Saint Nicholas Cathedral of Russian Orthodox Church in North America v. Kedroff

114 N.E.2d 197, 306 N.Y. 38, 1953 N.Y. LEXIS 784
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 14, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 114 N.E.2d 197 (Saint Nicholas Cathedral of Russian Orthodox Church in North America v. Kedroff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saint Nicholas Cathedral of Russian Orthodox Church in North America v. Kedroff, 114 N.E.2d 197, 306 N.Y. 38, 1953 N.Y. LEXIS 784 (N.Y. 1953).

Opinions

Conway, J.

The decision of this court in St. Nicholas Cathedral v. Kedroff (302 N. Y. 1), directing judgment in favor of the plaintiff, i.e., the group known as the Russian Church in America,” has been reversed by the Supreme Court of the [41]*41United States in a majority opinion written by Mr. Justice Reed, and the case has been remanded to this court for such further action as it deems proper and not in contravention of this opinion.” (Kedroff v. St. Nicholas Cathedral, 344 U. S. 94, 121.) On the basis of such reversal and remand, the defendants-respondents, i.e., the appointees of the Moscow Patriarchate, now move, in substance, for an order directing final judgment in their favor. Adjudication of the motion requires a re-examinatian of the grounds and rationale of our decision and the extent to which it has been affected by the action of the Supreme Court.

The majority opinion in this court very clearly divided consideration of the case under two heads — one statutory and the other common law. It was held that error, in any event, had been committed below, and that, under common-law principles, a new trial would be required, but that, under the statute, which was deemed controlling, final judgment for plaintiff was mandatory. Amendment of the remittitur was granted to make clear that the ultimate basis for the decision was the statute and that a contention that such statute was unconstitutional had been rejected (302 N. Y. 689). Thereupon the Supreme Court entertained the case and eventually, in an opinion, decided that the statute, as construed and applied by this court, did indeed constitute a violation of the constitutional right to the free exercise of religion, and accordingly, as above noted, returned the matter to us for such further action as we might deem proper and not in contravention of the said opinion. With the statutory phase of the case thus authoritatively eliminated, we are left with the alternative common-law base, which still stands as the basis for future action.

The foregoing is a simplified summary of what we conceive to be the present status of the case. We shall now discuss these views in more detail.

The prevailing opinion in this court, reported in 302 New York at pages 1 to 33, contains an extended review of the origins of this controversy — the history of the Russian Orthodox Church, the founding of the North American Diocese, and the consecration of St. Nicholas Cathedral as the see, the Bolshevik revolution, the persecution, suppression and virtual extinction of the church in Russia by the Soviet Government (pp. 4-9), [42]*42the patriarchal ukase of 1920 authorizing diocesan bishops to assume full hierarchal power in the event of cessation of the highest church administration in Moscow, subject to confirmation by such authority upon its re-establishment (p. 7), the prior litigations here (pp. 10-15), the renewed activity of the Moscow Patriarchate and the sobor of 1945 (p. 17), the unsuccessful efforts at reconciliation (pp. 17-18), and the commencement of this action (pp. 19-21).

For over twenty years prior to the commencement of this action, St. Nicholas Cathedral — the historical and traditional see of the Russian Orthodox Church in North America — had been occupied by John S. Kedrovsky and his family (302 N. Y., at pp. 4, 12, 16). Kedrovsky was not a cleric of the Russian Orthodox Church, but rather of the short-lived “ Renovated ” or “ Living Church ”, which had been created and supported by the communists in Russia as a divisive influence in the campaign against religion after the Bolshevik revolution, and which purported to assume control of the church abroad. Everyone now admits and agrees that this “ Renovated Church ” was uncanonical and had no standing whatever. Nevertheless, by judgment of the Appellate Division in 1925 (214 App. Div. 483), affirmed by this court without opinion in 1926 (Kedrovsky v. Rojdesvenshy, 242 N. Y. 547), Kedrovsky wrested possession of the cathedral from Archbishop Platon, the true head of the North American Diocese who had been appointed as such by Patriarch Tikhon. That decision, incidentally, was supported on the ground that the occupant of the cathedral must be an appointee of the central church authorities in Russia and that Kedrovsky, not Platon, was the current appointee of the authorities then existing, viz., the “ Renovated Church ”. This, we think, is an illustration of the difficulty in applying a mechanical test in such a situation without full examination and proof as to the nature of the so-called “ central church authorities ”. The courts, perhaps, were then too close in point of time to realize what had really occurred in Russia and they did not have access to the facts now available. In retrospect, however, and with the knowledge born of aftersight, it is now apparent that, by virtue of that decision, the rightful occupant was ousted from the cathedral and its administration and possession turned [43]*43over to a scMsmatic whose sect actually became extinct after a few years as is admitted by both parties herein.

Faced with this usurpation of the authority of the original patriarchal central church, and with the diocese in chaos and confusion, threatened with the loss of its temporalities to schismatics such as Kedrovsky, Archbishop Platon convened an American sobor and the administrative autonomy of the new North American metropolitan district was declared (302 N. Y., at pp. 11-12). This action was taken in pursuance of Patriarch Tikhon’s ukase No. 362 of 1920, a remarkably prescient document, which contained instructions for diocesan bishops in case the activity of the highest church administration should stop and in case the cessation of activity should acquire “ ‘ a protracted or even permanent character ’ ”. In that event, the diocesan bishop was officially empowered to “ ‘ organize the diocesan administration suitable to conditions created ’ ’ ’, with the proviso that “ ‘ all measures that were taken locally in accordance with the present instructions * * * must be submitted for confirmation later to the Central Church Authority when it is re-established.’ ” (302 N. Y., at p. 7.) The American sobor, in establishing the metropolitan district, stated that the “ ‘ final regulation ’ ” of the status of the North American church was to be left to a “ 1 future Sobor of the Russian Orthodox Church which will be legally convoked, legally elected, will sit with the participation of representatives of the American Church under conditions of political freedom * * * and will be recognized by the entire Oecumenical Orthodox Church as a true Sobor of the Russian Orthodox Church.’ ” (302 N. Y., at p. 12.)

Two years after our affirmance in the Cathedral case [supra) we declined to follow such decision to its logical conclusion. In Kedrovshy v. Russian Catholic Church (249 N. Y. 75) we reversed a judgment which had directed Platon and the others in the metropolitan district to turn over to Kedrovsky all the properties and deeds of the new metropolitan district. Realizing that the legitimate claims of the new metropolitan district, whose temporary administrative autonomy had but recently been declared, were entitled to consideration, and In view of the dissensions that have arisen ”, we returned the case to our Supreme Court, leaving it to that court, after full consideration [44]

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Bluebook (online)
114 N.E.2d 197, 306 N.Y. 38, 1953 N.Y. LEXIS 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saint-nicholas-cathedral-of-russian-orthodox-church-in-north-america-v-ny-1953.