delivered the opinion of the Court.
A wife living apart from her husband sued in replevin to *521 recover certain of her chattels that he held, and damages for their detention. The trial court sustained the husband’s demurrer to the declaration on the ground that the wife could not sue her husband at law, but must go into equity to obtain the return of the property. The appeal is from the judgment for the husband for costs.
Replevin is an action
ex delicto
founded upon a tortious detention of chattels, for which damages may be allowed. Despite the passage in 1898 of the Married Women’s Act, Code, 1951, Art. 45, Sec. 5 (hereinafter sometimes called “the Act”) which authorizes married women to engage in business, to contract, to sue on their contracts and for the recovery and protection of their property and for torts committed against them as fully as if unmarried, Maryland has held that the wife could not sue her husband, a partnership of which he was a member, or his employer, for a personal tort.
Furstenburg v. Furstenburg,
The cases in Maryland have interpreted the Act with such strictness and have given it such limited effect that we find ourselves unable to follow the authorities elsewhere without overruling our prior decisions, despite the appeal to reason and convenience that the rule urged upon us has. The
Furstenburg, David
and
Riegger
cases held explicitly that the Act did no more than authorize a married woman to prosecute suits at law in her own name as if unmarried against a third person. In holding that it did not authorize a suit at law by
*522
a wife against her husband for a personal tort, they said its purpose was not to enable her to maintain suits that she could not have maintained before its passage but only to bring in her own name those which before she must have brought in her husband’s name either alone or as party plaintiff with her. See, too, 1
Poe, Pleading and Practice
(Tiff. Ed.), Sec. 441A. The extent to which this Court has limited the application of the Act is emphasized in
Gregg v. Gregg,
It is clear that a wife may sue her husband in equity for the preservation or protection of her property rights.
Cochrane v. Cochrane,
We think that the decisions of this Court have established Maryland law to be that a wife may not sue her husband,at law unless a statute specifically authorizes her to do so. It is clear that the Act was construed in the Furstenburg, David and Riegger cases as not giving the wife a right of action she did not possess at common law, and the Gregg case construed the Act of 1900 (giving her the right to sue her husband on a contract with him) as not giving her the right to sue him on any other contract. We must read the Act as our predecessors have read it unless we overrule their decisions. The Act said she could sue for a tort committed against her, and on her contracts. The cases held that this did not mean on a tort committed against her person by her husband or on a contract with her husband, because the Act gave her no additional rights except to sue alone, where formerly she must have sued jointly or in the name of another. The Act says she may sue for the protection or recovery of her property. Reading the Act as our predecessors have said it must be read, we cannot distinguish between a right to sue her husband for a tort against her person and a right to sue him for a tort against her property interests. The literal language of the Act authorizes both the former and the latter, as well as a right to sue him in contract. We think we must put the same limitations on the right to sue for a property tort that the prior decisions have put on the other two rights. It is significant that Prosser, in note 20 on p. 672 of the work cited, lists Maryland as the one exception to the general rule that the Married Women’s Acts have been construed to enable the wife to maintain an action for any tort against her property interests.
Those in the situation of the appellant must proceed in equity until the Legislature sees fit to change the law.
The trial court noted specifically that his decision was without prejudice to the right of appellant to bring a new proceeding in equity but we see no reason why the case should *525 not have been transferred from the law to the equity side of the Circuit Court in which it was brought and appropriate amendments to the pleadings permitted. Maryland Rule 515. We shall remand without affirmance or reversal under Maryland Rule 871 (a).
Case remanded, without affirming or reversing the judgment for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion, the appellant to pay the costs.
