— These cases involve the same questions, and were submitted together. Those questions are, first, whether a decree in 1878, having for its purpose the relief of Mrs. Powell from the disabilities of coverture, to the extent and as provided in section 2731 of the Code of 1876, is void for insufficiency of the petition filed to that end; and, second, -whether, conceding the invalidity of that decree, the mortgages upon which the claim of the New England Mortgage Security Company is rested, -were validated by an attempted ratification on the part of the married woman after the enactment of February 28, 1887, entitled “Aff-act to define the rights and liabilities of husband and wife.”
The first question stated came before this court on a former appeal in the chancery suit now 'again submitted, and it was then held that the petition filed by Mrs. Powell, seeking to be relieved of disabilities of coverture, was' fatally cle*426fective, and insufficient to confer jurisdiction in the premises upon the chancellor, in that it did not ask for all the relief offered by the statute, and that, of consequence, the decree was coram non judiee and void; and also, that the decree, considered apart from the petition, was itself defective, for that, while broader than the petition, it yet did not grant the full measure of relief which the statute was intended to afford. Powell v. New England Mortgage Security Co., 87 Ala. 602.
The averments and prayer of the petition are as follows 1st, that Mrs. Powell “is a resident citizen of Montgomery county, Alabama, over twenty-one years of age, and the wife of James W. Powell; 2d, that she. is the owner of certain real estate and an interest in lands in Montgomery county, which are her separate statutory estate, and which she desires to incumber or mortgage for the purpose of raising money. Wherefore your petitioner prays that your Honor will relieve her of all the disabilities of coverture, to the end that she may sue and be sued as a femme sole, mortgage, convey, and otherwise dispose of her separate'estate, as fully and freely as if & femme sole.” The expression of petitioner’s desire to incumber or mortgage her property to raise money, and of the ends to the effectuation of which she prayed relief from the disabilities of coverture, was considered by this court on the former appeal as operating a limitation upon that part of the prayer which sought the removal of all disabilities to contract incident to the marital relation of the petitioner, so that, taking the petition as a whole, it asked for relief only so far as was necessary to enable Mrs. Powell to sue and be sued, and mortgage, convey, and otherwise dispose of her separate estate as a femme sole. If this construction be the correct one, the petition was, of course, insufficient to authorize any decree, since it did not ask for the relief which the statute offers, and which must be prayed and granted as an entirety, as held in numerous decisions of this court.
It is now strenuously insisted for appellant, that this construction is unsound, and that the true meaning of the petition is that the petitioner be relieved of all the disabilities of coverture — nothing more or less — -and that what is stated therein as to the petitioner’s desire to incumber or mortgage her property, and to the effect that she prays the removal of all the disabilities of coverture, “to the end that she may sue and be sued as a femme sole,” &c., is but the “garrulous disclosure of the immediate uses to be made of the liberty to be obtained under the prayer to relieve her of all the disabilities of coverture;” and that all this should be disregarded as the merest surplusage. This position of the appellant may be fully *427granted and conceded — for my own part, I consider it eminently sound — without disturbing the conclusion reached when the case was here before — that the petition was insufficient and the decree void. Applying the proposition of appellant to the proceeding, we have as á result a petition which prays relief, not to the extent that relief is afforded by the statute, but from all the disabilities of coverture, — a measure of relief far in excess of that provided for by the statute; and a decree which undertakes to grant this entire and unauthorized emancipation from the law’s limitations upon the contracting capacity of the fem me eovert. With respect to the decree the further concession may be made, that, though too broad, it would be good to the extent the statute authorizes relief, and its operation would be confined to such relief if the petition was sufficient. But is there any basis for a like concession in respect of the petition ? We think not. Tt is, of course, not to be doubted that, ordinarily, a jdeader’s right to particular relief is not prejudiced by a prayer for larger relief, including that to which he is entitled. It is equally true that, ordinarily, the pleader will not be denied all relief, because he asks only for lesadhan he is entitled to. And if an argument may be predicated on the first proposition favorable to the granting to this petitioner the relief’ intended to be afforded by the statute, though she asks for more, that argument is wholly parried by the legal fact, as to which no controversy exists, taken in connection with the second proposition, that thé pleader in this proceeding must ask for all that she is entitled to, or she gets nothing. In other words, to hold that the petitioner is entitled to no relief, because she asked for more than the law offers, is no more in the teeth of general rules of pleading, than to hold, as this court has frequently done, that she can not be awarded any relief, unless she prays for all contemplated by the act. The truth is, that the ordinary rules of pleading have no application 1 o this matter, and for very cogent reasons.
