Can. 1 The canons of this Code concern only the Latin Church.
Can. 2 For the most part the Code does not determine the rites to be
observed in the celebration of liturgical actions. Accordingly, liturgical laws
which have been in effect hitherto retain their force, except those which may
be contrary to the canons of the Code.
Can. 3 The canons of the Code do not abrogate, nor do they derogate from,
agreements entered into by the Apostolic See with nations or other civil entities.
For this reason, these agreements continue in force as hitherto, notwithstanding
any contrary provisions of this Code.
Can. 4 Acquired rights, and likewise privileges hitherto granted by the
Apostolic See to either physical or juridical persons, which are still in use
and have not been revoked, remain intact, unless they are expressly revoked
by the canons of this Code.
Can. 5 §1 Universal or particular customs which have been in effect
up to now but are contrary to the provisions of these canons and are reprobated
in the canons of this Code, are completely suppressed, and they may not be allowed
to revive in the future. Other contrary customs are also to be considered suppressed,
unless the Code expressly provides otherwise, or unless they are centennial
or immemorial: these latter may be tolerated if the Ordinary judges that, in
the circumstances of place and person, they cannot be removed.
§2 Customs apart from the law, whether universal or particular, which have
been in effect hitherto, are retained.
Can. 6 §1 When this Code comes into force, the following are abrogated:
1° the Code of Canon Law promulgated in 1917;
2° other laws, whether universal or particular, which are contrary to the
provisions of this Code, unless it is otherwise expressly provided in respect
of particular laws;
3° all penal laws enacted by the Apostolic See, whether universal or particular,
unless they are resumed in this Code itself;
4° any other universal disciplinary laws concerning matters which are integrally
reordered by this Code.
§2 To the extent that the canons of this Code reproduce the former law,
they are to be assessed in the light also of canonical tradition.
Can. 7 A law comes into being when it is promulgated.
Can. 8 §1 Universal ecclesiastical laws are promulgated by publication
in the ‘Acta Apostolicae Sedis’, unless in particular cases another
manner of promulgation has been prescribed. They come into force only on the
expiry of three months from the date appearing on the particular issue of the
‘Acta’, unless because of the nature of the case they bind at once,
or unless a shorter or a longer interval has been specifically and expressly
prescribed m the law itself.
§2 Particular laws are promulgated in the manner determined by the legislator;
they begin to oblige one month from the date of promulgation, unless a different
period is prescribed in the law itself.
Can. 9 Laws concern matters of the future, not those of the past, unless
provision is made in them for the latter by name.
Can. 10 Only those laws are to be considered invalidating or incapacitating
which expressly prescribe that an act is null or that a person is incapable.
Can. 11 Merely ecclesiastical laws bind those who were baptised in the
catholic Church or received into it, and who have a sufficient use of reason
and, unless the law expressly provides otherwise, who have completed their seventh
year of age.
Can. 12 §1 Universal laws are binding everywhere on all those for
whom they were enacted.
§2 All those actually present in a particular territory in which certain
universal laws are not in force, are exempt from those laws.
§3 Without prejudice to the provisions of Can. 13, laws enacted for a particular
territory bind those for whom they were enacted and who have a domicile or quasi
domicile in that territory and are actually residing in it.
Can. 13 §1 Particular laws are not presumed to be personal, but
rather territorial, unless the contrary is clear.
§2 Peregrini are not bound:
1° by the particular laws of their own territory while they are absent from
it, unless the transgression of those laws causes harm in their own territory,
or unless the laws are personal
2° by the laws of the territory in which they are present, except for those
laws which take care of public order, or determine the formalities of legal
acts, or concern immovable property located in the territory.
§3 Vagi are bound by both the universal and the particular laws which are
in force in the place in which they are present.
Can. 14 Laws, even invalidating and incapacitating ones, do not oblige
when there is a doubt of law. When there is a doubt of fact, however Ordinaries
can dispense from them provided, if there is question of a reserved dispensation,
it is one which the authority to whom it is reserved Is accustomed to grant.
Can. 15 §1 Ignorance or error concerning invalidating or incapacitating
laws does not prevent the effect of those laws, unless it is expressly provided
otherwise.
§2 Ignorance or error is not presumed about a law, a penalty, a fact concerning
oneself, or a notorious fact concerning another. It is presumed about a fact
concerning another which is not notorious, until the contrary is proved.
Can. 16 §1 Laws are authentically interpreted by the legislator
and by that person to whom the legislator entrusts the power of authentic interpretation.
§2 An authentic interpretation which is presented by way of a law has the
same force as the law itself, and must be promulgated. If it simply declares
the sense of words which are certain in themselves, it has retroactive force.
If it restricts or extends the law or resolves a doubt, it is not retroactive.
§3 On the other hand, an interpretation by way of a court judgement or
of an administrative act in a particular case, does not have the force of law.
It binds only those persons and affects only those matters for which it was
given.
Can. 17 Ecclesiastical laws are to be understood according to the proper
meaning of the words considered in their text and context. If the meaning remains
doubtful or obscure, there must be recourse to parallel places, if there be
any, to the purpose and circumstances of the law, and to the mind of the legislator.
Can. 18 Laws which prescribe a penalty, or restrict the free exercise
of rights, or contain an exception to the law, are to be interpreted strictly.
Can. 19 If on a particular matter there is not an express provision of
either universal or particular law, nor a custom, then, provided it is not a
penal matter, the question is to be decided by taking into account laws enacted
in similar matters, the general principles of law observed with canonical equity,
the jurisprudence and practice of the Roman Curia, and the common and constant
opinion of learned authors.
Can. 20 A later law abrogates or derogates from an earlier law, if it
expressly so states, or if it is directly contrary to that law, or if it integrally
reorders the whole subject matter of the earlier law. A universal law, however,
does not derogate from a particular or from a special law, unless the law expressly
provides otherwise.
Can. 21 In doubt, the revocation of a previous law is not presumed; rather,
later laws are to be related to earlier ones and, as far as possible, harmonised
with them.
Can. 22 When the law of the Church remits some issue to the civil law,
the latter is to be observed with the same effects in canon law, insofar as
it is not contrary to divine law, and provided it is not otherwise stipulated
in canon law.
Can. 23 A custom introduced by a community of the faithful has the force
of law only if it has been approved by the legislator, in accordance with the
following canons.
Can. 24 §1 No custom which is contrary to divine law can acquire
the force of law.
§2 A custom which is contrary to or apart from canon law, cannot acquire
the force of law unless it is reasonable; a custom which is expressly reprobated
in the law is not reasonable.
Can. 25 No custom acquires the force of law unless it has been observed,
with the intention of introducing a law, by a community capable at least of
receiving a law.
Can. 26 Unless it has been specifically approved by the competent legislator,
a custom which is contrary to the canon law currently in force, or is apart
from the canon law, acquires the force of law only when it has been lawfully
observed for a period of thirty continuous and complete years. Only a centennial
or immemorial custom can prevail over a canonical law which carries a clause
forbidding future customs.
Can. 27 Custom is the best interpreter of laws.
Can. 28 Without prejudice to the provisions of Can. 5, a custom, whether
contrary to or apart from the law, is revoked by a contrary custom or law. But
unless the law makes express mention of them, it does not revoke centennial
or immemorial customs, nor does a universal law revoke particular customs.
Can. 29 General decrees, by which a competent legislator makes common
provisions for a community capable of receiving a law, are true laws and are
regulated by the provisions of the canons on laws.
