It is said for the plaintiff, that if the husband dies, leaving no debts and no children, the widow will not be entitled to a homestead, but only to dower, and it is insisted that, this being so, the homestead is conferred simply as a protection against creditors, and that if the homestead has been assigned, and the heir, representing the deceased debtor, pays off the debts, there will no longer be a necessity for the continuance of the homestead estate, and the heir will become entitled to the land, subject only to the *172widow’s right of dower; and for this position Hoger v. Nixon, 69 N. C., 108, is cited. It is there said, that where no homestead was laid off in the life-time of the husband, it may be laid off as a protection against creditors, but is valid and available against them only. “As between the widow and the heirs, the estate goes under the general law,” and there is a quaere as to what would be the result, if the heir should procure the creditor to release and extinguish the debt, which seems to have been done in the present case.
It appears, from the statement of facts agreed, that there were debts, and that the homestead was allotted to the widow (defendant) according to law, and the allotment or assignment was void. Smith v. McDonald, 95 N. C., 163, and cases there cited.
We are clearly of the opinion that the homestead, whether laid off to the husband in his life-time, or, when he leaves no children, to his widow, after his death, cannot be divested in favor of the heir by the release or extinguishment of the debts of the deceased husband, but it shall inure to the benefit of the widow “during her widowhood.” Constitution, Art. X, §5; The Code, §514.
No error. Affirmed.