Code of Canon Law: text (original) (raw)
CHAPTER II: EXPIATORY PENALTIES
Can.1336 §1 Expiatory penalties can affect the offender either forever or for adeterminate or an indeterminate period. Apart from others which the law mayperhaps establish, these penalties are as follows:
1° aprohibition against residence, or an order to reside, in a certain place orterritory;
2° deprivation of power, office, function, right, privilege, faculty, favour,title or insignia, even of a merely honorary nature;
3° aprohibition on the exercise of those things enumerated in n. 2, or aprohibition on their exercise inside or outside a certain place; such aprohibition is never under pain of nullity;
4° a penal transfer to another office;
5° dismissal from the clerical state.
§2 Only those expiatory penalties may be latae sententiae which are enumerated in §1,n. 3.
Can.1337 §1 A prohibition against residing in a certain place or territory canaffect both clerics and religious. An order to reside in a certain place canaffect secular clerics and, within the limits of their constitutions,religious.
§2 An order imposing residence in a certain place or territory must have the consent of theOrdinary of that place, unless there is question of a house set up for penanceor rehabilitation of clerics, including extradiocesans.
Can.1338 §1 The deprivations and prohibitions enumerated in Can. 1336 §1, nn. 2 and3 never affect powers, offices, functions, rights, privileges, faculties,favours, titles or insignia, which are not within the control of the Superiorwho establishes the penalty.
§2 There can be no deprivation of the power of order, but only a prohibition against theexercise of it or of some of its acts; neither can there be a deprivation ofacademic degrees.
§3 The norm laid down for censures in Can. 1335 is to be observed in regard to theprohibitions mentioned in Can. 1336 §1, n. 3.