Election Law
Of The Code
Of Canon Law
Canon
160:
The election of the Roman Pontiff
is governed exclusively by the Constitution of Pope Pius X, "Vacante
Sede Apostolica," December 25, 1904. In other ecclesiastical elections
the laws of the following Canons are to be observed.Canon
161: If the right to elect to a vacant office rests with an electoral
college, the election, unless stated otherwise in the law, shall never
be deferred for more than three months reckoned from the day on which
notice of the vacancy was received. If the electoral college has
neglected to hold the election within three months, the superior who
has right of confirming the election, or to whom passes the right of
appointment in default of the college, shall freely appoint a person to
the vacant office.
Canon
162: Unless particular constitutions or customs regulate the manner of
convoking the voters, the president shall convene all the members of
the electoral college in the prescribed manner at a place and a time
convenient to the voters. If the convocation is to be announced to
each one personally, it suffices for validity, if the notice be
addressed either to the place of domicile or quasi-domicile of the
voters, or to the place where they actually stay. If one of the voters
was neglected, and for that reason missed the election, the election is
valid, but the person thus neglected may demand that the competent
superior recind the election provided the lack of notification and
absence from the election is proved. The party retains this right even
after the election has been confirmed, provided he can furnish legal
proof that he forwarded his objection tot he competent superior within
at least three days after obtaining knowledge of the election. If more
than one-third of the voters were neglected in the convocation, the
election is ipso jure invalid. The lack of notice does not invalidate
the election, if those who were not called are nevertheless present.
If the election is to an office which is to be held for life, the
convocation of the electors made before the office was vacant has no
legal effect at all.
Canon
163: The convocation having been legitimately made, the right to elect
rests with those who are present on the day fixed in the notice, and no
one has a right to vote either by letter or by proxy, unless the
particular law rules otherwise.
Canon
164: Even though one and the same person may have the right to vote
under several titles, he may nevertheless cast but one vote.
Canon
165: No one who does not belong to the electoral college, may be
admitted, except in virtue of privileges legitimately acquired:
otherwise the election is ipso jure null and void.
Canon
166: If laymen meddle in any way in the ecclesiastical election, or
interfere with its canonical freedom, the election is ipso facto
invalid.
Canon
167: The following may not cast a vote:
1.
Persons incapable of a human act;
2.
Persons under the age of puberty;
3.
Persons suffering from censure or infamy of law, if such censure or
infamy has been previously inflicted by a declatory or condemnatory
sentence;
4.
Persons who have joined at heretical or schismatical sect, or publicly
adhered to such. This refers to Catholics who have fallen from the
faith, as a similar phrase in Canon 542 was explained by the Committee
for the Authentic Interpretation of the Code (October 16, 1919 AAS XI,
480);
5.
Persons deprived of the active vote either through legitimate sentence
of the ecclesiastical judge or by the common or the particular law;
If
any one of the aforesaid persons is admitted to the election, his vote
is invalid, but the election is valid unless it is certain that the
elected would not have had the required number of votes without the
illegal vote; and the election is invalid if a person excommunicated by
a declatory or condemnatory sentence has knowingly been admitted to
vote.
Canon
168: If any of the voters is present in the house in which the election
takes place, but cannot be present at the election on account of
ill-health, his written vote shall be taken by the tellers, unless
particular laws or legitimate customs provide otherwise.
Canon
169: A vote is null and void unless it is (1) Free, wherefore a vote is
null and void, if through grave fear or deceit, the voter was led
directly or indirectly to cast his vote for a certain person, or for
several persons separately; (2) Secret, certain, absolute and
determinate. Conditions attached to a vote before the election are to
be ignored.
Canon
170: No one can validly vote in his own favor.
Canons 171 to 178 deal with the particulars of an election
Canon
542, paragraph 1: Besides the regulations given in Canons 539-541 and
others imposed by the constitutions of the various religious
organizations, the following shall be observed:
Admission into the novitiate is invalid in the case of:
1.
Persons who have lapsed from the Catholic faith into a non-Catholic
sect;
2.
October 16, 1919: The Code Commission was asked: Whether the words:
'qui sectae acatholicae adhaeserunt', of Canon 542 are to be understood
as applying to those who, moved by the grace of God, came into the
Church from the heresy or schism in which they were born, or rather to
those who fell away from the faith and joined a non-Catholic sect.
Reply: In the negative in the first part; in the affirmative in the
second part.
In
other words, converts are not considered by the Canon, but those who
were in the Church, but defected are.
Canon
167/4: Qui sectae haereticae vel shismaticae nomen dederunt vel publice
adhaeserunt;
Canon
542/1/1: Qui sectae acatholicae adhaeserunt;
Canon
167 appears to require more than Canon 542 to be incurred.
Canon
19: Laws which decree a penalty, or restrict the free exercise of one's
rights, or establish an exception from the law, must be interpreted in
the strict sense.
Canon
19 applies to Papal Elections, because Pope Pius XII's law, as well as
previous laws are an exception to the general law given above.
|