This appeal raises the question whether, under our system of law, a wife may maintain an action to recover damages for an assault and battery committed upon her person by the husband.
Section 4492 of the Code provides that “the wife has full legal capacity to contract as if she were sole, except as otherwise provided by law.” “The husband and wife may contract with each other,” etc. Section 4497. “All damages which the wife may be entitled to recover for injuries to her person or reputation are her separate property.” Section 4489. “The wife must sue alone * * * for injuries to such property, * * * or for all injuries to her person or reputation,” etc. Section 4493. There are other sections bearing more or less remotely upon this subject. It may be said that the last-quoted section was not enacted with a view to precisely the case here presented; but these sections, the last included, have the effect of abrogating the fiction of legal identity, and seem thereby, except as otherwise prescribed, to destroy the foundation of the common law in its application to questions touching the rights of husband and wife inter se.
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In Bruce v. Bruce, 95 Ala. 5C3,
“Our conclusion is that, if the suit is one which the statute requires to be brought in the name of the wife alone, it may be prosecuted against her husband, if he is the party resjwnsible for the violation of the right to be vindicated by the suit. The effect of the statute is that the legal rights of the wife as against her husband may be enforced by legal remedies.”
In Cook v. Cook,
“The right to sue her husband to recover from him possession of her realty rests upon _ the same statutory provision and the same principles. declared in the case cited as to her personalty, and can no more bo denied in respect of one class of property than in respect of the other. * * * To hold otherwise would be to give the husband rights and estates in the wife’s lands which our statutes not only do not provide for, but expressly provide against.”
The ancient common law of England, which gave the husband, at least among “the lower rank of the people,” the right to restrain the wife of her liberty and to chastise her (1 Blk. Com. 444), was never in this state the law for any rank or condition of people. Fulgham v. State,
“There is no law to compel a wife to live with her husband on her land or on his. There is no legal prohibition upon her separating from him and living apart.” Cook v. Cook, supra. The ’ like may be said of the husband, though he must support and maintain the wife as long as she does not abandon him without just cause. This consideration entered into the argument for the conclusion that the wife might maintain this action. Damages for separation imply support and maintenance pending separation. Relief of that sort is awarded in the courts of equity upon considerations which have no place in an action for assault and battery. The two remedies cover entirely different fields, and one may not be made to serve the purpose of the other.
We have said enough to indicate the opinion of the court on all the questions reserved and argued.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
