McAuliffe v. Russian Greek Catholic Church

36 A.2d 53, 130 Conn. 521, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 192
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 3, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 36 A.2d 53 (McAuliffe v. Russian Greek Catholic Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAuliffe v. Russian Greek Catholic Church, 36 A.2d 53, 130 Conn. 521, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 192 (Colo. 1944).

Opinions

*523 Ells, J.

In the decade beginning with the year 1890 a considerable body of immigrants known as Ruthenians or Carpatho-Russians settled in the east side of Bridgeport. They were Slavs, spoke a dialect of the Russian language and came from the territory known as Podkarpatska Rus, which lay on the southern slope of the Carpathian Mountains in what was then Hungary. A deeply religious people, they proceeded in the year 1900 to establish a church of their own in Bridgeport. The congregation grew rapidly and the church now occupies a large and valuable edifice. Two services are held each Sunday and the average total attendance is about fifteen hundred. Disputes which began in 1932 have now developed into a controversy concerning the legal title to the church property and to a school building, and particularly as to whether the title is held for the uses of a Roman Catholic church of the Greek Ruthenian rite, that is, a Greek Catholic church united with Rome, or for the uses of an independent autonomous Greek Catholic church.

On September 2, 1900, sixty-four persons, practically all of whom were Ruthenians or Carpatho-Russians, met in Sadler’s Hall in East Bridgeport and organized the Greek Catholic Church Society of St. Elias the Prophet. No priest was present. Officers were elected and at a later meeting by-laws were adopted. One of them provided that “This Society shall take care of its Greek Catholic Faith and its Greek Catholic Church, at Bridgeport, Connecticut. Each and every faithful Greek Catholic in whose heart lies his paternal and maternal Greek Catholic Faith can become a member of this Society.” Arrangements were made with the priest of the Hungarian Greek Catholic uniate church on the west side of Bridgeport to say mass for the Ruthenians in St. Michael’s Roman Catholic Church *524 in East Bridgeport. In April, 1901, Father Yolkay, a priest in union with Rome, became their pastor and held services in a store. He was succeeded in 1904 by Father Dudinsky, a uníate priest. On May 8, 1904, the society by vote changed its name to the Greek Catholic Church of St. John the Baptist. The membership of this society constituted the membership of the church. The society purchased land on Arctic Street on May 16, 1904, and took title in the name of three trustees, with habendum to their successors and assigns forever. At a meeting of the society just prior to the acquisition of this land, it was voted, one hundred and six to three, “that in the event that we have a church” it should be “under a Bishop.” Late in 1904 Father Gojdics, also a uníate priest, became pastor and was the first to devote his entire time to the society. He proceeded to conduct services for the society in the basement of a neighboring Roman Catholic church of the Latin rite. Early in 1905, at a meeting of the society held in the basement of this church, it was decided to build a church on the Arctic Street-property.

On December 5, 1905, the plaintiff corporation was incorporated as the St. John Baptist Church by the execution of a certificate of organization signed by Michael Tierney, bishop of Hartford, John Synott, vicar general, Elias Gojdics, pastor, and two laymen of the church, certifying that they had organized a corporation under the provisions of the statute laws of Connecticut governing the organization of Roman Catholic churches, and this certificate was duly filed with the secretary of sfate. The society never voted to incorporate itself, but impliedly and tacitly acquiesced in and approved the incorporation and organization of the St. John Baptist Church. The trustees then conveyed the Arctic Street land to the corpora *525 tion. No vote of the society was ever taken to expressly authorize this conveyance. In 1906 a basement church was built, following a loan by a bank, secured by a mortgage deed in which the corporation was described as the St. John Baptist Church, an ecclesiastical corporation of the Roman Catholic church. In 1908 Father Staurovsky became pastor and remained until 1911, when Father Chornock arrived. Both were uniate priests. In 1913 it was decided by vote of the parish to build the superstructure of the church and a rectory. A mortgage loan was secured, the deed describing the grantor as an ecclesiastical corporation of the Roman Catholic church, the buildings were erected and the church was dedicated in 1914. In 1915 the church society formed itself into a cemetery association and purchased land for such use. In 1920 the corporation acquired land on Pembroke Street, a mortgage loan was secured from a bank and a school building was erected. In 1925 the school building was dedicated. In 1930 serious trouble arose and Father Chornock was ultimately excommunicated from the Catholic church by Rome. He was supported by the overwhelming majority of the congregation and a resolution was adopted empowering him to hire legal counsel. It was later voted that nine trustees be elected and that Father Chornock and two laymen, the then members of the corporation other than the bishop of Hartford and his vicar general, sign deeds for the property to the nine trustees. This was done. Thereupon the defendant The Russian Greek Catholic Church of St. John the Baptist was organized in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 195 of the General Statutes, and the certificate of organization was duly filed with the secretary of state. The trustees then deeded the property to this corporation.

In 1938 the Reverend Daniel Maczkov, a regularly *526 ordained priest of the Roman Catholic church of the Greek Ruthenian rite, was appointed pastor, but Father Chornock and his adherents, in possession and control of the property, have refused to relinquish it and to recognize the appointment of Father Maczkov. Maurice F. McAuliffe, .Roman Catholic bishop- of i Hartford and president and trustee of the original corporation,. the corporation itself, ^ Father Maczkov and two members of the original society who adhere to the Roman Catholic: church and represent the members who likewise adhere brought this action against the new corporation, which claims to be an independent and autonomous Greek Catholic church, against the new society, which is incorporated, against various individuals, as representing different societies and as trustees in various capacities, and. against- Father Chornock. • ■ ;

The foregoing are the highlights in the chronology of events. The record contains two thousand four hundred and forty-five printed pages; there are six hundred and thirteen paragraphs ,in the finding of facts made by the trial court; and the scholarly memorandum -of decision is thirty-nine pages in length.. However, the questions to be decided are few in number. The court decided that the- corporation held nothing but the bare legal title and held such title for the uses and purposes of the society, which.continued to exist as the church — -that is, for the uses and purposes of the ■church maintained by -the voluntary association as it was at the time the title became vested in the corporation, no-matter what denomination that-might be, because equity will not permit a religious trust to fail for lack of a trustee; that if it should.be found that the society is an independent and autonomous church equity would simply appoint another trustee and would not let the trust fail; and that when a trust is *527

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Bluebook (online)
36 A.2d 53, 130 Conn. 521, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcauliffe-v-russian-greek-catholic-church-conn-1944.