Contogeorge v. Spyrou

7 F.R.D. 223, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1689
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 2, 1946
DocketCiv. 35/4
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 7 F.R.D. 223 (Contogeorge v. Spyrou) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Contogeorge v. Spyrou, 7 F.R.D. 223, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1689 (S.D.N.Y. 1946).

Opinion

CAFFEY, District Judge.

In oral arguments and in briefs a good deal has been said about the parol evidence rule. For the purpose of passing on the pending motion, however, I shall not now take up any purely evidence question. On the contrary, I shall confine my discussion to the bases for the motion to strike pursuant to rule 12(f) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C. A. following section 723c.

There are four grounds for the motion. These are that the matter objected to is either (1) redundant, or (2) immaterial, or (3) impertinent, or (4) scandalous. Parol evidence rules grew up as part of the common law system; whereas, the civil procedure rules originated pursuant to a statute which authorized their adoption. In specific words rule 12(f) definitely provides that the court may order stricken from a pleading matter having any one of the several faults I have mentioned.

I. In considering the source from which the new rules emanated there is no occasion to go into legislation further than to determine whether by it Congress vested the judicial branch of the government with appropriate power. So also there is no need to go into the equity rules as they formerly existed, save that as precedents they were useful to, and in some measure assisted or guided, the framers of those civil rules.

The contention of the defendants, who made the motion, involves a single inquiry. This is whether any paragraph of the complaint violates or goes outside of rule 12(f).

The complaint contains 20 paragraphs. Annexed thereto are copies of two written agreements. One is Exhibit I which was made September 22, 1944. The other is Exhibit II which was made February 19, 1945. Another was signed in March, 1943, but no copy is annexed to the complaint, and there are sub-exhibits attached to Exhibits I and II.

The notice of motion seeks elimination from the complaint of paragraphs 10 to 19 in their entireties, as well as of parts of paragraph 20. I shall first treat paragraphs 10 to 19 as raising a single question. Then I shall discuss paragraph 20 separately. For convenience, in identifying the paragraphs the numbers the paragraphs bear will be employed.

II. The essence of the paragraphs assailed is substantially as follows:

10. The plaintiff brought an action against the defendants in this court in September, 1942. In it, as he asserts, he sought to recover damages he had suffered by reason of a conspiracy, inaugurated by the defendants in 1934, to injure him as a priest and bishop of the Eastern Orthodox Church.

11. In the action, among other things, the plaintiff claimed the defendants committed acts, identified below by seven small letters, in substance as follows:

a. In violation of church usage, without knowledge or notice, and without hearing or trial, an alleged excommunication of the plaintiff was requested and allegedly procured in February, 1934, by the Patriarch of Constantinople.

b. Knowing that the excommunication was null and void, from 1934 to the commencement of the litigation, communications were circulated among the public to the effect that the plaintiff was a mere layman and that all sacraments performed by him or by the priests ordained by him were void.

c. Various newspapers were induced to refuse notices or advertisements as to religious activities of the plaintiff or of communities affiliated with him or priests ordained by him.

d. Priests the plaintiff had ordained were induced to renounce their ordinations by him and to become affiliated with the defendants.

e. Communities organized by him were induced to leave his jurisdiction' and to affiliate themselves with the defendants.

f. An effort was made to prevent a bishop of the Orthodox Church from officiating with the plaintiff in religious sacraments under threat of severing relations between the Church of Constantinople and the Russian Church.

g. Like acts were committed which were designed to prevent the plaintiff [225]*225from exercising his calling as a priest and bishop of the Eastern Orthodox Church.

12. In March, 1943, the parties agreed to settle the action begun in- 1942, and a condition precedent thereto was that the defendants procure execution by the Patriarch of Constantinople and deliver to the plaintiff a certain document annexed to the agreement and cause it to be published in certain newspapers. In substance, the document revoked the alleged excommunication and removed any cloud which might have been created by the defendants from plaintiff’s status as a bishop of the Eastern Orthodox Church.

13. The defendants failed to procure the document arranged for. The action was tried and a disagreement resulted in February, 1944.

14. On September 22, 1944, the parties executed another agreement looking to the settlement of the action (copy of which was annexed as Exhibit I). It was a condition precedent thereto that the defendants procure execution of a document by the Patriarch of Constantinople similar to that specified in the prior agreement of March, 1943, deliver it to the plaintiff and publish it in designated newspapers.

15. Thereafter the defendants claimed they were unable to procure execution by the Patriarch of Constantinople of Exhibit A attached to Exhibit I. The plaintiff insisted on defendants procuring Exhibit A and its delivery to the plaintiff.' Steps were taken to bring on the second trial and the case was set for February 9, 1945.

16. On the last named date the plaintiff was ready to proceed and there were sundry negotiations for an adjustment. The defendant Spyrou asked' for a private conference with the plaintiff and, speaking for both defendants, acknowledged to the plaintiff that the plaintiff had suffered great injury at the hands, of the defendants since 1934, expressed a desire to make reparation and settle the litigation and made other proposals. The defendants also stated they were unable to procure execution by the Patriarch of Constantinople of Exhibit A or Exhibit B attached to Exhibit I and urged the plaintiff to waive them. The efforts at compromise (of which there has been only a partial recital of details) continued in various forms for some time, but were abortive.

17. and 18. Differences arose with respect to numerous matters it is useless now to go into. Neither the March, 1943, nor the September, 1944 (Exhibit I) nor the February, 1945 (Exhibit II) agreement was fully consummated.

19. Relying on the promises, representations and assurances of the defendants-, the plaintiff accepted the modifications proposed by the defendants, executed Exhibit II and performed the terms and conditions thereof on his part to be performed.

20. The defendants have breached the aforesaid agreements in particulars specified of which, according to the plaintiff, three are designated in sub-divisions as (c), (d) and (e).

III. The story of the conduct of the parties, although not full, has been sufficiently told by the plaintiff for present purposes. The allegations of paragraphs 10 to 20 are so intertwined and so tied together in the agreements referred to in those paragraphs, however, that of necessity, so long as they are part of the complaint, they must be read together. In consequence, it seems to me it would be a waste to treat each paragraph as standing apart.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F.R.D. 223, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/contogeorge-v-spyrou-nysd-1946.