Can. 30 A general decree, as in Can. 29, cannot be made by one who has
only executive power, unless in particular cases this has been expressly authorised
by the competent legislator in accordance with the law, and provided the conditions
prescribed in the act of authorisation are observed.
Can. 31 §1 Within the limits of their competence, those who have
executive power can issue general executory decrees, that is, decrees which
define more precisely the manner of applying a law, or which urge the observance
of laws.
§2 The provisions of Can. 8 are to be observed in regard to the promulgation,
and to the interval before the coming into effect, of the decrees mentioned
in §1.
Can. 32 General executory decrees which define the manner of application
or urge the observance of laws, bind those who are bound by the laws.
Can. 33 §1 General executory decrees, even if published in directories
or other such documents, do not derogate from the law, and any of their provisions
which are contrary to the law have no force.
§2 These decrees cease to have force by explicit or implicit revocation
by the competent authority, and by the cessation of the law for whose execution
they were issued. They do not cease on the expiry of the authority of the person
who issued them, unless the contrary is expressly provided.
Can. 34 §1 Instructions, namely, which set out the provisions of
a law and develop the manner in which it is to be put into effect, are given
for the benefit of those whose duty it is to execute the law, and they bind
them in executing the law. Those who have executive power may, within the limits
of their competence, lawfully publish such instructions.
§2 The regulations of an instruction do not derogate from the law, and
if there are any which cannot be reconciled with the provisions of the law they
have no force.
§3 Instructions cease to have force not only by explicit or implicit revocation
by the competent authority who published them or by that authority’s superior,
but also by the cessation of the law which they were designed to set out and
execute.
Can. 35 Within the limits of his or her competence, one who has executive
power can issue a singular administrative act, either by decree or precept,
or by rescript, without prejudice to Can. 76 §1.
Can. 36 §1 An administrative act is to be understood according to
the proper meaning of the words and the common manner of speaking. In doubt,
a strict interpretation is to be given to those administrative acts which concern
litigation or threaten or inflict penalties, or restrict the rights of persons,
or harm the acquired rights of others, or run counter to a law in favour of
private persons; all other administrative acts are to be widely interpreted.
§2 Administrative acts must not be extended to cases other than those expressly
stated.
Can. 37 An administrative act which concerns the external forum is to
be effected in writing; likewise, if it requires an executor, the act of execution
is to be in writing.
Can. 38 An administrative act, even if there is question of a rescript
given Motu proprio, has no effect in so far as it harms the acquired right of
another, or is contrary to a law or approved custom, unless the competent authority
has expressly added a derogatory clause.
Can. 39 Conditions attached to an administrative act are considered to
concern validity only when they are expressed by the particles ‘if’,
‘unless’, ‘provided that’.
Can. 40 The executor of any administrative act cannot validly carry out
this office before receiving the relevant document and establishing its authenticity
and integrity, unless prior notice of this document has been conveyed to the
executor on the authority of the person who issued the administrative act.
Can. 41 The executor of an administrative act to whom the task of execution
only is entrusted, cannot refuse to execute it, unless it is quite clear that
the act itself is null, or that it cannot for some other grave reason be sustained,
or that the conditions attached to the administrative act itself have not been
fulfilled. If, however, the execution of the administrative act would appear
to be inopportune, by reason of the circumstances of person or place, the executor
is to desist from the execution, and immediately inform the person who issued
the act.
Can. 42 The executor of an administrative act must proceed in accordance
with the mandate. If, however, the executor has not fulfilled essential conditions
attached to the document, or has not observed the substantial form of procedure,
the execution is invalid.
Can. 43 The executor of an administrative act may in his prudent judgement
substitute another for himself, unless substitution has been forbidden, or he
has been deliberately chosen as the only person to be executor, or a specific
person has been designated as substitute; however, in these cases the executor
may commit the preparatory acts to another.
Can. 44 An administrative act can also be executed by the executor’s
successor in office, unless the first had been chosen deliberately as the only
person to be executor.
Can. 45 If there has been any error in the execution of an administrative
act, the executor may execute it again.
Can. 46 An administrative act does not cease on the expiry of the authority
of the person issuing it, unless the law expressly provides otherwise.
Can. 47 The revocation of an administrative act by another administrative
act of the competent authority takes effect only from the moment at which the
person to whom it was issued is lawfully notified.
Can. 48 A singular decree is an administrative act issued by a competent
executive authority, whereby in accordance with the norms of law a decision
is given or a provision made for a particular case; of its nature this decision
or provision does not presuppose that a petition has been made by anyone.
Can. 49 A singular precept is a decree by which an obligation is directly
and lawfully imposed on a specific person or persons to do or to omit something,
especially in order to urge the observance of a law.
Can. 50 Before issuing a singular decree, the person in authority is
to seek the necessary information and proof and, as far as possible, is to consult
those whose rights could be harmed.
Can. 51 A decree is to be issued in writing. When it is a decision, it
should express, at least in summary form, the reasons for the decision.
Can. 52 A singular decree has effect in respect only of those matters
it determines and of those persons to whom it was issued; it obliges such persons
everywhere, unless it is otherwise clear.
Can. 53 If decrees are contrary one to another, where specific matters
are expressed, the specific prevails over the general; if both are equally specific
or equally general, the one later in time abrogates the earlier insofar as it
is contrary to it.
Can. 54 §1 A singular decree whose application is entrusted to an
executor, has effect from the moment of execution; otherwise, from the moment
when it is made known to the person on the authority of the one who issued it.
§2 For a singular decree to be enforceable, it must be made known by a
lawful document in accordance with the law.
Can. 55 Without prejudice to Cann. 37 and 51, whenever a very grave reason
prevents the handing over of the written text of a decree, the decree is deemed
to have been made known if it is read to the person to whom it is directed,
in the presence of a notary or two witnesses a record of the occasion is to
be drawn up and signed by all present.
Can. 56 A decree is deemed to have been made known if the person to whom
it is directed has been duly summoned to receive or to hear the decree, and
without a just reason has not appeared or has refused to sign.
Can. 57 §1 Whenever the law orders a decree to be issued, or when
a person who is concerned lawfully requests a decree or has recourse to obtain
one, the competent authority is to provide for the situation within three months
of having received the petition or recourse, unless a different period of time
is prescribed by law.
§2 If this period of time has expired and the decree has not yet been given,
then as far as proposing a further recourse is concerned, the reply is presumed
to be negative.
§3 A presumed negative reply does not relieve the competent authority of
the obligation of issuing the decree, and, in accordance with Can. 128, of repairing
any harm done.
Can. 58 §1 A singular decree ceases to have force when it is lawfully
revoked by the competent authority, or when the law ceases for whose execution
it was issued.
§2 A singular precept, which was not imposed by a lawful document, ceases
on the expiry of the authority of the person who issued it.
Can. 59 §1 A rescript is an administrative act issued in writing
by a competent authority, by which of its very nature a privilege, dispensation
or other favour is granted at someone’s request.
§2 Unless it is otherwise established, provisions laid down concerning
rescripts apply also to the granting of permission and to the granting of favours
by word of mouth.
Can. 60 Any rescript can be obtained by all who are not expressly prohibited.
Can. 61 Unless it is otherwise established, a rescript can be obtained
for another, even without that person’s consent, and it is valid before
its acceptance, without prejudice to contrary clauses.
Can. 62 A rescript in which there is no executor, has effect from the
moment the document was issued; the others have effect from the moment of execution.
