Ryszko v. Kaimakan

153 A. 651, 108 N.J. Eq. 34, 7 Backes 34, 1931 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 173
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 25, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 153 A. 651 (Ryszko v. Kaimakan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryszko v. Kaimakan, 153 A. 651, 108 N.J. Eq. 34, 7 Backes 34, 1931 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 173 (N.J. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

The object of this suit is to enjoin the use of St. Nicholas Russian Orthodox Catholic Church of Elizabeth for divine services by a priest of that faith, alleged to have been deposed, and to restrain him from interfering with his successor officiating in the church; the legal theory of the bill being to prevent the diversion of church property from the pious use to which it is dedicated and held in trust.

Archbishop Platon, as Metropolitan of the Diocese of North America of the Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church, appointed Father Kaimakan priest of the St. Nicholas parish in 1926. There came discord between some of the parishoners and the priest, and on July 9th, 1929, the Metropolitan ordered his transfer to Singac, approving a resolution of the diocesan council of July 8th that he be removed for his refusal to obligate himself to convene his church committee for an audit of the finances of the church. At *Page 35 that meeting of the council, Father Kaimakan declared that he recognized the diocesan authority and its orders, but refused compliance; the unsettled condition of the finances provoked the trouble in the church. Father Kaimakan refused to go to Singac and later in the month, and without other than oral announcement from the altar, held a meeting with as many of his parishoners as would follow him, at which a resolution was adopted wherein, after reciting grievances and denouncing Metropolitan Platon as suspended and removed from his high office, and condemning his aim to create an autocephalous church in America, it was resolved to repudiate Metropolitan Platon and to recognize Archbishop Apollinary as the ruling bishop or Metropolitan of the church in America. At the meeting there were forty in attendance, out of a total of more than one hundred parishoners, and of these, twenty-five subscribed to the resolution. Two days before the resolution Bishop Apollinary had appointed Father Kaimakan "as missionary priest of the city of Elizabeth" and certified his appointment under his official seal. Thereafter, August 2d, the diocesan council, with the approval of Metropolitan Platon, suspended Father Kaimakan pending his trial for insubordination, assault upon a parishoner and for sedition, and appointed another priest in his place. The secession was unnoticed. The result is disruption of the congregation of St. Nicholas.

On behalf of those who adhere to the organization over which Metropolitan Platon presides it is set up that "they are without spiritual guidance and are unable to worship the Deity in accordance with their religious faith," meaning that they worship at or through the medium of the mass celebrated only by a licensed priest; that Father Kaimakan's canonical functions are suspended and his celebration of the mass is a pretense and gesture, without divine appeal or consolation to their souls; that in his supplication, as part of the liturgy, he invokes divine blessing upon Bishop Apollinary instead of Platon as his spiritual superior, and that, in conscience, they cannot attend the services celebrated by him, and, in consequence, are deprived of the use of the *Page 36 church, and to allow the use of the church by him, to their exclusion, is a diversion of trust property from the use to which it was devoted.

The adherents of the priest, on the other hand, contend that Archbishop Apollinary is the de jure Metropolitan of the church in America and this they claim the records of the church demonstrate. After the Russian revolution in 1918 (Kerenski's) the church was reorganized upon the former Patriarchal system, which had suffered an interruption during the reign of Peter the Great (A.D. 1689-1725), when the Czar became the titular head. Under the re-establishment the management of the church was vested in the Patriarch jointly with the Holy Synod and the Supreme Ecclesiastical Council, responsible only to the Sobor, the supreme authority of the church, legislative, administrative, judicial and supervisory; the Sobor, a council of bishops, clergymen and laymen, convened periodically at established periods. The church is subdivided into dioceses and the dioceses into parishes; the diocese being governed by a bishop and a diocesan council, and the parish by a priest and a parochial council; the parishoners having a voice in the management. North America is a province and the church a foreign mission. Power to appoint bishops to foreign missions is in the Holy Synod, but the Patriarch has authority to fill vacancies.

When the Soviet came into power and the church authorities grew apprehensive, the Patriarch, Holy Synod and the Supreme Church Council (November 7th, 1920) decreed that if dioceses outside of Russia be without communication with the Supreme Church Administration or if the latter for any reason stop its activities, the bishops abroad should form a Provisional Supreme Church Government.

Accordingly, a Supreme Church Authority Abroad was organized, but was dissolved on order of the Patriarch and the Holy Synod by decree, September 13th, 1922, and a council of all the Russian Churches Abroad was called for November 21st following. The council took over the management *Page 37 of the church outside of Russia, in subordination, however, and as "an undivided part of the autocephalous Patriarchate of Moscow and of All the Russia," with power to appoint bishops, fill episcopal sees, and have jurisdiction over bishops. Between councils, the synod of bishops was to act. Sobors (conventions) were to be convened by the council of bishops and by the synod.

Metropolitan Platon was a member of the Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, president of its finance commission and participated in its deliberations; the first provisional synod having resolved (September 5th, 1922) to consider him as ruling pro tempore the North American diocese upon a verbal report made to it of his appointment by the Patriarch. A commission addressed to Metropolitan Platon, purporting to be signed by Patriarch Tikhon, under date of September 20th, 1923, recites his appointment by the Sacred Synod in April, 1922, as pro tempore ruler of the North American dioceses. It is claimed that the commission was a permanent appointment by the Patriarch, but it does not admit of that construction. The Patriarch was without power to make a permanent appointment. The commission simply certifies the pro tempore appointment by the Sacred Synod of Moscow.

While the bishops abroad carried on at Sremski Karlovtzic, Serbia, the hierarchy at Moscow continued to function, but precariously. Patriarch Tikhon was imprisoned by the Soviet and what became of his Locum Tenans, Bishop Agathangel and later Metropolitan Peter, is undisclosed; but Patriarch Tikhon died in 1925. Bishop Sergius, who succeeded as Locum Tenans seems to have fared better with the Soviet, and in an epistle to the bishops abroad, counseled them to pledge their loyalty to the Soviet, to which they responded that as he and his synod were not free, but under the domination of the Soviet, they released him and it of responsibility for their refusal to recognize the Soviet, and they thereupon resolved that a threatened decree of exclusion for disobedience would be uncanonical and proclaimed *Page 38 that the Russian Church Abroad considers itself to be an indivisible spiritually unique branch of the Great Russian Church and Locum Tenans Peter (not Sergius) to be its head, and while protesting their fealty to the Mother Church, declared themselves self-governing until the church in Russia should be at liberty and restored; this by authority of the decree of November 7th, 1920.

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Bluebook (online)
153 A. 651, 108 N.J. Eq. 34, 7 Backes 34, 1931 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryszko-v-kaimakan-njch-1931.