delivered tiie opinion op the court.
The appellee is the wife of the appellant, and is seeking to enforce the collection of a note executed to her in 1876 by her husband for the sum of $2,500, to secure which he executed a mortgage on a house and lot in Louisville.
It appears from the petition that the wife was empowered to trade as a feme sole at the time of the transaction, but whether she in fact owned any estate, separate or otherwise, is not alleged, nor does it appear that she in fact furnished the husband any money or other thing of value in consideration of which the note was executed. We are abundantly informed in the brief of counsel that the note was executed for money loaned by the wife to the husband, and which had belonged to the wife as her separate estate and which the husband converted to his own use, executing the mortgage as security therefor. The writings themselves are silent as to these equitable considerations, and the pleadings likewise. The wife’s case, as set up in her petition, rests upon purely legal principles. She sues her husband just as she would sue anvother person whose promissory note she might *62hold. It is true she sues in equity, but that is because of the lien secured to her by the mortgage.
She alleges, too, that the note is her separate estate, but this is rather a.conclusion of law, and we are left to conjecture when or how it became so.
From these premises we might well determine that the plaintiff has not shown herself entitled to maintain the action. For it is abundantly established by all the authorities that the wife must assert some equitable grounds entitling her to relief before she may sue her husband. But waiving this question, we think it deafly appears from the pleadings and exhibits that the claim of the wife is devoid of merit.
The husband pleads that the note and mortgage are wholly without consideration. That prior to his intermarriage with appellee in 1867, he and his former wife, by whom he had a number of children, had accumulated a large estate, consisting in the main of real property in the city of Louisville, the deeds for which, beginning in 1858, he files with his answer. That after his last marriage he was induced to convey a large part of his property to his wife for the sole purpose of avoiding its loss in risky business ventures of which his wife pretended to be afraid, and that she so importuned him as to make him miserable and unhappy, and that in order to pacify her, he conveyed her a lot on Eighth street, of the value of $5,000, bought by him in 1864; one on Magazine street, of the value of $2,000, bought in 1863; one on Eleventh and Logan streets, valued at $2,000, bought in 1853; one on Twelfth street, worth $1,500, bought in 1868, one on Eleventh street, of the value of $3,500, bought in 1868, and one on Broadway, worth $2,000, bought in 1867.
The conveyances are' filed and are in the record as evi*63dence. He avers that his wife owned, when he married her, a small millinery store, invoiced for $450, and not worth more than that, which she continued to.run with his aid until in 1882, when she sold it for $1,100. She also owned a house and lot in Jeffersonville worth $5,000; and this property she still owned. That he paid the taxes on her Jeffersonville property, and for repairs .on it paid $700. That she received all the rents of his property as well as the proceeds of the sale of other valuable real estate to the extent of many thousand dollars, the result of all which was to leave him substantially penniless in his old age.
These allegations the wife in general terms denied, but the conveyances show for themselves and ,no explanation is offered for their execution. The fact remains that she stands seized of the legal title to this large and valuable estate, which formerly belonged to the husband, and no explanation is made as to her ownership save that offered by the defendant.
The husband testifies in support of the averments of his answer, but his testimony is not competent. His son also testifies, and while too young at the time of the transactions to know much of them, what he does prove is corroborative of the contentions of the defendant. No proof is taken for the plaintiff, her sole reliance being that as she was empowered to trade as a feme sole, the subject matter of the litigation must necessarily have been her separate estate, and that this of itself affords the chancellor ground for exercising jurisdiction. And it may be admitted that ordinarily when the wife.holds the note of the husband executed for money which belongs to the wife as her separate estate, and which has been obtained from her, with or without her consent, the chancellor may enforce her equity and require a settlement on her of such an estate as she may be entitled *64to. Rut, as we have seen, the petition in this case does not state any ground for equitable relief.
. At best, it only establishes the naked relation of debtor and creditor between the husband and wife; and while it is contended that such a relation may exist between them as between strangers, by reason of the law empowering the wife to trade as a single woman, we think such a construction of the statute can not be adopted for obvious reasons. This court has strongly intimated to the contrary, if indeed its utterances may not be regarded as expressly determining otherwise.
In Kalfus v. Kalfus, 92 Ky., 542, and in L. & N. R. Co. v. Alexander, 16 Ky. Law Rep., 306, it was held that this statute only enlarges the powers of a married woman as to others than her husband, and the rights of husbands and wives as between themselves are not affected by it. In Tucker v. Fenno, 110 Mass., 311, the court said: “The statutes which have so greatly enlarged the rights and removed the disabilities of a married woman are not intended to place her and her husband in the necessarily adverse relation of debtor and creditor,” and it refused to foreclose a mortgage for the wife saying that to do so “would be wholly inconsistent with the conjugal relation.” She could not turn him out of possession, she could not compel him to render an account of rents and profits. They could makeno binding contract and come to no valid adjustment as to the amount necessary for redemption. He could make no valid tenderto her, nor could she give him a valid discharge or release. There is no mode in which their adverse rights could either be prosecuted or released or adjusted that would not be inconsistent -with their relation to each other as husband and wife. Of course, when the wife shows herself entitled to equitable relief, it may be granted, but the burden of show*65ing such equity is on her. In this case the appellee has wholly failed to do this. On the contrary, the record discloses an utter want of equity in her demand; so much so that the chancellor reluctantly entered the judgment in her favor, declaring that to do so was most “distasteful” to him.
In Bohannon v. Travis, 94 Ky., 64, this court said that a contract between husband and wife “will not be enforced in equity in favor of either unless it is fair and just, founded on a valuable consideration, and reasonably certain as to its stipulations and the circumstances under which it was made.”
Let the judgment be reversed with directions to dismiss the petition.