Jones v. Trane

153 Misc. 2d 822, 591 N.Y.S.2d 927, 1992 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 547
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 153 Misc. 2d 822 (Jones v. Trane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Trane, 153 Misc. 2d 822, 591 N.Y.S.2d 927, 1992 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 547 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

William R. Roy, J.

This litigation by an infant and his mother was initiated by service of pleadings alleging that defendant Trane, while employed as parish priest at defendant St. Adam’s Parish and as director of religious education for defendant St. Adam’s Academy, improperly subjected the infant plaintiff to sexual and other conduct against the boy’s will between August 1988 and January 1989. The first amended complaint set forth three causes of action against all defendants, the first of which combined a number of theories of liability predicated on the alleged misconduct of the priest; the second and third causes of action were a derivative action by the infant’s mother and a claim for punitive damages.

Regarding the amended complaint as a pleading alleging clergy malpractice in a variety of forms, defendant Trane, joined by the institutional defendants, moved to dismiss on the ground that no such cause of action is recognized in this jurisdiction. Before that motion was argued however, plaintiffs made the present motion for leave to serve a second amended complaint, a copy of which is included in the moving papers. The proposed pleading states as separate causes of action the theories previously included in the first cause of action in the first amended complaint, adds two causes of action for outrageous conduct causing severe emotional distress to the infant, and expands claims that the institutional defendants not only were responsible for misconduct of the priest under the principle of respondeat superior but also were themselves at fault in [824]*824the hiring and the failure periodically to investigate and evaluate Trane in light of the priest’s alleged known pedophilic disposition. Some of the 14 causes of action now sought to be pleaded are against defendant Trane alone, some are against only the institutional defendants, and some are against all.

Of the causes of action against him in the proposed pleading, defendant Trane served objections to three of those actions: No. 3, alleging sexual misconduct and breach of trust; No. 5, alleging violation of trust; and No. 7, alleging clergy malpractice and negligence. The institutional defendants joined in those objections, identifying as "misplaced”, "plaintiffs’ claims that his pleadings could be interpreted to state causes of action other than clergy malpractice”.

On argument of the motion to amend, the court granted plaintiffs’ motion, applying the principle of liberal allowance of amendment most recently articulated by the Appellate Division, Fourth Department, in Agway, Inc. v Williams (185 AD2d 636). It then treated defendants’ motions to dismiss as directed to the complaint as amended, and accepted the arguments tendered in objection to plaintiffs’ motion to amend as arguments in support of motions to dismiss the clergy malpractice and negligence cause of action (No. 7) and the breach and violation of trust causes of action (Nos. 3 and 5), as well as the actions against the institutional defendants, in the second amended complaint. Additionally, with the consent of counsel, the court anticipated motions by defendants to dismiss the causes of action for outrageous conduct causing severe emotional distress, now added by the second amended pleading, and indicated that it would also pass on such motions as though formally made on papers. The parties were given opportunity to tender additional submissions following argument of the motions, and each has done so, the most recent being received on August 6, 1992.

Turning first to the causes of action against the individual defendant Trane that are challenged: Because plaintiffs have alleged respondeat superior liability on the institutional defendants for the conduct of the priest, all the defendants have joined in seeking dismissal of the claims of clergy malpractice and negligence and of breach and violation of trust by him.

The facts on which the challenged claims are based, as alleged in the amended complaint and amplified by documents [825]*825submitted by plaintiffs in support of their motion to amend, are these:

The infant plaintiff, Martin Jones, his parents and siblings resided in the City of Oswego where, as practicing Roman Catholics, they attended and supported defendant St. Adam’s Church, a parish under the jurisdiction of defendant Roman Catholic Diocese of Syracuse, New York. Prior to the beginning of the 1988-1989 school year, Mr. and Mrs. Jones enrolled Martin, then 11, and a younger sister, in defendant St. Adam’s Elementary School, a school operated by the parish and diocese, for the coming year, and paid fees for the children’s attendance at the school.

Defendant Trane was then employed as an associate pastor at the church and director of religious education for the school. Thereafter, on two occasions between August 1, 1988 and January 31, 1989, defendant Trane obtained permission from Martin’s mother to take him with another boy to Laker Hall, an athletic facility at the SUNY Oswego Campus, in the evening to play racketball and basketball and to go swimming. Before entering the swimming pool, at the pass through showers at the pool, Trane allegedly removed all his clothing and, against their will, made Martin and the other boy do the same; he then kissed and fondled them against their will. It is also alleged that, in addition to the actual physical contact, by the conduct of Trane, Martin was threatened with and placed in apprehension of imminent offensive sexual bodily contact. The complaint further alleges that defendant Trane’s conduct arose out of and in the course of his employment by the institutional defendants and that a special relationship of trust existed between the Joneses and defendant Trane as a priest and educator of the Roman Catholic Church.

Plaintiffs contend that upon the foregoing alleged facts they may maintain actions to recover damages for substantial emotional, mental and physical injury, economic loss and expenses for care and treatment sustained and required by Martin.

Defendants jointly, in all motions directed to plaintiffs’ complaints, have relied primarily and almost exclusively on the rationale of Chief Judge Charles L. Brieant of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York in Schmidt v Bishop (779 F Supp 321), in which summary judgment on causes of action for clergy malpractice, negligence and breach of fiduciary duty was granted, both to a [826]*826church pastor who had allegedly carried on long term sexual contact with the plaintiff in the course of "emotional, spiritual and familial counseling” initiated at the request of plaintiffs parents, and to his congregational and judicatory employers. The Judge concluded that, in addition to being without precedent in New York law and on other grounds, the causes of action constitutionally could not be sustained because they would require the definition of a standard of care for the cleric, and that the defining of such a standard would, in his view, necessarily run afoul of the prohibition against excessive entanglement in religion inherent in the First Amendment of the United States Constitution under Lemon v Kurtzman (403 US 602).

All defendants argue strenuously for adoption by this court of the result and conclusions reached by Judge Brieant, with which the court concurs, but in part only.

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Bluebook (online)
153 Misc. 2d 822, 591 N.Y.S.2d 927, 1992 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-trane-nysupct-1992.