This is the second interlocutory appeal we have heard in this case. We dissolved an earlier temporary injunction for lack of a specific statement of reasons as required by rule 683, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure.
See Charter Medical Corp. v. Miller,
Appellants do not challenge the entire order; they only attack the final section, which enjoins them from
* * * in any manner attempting to interfere with, abridge or limit the Plaintiffs’ rights to practice in Mesquite Memorial Hospital as they existed prior to the adoption of the aforesaid ARTICLE XI of the Bylaws.
Allegedly, this portion of the order is too general because it fails to set forth the specific reasons for issuance required by rule 683, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. We disagree. Considered as a whole, the order sufficiently informs appellants of the prohibited activity, and the generality of this final section does not necessitate dissolution of the restraint.
Although it is true that this final section does not specify the nature of appellees’ “rights to practice” prior to the bylaw amendment, this generality is cured by earlier parts of the order wherein the court specifically described those preamendment rights. The court’s findings of fact are included within the order and recite that prior to the amendment, the podiatrists had been granted privileges in the hospital as “clinical consultants.” According to the findings, these privileges entitled the podiatrists to admit patients and to perform surgery within the scope of their license with the concurrent medical management of any general practitioner on the hospital staff. These findings aid the final paragraph of the order by fully describing the rights which are to be observed. Considering the findings of fact stated in the order, the temporary injunction is not fatally defective for lack of specificity. When the court’s findings of fact are recited in the order granting the temporary injunction, the findings may supply the requirements of rule 683.
Littlejohn v. Finder,
Appellants also assert various evidentiary challenges based on grounds of inadmissibility and insufficiency. However, our review of the record leads us to conclude that even if the evidence were properly admitted, it does not support the issuance of a temporary injunction. Consequently, we do not review the points of error which challenge evidentiary admissibility.
Appellants assert that the evidence fails to show the necessary prerequisites to issuance of a temporary injunction, namely, immediate and irreparable injury, absence of an adequate legal remedy, and a probable right of recovery. We agree that the evidence fails to show any threat of immediate and irreparable harm. The only appellee to testify, Dr. Miller, admitted that his podiatric privileges were not limited to Mesquite Memorial Hospital, but that he had privileges at several other facilities, including one located in Mesquite. He further stated that podiatrists were on the staff at several major local hospitals. It follows from this testimony that, under the present record, appellants have not shown that the new regulations irreparably injured their alleged rights to practice podia
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try. There was no showing that resort to these other facilities pending decision on the merits would have prejudiced or interfered with appellees’ practice. While we recognize that appellees were not required to establish conclusively an irreparable injury at the temporary injunction hearing,
Transport Co. of Texas v. Robertson Transports, Inc.,
Finally, we see no justification for the failure to try this case on the merits during the pendency of our decisions on the temporary injunction appeals. Indeed, the entire case could have been finally and expeditiously resolved in less time than that consumed by these interlocutory appeals. Temporary injunction appeals do not stay proceedings on the merits.
Conway v. Irick,
The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the temporary injunction is dissolved.
