortgages, after the death of the makers of such securities, is as follows: “On general principle, it is clear the death of the mortgagor would not operate a revocation of the power. Whether the statute governing the settlement of the estates of decedents will cause it to have that effect is the question to be determined. And we are of opinion that it will.”
From the foregoing statement and the subsequent reasoning by Judge Wheeler in that case, it is clear that the court, while stating that the effect of the statute governing the settlement of estates was to revoke the power of sale after the death of the mortgagor or grantor, the holding was not that such statute revoked the power of sale, but simply suspended or held its operation in abeyance.
The Supreme Court, in the case of McLane v. Paschal, 47 Tex. 365, seems to have gone a step further than the court in the Robertson v. Paul Case, and on this subject said: “And, though the death of the mortgagor does not, on general principles, revoke their power, yet its exercise by the trustee would be inconsistent and in conflict with our statutes governing the settlement of estates of deceased persons. It cannot, therefore, be executed by the trustee after the death of the constituent. And whatever rights may be secured to the creditor by such deed, they can only be enforced after the death of the debtor through and by aid of the court. It naturally, if not inevitably, , follows that such deed, instead of operating as an absolute and unconditional security for the payment of the debt for which it purports to be given, has this effect only during the life of the debtor. And after his death it only secures the creditor priority over such claim against the debtor’s estate, as by the statute it is entitled to in the due course of administration.”
[2] In view of the doctrine laid down in McLane v. Paschal, it should be noted that from the statement of that case it appears that I. A. Paschal, joined by his wife, Mary C. Paschal, executed and delivered to McLane a deed of trust on certain property, in which was included their homestead, in the city of San Antonio. I. A. Paschal died in 1868, and his estate was administered upon in Bexar county, Tex. On the 30th of September, 1868, the debt of McLane was presented to the administrator of I. A. Paschal, and by him approved as a just claim against said estate. The widow, Mrs. Paschal, filed in the probate court her petition to have set aside to her the homestead, as well as other allowances. McLane,' as a lienholder, objected to any order setting aside the homestead to Mrs. Paschal, and his objection was sustained. Upon appeal by Mrs. Paschal to the district court, the judgment of the probate court was set aside, and the homestead decreed her. The judgment of the district court formed the basis of the decision of the Supreme Court in that case. The deed of trust given McLane by I. A. Paschal and wife was not foreclosed after Paschal’s death, and, so far as the record discloses, no at-, tempt was made by the trustee to foreclose the deed of trust by virtue of the power of sale therein contained. It follows, as a consequence, that the subject of revocation of the power to sell under that deed of trust was not an issue in the case, and that the decision of the court on that question was not essential to a proper disposition of the case. Ordinarily a decision on the question in a case, not necessarily presented, will not be treated as binding authority, but merely as persuasive.
[3] It may be safely said that all the cases in this state, prior to the case of Rogers v. Watson, 81 Tex. 400, 17 S. W. 29, in which the question of the revocation of the power to sell, given in mortgages and deeds of trust, caused by death of the mortgagors or grantors, was properly raised and decided, were cases where such sales had been made pending administration of the estates of such mortgagors or grantors, or before the lapse of four years from the time of their deaths in which an administration might be legally sued out. And it may be stated with equal emphasis and assurance that in all such cases the reason upon which such holding is based is, not that the death of the constituent revoked the power of sale, but that such power is in effect revoked by being suspended and held in abeyance, so as not to interfere with the orderly administration of the estates of decedents. But whatever construction may be placed upon the decisions on this question as denounced prior to the case of Rogers v. Watson, we think the rule there established and subsequently followed in a number of cases in this court and in the Courts of Civil Appeals is founded on the better reason, and more in harmony *775with sound principle. Por more than 20 years, the rule laid down by this court in the Rogers Case has been followed and extended, as the exigencies of the varying circumstances of the cases have presented themselves. In the case of Rogers v. Watson, 81 Tex. 400, 17 S. W. 29, certain property had been sold by a trustee under a deed of trust executed by John Rogers, and after his death; he having died intestate, and no administration having been had on his estate. This was the first time the precise question was ever presented to this court, so far as we have been able to ascertain, and Judge Gaines, then Associate Justice, rendered the opinion for the court in his customary clear and forceful style, and in part said:
