delivered the opinion of the court:
Louisa Steger, who appears on the record in this court as one of the defendants in error, became a complainant in the circuit court of Cook county August 11, 1894, by filing her bill against her husband, John V. Steger, the other defendant in error, for separate maintenance. On her petition an order was made requiring" him to pay her §40 per week as temporary alimony and §100 as solicitor’s fees to enable her to prosecute her suit, which solicitor’s fees were paid to her solicitor, Hervey H. Anderson; plaintiff in error-. The bill was answered and a cross-bill for divorce was filed by said John V. Steger. The cross-bill was answered, after which no further proceeding's occurred in court until March 18, 1896, when the cause was called for hearing, and it was suggested to the court by counsel for each side that it was claimed the controversy had been settled and the complainant in the original bill had returned to her husband. Counsel for John V. Steger accordingly moved the court to dismiss his cross-bill and the original bill of his wife. Plaintiff in error moved that he be allowed time to make inquiries in the matter, and made a motion in his own behalf for the allowance of additional solicitor’s fees for the services he had rendered to Mrs. Steger. The court dismissed the cross-bill, but continued the motion to dismiss the original bill and the motion for allowance of solicitor’s fees. On March 20, 1896, plaintiff in error moved that the order dismissing the cross-bill be set aside. On May 8,1896, on motion of plaintiff in error, a reference was ordered to a master in chancery to take testimony and report the value of his services rendered to Mrs. Steger from the date of his engagement up to April 26, 1896. The master reported that the services of plaintiff in error were worth §1120, that he had paid out §8 and received the §100 allowed by the court. The master charged §45 for his fees on this report, and they were paid by plaintiff in error. On July 28, 1896, the motions were considered and the court refused to set aside the order dismissing* the cross-bill, but ordered John V. Steger, defendant in the original bill, to pay to the clerk of the court, for the use of plaintiff in error, within ten days, §1028 for fees and §45 for master’s fees advanced as aforesaid, which sums the clerk was ordered to pay plaintiff in error. The original bill was dismissed at cost of complainant, but the decree recited that the court retained jurisdiction to enforce compliance with the orders for the payment of money. From that decree John V. Steger prosecuted an appeal to the Appellate Court, where the decree was reversed in so far as it directed the payment of any money by him to the clerk to be paid over to plaintiff in error, and it "was affirmed in all other respects. Mrs. Steger refused to take an appeal from the judgment of the Appellate Court, and that court allowed an appeal in her name to plaintiff in error on his giving a bond of indemnity to her, and also allowed him an appeal in his own name. The appeal was dismissed by this court on the ground that plaintiff in error was not a party to the suit and had no right to an appeal, and could not appeal against the will of his client, in her name. (Steger v. Steger, 165 Ill. 579.) Defendant in error John V. Steger has entered his motion in this case to dismiss the writ of error on the same grounds on which the appeal was dismissed, and this motion brings up the question whether the same restrictions apply to a writ of error as in case of appeal.
A writ of error was a writ of right at the common law, and, as a general rule, may be prosecuted as a matter of right in all civil cases. (Unknown Heirs of Langworthy v. Baker, 23 Ill. 484; Hammond v. People, 32 id. 446; Haines v. People, 97 id. 161; McIntyre v. Sholty, 139 id. 171; 7 Ency. of Pl. & Pr. 826; Shinn’s Pl. & Pr. sec. 1038.) An appeal, on the other hand, is a purely statutory right created by statute in connection with the constitution, and must be exercised in such cases, upon such conditions and by such persons as are authorized by statute. The statute confers new rights and prescribes a remedy unknown to the common law, which must be strictly pursued. (Lewis v. Shear, 93 Ill. 121; Shinn’s Pl. & Pr. 1013.) The term itself was unknown to the common law, and belonged wholly to the civil law and courts of chancery, and an appeal was the exclusive remedy for the review of chancery causes, to which class the suit for separate maintenance in this case belongs. There was for a long time great doubt and difficulty with respect to the mode of reviewing the decrees in equity of the Lord Chancellor, but, after a parliamentary struggle^ of much violence, it was established in the reign of Charles II that appeals would lie from them to the House of Lords. While a writ of error is a process of common law origin, which brought up for review only errors of law excepted to on the trial, and was the common law method of reviewing judgments at common law, an appeal removed the entire cause to the higher court, to be tried de novo on its merits, just as though it had never been tried in the inferior court, and was the method of reviewing chancery causes. By our statute the right of appeal is extended to common law causes and the right to a writ of error to chancery causes, and the technical distinction between the practice in the court of review in cases of appeal and writs of error is not observed, but if the suit follows the course of the common law it is reviewed for error, and if it is in the nature of a chancery cause it is considered upon Hie merits. If it is an appeal, however, it must be by a party to the suit, because it is only to parties that the statute extends the privilege of an appeal. Rorke v. Goldstein, 86 Ill. 568; Louisville, Evansville and St. Louis Railroad Co. v. Surwald, 150 id. 394; Hesing v. Attorney General, 104 id. 292; Steger v. Steger, supra.