In actions inter partes, the effort always is to enforce some obligation existing on the defendant. It is always to the interest of the complaining party that his claim shall be effectuated in full, or to any less extent to which he is entitled to relief on the facts adduced. Hence, the law assumes that he assents to, in fact demands, not only the full relief he prays, but any part of that relief to which he may show himself entitled. And his prayer essentially is for the whole relief, and for every part of it. But this is not. a suit inter partes. No right is asserted against anybody. No relief is sought through the operation of the court’s process upon any party. The *428effort involved is simply one to change the legal status of the petitioner, to give her a different attitude before the law than she before sustained, and this purely for her own benefit. Before the court can act, she must affirmatively assent to whatever change of status is made, to whatever new attilude she is decreed to bear. This has been decided. Not only so, but her husband also must assent in writing to the proposed change of status. This the statute specifically provides. And her assent as well as his must be expressed; it is a jurisdictional fact. Now, there is no presumption of law that it is to the benefit of the'petitioner that this change of status shall take place; the general policy of the law is against such change, and this on the theory that the wife’s inability to contract tends to conserve her interests, and save her from the evil results which might spring from the dominant will of her husband. And the same is true in respect of the husband. The court can not know that any change of status will be of benefit to him, or meet with his approval, except as may appear from the terms of his assent, or rather from the terms of the petition to which he does assent. There is, therefore, no basis for a presumption to be indulged by the court, that either the wife or the husband has assented to any other change of status, or to the investiture of the wife with any other -ights, than she has expressly asked, and he has expressly assented to. The court can not say, and the law does not presume, that she desires and he has assented to the grant of any integral part of the relief which she prays. It might well be that a married woman would desire to be freed from all the disabilities of coverture, and thus put upon the vantage-ground of a femme sole for all contractual purposes, and yet not desire to be absolved from the law’s limitations only in respect of her statutory and other separate estates. Oases might be imagined in which complete emancipation would, in a sense, be necessary to the proper management of the separate estate of the wife, and in which the mere grant, of power to buy, sell, hold, convey and mortgage property, and to sue and be sued as a femme sole, without capacity to make all other contracts which may be made by one sui juris, would not be conservative from any point of view of the wife’s welfare, or her separate property. And similarly, there might be good reasons actuating the assent of the husband to the removal of all marital disabilities which could have no force by way of inducing him to consent that only those disabilities specified in the statute should be removed. Hence it is that we can not say, there being no presumption, and no basis for any presumption, as to what the parties desire and have assented to, *429proceeding on the idea of their interests, or the benefits to accrue to them, that the petitioner here desired any other relief than that for which she expressly prayed, or that her husband assented to the granting of any other relief than that thus expressly asked for. The relief so asked was not the relief the statute authorized the chancellor to grant. There was nothing before him to show the assent of either the petitioner or her husband to the granting of the relief offered by the statute. In the absence of such showings he was without jurisdiction, and his decree, whether it follows the statute or not, is a nullity.
The decree being thus without efficacy, Mrs. Powell was under all the disabilities of coverture at the time she executed the mortgages under which appellant claims, and without any capacity in that behalf. The mortgages were, therefore, not voidable merely, but void. Granting that she might have ratified the execution of the instruments with the assent of her husband, after the passage of the act of 1887 above referred to, such ratification required a .new and independent consideration to support it. It is not pretended that the ratification attempted to be set up by an amendment to the bill in the chancery case, and relied on in evidence in the suit at law, was supported by any consideration whatever. Each court properly ruled that the alleged ratification could avail nothing to the Mortgage Security Company. — 14 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, p. 619 ; Herrington v. Hixon, 46 Ala. 297.
We find no error in either record; and the judgment of the Circuit Court and decree of the Chancery Court are respectively affirmed.
Affirmed.