Court Opinion

ID: 9715503
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-26 06:07:12.982006+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:23:35.370940
License: Public Domain

*297OPINION OF THE COURT
Ciparick, J.
Plaintiffs Wende C. and David C. were parishioners at Hosanna Junction United Methodist Church. During the period between January 1999 and April 2000, they sought individual counseling services from the church pastor Dr. G. Charles T. (Pastor T.). In the course of engaging in apparently intermittent ministerial counseling, Wende C. and the pastor developed a sexual relationship that lasted several months. On November 2, 2000, after David discovered the affair, plaintiffs commenced this action against defendants Pastor T., the Hosanna Junction United Methodist Church and various other ecclesiastical entities and officials for sexual battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, clergy malpractice and negligent retention and supervision.
Supreme Court denied plaintiffs’ motions and cross motion for summary judgment, granted summary judgment sua sponte to the pastor, and granted the motion and cross motions of the remaining defendants for summary judgment, dismissing the complaint in its entirety. Plaintiffs appealed, and a divided Appellate Division affirmed. As relevant here, the majority held that the claims of battery—arising from incidents of touching that occurred more than a year prior to commencement of this action—were time-barred (see CPLR 215 [3]). As to the remaining encounters between Wende C. and Pastor T., the majority concluded that the record established as a matter of law that their “romantic attachment was mutual and the[ir] sexual contact [was] consensual” (6 AD3d 1047, 1049 [2004]).
The majority next addressed plaintiffs’ argument that, in carrying on a sexual relationship with Wende C., the pastor breached his fiduciary duty.1 While noting that plaintiffs failed to plead this cause of action, the majority concluded “that there is no meaningful analytical distinction between a cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty by a cleric and one for clergy malpractice” (id. at 1050). Finally, the majority dismissed the negligent supervision and retention claims on the ground that no vicarious liability existed in the absence of any wrongful or actionable conduct by Pastor T.
Two Justices dissented in part, voting to reinstate the sexual battery and breach of fiduciary duty causes of action against *298Pastor T. and the claims of negligent supervision and retention against defendants Western New York Conference of the United Methodist Church, District Superintendent David Lubba and Resident Bishop Hae-Jong Kim. Plaintiffs appeal as of right based on the two-Justice dissent, and we now affirm.
It is well settled that Supreme Court may grant a party summary judgment absent a cross motion for such relief where judgment is required as a matter of law (see CPLR 3212 [b]). A valid claim for battery exists where a person intentionally touches another without that person’s consent (see PJI2d 3:3 [2005]; see also Restatement [Second] of Torts § 18, Comment d, Illustration 1). Here, there is no dispute that Pastor T. intended the subject physical contact with Wende C. The parties only contest whether his actions were based on a lack of consent.2
On the record before us, we conclude that as a matter of law the sexual relationship between the parties was indeed consensual. There exist no questions of fact “as to what occurred-[and] when” (dissenting op at 300). Indeed, Wende C. admitted that, on February 25, 1999, she initiated discussions with Pastor T. concerning her attraction to him. While she informed him that she preferred to terminate the ministerial counseling at that time, the record includes a sample of subsequent e-mails exchanged between the two expressing a shared affection and professing a growing love for one another. To be sure, after the affair was discovered, Wende C. took the initiative of forwarding these same e-mails to members of the congregation with the stated intention of demonstrating that the subject relationship was “very mutual.” Referring to the electronic correspondence as setting forth “a clearer, more accurate and truthful picture” of the affair, she stated in the accompanying letter: “[Pastor T] was just as responsible as I was in regards to how [the relationship] began and the course it followed.”
No record evidence exists that either Wende C.’s physical or emotional condition or prescribed medication impaired her ability to engage in a romantic relationship with Pastor T. or to consent to his physical contact. As there is no proof that Wende C. suffered from infancy, mental impairment or physical *299helplessness so as to render her consent impossible, Pastor T. was properly granted summary judgment sua sponte on the battery claim.
Moving next to plaintiffs’ contentions that Pastor T. breached his fiduciary duties to them, we note that these causes of action were not specifically pleaded. The complaint does not contain any allegation that Pastor T. breached his fiduciary duty to David C. during the period that David received counseling services from the pastor. The language in the complaint most resembling a fiduciary cause of action is found in a paragraph that refers only to Wende C. The paragraph alleges that Pastor T. exploited Wende “in the guise of providing pastoral counselling . . . and in breach of the sacred trust between counsellor and careseeker in the course of the ministerial relationship.” The complaint continues to state that the sexual battery alleged therein occurred while Pastor T. “was acting within the authority granted to him by the defendant Church . . . under the guise of his role as pastor in the ministerial relationship between himself and ... a congregant, and [in] his position as a responsible member of the clergy.”
While the complaint’s brief reference to a “sacred trust” may arguably be couched as alluding to a fiduciary duty, the surrounding language and the allegations that follow sound in clergy malpractice, which would improperly require courts to examine ecclesiastical doctrine in an effort to determine the standard of due care owed to parishioners undergoing ministerial counseling (see First Presbyt. Church of Schenectady v United Presbyt. Church in U.S. of Am., 62 NY2d 110, 116 [1984] [providing that “civil courts are forbidden from interfering in or determining religious disputes”]; see also Maryland & Va. Eldership of Churches of God v Church of God at Sharpsburg, Inc., 396 US 367, 369 [1970] [Brennan, J., concurring]). Given that no fiduciary cause of action is properly before us, we leave open for another day the question whether such a claim may arise between a cleric and a parishioner under very different circumstances, not present here. Plaintiffs’ remaining contentions are without merit.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.

. It should be noted that Pastor T. had no license for professional counseling that might give rise to a complaint under the Education Law.

. [1] Our discussion here is limited to plaintiffs’ allegations of unwanted touching that occurred after November 2, 1999. Any battery cause of action arising from contact between the parties before that date is barred by the applicable one-year statute of limitations (see CPLR 215 [3]).