Perry v. Ripley

282 S.W. 329
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 1926
DocketNo. 9619.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 282 S.W. 329 (Perry v. Ripley) 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
Perry v. Ripley, 282 S.W. 329 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

VAUGHAN, J.

This is an appeal from an order of date May 2, 1925, refusing, to dissolve the temporary writ of injunction granted on the application of appellees, J. B. Ripley, J. S. Eads, R. A. Clanton, Simpson Payne, Sam Bailey, S. H. Orman, C. M. Ra-gon, C. D. Kane, Sidney Goddard, Fannie E. Ford, W. H. Reeves, J. G. Mead, C. W. Howard, R. F. Adam, R. S. Craig, C. L. Wortham, ■ C. L. Hawkins, A. E. Wilbur, W. W. Dean, F. L. Lindsey, W. I-I. Kelly, Geo. E. Price, Mrs.J. T, Ashford, Mrs. M. J. Lowe, Mrs. Lon Rowley, Mrs. F. Tosch, and O. O. Lund, restraining appellants, Mrs. Lillian Perry and Miss Lillian. Hannah from keeping, establishing, running, maintaining, and operating a maternity home situated on part of lot 15 and all of lot 16,. and 25 feet off the south side of lot 17 in block 15 of Beverly Hills, an addition to the city of Dal *330 las. This appeal is before us without a statement of facts. Appellants’ motion to be permitted to file statement of facts tendered was refused because same was not presented to the clerk of this court to be filed as a statement of facts within the time required by law; appellants, in support of said motion, not having shown a sufficient reasonable excuse for such failure. Therefore we can only consider fundamental error, to wit, material error apparent upon the face of the pleadings. Does such exist? In answering this question we are confined to the issue of law presented by the ruling of the court on the general demurrer urged to the bill upon which the temporary writ of injunction was granted. Viewed in their strongest light, the effect of the allegations may be summed up as follows: ,

Appellants were operating, and intended to continue to operate, a maternity home on lots 15, 16, and 17 of block 15, Beverly Hills, an addition to the county of Dallas, situated about two or three miles from the city limits on the Dallas and Eort Worth interurban, located about two blocks from said railway in a sparsely settled new addition and almost across the road from the old Armstrong sanitarium, being on a plot of ground 107 by 205 feet. According to the allegations, it does not appear that any homes are within a reasonable distance of said maternity home. However, it is alleged:

“That some of the appellees have purchased property in the-vicinity of said home and expect to build residences thereon which they intend to occupy as homes, and that the operation of said maternity home would cause irreparable loss, not only in the land values and rentals, but a serious moral detriment to their aspirations for the honor and integrity of their children; that the establishment of said alleged maternity home and hospital for fallen girls is an eyesore, cancer to the bud of their aspirations and hopes, and that said institution is a festering sore, an incurable cancer and common nuisance; that one of the appellees purchased some lots 12 years ago and some day intended it as a home for her children, and the object of every other home owner as well as said appellee has been marred and destroyed; that the establishment has been and will be the mecea to which will journey poor unfortunate girls from Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana; and that it will be the clearing house of the vices of men and the sins and weaknesses of women, and will also be a ready receptacle for vicious medical practitioners who ply their wicked and nefarious art to the disgrace of the medical profession, by which they are not recognized, and who ofttimes ply their criminal practices in the city of Dallas, using this as the dumping ground and a place of concealment of their wickedness and sin and weakness of others.”

Appellees further allege, in effect, that to permit this alleged maternity home and hospital for weak and fallen girls to continue will absolutely destroy the harmony of the home, the beauty and symmetry of the lives of these home dwellers, will mar the lives of their wives and children and be a stench in the nostrils of decency, of high morals, and of good order, and that—

“These defendants have run and established and are now running an establishment, and are threatening to run this unlawful institution for the very purpose in the place selected of keeping under cover their wicked and illicit doings; that the inmates of said establishment are permitted, ' and will be permitted, to roam about the community invading the homes of the citizens thereof under various pretenses, creating a moral miasma to the detriment of the moral fibre of the children of this community, and all of its home owners and home dwellers; that these unfortunate creatures, the prey of vice and weakness, have been brought into this establishment, and -will be brought into this establishment, in the daytime, but more often at night, in ambulances and other closed motor vehicles, some of these unfortunate creatures sobbing aloud, crying and screaming in their desolation and misery, such has been the case and these plaintiffs allege such will be the case in the future; these plaintiffs allege that neither of defendants, or any of their agents or helpers, are either graduate nurses, trained nurses, or licensed nurses, and they have no right, morally or otherwise, to operate for or upon any one or nurse any one, either in the city of Dallas or Dallas county, for charge or hire, and these plaintiffs charge that they have so charged and acted as nurses for hire, and they charge they contemplate again so operating^ and are threatening to operate and act as nurses in this institution as they have done in the past, and as they are now doing, and will continue to do in this present institution in the future, reaping a sinful and a reeking sin-stained remuneration from poor unfortunates who fall into their hands, victims of misplaced confidence, fraud, and deceit. * * *
“These plaintiffs show to the court that their community has been thrown into turmoil and unhappiness by the establishment of this alleged maternity home and hospital for fallen girls; that their pursuit of happiness has been interfered with, their homes overshadowed by the ill consequences that will inevitably flow from the continued running of this institution; that their constitutional rights of living their lives in the full enjoyment of their homes has been interfered with, their property rights have been impaired; that an irreparable injury has been done each and every one of them. * * *

Appellees prayed for a temporary injunction restraining the appellants from further oprating the maternity home; that the temporary injunction so granted on final hearing be perpetuated, etc. The court granted the temporary writ as prayed for, and, on the 18th day of April, 1925, appellants duly filed their answer, and motion to dissolve. The hearing of the motion to dissolve was had on the 2d day of May, 1925, and resulted in the order appealed from.

Of the many exceptions and pleas to the merits contained iri the answer presented at this hearing, we will, for the reasons above stated, consider only the general demurrer. *331 The court overruled the general demurrer, to which order appellants duly excepted. While it is not alleged by appellees that appellants are operating, had operated and intended to operate the maternity home under article 4442, Revised Civil Statutes, 1925 (Acts 1921, p.

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Bluebook (online)
282 S.W. 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-ripley-texapp-1926.