Nimbler v. Felber

111 Misc. 2d 867
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 111 Misc. 2d 867 (Nimbler v. Felber) 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
Nimbler v. Felber, 111 Misc. 2d 867 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Martin Rodell, J.

“Provide yourself with a Rabbi” (Talmud, Avoth, ch 1, Mishnah 6).

“Despise the Rabbinate” (Talmud, Avoth, ch 1, Mishnah 10).

“Any Rabbi whom the community does not constantly wish to fire is no Rabbi” (Rabbi Israel Lipkin of Salant [1810-1883]).

This mixed ethos is a fact of synagogue or church life, which in effect recognizes that any position of leadership, even a spiritual one, invites a certain degree of inevitable opposition. Professor Aaron M. Schreiber in his comprehensive work on Jewish Law and Decision-Making — A Study Through Time (Temple Univ Press [1979], p 331) historically capsulizes this institutional phenomenon: “In [868]*868the power tensions between the communal Rabbi and laymen, much depended, of course, upon the personality of the particular Rabbi, the extent of the pressure to which he was subject, and many other factors.”

It would seem that such is the soul and substance of the instant action for declaratory judgment. After trial, the following facts were adduced:

The plaintiffs are members in good standing of the Kissena Jewish Center, which is a religious corporation of the Jewish faith, duly organized and existing pursuant to article 10 of the Religious Corporations Law. Plaintiffs Oscar Zimbler, Leon Kaiser, and Michael Male were also members of the board of trustees of the center when the action was commenced. The defendants are the duly elected officers of the center and members of the board of trustees.

On December 20, 1978 the plaintiffs and other members attended a general membership meeting, at which a motion was made to extend the employment contract of Rabbi Harold Frankel from its terminating date of January 15, 1983 to a new terminating date of January 14, 1989. This resolution was approved by a vote of 41 in favor and 32 opposed, which constituted a majority of the members present and voting at the said meeting.

On January 3, 1979 the board of trustees passed the following resolution on a motion which was carried by a vote of seven in favor and four opposed:

“Whereas the membership voted at a duly convened general meeting of the membership on December 20, 1978 on a motion to extend the Rabbi’s contract for six years which motion conflicts with the constitution established practice of the Kissena Jewish Center ***

“Resolved that the Board of Trustees does declare the motion voted by the membership at a general meeting of the membership on December 20, 1978 to extend the contract of the Rabbi for six years be and is null and void and that none of the officers of the Kissena Jewish Center conclude any agreement extending the Rabbi’s contract as contained in such null and void motion.

[869]*869“It is the intent of the resolution to reaffirm that all motions involving the expenditure of funds in excess of $500.00 must originate with the Board of Trustees and further, action by any officer of the Kissena Jewish Center contrary to this resolution shall be considered an ultra vires act by such officer and the Kissena Jewish Center may act to recover from such officer any losses sustained by the Kissena Jewish Center because of such ultra vires act.”

The plaintiffs sue in their own behalf and for all other similarly situated to have the board of trustees of the center recognize their voting rights and to act in accordance therewith.

The declaratory judgment sought by the plaintiffs is to: (1) adjudge and declare that the afore-mentioned resolution of the board of trustees, which purports to nullify the majority vote of the general membership meeting of December 20, 1978 to extend the contract of the Rabbi, is illegal and void in that it violates sections 5 and 200 of the Religious Corporations Law; and (2) to direct the president of the Kissena Jewish Center to execute a written contract with Harold Frankel, extending his employment as Rabbi from January 15, 1983 to January 14, 1989, under the same terms, conditions and salary as the existing contract, which terminates January 14, 1983.

The defendants have alleged the following in their defense: (1) that the general membership meeting of December 20, 1978 was not called in accordance with the notice requirements of section 194 of the Religious Corporations Law; (2) that the board of trustees did not approve or make any affirmative recommendations to the membership at the said meeting, and as such, the alleged extension of the Rabbi’s contract was in violation of the constitution and by-laws of the center, and is null and void; and (3) that many of the duties required to be performed by the Rabbi, pursuant to the extended agreement, cannot be performed by reason of the nonexistence of the involved facilities.

Before entertaining the merits of this specific action, the court has carefully pondered whether a controversy of this nature is the proper subject for a secular declaratory judgment. It is well established that under CPLR 3001 a [870]*870declaratory judgment is a remedial provision, the primary purpose of which is to stabilize legal relations and eliminate uncertainty as to the scope and content of present or prospective obligations. (See Barry v Ready Reference Pub. Co., 25 AD2d 827; 3 Weinstein-Korn-Miller, NY Civ Prac, par 3001.02.) CPLR 3001 also provides that the court “may render” a declaratory judgment, thereby clearly indicating that the jurisdiction to render a declaratory judgment is discretionary in character. The Court of Appeals has said that this discretion must be exercised judicially and with care, and where there is no necessity for resorting to it, it should not be employed. (James v Alderton Dock Yards, 256 NY 298; Chase Nat. Bank of City of N.Y. v Raleigh Estates, 266 App Div 864; 24 Carmody-Wait 2d, NY Prac, § 147:5, p 390.) This court, like other courts across the nation, is reluctant to interfere with the internal affairs of religious groups. (See Tribe, American Constitutional Law, ch 14.) “Causes spiritual must be judged by judges of the spiritual and causes temporal by temporal judges.” (24 Henry VI [YB] 8, ch 12 [1532].) “‘[T]he rights of conscience are, in their nature, of peculiar delicacy, and will little bear the gentlest touch of the governmental hand’ ”. (School Dist. of Abington Twp., Pa. v Schempp, 374 US 203, 231, quoting Rep Daniel Carroll of Maryland during the debate on proposed Bill of Rights in the First Congress.) At the very heart of the First Amendment is the proposition that “[t]he law knows no heresy, and is committed to the support of no dogma, the establishment of no sect.” (Watson v Jones, 13 Wall [80 US] 679, 728.) As early as the closing years of the eighteenth century and the first 20-odd years of the New York State Constitution of 1777, principles of religious freedom and separation of church and State were firmly joined to the religious and legal framework of New York life. (Pratt, Religion, Politics and Diversity — The Church-State Theme in New York History [Cornell Univ Press], pp 108-109.) These principles were expressed by Chief Justice John Jay, who believed that religious rights “are, by nature, subject to no control but that of the Deity ***. No opinions are dictated; no rules of faith prescribed; no preference given to one sect to the prejudice of others.” (Jay, The Charge of Chief Justice Jay to the Grand [871]*871Inquest of the County of Ulster, on the Ninth Day of September, 1777, Kingston, N.Y., 1777, pp 9-10.)

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