Smith v. Gill

310 So. 2d 214, 293 Ala. 736, 1975 Ala. LEXIS 1425
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 20, 1975
DocketSC 763
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 310 So. 2d 214 (Smith v. Gill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Gill, 310 So. 2d 214, 293 Ala. 736, 1975 Ala. LEXIS 1425 (Ala. 1975).

Opinion

MERRILL, Justice.

This appeal is from a decree in which the trial court ordered “that the Defendants cease and desist from the operation of a half way house for mental patients” at their residence in a residential community.

Thé halfway house, 3007 Hood Road, is owned by appellants, John and Irene Smith. Appellees, Harold and Nancy Gill, live in a single family dwelling on the adjoining lot east of the Smiths at 3005 Hood Road. Appellees, Howard and Mabel Raney, live across the street at 3010 Hood Road. The Raneys have lived in their house 24 years, the Gills 13 years, and the Smiths since July 1, 1973. These and other homes and apartments are in the Glen’ll Farms Subdivision in Huntsville. The lots of all parties contain approximately 2 acres each. The Smith lot has a duplex dwelling on it and prior to its purchase, more than one family occupied the dwelling. The area was Zoned as 2-B, a classification permitting multiple family occupancy of dwellings, apartments and boarding houses.

On July 1, 1973, the Smiths entered into a contract with the Madison County Mental Health Board by which they undertook to maintain a transitional care facility for persons who had been committed to and hospitalized in Bryce Hospital, a state hospital for the insane. Dr. William H. Goodson, Jr., Director of the Huntsville-Madison County Mental Health Center, testified that “A Transitional Care Facility, sometimes also referred to as Halfway Houses, is a residence for persons * * * who have been hospitalized for a mental disorder, but who no longer need to be hospitalized and need a place obviously to live in a community.” The contract required the Smiths “to provide living facilities and residential care within Madison County, Alabama, for at least ten persons who have a history of psychiatric hospitalization to be designated and assigned by the Board.” The Smiths were to receive $261.00 per month for each such person.

The Smiths moved into the house in early July, 1973, and about ten days later nine persons who had been mental patients at Bryce Hospital arrived and began living there.

The bill for injunction was filed in September, 1973, by the Gills, the Raneys and twenty-nine other residents in the subdivision, together with affidavits of the Gills and the Raneys. The bill charged in part that “The presence of a mental facility in Glen’ll Farms Subdivision causes plaintiffs hurt, damage and inconvenience for in that the Plaintiffs fear for their safety and their families’ safety; the value of plaintiffs’ residence is diminished; the use and enjoyment of plaintiffs’ property is reduced.” The plaintiffs prayed that the Smiths be enjoined “from housing known mentally disturbed persons, mental patients or otherwise maintaining a mental facility or any other facility for known mentally disturbed persons,” and for other relief. No request was made for a restraining order or temporary injunction and the cause was heard on November 19,1973.

*739 The plaintiffs testified as to certain specific abnormal acts of the residents of the halfway house:

(1) One of the residents picked bark from a pine tree which was on the Gills’ property.

(2) A resident on the defendants’ patio became ill and vomited.

(3) A newspaper was burned by a resident in the Gills’ front yard.

(4) A resident was observed urinating in the front yard of defendants’ property.

(5) Plaintiff, Nancy Gill, heard voices one morning at 9:00 o’clock in defendants’ driveway.

(6) An increase in the number of trucks and delivery type vehicles on the street.

(7) A resident rang the doorbell of the Raneys but left before the door was answered and the same resident came into the Raneys’ yard on two occasions.

(8) A resident looked in a neighbor’s mailbox on several occasions.

(9) Mrs. Raney had a conversation with a resident who acted “silly.”

The Smiths had a daughter 16 and a son 13. Smith operated a nursing home at Fayetteville, Tennessee, and spends the majority of his time there. The mental facility at Huntsville is operated by Mrs. Smith. The Smiths are under no obligation to furnish medical or nursing care; they are not required to supervise or watch the patients, and the Smiths are free to select the location of their facility. It must meet the licensing standards specified in the contract and the Smiths had no voice in the selection of the patients. Some of the patients are taking medications and the failure to take these drugs would result in a reoccurrence of the symptoms of the mental disorder for which they were committed, yet these medications and drugs are self-administered by the patients. There is no supervision to insure that the patients are taking the prescribed medicines, and Dr. Goodson was not aware of any policy to rule out the selection of persons for the halfway house even if they had been committed for acts of violence or sexual deviancy. One of the patients selected to stay with the Smiths was returned to Bryce Hospital because she was unable to participate in the treatment and rehabilitation program.

Mrs. Gill testified that her children, two girls aged 16 and 14, and a boy 11, could not enjoy the facilities of their home “such as sunbathing and this type of thing, due, to the fact that this facility is located next to us.” She also testified that the actions of some of the patients “has led us to be very frightened and to be concerned for our safety, and even more so regarding the safety of our children.”

The court’s decree follows:

‘‘This cause coming on to be heard seeking an injunction to prohibit the Defendants from operating a half way house for mental patients, on the ground that it constitutes a nuisance in the neighborhood, and praying for other relief therein, and evidence having been presented by the parties thereto as issue was joined upon the trial of the cause and the Court having heard and considered same, is of the opinion that the Plaintiffs are entitled to relief.
“The Court finds that the Defendants are operating a half way house in a former family residence, that the Defendants are lay persons without any special skills, that said half way house should be operated without endangering the welfare of the neighborhood, that the Defendants have no special ability in the field of mental hygiene, that the State has sanctioned the operation of this institution in a residential community without a resident physician or nurse residing in the premises, that the patients are not properly supervised and as such may endanger themselves as well as those who live in the community, that *740

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Bluebook (online)
310 So. 2d 214, 293 Ala. 736, 1975 Ala. LEXIS 1425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-gill-ala-1975.