The question whether the restrictions provided by statute as to appeals were equally applicable to a writ of error was first considered in 1830, in Clark v. Ross, Breese, 334, and it was then held that the same rules applied to a writ of error as to an appeal, and that the writ would lie only where an appeal would lie. In 1832, in the case of Bowers v. Green, 1 Scam. 42, the former decision was overruled. It was said that a writ of error was a writ of right at common law, applicable to all cases, and the only method t<j remove a cause from an inferior court of record to a superior court; that an appeal ought to be considered a cumulative remedy; that restrictions upon the right to use the remedy of appeal could not, with proprietjq be extended to the other mode of redress by a writ of error, and the writ should be given the same scope as at common law. We think that the same rule should apply here, and that where the right to a writ of error is extended to chancery causes, as it has been by our statute without restrictions, it is to be regarded the same as at common law, and should not be subject to any limitations or restrictions as to parties not imposed by the common law. If, therefore, plaintiff in error could have sued out a writ of error at the common law upon a like interest, the motion to dismiss should be denied.
At common law the person entitled to a writ of error must be a party or privy to the record, or be one who is injured by the judgment or will be benefited by its reversal or competent to release error. Plaintiff in error was not a party to the record. “By privies, within the meaning of the rule, are meant heirs, executors, administrators, terre tenants, or those having an interest in remainder or reversion, or one who is made a party by the law.” (7 Ency. of Pl. & Pr. 857.) Plaintiff in error does not occupy a position of that kind. The decree of the circuit court, however, amounted, in effect, to an order that the defendant, John V. Steger, should pay to plaintiff in error $1073, and the judgment of the Appellate Court reversed the decree. Plaintiff in error was injured by that judgment of the Appellate Court and would be benefited by its reversal to that amount, and we are therefore inclined to the opinion thfit he is entitled to sue out the writ of error to review that judgment, and the motion to dismiss the writ is denied.
The statute under which the original bill was filed by Louisa Steger provided that the court might grant allowance to her to enable her to prosecute her suit as in case of divorce. The provision of the divorce.statute is as follows: “In all cases of divorce the court may require the husband to pay to the wife, or pay into court for her use, during the pendency of the suit, such sum or sums of money as may enable her to maintain or defend the suit.” (Rev. Stat. sec. 15, chap. 40.) This provision is in favor of the wife, so she may be able to present her cause to the court, to employ counsel and to make proper preparations for trial. She cannot bind her husband to pay her counsel, and may be unable to prosecute her suit without the assistance of the court, and if her bill shows a meritorious cause of action and there is a showing' of good faith on her part the court will extend its aid under that statute. (Harding v. Harding, 144 Ill. 588.) The allowance, when made, is designed to meet all just and reasonable expenses to which she may be put, including" the fees of officers and witnesses, taking depositions, expenses in attendance upon court and the services of her solicitor; and the fees 'of such solicitor are on no different footing from any other expenses which she may properly incur. The allowance is for her, and not for the officers or witnesses, the commissioners who may take depositions or the master who may perform services. So far as such expenses are concerned, if such costs are not paid the claim of the officer or witness is against her; and it would not be proper for the court to make orders in favor of such parties against the defendant, so as to bring into the suit all those parties, and give each one a separate writ of error in case the court should refuse to order defendant to pay his fee. Any motion for'allowance under the statute must be in her name, and the allowance is to be made to her, and not to the party whom she employs. When collected, she may apply it as may be necessary for the prosecution of her suit. The right being- in her, the decree of the circuit court should not, in any event, have been in favor of her solicitor, but should have followed the statute and required the money to be paid to her or to the clerk for her use. The Appellate Court would have been justified in reversing the decree for that reason, but it is also erroneous for other reasons.
The provision of the statute is to enable the wife to maintain the suit, and it contemplates that the provision shall be made in advance. The performance of services by a solicitor where such provision is not made creates no liability against the husband. The wife cannot bind her husband to pay the expenses of prosecuting an action for separate maintenance or divorce against him, and her solicitor cannot maintain an action at law for such services. (Dow v. Eyster, 79 Ill. 254.) If,'under the guise of a temporary allowance to enable the wife to maintain her suit, a solicitor has a right to recover for services rendered for which no allowance has been made, there would be no difference whatever between that right and the right to maintain an action at law. The only difference would be in the court, and the right would be a right to collect from the husband the value of services rendered for the wife. The statute does not go to the extent of compelling the husband to pay such expenses as she has seen fit to incur. The statute gives no warrant for a solicitor performing services upon the credit of the husband, in anticipation of an allowance, further than necessary to present the question to the court. The intention of the statute is, that when the wife needs money she shall apply for it, and have an order compelling her husband to pay her such sum of money as may be necessary. (Beadelston v. Beadelston, 103 N. Y. 402.) From the necessities of the case the solicitor may prepare a'bill and render such services as may be necessary to present her application to the court, and until there shall be a session of the court, when her application can be made for an allowance, but no further. The decree is not warranted under that provision of the statute.
All such reasonable expenses as the wife has incurred may be allowed, although the services were rendered in the past, in case the wife succeeds in her suit, when they may be taken into account in the final decree. They are allowed in the final decree in cases of divorce. (Blake v. Blake, 70 Ill. 618.) And the same rule is applicable in cases of separate maintenance. If the suit in this case had proceeded to a decree and Mrs. Steger had been successful, it would have been proper to include in the allowance to her the amount of her counsel’s fees earned in the prosecution of the suit; but it was held in. McCulloch v. Murphy, 45 Ill. 256, upon the plainest grounds, that counsel cannot be permitted to insist upon a trial of the issue for the purpose of showing that he would have had a right to a fee Upon a final decree in favor of the wife. Mrs. Steger having settled her controversy with her husband, as she had a right to do, and returned to him, there is no power to order the payment of solicitor’s fees for past services.
The judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.