The rights of the husband over the acquisitions of the wife are not affected by a temporary separation of the parties, voluntary on the part of both, and adopted for their comfort, convenience or interest, as the case may be; and while thus situated, the legal disabilities and legal privileges, incident to the relation of husband and wife, continue unaltered. In case of the husband’s abjuration, or exile from the country, the law does indeed give to the wife the protection and power incident to a feme sole. It does this from the necessity of the case. Her legal protector being civilly dead, she resumes her individual legal capacity to enter into contracts, to make acquisitions of property, and to sue and be sued. Gregory v. Paul, 15 Mass. 31. Rev. Sts. c. 77, § 4.
The same principle is also extended to the case of a married woman who, driven by cruelty and neglect of the husband, to abandon his house, and to provide for herself, should come into this Commonwealth, leaving her husband in another State, and here maintain herself as a single woman, the husband having utterly abandoned her. Abbot v. Bayley, 6 Pick. 89.
Our Rev. Sts. c. 77, § 18, have gone further, and provided that when any married woman shall come from any other State *322or country into this State, without her husband, he having never lived with her in this State, she may contract, and -may sue and be sued as a feme sole.
This case, as disclosed in the answer of the trustee, shciws that a sum of money was deposited in the savings bank by the wife of the principal defendant, in her name, she and her husband living separate at the time, but both residing within the Commonwealth, and for aught that appears, in the same neighborhood. Prima facie, such a deposit would enure to the benefit of the husband and might well be attached by the trustee process, by his creditor. To avoid such a result, the trustee must show, that as to this deposit the wife was to be considered a feme sole, and that the marital rights of the husband were not in force. And it is attempted to maintain this position by the facts, that the parties' did not live together . that they had been separated for many years previous ; that while thus living apart, neither of them had contributed any thing toward the support of the other; and that the husband had not exercised any control over her deposits in the savings bank.
Cases have occurred, as has been already suggested, of separation under such circumstances of desertion, and indicating so manifestly a renouncement of all marital duties and liabilities, that the law has invested the wife with legal capacity to act in her own name, and to acquire and hold property in her own right. But they have been cases where the husband was without the Commonwealth ; cases where the court could not, by its process, compel the husband to pay the expenses, incident to her necessary support, to those who might furnish it, nor enforce the payment of any alimony that might be allowed upon her application for a divorce.
The law does not allow, and public policy strongly forbids, that by a mere voluntary separation of the parties, both continuing to reside here, they should be reinstated in their separate legal interests and legal capacities, by means of such separation. Indeed if the husband had by his extreme cruelty driven her from his house, and left her without any means of support, yet if both parties continued to reside here, she would still remain under the *323legal disabilities of a feme covert, according to the doctrine stated in the case of Abbot v. Bayley, before cited.
With the great facilities, now existing under our statutes, for procuring a legal separation, either by a divorce a vinculo, or a mensa et thoro, extending to every case which can possibly justify or require such separation, there seems to be no good reason for any further extension of the doctrine of the power of acquisition, by the wife, of the legal capacity and legal rights of a feme sole, by reason of her husband’s acts, and independent of that formal divorce which the law in its wisdom has provided as the proper mode of separating husband and wife. It seems to us, therefore, that the money in the hands of the trustee is to be considered in the same legal view as if those parties had been living together as husband and wife, at the time of making the deposit, and the husband had assented to such deposit by the wife in her own name. Such investment in the name of his wife, by the husband directly, or by his permission, if of property legally his by acquisition, and holden really in his own right, could not be legally made for the benefit of the wife. Such investment in her name, by his consent, might bar the heirs of the husband, and might confer upon her all the legal rights of survivorship, as regards the claims of such heirs ; but it would be invalid as against the creditors of the husband. Although deposited in the name of the wife, it is the husband’s money, and may be demanded by him, or taken by his creditors.
But if we were to give greater effect to this deposit, and consider it as the wife’s chose in action, and allow her the full ben ■ efit of the doctrine of right by survivorship, there would still be difficulties in the way, if we attempt to sustain her right to the money now in controversy upon that ground ; as no case exists for the application of the doctrine of survivorship. Before the dissolution of the marriage by death or divorce, the wife’s dioses in action, if unnegotiable, as the present credit in the hands of the trustee is, may be attached by the creditors of the husband, by the trustee process, and they may thus compel its reduction to possession for their benefit. Holbrook v. Waters, 19 Pick 354. Wheeler v. Bowen, 20 Pick. 563.
*324The husband is yet living, and there has been no divorce from the bond of matrimony. It is true that there has been, since the attachment, a divorce from bed and board, but not accompanied with a decree vesting m the wife her choses in action, or other personal property. This would present an insuperable difficulty to the supporting of the wife’s claim to this money, treating the deposit as a chose in action of the wife.
It seems to us, therefore, that the money deposited in the savings bank, whether considered as the money absolutely of the husband, as we hold it to be, or considered as a chose in action of the wife, was liable to the trustee process, at the suit of the creditors of the husband, and that no subsequent pro ceedings, which have taken place, have defeated the attachment of it in the hands of the trustee.