-I. The court found as facts in substance:
1. That the evidence does not show' that defendant had been guilty of the alleged acts of inhuman treatment, set forth in the petition.
2. That the evidence does not establish the commission of the acts of cruelty alleged in the cross-bill.
3. That the separation of the parties was without any desire therefor on the part of the plaintiff, but was acquiesced in because defendant had determined to leave, and that the evidence fails to establish any reasonable grounds for the desertion on the part of the defendant.
4. That there is no evidence that defendant has been guilty of any improper conduct since the separation.
5. That the evidence sustains the charge of adultery against the plaintiff, committed in the spring and summer of 1873, about one year after the defendant’s desertion, and after the filing of the original petition.
The court held that the evidence is of such character that a divorce should be granted defendant, if she were shown to be an innocent party, but that, as the plaintiff was at fault bj^ his adultery, and the defendant was at fault by her desertion, neither party was entitled to a divorce.
*232The evidence clearly sustains the finding of fact as to the plaintiff's adultery. It is not necessary that we should review the evidence, which is quite voluminous. It rarely happens that a fact of that nature is made to appear more clearly. Conceding that the desertion of the plaintiff by the defendant was without reasonable ground, we are clearly of opinion that the court erred in the legal consequences which he attached to it. Before the defendant had been absent long enough to entitle plaintiff to a divorce on the ground of desertion, he was guilty of adultery, which rendered her return repugnant to every natural feeling, and justified her further absence.
This very point was determined in Dupont v. Dupont, 10 Iowa, 112, in which it was held that a wife who deserts her i. dtvoece : adultery: desertion. husband without reasonable cause, is entitled to a , divorce and alimony on account of the adultery of the husband after separation, and before the desertion has been so long continued as to be the ground of a divorce. In Hall v. Hall, 4 Allen, 39, the same conclusion is announced. In Conant v. Conant, 10 California, 249, it was held that desertion for a less period than two years is not sufficient to bar a decree for divorce where the adultery of defendant is established, but that it may be a ground for limiting the divorce to one from bed and board. See also Thomas v. Faillen, 13 La. Annual. 127.
. The cases of Whittington v. Whittington, 2 Devereux & Battles (N. C.), 64; Moss v. Moss, 2 Iredell, 55; Wood v. Wood, 5 Iredell, 674, hold that where parties are living in voluntary separation, a separation from the bonds of matrimony will not be granted on account of adultery committed during the separation. The last case holds that a court may, on such grounds grant a divorce from bed and board.
The case of Dupont v. Dupont, supra, definitely settled the law in this State, and settled it, as we believe, in harmony with just and sound legal principles.
II. Plaintiff claims that, whilst adultery committed after the filing of the original bill may be pleaded by the defendant 2_. .practice. by way of recrimination, and will, if proved, defeat the plaintiff’s action,yet it cannot be urged *233by cross-bill, as a ground for divorce. We are referred to Section 2890 of the Eevision, which provides that a cross-demand is any new matter 'constituting a cause of action in favor of defendant, and which he held, whether; matured or not, when suit was brought. If the matter set up in the amended cross-bill is to be regarded as a cross-demand, simply, it cannot be made the basis of affirmative relief, for the facts alleged did not exist when the original action was commenced. "VVe, however, think the facts alleged are rather to be regarded as a counter-claim, under the provisions of Section 2889 of the Eevision. The plaintiff seeks to annul the marriage contract on account of an alleged violation of it by defendant, The defendant, upon the other hand, seeks to annul the same contract on account of violations of the same by the plaintiff. The matters alleged arise out of the contract set forth in the petition, and are connected with the subject of the action.
There is no provision that the facts constituting a counterclaim should exist when the action is commenced.
III. Plaintiff claims that if a divorce should be decreed, the defendant is not entitled to alimony. In the agreement 3 _. vol_ ratior?- Saii-a" rnony. for settlement which she entered into with her husband she agreed to release all claims upon his property. The law merely tolerates voluntary agreements for separation between husband and wife; it does not authorize or sanction them. Sir William Scott, in delivering the judgment in the case of Mortimer v. Mortimer, (2 Hazz. Const. Rep., 318), says the court considers a private separation an illegal contract. It implies a renunciation of stipulated duties; a dereliction of those mutual offices which the parties are not at liberty to desert;, an assumption of a false character in both parties, contrary to the real status per-sones, and to obligations which both of them have contracted, in the sight of Grod and man, to live together until death; on which obligations the solemnities both of civil society and religion have stamped a binding authority, from which the parties cannot release themselves by any private act of their own, or for causes which the law has not pronounced to *234be sufficient and sufficiently proved. See Rogers v. Rogers, 4 Paige, 516.
In Wonall v. Jacobs, 3 Merivale’s Rep. 256 (268), the Master of Rolls declared that a court of equity will not cany into execution articles of separation between husband and wife, and that it recognizes no power in them to vary the rights and duties growing out" of the marriage contract, or to affect, at their pleasure a partial dissolution of that contract; and that it would seem to follow that the court would not acknowledge the validity of any stipulation that is merely accessory to an agreement for separation. See also Champlin v. Champlin, 1 Hoffman, 55; McKennan v. Phillips, 6 Wharton, 571.
In Rogers v. Rogers, 4 Paige, 516, it was held that an agreement to live separate, the husband giving a bond for the payment of an annual sum to the wife, was no bar to the wife’s claim for an allowance to enable her to prosecute a suit against him for a divorce.
See 2 Kent’s Commentaries, * page 175, and cases cited in note. The case of Blake v. Blake, 7 Iowa, 46, cited by plaintiff, is not in point, for in that case the agreement touching alimony was made after a divorce had been decreed.
We are clearly of opinion that the agreement entered into between the parties does not bar the wife of her claim for alimony.
IV. The cause was determined by the court on the 19th day of December, 1873. On the 9th of March, 1874, the 4>_.. costs. plaintiff filed a motion to retax costs, and on the 10th day of March, 1874, the defendant filed her application for an allowance, as a part of the costs, of attorney’s fees, and that it be made a lien upon plaintiff’s homestead. The court allowed the defendant, upon her application, one hundred dollars, and ordered that judgment for the same be rendered as a part of the costs, but refused to make the same a lien on the homestead. Plaintiff appeals from the order making the allowantíe, and. defendant from the refusal to make it a lien on the homestead. We sec no sufficient reason for disturbing the order in either respect. Plaintiff claims *235that.the court bad no jurisdiction to make the order. But he had himself invoked and called into exercise the jurisdiction of the court upon -the question of costs, and if the court had the right to diminish them on plaintiff’s motion, he had jurisdiction to increase them on .defendant’s motion.
The allowance was made as joart of the costs, and as. such was no more entitled to be made a lien on the homestead than the other costs in the case, included in the same judgment.
T. The court found that at the time of the separation, the plaintiff was worth about $8,000, but that he has since suffered a loss by fire, reducing his means to about $4,000 or $5,000, of which amount $3,000 is in his homestead. That plaintiff has one daughter by a former marriage, fourteen years of age. That defendant brought to plaintiff, on her marriage, property of the value of $500, which was all received by her under the agreement of settlement. We are satisfied that these findings of fact are supported by the evidence. The defendant lived with plaintiff less than two years, and she contributed but little, if anything, toward the accumulation of the property. Although not as guilty as the plaintiff, yet she seems not to be wholly without fault in her original separation and absence from her husband. We conclude that, under all the circumstances, it is just to the parties to allow the defendant $500 as alimony, which shall be declared a lien on plaintiff’s homestead.
The defendant will have a decree for divorce, as prayed.
Eevebsed.