Can. 63 §1 Except where there is question of a rescript which grants
a favour Motu proprio, subreption, that is, the withholding of the truth, renders
a rescript invalid if the request does not express that which, according to
canonical law, style and practice, must for validity be expressed.
§2 Obreption, that is, the making of a false statement, renders a rescript
invalid if not even one of the motivating reasons submitted is true.
§3 In rescripts of which there is no executor, the motivating reason must
be true at the time the rescript is issued; in the others, at the time of execution.
Can. 64 Without prejudice to the right of the Penitentiary for the internal
forum, a favour refused by any department of the Roman Curia cannot validly
be granted by another department of the same Curia, or by any other competent
authority below the Roman Pontiff, without the approval of the department which
was first approached.
Can. 65 §1 Without prejudice to the provisions of §§2
and 3, no one is to seek from another Ordinary a favour which was refused by
that person’s proper Ordinary, unless mention is made of the refusal.
When the refusal is mentioned, the Ordinary is not to grant the favour unless
he has learned from the former Ordinary the reasons for the refusal.
§2 A favour refused by a Vicar general or an episcopal Vicar cannot be
validly granted by another Vicar of the same Bishop, even when he has learned
from the Vicar who refused the reasons for the refusal.
§3 A favour refused by a Vicar general or an episcopal Vicar and later,
without any mention being made of this refusal, obtained from the diocesan Bishop,
is invalid. A favour refused by the diocesan Bishop cannot, without the Bishop’s
consent, validly be obtained from his Vicar general or episcopal Vicar, even
though mention is made of the refusal.
Can. 66 A rescript is not rendered invalid because of an error in the
name of the person to whom it is given or by whom it is issued, or of the place
in which such person resides, or of the matter concerned, provided that in the
judgement of the Ordinary there is no doubt about the person or the matter in
question.
Can. 67 §1 If it should happen that two contrary rescripts are obtained
for one and the same thing, where specific matters are expressed, the specific
prevails over the general.
§2 If both are equally specific or equally general, the one earlier in
time prevails over the later, unless in the later one there is an express mention
of the earlier, or unless the person who first obtained the rescript has not
used it by reason of deceit or of notable personal negligence.
§3 In doubt as to whether a rescript is invalid or not, recourse is to
be made to the issuing authority.
Can. 68 A rescript of the Apostolic See in which there is no executor
must be presented to the Ordinary of the person who obtains it only when this
is prescribed in the rescript, or when there is question of public affairs,
or when it is necessary to have the conditions verified.
Can. 69 A rescript for whose presentation no time is determined, may
be submitted to the executor at any time, provided there is no fraud or deceit.
Can. 70 If in a rescript the very granting of the favour is entrusted
to the executor, it is a matter for the executor’s prudent judgement and
conscience to grant or to refuse the favour.
Can. 71 No one is obliged to use a rescript granted in his or her favour
only, unless bound by a canonical obligation from another source to do so .
Can. 72 Rescripts granted by the Apostolic See which have expired, can
for a just reason be extended by the diocesan Bishop, but once only and not
beyond three months.
Can. 73 No rescripts are revoked by a contrary law, unless it is otherwise
provided in the law itself.
Can. 74 Although one who has been granted a favour orally may use it
in the internal forum, that person is obliged to prove the favour for the external
forum whenever this is lawfully requested.
Can. 75 If a rescript contains a privilege or a dispensation, the provision
of the following canons are also to be observed.
Can. 76 §1 A privilege is a favour given by a special act for the
benefit of certain persons, physical or juridical; it can be granted by the
legislator, and by an executive authority to whom the legislator has given this
power.
§2 Centennial or immemorial possession of a privilege gives rise to the
presumption that it has been granted.
Can. 77 A privilege is to be interpreted in accordance with Can. 36 §1.
The interpretation must, however, always be such that the beneficiaries of the
privilege do in fact receive some favour.
Can. 78 §1 A privilege is presumed to be perpetual, unless the contrary
is proved.
§2 A personal privilege, namely one which attaches to a person, is extinguished
with the person.
§3 A real privilege ceases on the total destruction of the thing or place;
a local privilege, however, revives if the place is restored within fifty years.
Can. 79 Without prejudice to Can. 46, a privilege ceases by revocation
on the part of the competent authority in accordance with Can. 47.
Can. 80 §1 No privilege ceases by renunciation unless this has been
accepted by the competent authority.
§2 Any physical person may renounce a privilege granted in his or her favour
only.
§3 Individual persons cannot renounce a privilege granted to a juridical
person, or granted by reason of the dignity of a place or thing. Nor can a juridical
person renounce a privilege granted to it, if the renunciation would be prejudicial
to the Church or to others.
Can. 81 A privilege is not extinguished on the expiry of the authority
of the person who granted it, unless it was given with the clause ‘at
our pleasure’ or another equivalent expression.
Can. 82 A privilege which does not burden others does not lapse through
non use or contrary use; if it does cause an inconvenience for others, it is
lost if lawful prescription intervenes.
Can. 83 §1 Without prejudice to Can. 142 §2, a privilege ceases
on the expiry of the time or the completion of the number of cases for which
it was granted.
§2 It ceases also if in the judgement of the competent authority circumstances
are so changed with the passage of time that it has become harmful, or that
its use becomes unlawful.
Can. 84 A person who abuses a power given by a privilege deserves to
be deprived of the privilege itself. Accordingly, after a warning which has
been in vain, the Ordinary, if it was he who granted it, is to deprive the person
of the privilege which he or she is gravely abusing; if the privilege has been
granted by the Apostolic See, the Ordinary is obliged to make the matter known
to it.
Can. 85 A dispensation, that is, the relaxation of a merely ecclesiastical
law in a particular case, can be granted, within the limits of their competence,
by those who have executive power, and by those who either explicitly or implicitly
have the power of dispensing, whether by virtue of the law itself or by lawful
delegation.
Can. 86 In so far as laws define those elements which are essentially
constitutive of institutes or of juridical acts, they are not subject to dispensation.
Can. 87 §1 Whenever he judges that it contributes to their spiritual
welfare, the diocesan Bishop can dispense the faithful from disciplinary laws,
both universal laws and those particular laws made by the supreme ecclesiastical
authority for his territory or his subjects. He cannot dispense from procedural
laws or from penal laws, nor from those whose dispensation is specially reserved
to the Apostolic See or to some other authority.
§2 If recourse to the Holy See is difficult, and at the same time there
is danger of grave harm in delay, any Ordinary can dispense from these laws,
even if the dispensation is reserved to the Holy See, provided the dispensation
is one which the Holy See customarily grants in the same circumstances, and
without prejudice to Can. 291.
Can. 88 The local Ordinary can dispense from diocesan laws and, whenever
he judges that it contributes to the spiritual welfare of the faithful, from
laws made by a plenary or a provincial Council or by the Episcopal Conference.
Can. 89 Parish priests and other priests or deacons cannot dispense from
universal or particular law unless this power is expressly granted to them.
Can. 90 §1 A dispensation from an ecclesiastical law is not to be
given without a just and reasonable cause, taking into account the circumstances
of the case and the importance of the law from which the dispensation is given;
otherwise the dispensation is unlawful and, unless given by the legislator or
his superior, it is also invalid.
§2 A dispensation given in doubt about the sufficiency of its reason is
valid and lawful.
Can. 91 In respect of their subjects, even if these are outside the territory,
those who have the power of dispensing can exercise it even if they themselves
are outside their territory; unless the contrary is expressly provided, they
can exercise it also in respect of peregrini actually present in the territory;
they can exercise it too in respect of themselves.
