for the Court:
¶ 1. William Paul Jackson Jr. appeals the judgment of the Itawamba County Chancery Court that awarded Linda L. Jackson separate maintenance of $600 a month as well as the use of the home and surrounding land, the proceeds of an income-tax refund check, and other relief. On appeal, Paul raises the following issues: (1) whether Linda sufficiently met the jurisdictional requirements to sustain her separate-maintenance award; (2) whether the separate-maintenance award to Linda should be sustained absent any corroboration of Linda’s case, and whether Linda met her burden of proof for the case; and (3) assuming the award of separate maintenance is sustainable, whether the award of a monthly amount of support almost 150% higher than Paul’s net monthly income constitutes manifest error.
¶ 2. We find that the record reflects Linda failed to present evidence sufficient to sustain the award of separate maintenance. Therefore, the chancellor erroneously awarded the equitable relief of separate maintenance to Linda, due to the lack of requisite findings and evidence showing Linda’s marital conduct, or course of conduct, was not a material factor in causing the parties’ separation.
FACTS
¶ 3. Paul and Linda married on March 5, 1991. After their marriage, Paul adopted Linda’s daughter, who is now over twenty-one years old. After approximately twenty years of marriage, Paul separated from Linda on or about March 5, 2011.
¶ 4. Paul testified that a cumulation of events led to his departure from the marital home. Paul testified that while they were married, Linda repeatedly demanded that he leave the marital home, and he stated that Linda repeatedly told him that the marital home and land were hers. Regarding the home and residential-property ownership, the record shows that Linda’s parents owned the home in which Paul and Linda resided, and the property deed reflects Linda as the sole owner of the real property subject to her parents’ life estate. Paul testified that Linda often told him that she did not love him, and he asserted that she rarely engaged in sexual relations with him. With respect to Linda’s conduct contributing to the parties’ separation, Paul further stated that Linda never cooked; she failed to assist with household duties; and she failed to support him in his farm work or other efforts. Paul asserts that Linda also kept their financial affairs separate, specifically citing to secretive behavior when she received approximately $200,000 from an inheritance and converted a large portion of the money into $100 bills, with no explanation as to where that money went. In explaining the cumulative effect of Linda’s behavior upon the marriage and his decision to leave the marital home in March 5, 2011, Paul testified: “[S]he kept telling me repeatedly over the period of years, and I finally decided I didn’t have to live like thatf;] I could go
¶ 5. We now turn to review the facts in the record pertaining to Paul’s marital fault contributing to the separation. Linda testified that Paul left the marital residence because of his affair -with Bonnie, which she contended started in December 2010. Linda claimed that Paul started sending text messages to Bonnie during the night, at one time sending her 217 text messages in approximately two days. Linda testified that Paul admitted to her his infidelity with Bonnie prior to leaving the marital home in March 2011. Linda further testified that she tried unsuccessfully to “get him to work things out,” and that she “was just devastated.” Linda denied telling Paul to leave the marital home, and she indicated that she remained open to reconciliation with Paul, albeit with certain conditions. Linda testified that Paul would need to receive “help for some issues that he’s had,” and that the “marriage would have to have some issues worked out, some relationship counseling!.]” The record provides no testimony or other evidence to explain what changes or conditions Linda required Paul to satisfy before she would reconcile with him.
¶ 6. Gail Whitaker, the sole witness other than the parties, testified that after separating from Linda, Paul rented a home from her in March 2011. Gail testi-lied that Paul only stayed in the home for a week or two. Gail stated that after Paul quit staying in the house, he went “to her home,” referencing Bonnie. Gail provided that she became aware of Paul and Bonnie’s extramarital relationship when Bonnie accompanied Paul to Gail’s home in July 2011, some months after the separation in March 2011.
¶ 7. On June 20, 2011, Linda filed a complaint against Paul for separate maintenance. In her complaint, Linda sought support, use and possession of the home and land, and other relief. Paul responded with his answer in which he denied Linda’s entitlement to relief, and with his counter-complaint in which he sought certain personal property and distribution of the parties’ recent income-tax refund check. Following a hearing on August 25, 2011, the chancellor timely rendered an opinion and judgment on November 16, 2011, in which he awarded Linda the $600-per-month separate-maintenance award currently disputed on appeal, the use of the home, the income-tax refund check, and other relief. Significantly, the chancellor’s order provides no findings as to whether Linda’s marital misconduct, or course of such conduct, materially contributed to the separation or not.
