Opinion by
Mr. Justice Moschzisker,The plaintiff filed a bill against her husband alleging that certain real estate in his occupancy and possession was her sole and separate property; that, owing to ill-treatment on his part, she was compelled to leave the property in question, on October 14,1910, and to remain away thenceforth; that she did not attempt to retake possession for fear of personal violence at his hands; that she had demanded that he vacate, but he had refused to do so. The plaintiff prayed that the defendant be ordered to surrender possession to her, that he be enjoined from in any way interfering with her enjoyment of the property, and that he be decreed to pay a just compensation for use and occupation since October 14, 1910. The defendant filed an answer in which he averred that the property had been purchased solely with his own money; that he conveyed it to his wife for a mere nominal consideration “to secure its use as a home”; that she had left voluntarily and without cause; that he had not been guilty of any treatment that would justify her withdrawal; he further alleged, in detail, improper conduct and ill-treatment by the plaintiff, and prayed that the bill be dismissed. The case was heard on bill and answer, and a decree was entered that the defendant *491should vacate and surrender possession to the plaintiff and not interfere with her management and control of the property in the future; the costs were placed upon the defendant, hut he was not charged with any rent during the time of his separate occupancy. The defendant has appealed and assigns for error several findings of the trial court, and its final decree.
Equity jurisdiction was not disputed in the court below and is not questioned here. • The chancellor found that this real estate had been conveyed by the defendant to the plaintiff in consideration of the fact that she had paid with her own funds a good part of the original cost of the property and in pursuance of an agreement that she should satisfy certain mortgages thereon out of her separate estate, which she did. He also found, however, “that at least a portion of the cost of the property was paid by Howard I. Ireland, and thousands of dollars of improvements thereon were paid by him, together with all but two years’ taxes and mortgage interest,” and that after the conveyance to the plaintiff the parties had “continued to live there as man and wife as an established home.” But in connection with this last fact, the chancellor found that the plaintiff “lived and resided there in sole and separate ownership thereof, the said defendant, Howard I. Ireland, residing therein as her husband,” further, “that no fraud was practiced by said Bertha D. Ireland upon said Howard I. Ireland in obtaining said conveyance,” and that “nothing was said or transpired at the time of said conveyance,......in derogation of the absolute fee-simple grant to her.” On these findings the court below' concluded that the plaintiff was the owner in fee of the premises, that “no trust of any kind was impressed upon the said property at the time of the conveyance thereof to the said Bertha D. Ireland,” and that she was entitled to the possession thereof free from any interference on the part of her husband.
We have read the evidence and are not convinced of an insufficiency of proofs to sustain the chancellor’s findings *492of fact. But the appellant contends that even though these findings be accepted as true, it should be decided as a matter of law that the plaintiff could not maintain her action, for two reasons: (1) Because under the law she Avas not entitled to sue her husband; (2) because the findings show a departure from the allegations of the bill. It has long been established in Pennsylvania that a married woman may sue her husband in equity to restrain him from unlawfully depriving her of the use and enjoyment of her separate estate, and this notwithstanding the provisions of section 3, of the Act of June 8,1893, P. L. 344. See, McKendry v. McKendry, 131 Pa. 24; Heckman v. Heckman, 215 Pa. 203; Dorsett v. Dorsett, 226 Pa. 334; these authorities fully dispose of the first of the contentions now before us. As to the second, although the bill avers that the plaintiff was obliged to leave the property in controversy, “owing to the cruel and barbarous treatment” of her husband, and the chancellor states, “I do not find any evidence that the defendant caused the plaintiff to leave by cruel and barbarous treatment,” yet, he specifically found, concerning the defendant’s personal conduct as a husband, that his wife had been “compelled to withdraw from the said property......and remain out of possession thereof ......for causes which justified her in so doing.” The essential part of the averment under consideration is not so much the particularities of the cause of the plaintiff’s departure, or the proper name by which the defendant’s behavior toward her should be designated, as the fact that, she was “compelled to withdraw......and remain out of possession” owing to the conduct of her husband. Even though the precise cause which led to the plaintiff’s withdrawal may not have amounted to “cruel and barbarous treatment” within the technical meaning, of that term, and hence the evidence possibly might have fallen short of sustaining the averment to that extent, still it is sufficient that the proofs and the findings upon the subject-matter in hand are in accord with and fully sus*493tain the important part of the averment to which they relate, and since this is the fact, there was no material variance, or departure, in the case.
Any money which the defendant put into the property before the conveyance to his wife, necessarily passed to her, and any subsequent expenditures must be presumed to have been made with the knowledge on his part that the property belonged to the plaintiff, and that, therefore, they might enure to her benefit; but the trial court, no doubt, had these latter items in mind when it refused to charge the defendant for use and occupation of the premises. In connection herewith, see the opinion in Ireland v. Ireland (No. 2), 244 Pa. 493.
The assignments of error are overruled and the decree is affirmed at the cost of the appellant.