Can. 92 A strict interpretation is to be given not only to a dispensation
in accordance with Can. 36 §1, but also to the very power of dispensing
granted for a specific case.
Can. 93 A dispensation capable of successive applications ceases in the
same way as a privilege. It also ceases by the certain and complete cessation
of the motivating reason.
Can. 94 §1 Statutes properly so called are regulations which are
established in accordance with the law in aggregates of persons or of things,
whereby the purpose, constitution, governance and manner of acting of these
bodies are defined.
§2 The statutes of an aggregate of persons bind only those persons who
are lawfully members of it; the statutes of an aggregate of things bind those
who direct it.
§3 The provisions of statutes which are established and promulgated by
virtue of legislative power, are regulated by the provisions of the canons concerning
laws.
Can. 95 §1 Ordinances are rules or norms to be observed both in
assemblies of persons, whether these assemblies are convened by ecclesiastical
authority or are freely convoked by the faithful, and in other celebrations:
they define those matters which concern their constitution, direction and agenda.
§2 In assemblies or celebrations, those who take part are bound by these
rules of ordinance.
Can. 96 By baptism one is incorporated into the Church of Christ and
constituted a person in it, with the duties and the rights which, in accordance
with each one’s status, are proper to christians, in so far as they are
in ecclesiastical communion and unless a lawfully issued sanction intervenes.
Can. 97 §1 A person who has completed the eighteenth year of age,
has attained majority; below this age, a person is a minor.
§2 A minor who has not completed the seventh year of age is called an infant
and is considered incapable of personal responsibility; on completion of the
seventh year, however, the minor is presumed to have the use of reason.
Can. 98 §1 A person who has attained majority has the full exercise
of his or her rights.
§2 In the exercise of rights a minor remains subject to parents or guardians,
except for those matters in which by divine or by canon law minors are exempt
from such authority. In regard to the appointment of guardians and the determination
of their powers, the provisions of civil law are to be observed, unless it is
otherwise provided in canon law or unless, in specific cases and for a just
reason, the diocesan Bishop has decided that the matter is to be catered for
by the appointment of another guardian.
Can. 99 Whoever habitually lacks the use of reason is considered as incapable
of personal responsibility and is regarded as an infant.
Can. 100 A person is said to be: an incola, in the place where he or
she has a domicile; an advena, in the place of quasi domicile; a peregrinus,
if away from the domicile or quasi domicile which is still retained; a vagus,
if the person has nowhere a domicile or quasi domicile.
Can. 101 §1 The place of origin of a child, and even of a neophyte,
is that in which the parents had a domicile or, lacking that, a quasi domicile
when the child was born; if the parents did not have the same domicile or quasi
domicile, it is that of the mother.
§2 In the case of a child of vagi, the place of origin is the actual place
of birth; in the case of a foundling, it is the place where it was found.
Can. 102 §1 Domicile is acquired by residence in the territory of
a parish, or at least of a diocese, which is either linked to the intention
of remaining there permanently if nothing should occasion its withdrawal, or
in fact protracted for a full five years.
§2 Quasi domicile is acquired by residence in the territory of a parish,
or at least of a diocese, which is either linked to the intention of remaining
there for three months if nothing should occasion its withdrawal, or in fact
protracted for three months.
§3 Domicile or quasi domicile in the territory of a parish is called parochial;
in the territory of a diocese, even if not in a parish, it is called diocesan.
Can. 103 Members of religious institutes and of societies of apostolic
life acquire a domicile in the place where the house to which they belong is
situated. They acquire a quasi domicile in the house in which, in accordance
with Can. 102 §2, they reside.
Can. 104 Spouses are to have a common domicile or quasi domicile. By
reason of lawful separation or for some other just reason, each may have his
or her own domicile or quasi domicile.
Can. 105 §1 A minor necessarily retains the domicile or quasi domicile
of the person to whose authority the minor is subject. A minor who is no longer
an infant can acquire a quasi domicile of his or her own and, if lawfully emancipated
in accordance with the civil law, a domicile also.
§2 One who for a reason other than minority is lawfully entrusted to the
guardianship or tutelage of another, has the domicile and quasidomicile of the
guardian or curator.
Can. 106 Domicile or quasi domicile is lost by departure from the place
with the intention of not returning, without prejudice to the provisions of
Can. 105.
Can. 107 §1 Both through domicile and through quasi domicile everyone
acquires his or her own parish priest and Ordinary.
§2 The proper parish priest or Ordinary of a vagus is the parish priest
or Ordinary of the place where the vagus is actually residing.
§3 The proper parish priest of one who has only a diocesan domicile or
quasi domicile is the parish priest of the place where that person is actually
residing.
Can. 108 §1 Consanguinity is reckoned by lines and degrees.
§2 In the direct line there are as many degrees as there are generations,
that is, as there are persons, not counting the common ancestor.
§3 In the collateral line there are as many degrees as there are persons
in both lines together, not counting the common ancestor.
Can. 109 §1 Affinity arises from a valid marriage, even if not consummated,
and it exists between the man and the blood relations of the woman, and likewise
between the woman and the blood relations of the man.
§2 It is reckoned in such a way that the blood relations of the man are
related by affinity to the woman in the same line and the same degree, and vice
versa.
Can. 110 Children who have been adopted in accordance with the civil
law are considered the children of that person or those persons who have adopted
them.
Can. 111 §1 Through the reception of baptism a child becomes a member
of the Latin Church if the parents belong to that Church or, should one of them
not belong to it, if they have both by common consent chosen that the child
be baptised in the Latin Church: if that common consent is lacking, the child
becomes a member of the ritual Church to which the father belongs.
§2 Any candidate for baptism who has completed the fourteenth year of age
may freely choose to be baptised either in the Latin Church or in another autonomous
ritual Church; in which case the person belongs to the Church which he or she
has chosen.
Can. 112 §1 After the reception of baptism, the following become
members of another autonomous ritual Church:
1° those who have obtained permission from the Apostolic See;
2° a spouse who, on entering marriage or during its course, has declared
that he or she is transferring to the autonomous ritual
Church of the other spouse; on the dissolution of the marriage, however, that
person may freely return to the Latin Church;
3° the children of those mentioned in nn. 1 and 2 who have not completed
their fourteenth year, and likewise in a mixed marriage the children of a catholic
party who has lawfully transferred to another ritual Church; on completion of
their fourteenth year, however, they may return to the Latin Church.
§2 The practice, however long standing, of receiving the sacraments according
to the rite of an autonomous ritual Church, does not bring with it membership
of that Church.
Can. 113 §1 The catholic Church and the Apostolic See have the
status of a moral person by divine disposition.
§2 In the Church, besides physical persons, there are also juridical persons,
that is, in canon law subjects of obligations and rights which accord with their
nature.
Can. 114 §1 Aggregates of persons or of things which are directed
to a purpose befitting the Church’s mission, which transcends the purpose
of the individuals, are constituted juridical persons either by a provision
of the law itself or by a special concession given in the form of a decree by
the competent authority.
§2 The purposes indicated in §1 are understood to be those which concern
works of piety, of the apostolate or of charity, whether spiritual or temporal.
§3 The competent ecclesiastical authority is not to confer juridical personality
except on those aggregates of persons or of things which aim at a genuinely
useful purpose and which, all things considered, have the means which are foreseen
to be sufficient to achieve the purpose in view.
Can. 115 §1 Juridical persons in the Church are either aggregates
of persons or aggregates of things.