“We are of the opinion that if the trustees in the deed of trust executed by the vendees to secure the payment of the purchase money •of the land had the power to sell the land, notwithstanding the death of Rogers, the allegations in the petition show title in the plaintiffs to the land in controversy, and the court did not err in overruling the defendant’s demurrer thereto. At an early day It was held, in the case of Robertson v. Paul, 16 Tex. 472, that a sale made in pursuance of a power given in a mortgage after the death of the mortgagor was void, although the mortgage was given to secure the payment of the purchase money of the mortgaged premises. That decision has been followed in subsequent cases in the courts, and may now be regarded as settled law. McLane v. Paschal, 47 Tex. 365; Black v. Rockmore, 50 Tex. 94; Abney v. Pope, 52 Tex. 288. In Black v. Rockmore, at the time of the sale under the power, the widow of the deceased mortgagor had filed a Bond and inventory under the statute, and was administering the community estate as survivor. In Robertson v. Paul, and in the other cases cited, there were regular administrations pending at the time of the sale. The sales were not held void upon the ground that the death of the mortgagors had revoked the power, because it was recognized that the powers were coupled with an interest, and that they remained in force after the death of the respective constituents. But" the exercise of the powers after such deaths and during an administration upon the mortgagors’ estates was regarded as inconsistent with our statutes, which give to certain classes of claims against a decedent’s estate priority of payment over a debt secured by a lien, even as to the property subject to the incumbrance. But in this case, according to the allegations of the petition, at the time of the sale, more than four years had elapsed from the date of Rogers’ death, and no administration had ever been had upon his estate. Under the statute as it then existed and now exists, after a lapse of four years from the death of the person the probate court lost its power to grant letters of administration upon his estate. Rev. Stats. 1879, art. 1827. Consequently the provisions of the statute for establishing and ranking claims against an estate were no longer an obstacle to the sale. The debt being the purchase money promised to be paid, the holders of the notes were entitled to a preference in payment over all other claims whatever. Therefore the reason for the rule laid down in the cases cited no longer existed, and we are of opinion that the rule itself should be held no longer applicable. After the time had passed within which letters of administration could be granted upon Rogers’ estate, the debt being for vendor’s lien, and no claim having priority over it as to the mortgaged premises, we see no good reason why the power which had been in abeyance did not immediately become effective, and why the sale did not pass title to the property in controversy.”
Following the Rogers v. Watson Case, and upon the soundness of the doctrine there stated, come other cases. In the case of National Exch. Bank v. Jackson, 33 S. W. 277, the Court of Civil Appeals laid down this proposition: “The sale of the land by the trustee under the deed of trust executed by John J. Eakins to J. J. Ellis, as trustee, to secure the indebtedness to Mrs. White, was valid, and conveyed the title to the purchaser, Daugherty, although Eakins was dead at the time of said sale.. The death of Eakins only suspended the power of the trustee until the courts might administer the property. Mrs. Eakins being the sole executrix and legatee of the property, and having appropriated the property to her use, the powers of the trustee were revived, and he was authorized to sell.” It is not shown in the statement of the case how long John J. Eakins, the grantor in the deed of trust had been dead, but, in view of the fact that his widow was made sole legatee, and had appropriated the property, it was sufficient to revive the power of sale.
In the case of Silverman v. Landrum et al., 19 Tex. Civ. App. 402, 47 S. W. 404, the Court of Civil Appeals, following the Rogers v. Watson Case, laid down this proposition on the subject under discussion: “The death of Samuel Landrum did not affect the power to sell under the deed of trust. The time in which administration upon his estate might have been taken out had expired. So the right off the heirs to have the estate settled under our probate laws was not interfered with.”
In the case of Gillaspie v. Murray, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 580, 66 S. W. 252, the Court of Civil Appeals, following the same case, announced this proposition: “More than four years having elapsed after the death of J. H. Murray, without any administration having been taken out upon his estate, the power to sell under the deed of trust could be executed. The power to sell given in a deed of trust is a power coupled with an interest, and is not revoked by the death of the *776constituent, but its exercise has been held to be inconsistent with the administration of the probate law of this state. After the expiration of the four years allowed for taking out letters of administration, the reason for denying the exercise of the power ceases.”
