Lindsay v. Woods

27 S.W.2d 263, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 393
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 9, 1930
DocketNo. 3388.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 27 S.W.2d 263 (Lindsay v. Woods) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindsay v. Woods, 27 S.W.2d 263, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 393 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

JACKSON, J.

This suit was instituted by Mrs. Pearl C. Dindsay and her husband, W. T. Lindsay, as plaintiffs, in the district court of Dallas county, Tex., against the' defendants, John W. Woods and wife, Mrs. John W. Woods.

On October 8,1928, with leave of the court, Mrs. Pearl C. Lindsay filed a first amended original petition, in which she alleged that she was married to W. T. Lindsay in October, 1927, and had never been, divorced from him; that her husband, about May 1, 1928, permanently abandoned and deserted her and moved to the state of Mississippi, where he has since continued to reside; that the abandonment of plaintiff by her husband was caused by the acts and conduct of the defendants, and he refuses now to continue with her as a party plaintiff in this suit. She asks that she be permitted to prosecute her suit alone, without the joinder of her husband herein.

She alleged that in January, 1917, she was lawfully married to M. Cammack, from whom, she was divorced in 1926; that while she lived .with Mi. Cammack as his wife, she adopted a baby girl and named her Virginia Cammack; that soon thereafter, the defendants began threatening her and, in various ways, tried to get her to give up and abandon the adopted .child, which she refused to do.

. That the defendants insisted on and assisted her in getting a divorce from her first husband, from whom she received, in her proper.ty settlement with him, $2,500 in money and $1,800 in property.

That after the divorce was granted, she visited a sister at Sweetwater, Tex., and another at Dalhart, Tex. That the defendants, by misrepresentations made to her sister at Dalhart, forced plaintiff to leave her sister’s home and she returned to Amarillo. That her former husband assisted her in getting her a room at Amarillo, but the defendants, because she would not abandon her adopted child, caused her former husband to have her charged, in the county court of Potter county, Tex., with lunacy, arrested, and placed in jail. That she was promptly acquitted of said charge, and the defendants caused her said former husband to again have her arrested on a complaint, charging her with lunacy, but said charge was dismissed.

That she secured a position in Amarillo, and went to work, but the defendants continued to threaten her and tell every one that she was insane, to cause her discharge. That her continued persecution by the defendants, incarceration in jail on charges of lunacy, and misrepresentations to her friends that she wás insane, caused her friends and acquaintances to shun her and caused her great humiliation; that she left Amarillo and took her adopted baby to her mother’s home at Sherman, Tex., in December, 1926, where she remained until February 14, 1927, when, on account of the continued threats of the defendants to have her charged with lunacy, she left her mother’s home and went to Fort Worth.

That the defendants, on the 15th of February, 1927, filed a complaint against her in the county court of Tarrant county, Tex., charging her with lunacy; had her arrested and placed in the Arlington Heights Sanitarium, where she was not allowed to communicate with any one, consult a lawyer, or secure witnesses. That she was taken from the sanitarium to the courthouse, and the defendants, with other witnesses, testified against her in a lunacy trial, on March 1, 1927, but she was found to be of sound mind and acquitted on her own testimony.

That the defendants continued to persecute the plaintiff, and she finally left Fort Worth and went to Oklahoma City, where such persecution continued, and she returned from there to Dallas, Tex., in company with Mrs. Reece, who lived at Dallas.

That after she reached Dallas, the defendants had her confined in an insane asylum, and while therein or just prior thereto, her adopted baby was taken from her through the fraud and connivance of the defendants, who succeeded in having the district court of Dallas county adjudge her adopted child to be dependent and awarded to other parties, 'after which she was released from the sanitarium.

' That she immediately employed an attorney to institute proceedings to regain her adopted child, and the defendants promptly renewed their threats that if she did not give up her adopted baby, they would again prosecute her for insanity; that she continued her efforts through the courts to regain possession of said child, and the defendants, on April 21, 192S, filed a complaint in the county court of Dallas county, again charging her with lunacy. That the day the case was set in the district court, to determine ■whether or not she should recover her adopted child, the defendants filed another complaint against the plaintiff, again charging her with lunacy, and had her arrested.

That she was thereafter tried on said complaints, found of sound mind, and acquitted.

That on account of the conduct of the defendants and their false statements and rumors, charging her with lunacy, and having her incarcerated on said charges, and having *265 her illegally confined In sanitariums, slie fiad been forced to expend all fier money and property ; that tfie defendants took from fier the money she fiad left when she was placed in the sanitarium at Dallas, and expended it to defray fier expenses while she was so illegally imprisoned.

That since 1926, tfie defendants have willfully and maliciously, and without probable cause, persecuted tfie plaintiff; contrived tfie destruction of fier mind, character, and reputation; degraded her in the eyes of fier friends and associates; exposed fier to tfie hate and ridicule of the public; embarrassed and humiliated fier; which caused fier much trouble and expense.

That because of tfie conduct of the defendants, <sfie was deprived of her friends; fier second husband was induced to abandon and desert fier; she was imprisoned in tfie Arlington Heights Sanitarium from February 15, 1927, to April 4,1927; confined in tfie Timber-lawn Asylum at Dallas from November 25, 1927, to January 26, 1928, illegally and without authority of law; has been prevented from obtaining and keeping employment, and has suffered great mental and physical pain, embarrassment, and humiliation, for all of which she seeks to recover $25,000 actual and $25,000 exemplary damages.

She alleges, in detail, facts which present a cause of action for slander, malicious prosecution, false imprisonment, and causing fier second husband to abandon and desert fier.

On June 14, 1929, the defendants, with leave of tfie court, filed their second amended original answer in this case, pleading a general demurrer, numerous special exceptions, a general denial, and specially alleged that tfie plaintiff was not mentally capacitated to have and maintain the suit against them, because sfi.e was at the date of the filing of tfie suit, and still is, of unsound mind.

The case was tried to a jury, and at tfie conclusion of the testimony, tfie jury, in compliance with a peremptory instruction of tfie court, returned a verdict against the plaintiff and in favor of tfie defendants.

Tfie court, in compliance with tfie directed verdict, entered judgment that tfie plaintiff take nothing by her suit and .that tfie defendants go hence without day and recover of fier all costs by them incurred; that it appearing to tfie court that tfie suit was originally filed by W. T. Lindsay, joined by his wife, Pearl O.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 S.W.2d 263, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsay-v-woods-texapp-1930.