§2 An aggregate of persons, which must be made up of at least three persons,
is collegial if the members decide its conduct by participating together in
making its decisions, whether by equal right or not, in accordance with the
law and the statutes; otherwise, it is non collegial.
§3 An aggregate of things, or an autonomous foundation, consists of goods
or things, whether spiritual or material, and is directed, in accordance with
the law and the statutes, by one or more physical persons or by a college.
Can. 116 §1 Public juridical persons are aggregates of persons or
of things which are established by the competent ecclesiastical authority so
that, within the limits allotted to them in the name of the Church, and in accordance
with the provisions of law, they might fulfil the specific task entrusted to
them for the public good. Other juridical persons are private.
§2 Public juridical persons are given this personality either by the law
itself or by a special decree of the competent authority expressly granting
it. Private juridical persons are given this personality only by a special decree
of the competent authority expressly granting it.
Can. 117 No aggregate of persons or of things seeking juridical personality
can acquire it unless its statutes are approved by the competent authority.
Can. 118 Those persons represent, and act in the name of, a public juridical
person whose competence to do so is acknowledged by universal or particular
law, or by their own statutes; those persons represent a private juridical person
who are given this competence by their statutes.
Can. 119 In regard to collegial acts, unless the law or the statutes
provide otherwise:
1° in regard to elections, provided a majority of those who must be summoned
are present, what is decided by an absolute majority of those present has the
force of law. If there have been two inconclusive scrutinies, a vote is to be
taken between the two candidates with the greatest number of votes or, if there
are more than two, between the two senior by age. After a third inconclusive
scrutiny, that person is deemed elected who is senior by age;
2° in regard to other matters, provided a majority of those who must be
summoned are present, what is decided by an absolute majority of those present
has the force of law. If the votes are equal after two scrutinies, the person
presiding can break the tie with a casting vote;
3° that which affects all as individuals must be approved by all.
Can. 120 §1 A juridical person is by its nature perpetual. It ceases
to exist, however, if it is lawfully suppressed by the competent authority,
or if it has been inactive for a hundred years. A private juridical person also
ceases to exist if the association itself is dissolved in accordance with the
statutes, or if, in the judgement of the competent authority, the foundation
itself has, in accordance with the statutes, ceased to exist.
§2 If even a single member of a collegial juridical person survives, and
the aggregate of persons has not, according to the statutes, ceased to exist,
the exercise of all the rights of the aggregate devolves upon that member.
Can. 121 When aggregates of persons or of things which are public juridical
persons are so amalgamated that one aggregate, itself with a juridical personality,
is formed, this new juridical person obtains the patrimonial goods and rights
which belonged to the previous aggregates; it also accepts the liabilities of
the previous aggregates. In what concerns particularly the arrangements for
the goods and the discharge of obligations, the wishes of the founders and benefactors,
and any acquired rights must be safeguarded.
Can. 122 When an aggregate which is a public juridical person is divided
in such a way that part of it is joined to another juridical person or a distinct
public juridical person is established from one part of it, the first obligation
is to observe the wishes of the founders and benefactors, the demands of acquired
rights and the requirements of the approved statutes. Then the competent ecclesiastical
authority, either personally or through an executor, is to ensure:
1° that the divisible common patrimonial goods and rights, the monies owed
and the other liabilities, are divided between the juridical persons in question
in due proportion, in a fashion which is equitable and right, taking account
of all the circumstances and needs of both;
2° that the use and enjoyment of the common goods which cannot be divided,
be given to each juridical person, and also that the liabilities which are proper
to each are the responsibility of each, in due proportion, in a fashion which
is equitable and right.
Can. 123 On the extinction of a public juridical person, the arrangements
for its patrimonial goods and rights, and for its liabilities, are determined
by law and the statutes. If these do not deal with the matter, the arrangements
devolve upon the next higher juridical person, always with due regard for the
wishes of the founders or benefactors and for acquired rights. On the extinction
of a private juridical person, the arrangements for its goods and liabilities
are governed by its own statutes.
Can. 124 §1 For the validity of a juridical act, it is required
that it be performed by a person who is legally capable, and it must contain
those elements which constitute the essence of the act, as well as the formalities
and requirements which the law prescribes for the validity of the act.
§2 A juridical act which, as far as its external elements are concerned,
is properly performed, is presumed to be valid.
Can. 125 §1 An act is invalid if performed as a result of force
imposed from outside on a person who was quite unable to resist it.
§2 An act performed as a result of fear which is grave and unjustly inflicted,
or as a result of deceit, is valid, unless the law provides otherwise. However,
it can be rescinded by a court judgement, either at the instance of the injured
party or that party’s successors in law, or ex officio.
Can. 126 An act is invalid when performed as a result of ignorance or
of error which concerns the substance of the act, or which amounts to a condition
sine qua non; otherwise it is valid, unless the law provides differently. But
an act done as a result of ignorance or error can give rise to a rescinding
action in accordance with the law.
Can. 127 §1 When the law prescribes that, in order to perform a
juridical act, a Superior requires the consent or the advice of some college
or group of persons, the college or group must be convened in accordance with
Can. 166, unless, if there is question of seeking advice only, particular or
proper law provides otherwise. For the validity of the act, it is required that
the consent be obtained of an absolute majority of those present, or that the
advice of all be sought.
§2 When the law prescribes that, in order to perform a juridical act, a
Superior requires the consent or advice of certain persons as individuals:
1° if consent is required, the Superior’s act is invalid if the Superior
does not seek the consent of those persons, or acts against the vote of all
or of any of them;
2° if advice is required, the Superior’s act is invalid if the Superior
does not hear those persons. The Superior is not in any way bound to accept
their vote, even if it is unanimous; nevertheless, without what is, in his or
her judgement, an overriding reason, the Superior is not to act against their
vote, especially if it is a unanimous one.
§3 All whose consent or advice is required are obliged to give their opinions
sincerely. If the seriousness of the matter requires it, they are obliged carefully
to maintain secrecy, and the Superior can insist on this obligation.
Can. 128 Whoever unlawfully causes harm to another by a juridical act,
or indeed by any other act which is deceitful or culpable, is obliged to repair
the damage done.
Can. 129 §1 Those who are in sacred orders are, in accordance with
the provisions of law, capable of the power of governance, which belongs to
the Church by divine institution. This power is also called the power of jurisdiction.
§2 Lay members of Christ’s faithful can cooperate in the exercise
of this same power in accordance with the law.
Can. 130 Of itself the power of governance is exercised for the external
forum; sometimes however it is exercised for the internal forum only, but in
such a way that the effects which its exercise is designed to have in the external
forum are not acknowledged in that forum, except in so far as the law prescribes
this for determinate cases.
Can. 131 §1 Ordinary power of governance is that which by virtue
of the law itself is attached to a given office; delegated power is that which
is granted to a person other than through an office.
§2 Ordinary power of governance may be proper or vicarious.
§3 One who claims to have been delegated has the onus of proving the delegation.
Can. 132 §1 Habitual faculties are governed by the provisions concerning
delegated power.
§2 However, unless the grant has expressly provided otherwise, or the Ordinary
was deliberately chosen as the only one to exercise the faculty, an habitual
faculty granted to an Ordinary does not lapse on the expiry of the authority
of the Ordinary to whom it was given, even if he has already begun to exercise
the faculty, but it passes to the Ordinary who succeeds him in governance.
Can. 133 §1 A delegate who exceeds the limits of the mandate, with
regard either to things or to persons, performs no act at all.