The case of Taylor v. Williams, 101 Tex. 388, 108 S. W. 815, is strongly in point in the case at bar. In that case the assignee of the mortgagor died, and left a will, in which he appointed an independent executor, and pending such independent administration the trustee in the deed of trust executed by Williams’ assignor of the mortgage property was proceeding to sell under the terms of the deed of trust, when the independent executor and others interested in the mortgaged property brought suit to enjoin the threatened sale of the property by the trustee in the exercise of the power conferred by the deed of trust. The question presented in that case for decision was, not whether the death of the assiguee of the mortgaged property, who stood in the same relation as to the revocation of the power to sell under the deed of trust as did the grantor, but whether an independent administration was such an administration as would, by force of the probate law, extinguish or supersede the power of the trustee in the deed of trust to sell. Judge Williams in that case rendered a clear and strong opinion, holding that the death of the assignee of the grantor, who was treated as the grantor, did not revoke the power to sell, and that an independent administration was not the kind of an 'administration which would suspend the power of sale by the trustee.
From the authorities in this state, it may be said the law is now definitely settled that the death of the grantor in a deed of trust, authorizing the sale of the property by a trustee, or the death of the assignee of such grantor of the property pledged, does not revoke the power of the trustee to sell the mortgaged property; that such power to sell, under the circumstances just mentioned, after the death of the grantor is. suspended in such manner as not to interfere with the orderly administration of the estate of ‘such decedent; and, where the time in which an administration may be sued out has expired, or when the administration is had independent of the probate court, the power to sell theretofore held in abeyance is revived and may be exercised. Thus far the courts of this state have definitely settled the law. In the case at bar, where the sale under the deed of trust was made after the death of the grantor, and before the expiration of four years within which time an administration might have been sued out, but where no administration was in fact ever sued out, the Court of Civil Appeals held that the trustee deed, like the power of sale, was held in abeyance until the expiration of the four years from the date of the grantor’s death, but upon the lapse of such period became effective, and passed the title to the purchaser at such sale. We think that court was right in its solution of that question, with this addition and modification: The trustee’s deed, made after the death of the constituent and before the lapse of the time within an administration might have been sued out on the estate of the grantor, was valid and effective, and passed the title to the land conveyed, subject only to be set aside by an administration for the payment of such preferred claims as might have existed under the law at the time, and as such deed might have interfered with the orderly administration of said estate. Such deed, made under the circumstances of this case, was neither invalid nor in a state of suspense, except in so far as it might have interfered with the. due execution of an administration -of the estate of the deceased grantor in said deed of trust; but, to the contrary, said deed was valid and effective, and upon its execution passed the title to the purchaser of said land at said sale against the heirs of the deceased and all other persons with the bare exception above stated. We may add to what has been said that the record contains no fact showing that a necessity existed for an administration on the estate of Henry Wiener, or that there was existent any creditor who might have demanded such administration.
In support of the reasoning upon which this ruling is based, we quote from the opinion of Judge Fly, as follows:
“The Supreme Court in that case [Taylor v. Williams, supra] did not decide the precise question in this case, and in fact declined to decide it, but the logic of the opinion can lead to no other result than to the ruling that a sale, made under a power before an administration is begun on an estate, is not void, but merely voidable in case an administration should be begun within the four years prescribed by the statute. Such sale would not interfere with the due administration of the estate; for the moment that the probate court took control of the estate the sale would be superseded, and the mortgagee relegated to the collection of his debt by the method required by law in cases of administration. No more would the sale before administration, under circumstances now being discussed interfere with the law in regard to administering of estates than would the sale under a power when an independent executor is in charge of the estate, nor when a suit is instituted on a claim to enforce payment before administration. In either case, an administration might be begun, and the opening of administration within the legal time would have the same effect in either instance.”
“In this case, no administration was ever had on the estate of Henry Wiener, and, although the sale under the power may have been made before the expiration of four years from the time of his death, upon what *777reasonable ground can it be held that tbe sale was invalid? It did not tend in any way to interfere with an administration of tbe estate, because no sucb administration ever existed. It cannot with any reason or justice be held that tbe mortgagee should have enforced bis claim through tbe district court, or that be should have gone to the extent of administering on tbe estate to enforce bis lien and collect his debt. If, in tbe case of tbe independent executor, a power of sale could be executed, it would seem that the power could be executed when no administration was pending, and which in fact was never opened. It may be that there would be stronger probabilities of an administration in tbe one case than in the other, but those chances would be assumed by the party invoking the power of sale in either instance, and could not affect the right to make the sale.”
