after stating the case: In Fulp v. Brown, 153 N. C., p. 533, the Court, in speaking to the question presented, said: “While our decisions have not been in entire accord as to the exact nature of the homestead interest referred to in these provisions, it has come now to be accepted doctrine that they do not create a new estate or confer any new property rights in an old one, but only an 'exemption right’ — a 'determinable exemption,’ as it has been called in some of the cases, operating on the creditor and the agencies provided for the collection of the debt by law and requiring, in the case of real estate certainly, that the exemption be given effect before a valid sale can be made.” This' and a decision at same term in Sash Co. v. Parker, 153 N. C., 130, in which it was held among other things, “That a homestead in lands is not an estate therein, but a mere exemption right,” were in recognition of the principle contained and established in the case of Joyner v. Sugg, 132 N. C., 580. That was a petition to rehear *294a decision in the same case, 131 N. C., 324, and the Supreme Court in upholding the petition and in reversal of its former ruling held in effect that the homestead interest provided for in Article X of our Constitution was only “an exemption right, a determinable exemption,” and that where this right obtained, whether it had been allotted or otherwise, the general power of alienation incident to ordinary ownership of real property continued to exist as to any and all the residue'or remaining interest in the property, and unaffected by the restrictive features of section 8 of Article X, these features applying only to the homestead interest itself, and none other. In the case referred to, the position indicated was declared and maintained in a learned and elaborate opinion by Associate Justice Walker, for the Court, as expressing the correct purport and meaning of the constitutional provision, as being grounded in right reason and in line with a large number of well-considered decisions bearing directly on the subject. From this, we think it follows that when the ownership of a tract of land and any and all interest therein, except this homestead interest, has been passed from the debtor by valid conveyance, and such homestead interest determines by the death of the parties entitled, or by any of the recognized methods of abandonment, it does so in favor of the grantee in such conveyance; and where such conveyance has become effective before a judgment is docketed, that there is no estate in the debtor to which a judgment lien could attach and no interest of the judgment creditor in the property that would call for or permit the interference of a court in his behalf by injunction or otherwise.
In the present case, prior to any judgment docketed or any lien acquired, the debtor conveyed the entire land in trust for creditors, “reserving from the operation of the instrument the homestead and personal-property exemption of the said Joseph Fleming.” After the execution of this deed, the homestead having been duly allotted, the trustee sold and conveyed the tract of land except the homestead, and also the reversion after the homestead interest, to Isabella Fleming. There is no allegation or suggestion of fraud or irregularity in the transaction, and on the facts in evidence, and applying the princi-*295pies recognized and upheld by the decisions referred to, we are of opinion that there is no right in the judgment creditor to stay the cutting of timber on the land contained in the homestead. This position in no way conflicts with the decision in Jones v. Britton, 102 N. C., 166, to which we were referred by counsel. In that case the reversion in the land after the homestead interest was in the debtor at the time the judgment lien attached, and the debtor was restrained from destructive waste. The complaint alleged, and the evidence tended to show, that “At the time said judgment was docketed the defendant was entitled to the right of homestead and was seized and possessed of the land, etc.,” and the ruling as stated was based on the fact, that the debtor owned the land when the judgment was docketed.
A construction of section 686 of the Revisal does not seem to be involved in this appeal, for the section itself contains the provision that the same shall have no retroactive effect, and the determinative facts all transpired before the section was enacted. Chapter 3, sec. 3, Laws 1905. But if it were otherwise, the same position would prevail. A perusal of the entire section gives clear indication that the portion of the law providing for the enforcement of liens which attach prior to the conveyance of the homestead refers to liens which attach to the land on which the homestead had been or may be allotted. Accordingly, in a recent case construing the statute, Sash Co. v. Parker, supra, it appears that the judgment debtor owned the land at the time the lien attached. The decision in Joyner v. Sugg, supra, was made on facts very similar to those presented here, the headnote being as follows: “A deed in trust by the husband, in which the wife does not join, reserving the homestead of the grantor therein, conveys the entire land contained in the deed of trust, subject only to the determinable exemption in $1,000 thereof from the payment of the debts of the grantor during his life”; and the case throughout is an apt authority in support of the present ruling.
There is no error, and the judgment below is
Affirmed.