¶ 8. After hearing the testimony and the evidence, the chancellor found Linda’s claims credible regarding the extramarital affair between Paul and Bonnie, and the chancellor also acknowledged evidence in the record showing Linda’s marital misconduct Paúl argued contributed to the separation. While the chancellor indeed acknowledged evidence in the record of Linda’s marital misconduct during the last five years of marriage, the chancellor provided no findings as to whether Linda’s marital misconduct contributed, materially
Paul works regularly. Indeed, he is engaged in a number of business ventures. He is the principal in Jackson Truck Lines and has a number of trucks and trailers[;] he farms and has farm equipment[;] he has an interest in cattle; he has a used car and truck business[;] and he raises hay which he sells to the public.
Although Paul[ ] and Linda’s 2010 Joint Individual Income Tax Return shows a total income of $4,207 and an adjusted gross income of $3,916, it is also reflected that Paul had a higher gross income. Moreover, Paul’s bank statements reflected that the amount of money moving through Paul’s bank account was considerable!].] To the court’s amazement, Paul’s 8.05[f|inancial [statement ... claimed a net monthly pay of $313.34, a total monthly income of $4,540 and total monthly expenses of $9,429[,] in addition to monthly installment payments of $1,457.06.
While the court must take Paul’s assertion that the contents of his [Rule] 8.05[f]inancial [statement ... are “true and correct,” the court finds that Paul enjoys good health, has the ability to earn and is in fact earning a living, and has been able to make purchases since he and Linda separated. These include a new hay bailer, a computer, a flat screen television, a deep freezer and a refrigerator.
Linda’s [Rule] 8.05[f]inancial [statement, which is part of the court file, is completely inadequate. It only indicates Linda’s income and her expenses. It does not indicate that Linda has a remainder interest in real property and that she lives on that property at no cost. Nor does Linda’s [Rule] 8.05[f]i-nancial [statement indicate her ownership interest in Pet Palace, a business that played prominently in the parties’ testimony.
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Paul offered no proof that Pet Palace was an income producing endeavor.
In addition to Pet Palace[,] Paul claimed that Linda possessed two trailers full of rustic furniture which she could sell to produce income. This would be in addition to the $7,000 received from Linda from the sale of scrap metal after the parties separated. No proof was offered by Linda or Paul as to the amount which would be generated by the sale of the rustic furniture contained in the two trailers.
It must be remembered that Linda has been found disabled by the Social Security Administration. Her only stated income is $708 monthly. Her [Rule] 8.05[f]inancial [statement does not show savings or personal property. The court is mindful that in approximately 2002, Linda received about $200,000 and converted $97,000 into $100 bills which she carried from the bank. The explanation as to how these funds were disposed of was completely unconvincing and unsat-*773 isfaetory. Also of note is the fact that the parties after 2000 or 2001 essentially had separate economic lives.
¶ 9. Aggrieved with the chancery court’s award of separate maintenance to Linda, Paul now appeals.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 10. This Court employs a limited standard of review when considering domestic-relations cases. Welch v. Welch,
¶ 11. The factual findings of the chancellor are reviewed to determine if the award is supported by substantial evidence or whether the decision reflects manifest error. Fore v. Fore,
¶ 12. We acknowledge that on appeal, the amount of a separate-maintenance award is reviewed for abuse of discretion. See Shorter v. Shorter,
¶ 13. Where the trial court provides no express findings of fact as to an element or requirement of proof, “[o]n appellate review we look at those findings which should have been made incident to the entry of the final judgment to determine whether the record contains substantial evidence to support them.” Day v. Day,
DISCUSSION
I. Whether Linda sufficiently met the jurisdictional requirements to sustain her separate-maintenance award.
II. Whether the separate-maintenance award should be sustained absent any corroboration of Linda’s case.
¶ 14. Paul argues that Linda failed to sufficiently meet the jurisdictional re
¶ 15. We agree with Paul’s argument to the extent that the record reflects that Linda failed to meet the jurisdictional requirements necessary to support an award of separate maintenance, because she failed to show that her marital misconduct did not contribute to the separation. See Rodgers,
¶ 16. We acknowledge that “[s]eparate maintenance is ... court-created equitable relief based upon the marriage relationship and is a judicial command to the husband to resume cohabitation with his wife, or in default thereof, to provide suitable maintenance of her until such time as they may be reconciled to each other.” Forthner v. Forthner,
¶ 17. In Rodgers,
¶ 18. As previously discussed, our jurisprudence establishes that in order for the court to equitably award séparate maintenance, the misconduct of the abandoned spouse must not have materially contributed to the separation. See id. In Rodgers, the supreme court provided guidance explaining that the requesting spouse need not be blameless or without any fault before invoking the equity required for separate maintenance. Id. The supreme court explained that where a wife’s course of conduct is a material factor in the separation at least equal to, if not greater than, that of the husband, the decree of separate maintenance is erroneous. Id. The supreme court in Rodgers found such an award erroneous since the power of the chancery court to grant separate maintenance is based on a separation without fault on the wife’s part and willful abandonment of her by the husband with a refusal by him to support her. Id.