While dealing with the question of the validity of sales under deeds of trust after the death of the grantor and pending administration, the terms “invalid” or “void” have been applied to such trustee deeds, but such language was evidently used in the sense that such sales were ineffectual to pass title under the existing circumstances. The terms “void” and “invalid,” as there used, were intended to mean nothing more than ineffectual to pass title. As stated in the case of Brown v. Brown, 50 N. H. 538: “The term ‘void’ is perhaps seldom, unless in a very clear case, to be regarded as implying a complete nullity; but it is, in a legal sense, subject to large qualifications, in view of all the circumstances calling for its application and the rights and interests to be affected m a given case.”
The fact that the power of sale under the circumstances named is only suspended or held in abeyance pending an administration, or until the time within which an administration may be had under the statute, and then only as it might effect such administration, is a reason why a sale, made under a deed of trust after the death of the grantor and before an administration has been sued out, or before the time in which an administration could be sued out had elapsed, is suspended and held in abeyance until an administration is had, when it becomes ineffectual to convey the title, or until the passing of the period when an administration could be had, at which time it becomes effectual to pass title as well against such administration as it had before against all others. For this reason and the reasons before assigned and given in the opinion of the Court of' Civil Appeals, we hold with that court that the trustee deed, made under the facts of this case as conceded, was valid, and passed the title of the grantor in the deed of trust to the property conveyed.
[4] We are of opinion the plaintiffs below, as the heirs of the grantor, had no right to raise the question of the invalidity of the sale under the deed of trust, on the ground that the sale was made after the death of the grantor and before the period had elapsed in which an administration could have been had on the estate of the grantor, for the reason that such issue could be raised only by the administrator in the interest of the creditors having claims against the estate of such decedent. The heirs of the decedent, as such, had no interest in the question of the validity of such sale of the decedent’s property under the deed of trust executed by him, since the invalidity of such sales, under such circumstances, could be declared invalid only as they did or might interfere with the orderly procedure of pending administrations. If there was no administration pending, there could be no interference with its orderly execution; and if an administration was pending the interference with its orderly enforcement could be suggested only by the administrator in the interest of the administration and creditors of the decedent.
The assignments of plaintiffs below present the question of the invalidity of the .deed of trust executed by Henry Wiener without be-' ing joined by his wife. The contention is that, because the wife refused to join in the deed of trust given by the husband on the homestead, such instrument was void. It is also contended that at the time of the sale under the deed of trust the property so conveyed was the homestead of plaintiffs; they being, as contended, the remaining constituents of the family after the death of their father and mother.
[5] The questions raised by these assignments must be determined in the light of the Constitution and laws existent prior to January 1, 1868, the date of the execution of the deed of trust by Henry Wiener. The Constitution of 1806, § 22, art. 7, which was an exact reproduction of the Constitution of 1845, is as follows: “The Legislature shall have power to protect by law from forced sale, a certain portion of the property of all heads of families. The homestead of a family not to exceed two hundred acres of land (not included in a town or city) or any town or city lot or lots, in value not to exceed $2,000.00, shall not be subject to forced sale for any debt hereafter contracted, nor shall the owner, if a married man, be at liberty to alienate the same, unless by the consent of the wife, in such manner as the Legislature may point out.”
Under the Constitutions of 1845 and 1860, the homestead was protected from forced sale, but it was permissible to mortgage the homestead, and, when duly executed by the husband and wife, was enforceable when the power of sale was given. It was held that sales made of the homestead under deeds of trust or mortgages with power of sale were not forced sales, as meant in the Constitution; and hence such sales passed title to the homestead when regularly made, when *778such instruments were executed by bothhusband and wife. Sampson & Keene v. Williamson and Wife, 6 Tex. 102, 55 Am. Dec. 762; Lee and Wife v. Kingsbury, 13 Tex. 68, 62 Am. Dec. 546; Jordon v. Peak, 38 Tex. 429; Chipman v. McKinney, 41 Tex. 76.