§2 A delegate is not considered to have exceeded the mandate when what
was delegated is carried out, but in a manner different to that determined in
the mandate, unless the manner was prescribed for validity by the delegating
authority.
Can. 134 §1 In law the term Ordinary means, apart from the Roman
Pontiff, diocesan Bishops and all who, even for a time only, are set over a
particular Church or a community equivalent to it in accordance with Can. 368,
and those who in these have general ordinary executive power, that is, Vicars
general and episcopal Vicars; likewise, for their own members, it means the
major Superiors of clerical religious institutes of pontifical right and of
clerical societies of apostolic life of pontifical right, who have at least
ordinary executive power.
§2 The term local Ordinary means all those enumerated in §1, except
Superiors of religious institutes and of societies of apostolic life.
§3 Whatever in the canons, in the context of executive power, is attributed
to the diocesan Bishop, is understood to belong only to the diocesan Bishop
and to those others in Can. 381 §2 who are equivalent to him, to the exclusion
of the Vicar general and the episcopal Vicar except by special mandate.
Can. 135 §1 The power of governance is divided into legislative,
executive and judicial power.
§2 Legislative power is to be exercised in the manner prescribed by law;
that which in the Church a legislator lower than the supreme authority has cannot
be delegated, unless the law explicitly provides otherwise. A lower legislator
cannot validly make a law which is contrary to that of a higher legislator.
§3 Judicial power, which is possessed by judges and judicial colleges,
is to be exercised in the manner prescribed by law, and it cannot be delegated
except for the performance of acts preparatory to some decree or judgement.
§4 As far as the exercise of executive power is concerned, the provisions
of the following canons are to be observed.
Can. 136 Persons may exercise executive power over their subjects, even
when either they themselves or their subjects are outside the territory, unless
it is otherwise clear from the nature of things or from the provisions of law.
They can exercise this power over peregrini who are actually living in the territory,
if it is a question of granting favours, or of executing universal or particular
laws by which the peregrini are bound in accordance with Can. 13 §2, n.
2.
Can. 137 §1 Ordinary executive power can be delegated either for
an individual case or for all cases, unless the law expressly provides otherwise.
§2 Executive power delegated by the Apostolic See can be subdelegated,
either for an individual case or for all cases, unless the delegation was deliberately
given to the individual alone, or unless subdelegation was expressly prohibited.
§3 Executive power delegated by another authority having ordinary power,
if delegated for all cases, can be subdelegated only for individual cases; if
delegated for a determinate act or acts, it cannot be subdelegated, except by
the express grant of the person delegating.
§4 No subdelegated power can again be subdelegated, unless this was expressly
granted by the person delegating.
Can. 138 Ordinary executive power, and power delegated for all cases,
are to be interpreted widely; any other power is to be interpreted strictly.
Delegation of power to a person is understood to include everything necessary
for the exercise of that power.
Can. 139 §1 Unless the law prescribes otherwise, the tact that a
person approaches some competent authority, even a higher one, does not mean
that the executive power of another competent authority is suspended, whether
that be ordinary or delegated.
§2 A lower authority, however, is not to interfere in cases referred to
higher authority, except for a grave and urgent reason; in which case the higher
authority is to be notified immediately.
Can. 140 §1 When several people are together delegated to act in
the same matter, the person who has begun to deal with it excludes the others
from acting, unless that person is subsequently impeded, or does not wish to
proceed further with the matter.
§2 When several people are delegated to act as a college in a certain matter,
all must proceed in accordance with Can. 119, unless the mandate provides otherwise.
§3 Executive power delegated to several people is presumed to be delegated
to them together.
Can. 141 If several people are successively delegated, that person is
to deal with the matter whose mandate was the earlier and was not subsequently
revoked.
Can. 142 §1 Delegated power lapses: on the completion of the mandate;
on the expiry of the time or the completion of the number of cases for which
it was granted; on the cessation of the motivating reason for the delegation;
on its revocation by the person delegating, when communicated directly to the
person delegated; and on the retirement of the person delegated, when communicated
to and accepted by the person delegating. It does not lapse on the expiry of
the authority of the person delegating, unless this appears from clauses attached
to it.
§2 An act of delegated power exercised for the internal forum only, which
is inadvertently performed after the time limit of the delegation, is valid.
Can. 143 §1 Ordinary power ceases on the loss of the office to which
it is attached.
§2 Unless the law provides otherwise, ordinary power is suspended if an
appeal or a recourse is lawfully made against a deprivation of, or removal from,
office.
Can. 144 §1 In common error, whether of fact or of law, and in positive
and probable doubt, whether of law or of fact, the Church supplies executive
power of governance for both the external and the internal forum.
§2 The same norm applies to the faculties mentioned in Cann. 883, 966,
and 1111 §1.
Can. 145 §1 An ecclesiastical office is any post which by divine
or ecclesiastical disposition is established in a stable manner to further a
spiritual purpose.
§2 The duties and rights proper to each ecclesiastical office are defined
either by the law whereby the office is established, or by a decree of the competent
authority whereby it is at one and at the same time established and conferred.
Can. 146 An ecclesiastical office cannot be validly obtained without
canonical provision.
Can. 147 The provision of an ecclesiastical office is effected: by its
being freely conferred by the competent ecclesiastical authority; by appointment
made by the same authority, where there has been a prior presentation; by confirmation
or admission by the same authority, where there has been a prior election or
postulation; finally, by a simple election and acceptance of the election, if
the election does not require confirmation.
Can. 148 Unless the law provides otherwise, the provision of an office
is the prerogative of the authority which is competent to establish, change
or suppress the office.
Can. 149 §1 In order to be promoted to an ecclesiastical office,
one must be in communion with the Church, and be suitable, that is, possessed
of those qualities which are required for that office by universal or particular
law or by the law of the foundation.
§2 The provision of an ecclesiastical office to a person who lacks the
requisite qualities is invalid only if the qualities are expressly required
for validity by universal or particular law or by the law of the foundation;
otherwise it is valid, but it can be rescinded by a decree of the competent
authority or by a judgement of an administrative tribunal.
§3 The provision of an office made as a result of simony, is invalid by
virtue of the law itself.
Can. 150 An office which carries with it the full care of souls, for
which the exercise of the order of priesthood is required, cannot validly be
conferred upon a person who is not yet a priest.
Can. 151 The provision of an office which carries with it the care of
souls is not to be deferred without grave reason.
Can. 152 Two or more offices which are incompatible, that is, which cannot
be exercised at the same time by the same person, are not to be conferred upon
anyone.
Can. 153 §1 The provision of an office which in law is not vacant
is by that very fact invalid, nor does it become valid by subsequent vacancy.
§2 If, however, there is question of an office which by law is conferred
for a determinate time, provision can be made within six months before the expiry
of this time, and it takes effect from the day the office falls vacant.
§3 The promise of any office, by whomsoever it is made, has no juridical
effect.
Can. 154 An office which in law is vacant, but which someone unlawfully
still holds, may be conferred, provided that it has been properly declared that
such possession is not lawful, and that mention is made of this declaration
in the letter of conferral.
Can. 155 One who confers an office in the place of another who is negligent
or impeded, does not thereby acquire any power over the person on whom the office
is conferred; the juridical condition of the latter is the same as if the provision
of the office had been carried out in accordance with the ordinary norm of law.
Can. 156 The provision of any office is to be made in writing.
