Kedrovsky v. Rojdesvensky

214 A.D. 483, 212 N.Y.S. 273, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10550
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 27, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 214 A.D. 483 (Kedrovsky v. Rojdesvensky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kedrovsky v. Rojdesvensky, 214 A.D. 483, 212 N.Y.S. 273, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10550 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

McAvoy, J.:

The plaintiffs are the individual Kedrovsky, named as delegate of the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church and as Archbishop of the Diocese of North America and Aleutian Islands, and a corporation known as the Archbishop and Consistory of the Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church. Judgment was denied plaintiffs and granted to defendants by the learned court at Special1 Term in an action in which plaintiffs sought to prevent the defendants from occupying the Cathedral of St. Nicholas in New York, because it was alleged that the defendants were not the Archbishop and Dean of this Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church, as; they asserted, and were in their occupancy diverting the property of the church from the trust to which it was subject, to wit, the occupancy by the accredited Archbishop of the North American Diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church and the Dean of the Cathedral. It was designed to establish that defendant Rojdesvensky is not the Archbishop and to forbid the excluding from the premises of Kedrovsky as the Archbishop.

The complaint takes the form of an action for the enforcement of the trust upon the real property occupied by the defendants. Defendant Rojdesvénsky has a counterclaim in which he sets forth that he is the ruling Bishop ” and Kedrovsky is not the Archbishop and that Kedrovsky is interfering with the affairs of the diocese and its properties and diverting the properties from their uses for the Russian Orthodox Church, and he asks for an injunction restraining plaintiffs from interfering with the property or affairs [485]*485of the diocese or with him, Rojdesvensky, in the exercise of his ecclesiastical office. The injunction granted by the learned court at Special Term forbids all interference with Rojdesvensky’s ecclesiastical office and forbids Kedrovsky from holding himself out as the Archbishop of the North American Diocese of the Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church.

The plaintiffs assert that the undisputed facts show that defendant Rojdesvensky is not the Archbishop. In effect, they say that Rojdesvensky entered the premises of the Russian Cathedral of St. Nicholas as a guest and secured what he calls an oral appointment as the personal representative of the Patriarch, the presiding authority of the Supreme Church Administration in Moscow. This, it is asserted, is neither the same thing as an archbishop’s appointment nor superior thereto. It is said that the Patriarch having no authority to appoint an archbishop, could not designate the defendant, and that in any event an oral appointment under the canons of the Church is void. There is a confirmatory letter purporting to sustain this oral appointment from the ex-Patriarch Tikhon, which plaintiffs assert is obviously forged. The plaintiffs claim too that it is established that the ex-Patriarch has repudiated Rojdesvensky, and that he was excommunicated by the General Council or Sobor of the church in 1923.

The decision at Special Term was, apparently, not made on any theory of deciding the right to administer this trust as between these two ecclesiastics. The opinion recites that since the fact of possession raises the presumption of right to possess, the burden of showing a superior right is thrown on the plaintiffs, and if their title is defective, the court will not interfere with the existing possession. The action is not for ejectment and this ruling decides nothing with respect to the title or office of archbishop, which is the controversy between the respective parties and a determination of which will conclude the question of a diversion of the trust. There is no finding as to how the defendant was appointed archbishop; by whom; by what document or at what particular time, excepting that it is found generally that he was so appointed in 1922. Defendant Rojdesvensky was originally the Metropolitan (archbishop) of Kherson and Odessa in Russia and at one time was the archbishop of the diocese of North America. He came here in 1920 and again in 1921 and has remained here since, except for a short period. He was a guest at the archbishop’s residence of the former acting archbishop Alexander Nemolovsky. Shortly afterwards he asserted that he was ruling bishop. The version of his oral appointment as personal representative of the Patriarch is given by one Colton of the International Committee of the Young Men’s Christian [486]*486Associations. He says that he was in Moscow in the spring of 1922, and he received two cablegrams from friends of Rojdesvensky who asked him to present a request to the Patriarch Tikhon to appoint Rojdesvensky his personal representative with full powers in America.” This appointment, if made by Tikhon, would not carry with it the powers or duties of an archbishop, and the canons of the Russian Church show that a personal representative of the Patriarch would not be the equivalent or superior of an archbishop. This was admitted by the defendants’ witnesses. The Patriarch had no authority to appoint an archbishop under the canons or enactments as they are called. The witness Colton says that he presented this request to the Patriarch and received a favorable reply but that the Patriarch said instead of making an order he would make a recommendation which Colton should communicate to a council of refugee bishops abroad who were, apparently, handling the foreign affairs of the church. This council upon the receipt of Colton’s message, decided that the expression of a recommendation of Rojdesvensky was not official and refused to give Rojdesvensky the order which he requested.

There is nothing in the Colton letter nor the action of this council of refugee bishops which shows any appointment of Rojdesvensky as an archbishop.

A Russian named Pashkovsky, whom Rojdesvensky has made a bishop, says that he acted as interpreter at Mr. Colton’s interview with the Patriarch. Pashkovsky says that what Colton said was a recommendation was also an appointment, but even if it be an appointment, it was as representative of the Patriarch and not as archbishop. Pashkovsky says that on May 3, 1922, the Patriarch issued a direction that Rojdesvensky assume the administration of the North American diocese in view of the disorders. He says, however, that Rojdesvensky was appointed archbishop, but he admits that the special appointment to assume the administration of affairs is different from that of an appointment to an archbishopric. Pashkovsky stated in an affidavit that the message presented to the Patriarch asked to have Rojdesvensky appointed as ruling archbishop of the North American archdiocese; but this is contradicted by the request itself, which asked for a personal representative of the Patriarch. Pashkovsky, however, admitted that the Patriarch had no authority to appoint an archbishop, except in an instance which does not appear here to apply, and although his affidavit stated that the Patriarch appointed Rojdesvensky to be his personal representative in North America and to rule over the entire Russian Orthodox Greek Church in North America as superior to all other bishops and archbishops therein, [487]*487nothing has yet been found that appoints him archbishop. Pashkovsky also stated that the Patriarch said he would appoint Rojdesvensky in place of Archbishop Alexander; and that he would give papers for this appointment; but in the three years which have elapsed since then, no papers have arrived. It is apparent that Patriarch Tikhon had no power to appoint an archbishop.

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Bluebook (online)
214 A.D. 483, 212 N.Y.S. 273, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kedrovsky-v-rojdesvensky-nyappdiv-1925.