[6] In the case at bar, however, the deed of trust was executed by the husband alone, the wife refusing to join him, and this furnishes the contention that the deed of trust was by reason of that fact void. We do not think the contention well grounded. The husband could not alienate the homestead without the consent of the wife in the execution of the conveyance, and it is clear he could not mortgage the homestead, so as to cause its alienation, without the joint execution of the instrument by his wife; but from this it does not follow, in the light of authority, that such mortgage or deed of trust is void. Such deed of trust was valid, but ineffectual to convey the homestead. The lien given by Wiener on the homestead, without the consent of his wife, was valid, but, in the language of Judge Robertson, in Inge & Boring v. Cain, 65 Tex. 78, “its fruition was dependent upon the contingency of a cessation of the unassailable use.” There was nothing jn any of the Constitutions, prior to 1876, making mortgages, deeds of trust, bonds for title, or deeds alienating the homestead void, as is the case in the later Constitution, except in specially enumerated cases. Formerly our courts were uniform in holding such instruments, when not executed by the wife with the husband, simply as ineffectual and not void, and their revival was recognized when, for instance, the homestead character of the property was abandoned or ceased to be used as such, or in cases of the death of the wife before the husband. In Inge & Boring v. Cain, supra, it was said: “Liens upon the homesteads, if given by the husband alone, were valid; and if given by the husband and wife were valid; and if so given as to be effectual without a forced sale were valid and effectual.”
In the ease of Stewart v. Mackey, 16 Tex. 56, 67 Am. Dec. 609, a mortgage was given on the homestead of the mortgagors, but no power of sale was given. It was held by the court in that case that the mortgage was ineffectual at the time of its execution, but that subsequently, when the homestead was abandoned, such mortgage became effectual, and gave a prior lien on the property that was formerly exempt from forced sale, as against other creditors of the mortgagors. A like holding was made in the case of Lee v. Kingsbury, heretofore cited.
In the case of Duke v. Reed, 64 Tex. 705, a mortgage had been executed by one Dorn on his homestead, without the signature and acknowledgment of the wife; and Chief Justice Willie held that, even if this were true, by the subsequent death of Dorn, without leaving any member of his family surviving in whom the homestead right could vest, the land was deprived of its homestead character, and that immediately after this contingency the mortgage lien was fastened on such property. The mortgage, ineffectual at the time of its execution, was revived when the homestead character of the property ceased to exist. This could not have been the case if the mortgage executed by the husband alone was at the time of its execution void. Under the present Constitution, such an instrument is made void from the beginning, and can never be resuscitated.
Analogous to the case in hand and illustrative of the question under discussion is the case of Jordon v. Godman, 19 Tex. 273. In that case, in 1850, Godman, without the consent of his wife, conveyed the homestead on 'which they were residing at the time of such sale. 1 They left the state and Godman died. 1-Iis widow and children returned to the state and attempted to recover the homestead, on the ground that the deed made by the husband to the homestead, without the wife’s consent, was void. The court held that, while the deed to the homestead by the husband, without the wife’s consent, was ineffectual to alienate the homestead while the property was clothed with that character, yet after the homestead had been abandoned the conveyance, before ineffectual, became effectual to convey the property.
The cases of Brewer v. Wall, 23 Tex. 586, 76 Am. Dec. 76, and Allison and Wife v. Shilling, 27 Tex. 451, 86 Am. Dec. 622, illustrate the principle here contended for that a mortgage, given on a homestead, under the Constitution prior to 1876, by the husband, without the wife’s consent, was not void, was not an unlawful act, but was simply a valid, yet ineffectual, conveyance. In the two cases last referred to, the husbands had given bonds for title, agreeing to convey their homesteads. As to homesteads, specific performance could not be enforced, for such actions would have been construed as forced sales, and their enforcement was inhibited by the Constitution. But in the one ease the wife died, and the court held the bond for title enforceable against the husband; and in the other, the homestead being abandoned, the bond for title theretofore nonenforceable became enforceable against the husband.
It seems to us that no more authority is required to establish the principle that the mortgage given by Henry Wiener on his homestead, without the consent of his wife, was not a yoid instrument, but was only inoperative during the lifetime of his wife, and while the property retained its homestead character, and upon the death of his wife was a valid and effective deed of trust, capable of being enforced.