ARTICLE 1: FREE CONFERRAL
Can. 157 Unless the law expressly states otherwise, it is the prerogative
of the diocesan Bishop to make appointments to ecclesiastical offices in his
own particular Church by free conferral.
ARTICLE 2: PRESENTATION
Can. 158 §1 Presentation to an ecclesiastical office by a person
having the right of presentation must be made to the authority who is competent
to make an appointment to the office in question; unless it is otherwise lawfully
provided, presentation is to be made within three months of receiving notification
of the vacancy of the office.
§2 If the right of presentation belongs to a college or group of persons,
the person to be presented is to be designated according to the provisions of
Cann. 165–179.
Can. 159 No one is to be presented who is unwilling. Accordingly, one
who is proposed for presentation must be consulted, and may be presented if
within eight canonical days a refusal is not entered.
Can. 160 §1 One who has the right of presentation may present one
or more persons, either simultaneously or successively.
§2 No persons may present themselves. However a college or a group of persons
may present one of its members.
Can. 161 §1 Unless the law prescribes otherwise, one who has presented
a person who is judged unsuitable, may within a month present another candidate,
but once only.
§2 If before the appointment is made the person presented has withdrawn
or has died, the one with the right of presentation may exercise this right
again, within a month of receiving notice of the withdrawal or of the death.
Can. 162 A person who has not presented anyone within the canonical time
prescribed by Can. 158 §1 and Can. 161, or who has twice presented a candidate
judged to be unsuitable, loses the right of presentation for that case. The
authority who is competent to appoint may then freely provide for the vacant
office, but with the consent of the proper Ordinary of the person appointed.
Can. 163 The authority to whom, in accordance with the law, it belongs
to appoint one who is presented, is to appoint the person lawfully presented
whom he has judged suitable, and who has accepted. If a number lawfully presented
are judged suitable, he is to appoint one of them.
ARTICLE 3: ELECTION
Can. 164 Unless it has been otherwise provided in the law, the provisions
of the following canons are to be observed in canonical elections.
Can. 165 Unless it is otherwise provided in the law or in the statutes
of the college or group, if a college or a group of persons enjoys the right
to elect to an office, the election is not to be deferred beyond three canonical
months, to be reckoned from the receipt of notification of the vacancy of the
office. If the election does not take place within that time, the ecclesiastical
authority who has the right of confirming the election or the right to make
provision otherwise, is freely to provide for the vacant office.
Can. 166 §1 The one who presides over the college or group is to
summon all those who belong to the college or group. When it has to be personal,
the summons is valid if it is made in the place of domicile or quasi domicile
or in the place of residence.
§2 If someone who should have been summoned was overlooked and was therefore
absent, the election is valid. However, if that person insists and gives proof
of being overlooked and of absence, the election, even if confirmed, must be
rescinded by the competent authority, provided it is juridically established
that the recourse was submitted within no more than three days of having received
notification of the election.
§3 If more than one third of the voters were overlooked, the election is
invalid by virtue of the law itself, unless all those overlooked were in fact
present.
Can. 167 §1 When the summons has been lawfully made, those who are
present on the day and in the place specified in the summons have the right
to vote. Unless it is otherwise lawfully provided in the statutes, votes cast
by letter or by proxy cannot be admitted.
§2 If an elector is present in the building in which the election is being
held, but because of infirmity is unable to be present at the election, a written
vote is to be sought from that person by the scrutineers.
Can. 168 Even if someone has a right to vote in his or her own name by
reason of a number of titles, that person may cast only one vote.
Can. 169 In order that an election be valid, no one may be allowed to
vote who does not belong to the college or group.
Can. 170 If the freedom of an election has in any way been in fact impeded,
the election is invalid by virtue of the law itself.
Can. 171 §1 The following are legally incapable of casting a vote:
1° one incapable of a human act;
2° one lacking active voice;
3° one who is excommunicated, whether by judgement of a court or by a decree
whereby this penalty is imposed or declared;
4° one who notoriously defected from communion with the Church.
§2 If any of the above persons is admitted, the vote cast is invalid. The
election, however, is valid, unless it is established that, without this vote,
the person elected would not have gained the requisite number of votes.
Can. 172 §1 For a vote to be valid, it must be:
1° free; a vote is therefore invalid if, through grave fear or deceit, someone
was directly or indirectly made to choose a certain person or several persons
separately;
2° secret, certain, absolute and determinate.
§2 Conditions attached to a vote before an election are to be considered
non existent.
Can. 173 §1 Before an election begins, at least two scrutineers
are to be appointed from among the college or group.
§2 The scrutineers are to collect the votes and, in the presence of the
one who presides at the election, to check whether the number of votes corresponds
to the number of electors; they are then to examine the votes and to announce
how many each person has received.
§3 If the number of votes exceeds the number of electors, the act is null.
§4 All the proceedings of an election are to be accurately recorded by
the one who acts as notary. They are to be signed at least by that notary, by
the person who presides and by the scrutineers, and they are to be carefully
preserved in the archive of the college.
Can. 174 §1 Unless the law or the statutes provide otherwise, an
election can be made by compromise, that is the electors by unanimous and written
consent transfer the right of election for this occasion to one or more suitable
persons, whether they belong to the college or are outside it, who in virtue
of this authority are to elect in the name of all.
§2 If the college or group consists solely of clerics, the persons to whom
the power of election is transferred must be in sacred orders; otherwise the
election is invalid.
§3 Those to whom the power of election is transferred must observe the
provisions of law concerning an election and, for the validity of the election,
they must observe the conditions attached to the compromise, unless these conditions
are contrary to the law. Conditions which are contrary to the law are to be
regarded as non existent.
Can. 175 A compromise ceases, and the right to vote reverts to those
who transferred it, when:
1° it is revoked by the college or group before it has been put into effect;
2° a condition attached to the compromise has not been fulfilled;
3° the election has been held, but invalidly.
Can. 176 Unless it is otherwise provided in the law or the statutes,
the person who has received the requisite number of votes in accordance with
Can. 119, n. 1, is deemed elected and is to be proclaimed by the person who
presides over the college or group.
Can. 177 §1 The election is to be notified immediately to the person
elected who must, within eight canonical days from the receipt of notification
of the election, intimate to the person who presides over the college or group
whether or not he or she accepts the election; otherwise, the election has no
effect.
§2 The person elected who has not accepted loses every right deriving from
the election, nor is any right revived by subsequent acceptance; the person
may, however, be elected again. The college or group must proceed to a new election
within a month of being notified of non acceptance.
Can. 178 If the election does not require confirmation, by accepting
the election the person elected immediately obtains the office with all its
rights; otherwise, he or she acquires only a right to the office.
Can. 179 §1 If the election requires confirmation, the person elected
must, either personally or through another, ask for confirmation by the competent
authority within eight canonical days of acceptance of the office otherwise
that person is deprived of every right, unless he or she has established that
there was just reason which prevented confirmation being sought.
§2 The competent authority cannot refuse confirmation if he has found the
person elected suitable in accordance with Can. 149 §1, and the election
has been carried out in accordance with the law.
§3 Confirmation must be given in writing.
§4 Before receiving notice of the confirmation, the person elected may
not become involved in the administration of the office, neither in spiritual
nor in material affairs; any acts possibly performed by that person are invalid.
§5 When confirmation has been notified, the person elected obtains full
right to the office, unless the law provides otherwise.
ARTICLE 4: POSTULATION
Can. 180 §1 If a canonical impediment, from which a dispensation
is possible and customary, stands in the way of the election of a person whom
the electors judge more suitable and prefer, they can, unless the law provides
otherwise, postulate that person from the competent authority.