¶ 19. In this case, the chancellor found in his memorandum opinion and judgment that the proof revealed that Linda and Paul, while living together for twenty years, began experiencing marital problems approximately five years prior to Paul’s departure from the marital home. The chancellor acknowledged in his opinion and judgment that Paul testified as to Linda’s marital fault — she began telling Paul to get out, that she did not love him, and that the home where they resided was her place, not his. The chancellor further acknowledged that Paul testified as to the following marital fault of Linda: he had to cook his own meals, including breakfast and dinner; the dining-room table had not been used in over ten years; and Linda would not even give him a ride to the fields if he needed it. The chancellor also found that Paul testified that the most recent misconduct of Linda leading to the separation pertained to Linda’s accusations that he was having an affair. As previously noted, Paul claimed that Bonnie was not his girlfriend until June 2011, several months after the March 2011 separation.
¶ 20. The chancellor found credible Linda’s claims of an extramarital affair between Paul and Bonnie, and as previously set forth, we find no abuse of discretion in this factual finding.
¶ 21. After reviewing the finances of the parties, the chancellor found that separate maintenance constituted a judicial command to one spouse to resume cohabitation or to provide support. Without applying equity principles to Linda’s behavior, the chancellor awarded separate maintenance, providing that even if Linda had contributed to the separation and wanted to work out the parties’ problems, Paul had no intentions of resuming cohabitation. The chancellor’s analysis fails to embrace that no equitable jurisdiction existed in this case to award separate maintenance without first applying the princi-pies of equity to the marriage relationship and finding Linda, the requesting spouse, was without significant marital fault. A review of the record shows that the chancellor erred in failing to require the evidence necessary to support the separate-maintenance award. The equitable relief of separate maintenance requires the requisite evidence of a separation without fault of the wife as well as evidence showing no significant misconduct on her behalf materially contributed to the separation of the parties. Rodgers,
there is little difference between a suit for separate maintenance and a suit for alimony and substantially the same principles of law apply in fixing the amount.... [T]he amount of separate maintenance should be a sum sufficient to provide as nearly as possible the same support and maintenance as the*777 wife would have received if the parties had continued normal cohabitation[.]
¶ 22. While alimony and separate maintenance pertain to financial support, the awards differ as to the evidence required. The chancellor erred in applying the requisite evidentiary requirements of alimony to an equitable award of separate maintenance. This Court recognizes that in divorce proceedings, any award of alimony must be based upon a determination of need for such award upon a finding of a deficit suffered by a party after completion of the equitable division of marital property. See generally Armstrong v. Armstrong,
¶ 23. Divorce and alimony are distinct concepts from separate maintenance, and divorce and alimony are governed by statute, not common law. Dearman v. Dearman,
¶ 24. With respect to the chancellor’s reference to the futility of reconciliation as a basis to award separate maintenance, we acknowledge that upon reconciliation, the support obligation of a separate-maintenance award indeed becomes null and void. See Watkins v. Watkins,
¶ 25. Upon reviewing the record, we find that the chancellor erred in failing to find, before awarding separate maintenance, that no significant marital misconduct by Linda materially contributed negatively to the separation. See Rodgers,
¶ 26. The record shows that Paul’s separation from Linda occurred after the culmination of a five to six year period pre
¶ 27. Based on the foregoing, we must reverse and render the chancery court’s award of separate maintenance to Linda.
III. Assuming the award of separate maintenance is sustainable, whether the amount of the award of separate maintenance constituted manifest error.
¶ 28. As Issues I and II are case-dis-positive, the remaining issue is rendered moot.
¶ 29. THE JUDGMENT OF THE ITAWAMBA COUNTY CHANCERY COURT IS REVERSED AND RENDERED. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO THE AP-PELLEE.
Notes
. See Rodgers v. Rodgers,
. See Lynch v. Lynch,
. See Rodgers,
. See also Robinson v. Robinson,
. The application of equal-protection principles allows either spouse to seek the equitable remedy of separate maintenance. However, since Linda is the petitioner in this case claiming the entitlement, this opinion refers to the wife as the petitioner in its analysis.
. The chancellor noted that Bonnie is much younger than Paul and that Bonnie and Paul lived together at the time of the chancellor’s opinion and judgment. As discussed previously, we review factual findings of the chancellor for abuse of discretion and will affirm if they are supported by substantial evidence.
. In McDonald v. McDonald,
. See Churchill v. Churchill,
. See Kergosien v. Kergosien,
. See Lynch,
.We find unnecessary any further review with respect to the amount of separate maintenance since we find the award erroneous in lacking the requisite evidence of a separation without significant misconduct of the spouse seeking the equitable relief. Rodgers,