[7, 8] This brings us to the other question so earnestly and with so great ability urged by counsel for plaintiffs below, namely, that at the time of the sale of the land in question under the deed of trust it was the *779homestead of plaintiffs as the surviving constituents of the family after the death of their father and mother. This contention of plaintiffs cannot, we think, be sustained, either on principle or authority in this state. “Children have no interest in the homestead, as such, as the surviving parent, by virtue of the homestead rights of the deceased parent.” If the homestead be community property, as in the case in hand, the surviving husband has, and always has had, the power to sell such homestead to pay the community debts. He has power to mortgage such homestead for a like purpose, and the children, if there be any, whether minors or adults have no power to interfere or obstruct the exercise of such dominion over such property by the surviving parent. The rights of children in the homestead are entirely dependent upon the will and action of the surviving parent. In case of the death of both parents, the right of minor children to occupy the homestead exists only through a guardian, and even then it is not an absolute right, as is that given by law to the survivor to occupy the homestead, but such right is made to depend upon the discretion and judgment of the proper court as to whether such necessity exists. Ashe v. Yungst, 65 Tex. 631; Johnson v. Taylor, 43 Tex. 122; Tadlock v. Eccles, 20 Tex. 782, 73 Am. Dec. 213; Brewer v. Wall, 23 Tex. 586, 76 Am. Dec. 76; Grothaus v. De Lopez, 57 Tex. 670; Shannon v. Grey, 59 Tex. 252.
It is doubtful whether a further discussion of this last question is demanded. If it should be thought otherwise, we will quote briefly from some of the authorities above cited. Judge Bell, in the case of Brewer v. Wall, above cited, on this question, said: “This court has decided, and the Constitution clearly contemplates, that the homestead right of the wife does not survive after her death, so as to vest a homestead right in the children of the marriage.”
Judge Gould, in the case of Johnson v. Taylor, above, which was a suit by a minor child to recover the homestead that had been sold by the mother as community survivor, said: “It is claimed by appellant that, inasmuch as the father’s estate was insolvent, the forty-fifth section of the probate law of 1848 (Paschal’s Dig. art. 1154) had the effect of vesting in his child (the plaintiff) an absolute estate of one-half of the homestead, not subject to sale by the survivor of the community. The case of Green v. Crow, cited by appellant, 17 Tex. 188, is to the effect that, under the section referred to, the right of the widow and children to such exempt property is absolute as against creditors. But there is believed to be nothing in that law or that decision justifying the conclusion that the child in such a case, as against the surviving widow, takes any other estate than that given him by the general laws of descent and distribution. Where the homestead was the separate property of the survivor, the right of the survivor to sell and convey it is well settled. Brewer v. Wall, 23 Tex. 589 [76 Am. Dec. 76]; Tadlock v. Eccles, 20 Tex. 782 [73 Am. Dec. 213], The children have no interest in the homestead as such, as against the surviving parent, by virtue of the homestead rights of the deceased parent, ff it was the community property of their parents, they inherit the share of the deceased parent, just as they inherit other community property.”
Judge Wheeler, in Tadloek v. Eccles, above, expressed the following view, speaking for the court: “But it is insisted that there are other parties, the children of the defendant, who have interfered in this suit, and who are not concluded by the former judgment, because not parties to it. If the wife were here to assert her rights, she would not be concluded, because not a party to the proceeding, and because she cannot be divested of her right, except by her own voluntary act. But the children cannot control the parent in the disposition of the homestead, or assert a right therein adversely to the act of their parents. The parent has the right to dispose of the homestead without consulting them; and whatever will bind the head of a family will be binding upon them.”
“It is well settled that after the death of the wife the husband could have sold the property, for the purpose of paying this community debt, without first qualifying as survivor in community. It is equally well settled that his administrator, if he had died, would have had the right to control and administer the property for the purpose of paying communities debts.” Shannon v. Gray et al., 59 Tex. 251.
It is evident that the plaintiffs, as the heirs of Henry and Hannah Wiener, had no right in the property in controversy after it was sold under the deed of trust. The debt was shown to have been a community debt, and the property was also of the community.
There are other questions raised by the assignments of plaintiffs, but, in view of the fact they have all been ably discussed and correctly disposed of by the Court of Civil Appeals in the opinion of that court, which is approved by this court, it will serve no good purpose here to discuss such other questions.
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals will be affirmed, and it is so ordered.