(after stating the case). At the time the defendant’s homestead was laid off, there was no provision by law for his appeal from the allotment of the appraisers. Prior to the act of 1876-77, ch. 14, a homesteader, if dissatisfied with the appraisement, had the right of appeal to the Board of Township Trustees; but by that act, the Board of Trustees was abolished, and the homesteader was put to such other means of relief as were given by the law. As the appraisers were not a court of record, the party deprived of his appeal, had the right to bring his case before the Superior Court by a writ of reoordari. Ballard v. Waller, 7 Jones, 84; Leatherwood v. Moody, 3 Ired., 129; Webb v. Durham, 7 Ired., 130. This was a means provided by law for having the proceedings before the appraisers reviewed, of which the defendant might have availed himself, but he failed *154to do so. Instead of applying for the writ of recordari, he applied for a certiorari, but even if that might have availed him, after obtaining the fiat of the Judge requiring him to give a bond, no bond was ever given, and no other steps taken by him to obtain the writ. It was never issued, but was stopped by the intervention of his counsel.
There was yet another remedy for the defendant, as prescribed in the case of Burton v. Spiers, 87 N. C., 87, of which the defendant might properly have taken advantage, if he had prosecuted the matter to a final determination. This Court there held, that the proceedings by the appraisers, were required to be returned by the officer, to the Clerk of the Court for the county in which the homestead is situated, and filed with the judgment-roll in the action, and a minute of the same entered on the judgment docket. Bat. Rev., ch. 55, §4. This direction, said the Court, as to the disposition to be made of the report of the exemption, is not to give notice of its extent only, but to subject it to a motion made in reasonable time to set it aside. But the motion, as was said, should be made in a reasonable time — that must mean at the first opportunity the defendant might have to make his' motion. It is true, the defendant did make his motion to have the allotment of homestead and the sale of excess under execution set aside, and to have a new allotment; but this was not done until the January term, 1883, more than two years after the allotment had been made, and the excess sold under execution. But the defendant, after the act of 1883, hereinafter recited, took an appeal under that act, and allowed his motion in the cause to be dismissed without objection.
The law in force at the time the allotment was made, required that the debtor, dissatisfied with the valuation of the allotment of the appraisers, might, within ten days thereafter’, and before sale under execution of the excess, file a transcript of the return of the appraisers with the Clerk of the Board of Township Trustees, who was required to notify the Board of Township Trustees, who might re-assess and allot the homestead — Bat. Rev., ch. 55, §20 —and make their returns as provided in §21.
*155It will be seen from this act, that the proceedings to have a re-assessment, must be had before a sale under the execution.
But the defendant says that he was deprived of this remedy, by the abolition of the Board of Township Trustees, and the Legislature has come to his relief, by passing the Act of 1883, ch. 357, §§1-2, which gives him the right of appeal to the Superior Court.
That act is as follows:
“SECTION 1. That if the judgment creditor, at whose instance the personal property exemption or homestead of his judgment debtor shall have been allotted, or the said judgment debtor, shall be dissatisfied with the valuation and allotment of the appraisers or assessors, as the case may be, either of them may, within ten days thereafter, or any other creditor, if dissatisfied, within six months thereafter, and before sale under execution of the excess, notify the adverse party and the sheriff having the execution in hand thereof, and file with the Clerk of the Superior Court of the county where the said allotment shall be made, a transcript of the return of' the appraisers or assessors, as the case may be, which they, or the sheriff, shall allow to be made upon demand, together with his objections, in writing, to said return, and thereupon the said clerk shall enter the same on the civil issue docket of the said Superior Court, for trial, to be had at the next term thereof, as other civil actions, and the sheriff shall not thereupon sell the excess until after the determination of said proceeding.
“ Sec. 2. That any creditor or debtor who is dissatisfied with the allotment of any homestead or personal property exemption, made since the abolition of the Board of Township Trustees, may have the same appealed to a regular term of the Superior Court of the county where the property was situated, under the provisions of this act; Provided, however, that no one' shall be entitled to an appeal under this section, who has not already taken steps to have such allotment revised in some way.”
The two sections of the act must be construed together. They are parts of a whole. The latter section refers to the first, and *156gives the right of appeal, under the provisions of this act, to any one who has already taken steps to have such allotment revised in some way. But one of the provisions of the act is, that the appeal must be taken before sale under execution of the excess, and this was a provision in the act of 1868, Bat. Rev., eh. 55, §20, and no doubt the reason of this provision was, that the Legislature did not mean to allow the title of the purchaser to be disturbed, after a sale of the excess by the sheriff. This was the construction given to the act of 1868 in the case of Heptinstall v. Perry, 76 N. C., 190. There, the plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant, executions issued thereon, and the homestead of the judgment debtor was laid off. About six months after the sale of the excess by the sheriff, the plaintiff, becoming dissatisfied, requested a re-allotment of said homestead, and to that end applied for a mandamus to the Township Board of Trustees, which was refused by the Judge, and the defendant appealed. Reade, Judge, delivering the opinion of the Court, said, “The statute is so plain as to leave no room for construction. The application for re assessment and allotment of homestead, must be before the sale of the excess by the sheriff. Bat. Rev., ch. 55, § 20.” The same construction must be given to the act of 1883, for their provisions are the same in this respect. The second section of that act, then, was insufficient for the purpose intended to be effected by it, after the excess had been sold under execution; and this was probably the reason why the Legislature, in incorporating the act of 1883 in The Code, omitted the second section of the act, although The Code and the act of 1883 were adopted at the same session of the Legislature. The Code, §519.
Our conclusion is, the defendant has lost his right to have a re-allotment of his homestead, by his own fault in not having resorted in time to the means of relief which the law afforded him.
There is no error. The judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed.
No error. Affirmed.