Williams v. Montgomery

186 So. 302, 184 Miss. 547, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 55
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1939
DocketNo. 33482.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 186 So. 302 (Williams v. Montgomery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Montgomery, 186 So. 302, 184 Miss. 547, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 55 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered tbe opinion of the Court.

The Williams Funeral Home, conducted by Mrs. Alice Williams and M. T. Williams, and the Southern Undertaking Association appealed to this Court from a decree of the chancery court perpetually enjoining them from operating a funeral home and undertaker’s establishment and a morgue on certain property owned by the appellants, known as the Tarver residence, on the River Road in the City of Greenwood, Mississippi. The bill was filed by Susan Malone Scales, Betty Malone, H. F. McShane, Mrs. Lillie H. Montgomery, T. S. Marye, W. P. Weaver, and Joseph W. George seeking a perpetual injunction.

The bill very fully described the operation of the funeral home and undertaking establishment, and the answer denied every material allegation in the bill, save that it was admitted that the funeral home was being operated. On the hearing of the case many witnesses were examined and we cannot undertake a detailed analysis thereof.

The chancellor found, and we think it was practically undisputed, that River Road was an exclusively residential district in the City of Greenwood, fronting on Yazoo River, with a paved street between, described in the record as a beautiful residential district. No zoning ordinances are here involved.

On July 26, Mrs. Williams filed a deed conveying to her the Tarver property, which was a two-story house that had been always theretofore occupied as a residence. Mrs. Scales and Miss Betty Malone lived immediately west of the funeral home about forty-five feet therefrom. Mrs. Montgomery and her husband lived to the east, with Dewey Street between, about ninety-five feet from the funeral home. The other complainants lived on that street at various distances, but further from the funeral' home than those immediately adjoining. Directly upon *553 the filing of the deed, it became known to these complainants and others that it was proposed by the Williams to establish a funeral home in the Tarver residence, and immediately protests were made by mass meetings and by direct notice to the owners of the funeral home. However, the appellants proceeded to reconvert the residence into a funeral home and ignored these protests. Promptly this bill was filed, the contents of which will appear from an abbreviated finding of facts by the court which we approve. There was evidence that some of the parties living on this street selected their homes there because of its quietude. The record reflects that the street was adorned with residences, lawns, and the appurtenances of comfortable southern city homes, and also indeed a very choice residential section of Greenwood and the Delta. Greenwood has a population of over 11,000.

After a critical examination of the voluminous record in this case, we think the chancellor was warranted in finding the following facts in addition to the above statement : That upon the beginning of occupancy by the appellants the adjoining neighbors were annoyed to an appreciable extent by noises, unusual odors, slamming of doors, the ringing of the telephone and the door bell, the parking of cars and ambulances with lights shining upon their premises, the display of caskets and other burial paraphernalia, such as the hearse and the dead wagon, and the appliance used to lower the caskets containing dead bodies into the grave, also the bringing of the dead to the embalming room where the bodies were embalmed. The home was provided with a chapel, where they were equipped to have funeral services. The adjoining neighbors would see and hear constantly, according to the business done by the appellants, all the attributes and concomitances of a funeral party, the singing of funeral dirges.

Into this home were carried dead bodies sometimes for embalming, a process by which all the blood is forced from the body and a preservative fluid injected therein, *554 and as to the length, of time a body would remain in the funeral home would depend upon the circumstances of each case. The property of those in the immediate vicinity would be greatly depreciated because of the operation of the funeral home, and that of others on that street would be depreciated to a less degree according to the distance from the funeral home. The chancellor found that the funeral home was a constant reminder of death, and the things connected with it were calculated to depress the feelings of the average normal person, and that such is detrimental to the health. The conclusion of the court below was that the appellees were denied the free use, occupation, repose, and comfort of their homes, and that the value thereof would be materially decreased thereby, although there were witnesses who testified that a funeral home had no unfavorable or depressing effect upon them.

The appellants had expended a considerable sum of money in the purchase and conversion of this residence into a funeral home in excess of $25,000, but they were warned before much of the expense was incurred that stubborn resistance would be met by them in the courts if they converted the residence into a funeral home.

We think the chancellor was warranted in finding in the maze of conflicting evidence in this case that the appellees were being denied the free use, occupation, repose, comfort, and enjoyment of their homes by reason of the establishment and operation of the funeral home, and that their property values had been consequently materially decreased thereby. He was further warranted in finding that the operation of a funeral home in all its details dealing with death and dead bodies would have a depressing effect on the average normal person.

This funeral home was conducted in a modern manner and was sanitary.

It is our own conclusion, based upon the conflicting evidence in this case, that a constant reminder of death, naturally caused to those in the vicinity of a funeral *555 home by its operation, is bound to have a depressing effect upon the persons who have sought a quiet street and and established it for a long time, and tends to impair right in this country to enjoy life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness.

It is true that a funeral home is now deemed a necessity, but its business is — dealing with the dead in the most gruesome manner. It is true as one poet has said that, “Our hearts like muffled drums are beating funeral marches to the grave,” but it is not conducive to the quiet, peaceable enjoyment of one’s property, who has selected an exclusively residential district for his home, to have a funeral home protrude itself into that district and conduct its business of dealing with the dead. The constant reminder of death to the average normal human being is not conducive to health and happiness when continually thrusting its “skull and crossbones” in his presence. The Savior of all mankind when He came face to face with it prayed to His Father, “Let this cup pass from me.”

One poet has thus described it:

“Come to the bridal chamber, Death!
Come to the mother, when she feels
For the first time her firstborn’s breath;
Come when the blessed seals
That close the pestilence are broke,

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Bluebook (online)
186 So. 302, 184 Miss. 547, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-montgomery-miss-1939.