§2 Those to whom the power of electing has been transferred by compromise
may not make a postulation, unless this is expressly stated in the terms of
the compromise.
Can. 181 §1 For a postulation to have effect, at least two thirds
of the votes are required.
§2 A vote for postulation must be expressed by the term ‘I postulate’,
or an equivalent. The formula ‘I elect or postulate’, or its equivalent,
is valid for election if there is no impediment; otherwise, it is valid for
postulation.
Can. 182 §1 The postulation must be sent, within eight canonical
days, by the person who presides to the authority which is competent to confirm
the election, to whom it belongs to grant the dispensation from the impediment
or, if he has not this authority, to seek the dispensation from a superior authority.
If confirmation is not required, the postulation must be sent to the authority
which is competent to grant the dispensation.
§2 If the postulation is not forwarded within the prescribed time, it is
by that very fact invalid, and the college or group is for that occasion deprived
of the right of election or of postulation, unless it is proved that the person
presiding was prevented by a just impediment from forwarding the postulation,
or did not do so in due time because of deceit or negligence.
§3 The person postulated does not acquire any right from the postulation;
the competent authority is not obliged to admit the postulation.
§4 The electors may not revoke a postulation made to the competent authority,
except with the consent of that authority.
Can. 183 §1 If a postulation is not admitted by the competent authority
the right of election reverts to the college or group.
§2 If the postulation has been admitted, this is to be notified to the
person postulated, who must reply in accordance with Can. 177 §1.
§3 The person who accepts a postulation which has been admitted immediately
obtains full right to the office.
Can. 184 §1 An ecclesiastical office is lost on the expiry of a
predetermined time; on reaching the age limit defined by law; by resignation;
by transfer; by removal; by deprivation.
§2 An ecclesiastical office is not lost on the expiry, in whatever way,
of the authority of the one by whom it was conferred, unless the law provides
otherwise.
§3 The loss of an office, once it has taken effect, is to be notified as
soon as possible to those who have any right in regard to the provision of the
office.
Can. 185 The title ‘emeritus’ may be conferred on one who
loses office by reason of age, or of resignation which has been accepted.
Can. 186 Loss of office by reason of the expiry of a predetermined time
or of reaching the age limit, has effect only from the moment that this is communicated
in writing by the competent authority.
ARTICLE 1: RESIGNATION
Can. 187 Anyone who is capable of personal responsibility can resign
from an ecclesiastical office for a just reason.
Can. 188 A resignation which is made as a result of grave fear unjustly
inflicted, or of deceit, or of substantial error, or of simony, is invalid by
virtue of the law itself.
Can. 189 §1 For a resignation to be valid, whether it requires acceptance
or not, it must be made to the authority which is competent to provide for the
office in question, and it must be made either in writing, or orally before
two witnesses.
§2 The authority is not to accept a resignation which is not based on a
just and proportionate reason.
§3 A resignation which requires acceptance has no force unless it is accepted
within three months. One which does not require acceptance takes effect when
the person resigning communicates it in accordance with the law.
§4 Until a resignation takes effect, it can be revoked by the person resigning.
Once it has taken effect, it cannot be revoked, but the person who resigned
can obtain the office on the basis of another title.
ARTICLE 2: TRANSFER
Can. 190 §1 A transfer can be made only by the person who has the
right to provide both for the office which is lost and at the same time for
the office which is being conferred.
§2 A grave reason is required if a transfer is made against the will of
the holder of an office and, always without prejudice to the right to present
reasons against the transfer, the procedure prescribed by law is to be observed.
§3 For a transfer to have effect, it must be notified in writing.
Can. 191 §1 In the process of transfer, the first office is vacated
by the taking of canonical possession of the other office, unless the law or
the competent authority has prescribed otherwise.
§2 The person transferred receives the remuneration attached to the previous
office until the moment of obtaining canonical possession of the other office.
ARTICLE 3: REMOVAL
Can. 192 One is removed from office either by a decree of the competent
authority lawfully issued, observing of course the rights possibly acquired
from a contract, or by virtue of the law in accordance with Can. 194.
Can. 193 §1 No one may be removed from an office which is conferred
on a person for an indeterminate time, except for grave reasons and in accordance
with the procedure defined by law.
§2 This also applies to the removal from office before time of a person
on whom an office is conferred for a determinate time, without prejudice to
Can. 624 §3.
§3 When in accordance with the provisions of law an office is conferred
upon someone at the prudent discretion of the competent authority, that person
may, upon the judgement of the same authority, be removed from the office for
a just reason.
§4 For a decree of removal to be effective, it must be notified in writing.
Can. 194 §1 The following are removed from ecclesiastical office
by virtue of the law itself:
1° one who has lost the clerical state;
2° one who has publicly defected from the catholic faith or from communion
with the Church;
3° a cleric who has attempted marriage, even a civil one.
§2 The removal mentioned in nn. 2 and 3 can be insisted upon only if it
is established by a declaration of the competent authority.
Can. 195 If by a decree of the competent authority, and not by the law
itself, someone is removed from an office on which that person’s livelihood
depends, the same authority is to ensure that the person’s livelihood
is secure for an appropriate time, unless this has been provided for in some
other way.
ARTICLE 4: DEPRIVATION
Can. 196 §1 Deprivation of office, that is, as a punishment for
an offence, may be effected only in accordance with the law.
§2 Deprivation takes effect in accordance with the provisions of the canons
concerning penal law.
Can. 197 Prescription, as a means of acquiring or of losing a subjective
right, or as a means of freeing oneself from obligations, is, apart from the
exceptions prescribed in the canons of this Code, accepted by the Church in
the manner in which it is adopted in the civil legislation of each country.
Can. 198 No prescription is valid unless it is based on good faith, not
only in its beginning, but throughout the whole time required for the prescription,
without prejudice to Can. 1362.
Can. 199 The following are not affected by prescription:
1° rights and obligations which are of divine law, whether natural or positive;
2° rights which can be obtained only by apostolic privilege;
3° rights and obligations which bear directly on the spiritual life of Christ’s
faithful;
4° the certain and undisputed boundaries of ecclesiastical territories;
5° Mass offerings and obligations;
6° the provision of an ecclesiastical office which, in accordance with the
law, requires the exercise of a sacred order;
7° the right of visitation and the obligation of obedience, so that Christ’s
faithful could not be visited by an ecclesiastical authority and would no longer
be subject to any authority.
Can. 200 Unless the law provides otherwise, time is to be reckoned in
accordance with the following canons.
Can. 201 §1 Continuous time means unbroken time.
§2 Canonical time is time which a person can so use to exercise or to pursue
a right that it does not run when one is unaware, or when one is unable to act.
Can. 202 §1 In law, a day is understood to be a space of twenty
four hours, to be reckoned continuously and, unless expressly provided otherwise,
it begins at midnight; a week is a space of seven days a month is a space of
thirty days, and a year a space of three hundred and sixty five days, unless
it is stated that the month and the year are to be taken as in the calendar.
§2 If time is continuous, the month and the year are always to be taken
as in the calendar.
Can. 203 §1 The first day is not to be counted in the total, unless
its beginning coincides with the beginning of the day, or unless the law expressly
provides otherwise.
§2 Unless the contrary is prescribed, the final day is to be reckoned within
the total; if the total time is one or more months, one or more years, one or
more weeks, it finishes on completion of the last day bearing the same number
or, if the month does not have the same number, on the completion of the last
day of that month.