The plaintiff being the wife of the defendant, sues him for the price and value of certain property, personal and real; also for money, amounting in the aggregate to thirty-eight hundred dollars, more or less, which he had received from her, at different times after their intermarriage, in December, 1858, in Indiana, and for which he agreed at the time, as the petition states, to account to her. She asks that he may be required to account, and that a judgment may be rendered against him for the amount found to be due her.
What the relative rights of the parties were, under the laws of Indiana, where the most of this property was reduced to the possession of the husband, does not appear from any statement made in the petition. Chapter 84 of our Code secures to her some substantive rights of property, which she may hold separate and distinct from her husband, and exempt from his debts, by having a schedule of the same made and recorded in the manner prescribed by that chapter, but it does not remove from her the disabilities of coverture or give her any remedial rights in her own name, until she obtains authority from the District Court to transact business as though unmarried, provided for in section 1456 of that chapter, and this is not averred in the bill.
Until this occurs we infer that she labors under the same disabilities during coverture, under the Code, that she does at common law. If so, she could not make such a contract as is stated in the petition with her husband, which would be *414binding upon either one, unless it was made through the medium of a third person or trustee, in her behalf; nor could she maintain a suit except by her next friend.
In this case the petition states that the parties have been separated about eighteen months, but does not disclose the cause of this separation; whether it was temporary or permanent, or whether it was by mutual agreement, or from desertion by one party or the other, either with or without cause. Under such circumstances, at common law, the. wife could have no claim or equity for a separate support or maintenance. Clancy and Bright, on the law of husband and wife, lay it down that whenever a husband has property, real or personal, in right of his wife, within the jurisdiction of a court of equity, if he misconducts himself towards her, either by leaving her without the means of support, or by harsh and cruel conduct, that court will intercept his marital right to the property, and maintain his wife out of it until he returns to his duty. But then they say, also, that a separation between husband and wife, without cruelty or desertion on his part, will not raise an equity for the wife to claim a provision of this kind. It is essential to the validity of her claim that one of these two ingredients should exist in the transaction, namely, either that her husband should have deserted her without giving her adequate means of support, or that she should have been forced by his cruel conduct, to leave his protection. If a separation has taken place without either of these causes, and the wife seeks a separate maintenance out of her equitable estate, the application will be refused.
Applying these principles, the plaintiff has no case which the court would be authorized to entertain; nor do we think that the provisions of the Code change the common law practice in this respect. It is true the plaintiff states in her petition that there was a separation in fact, but was there de jure f Will the law regard a separation that takes place without any cause whatever? Are they not in contemplation of law, under such circumstances, cohabiting together ? *415If so, they are one, and their interests identical, and what would such a judgment as she seeks to recover against her husband be worth to her in case it was granted by the court ? It is very possible the plaintiff may be able to state a case that will entitle her to relief in equity, but it is our opinion that she has not done so in the present case, and the order of the court overruling a motion to dismiss the petition for want of equity, must be reversed.