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Code of Canon Law


IntraText - Concordances
person
    Book,  Part, Can.
1 Intr | and obligations of each person towards others and towards 2 Intr | sacred ministry. To each person is given a source of knowing 3 1, 0, 10| an act is null or that a person is effected.~ 4 1, 0, 30| Can. 30 A person who possesses only executive 5 1, 0, 30| expressly granted to that person by a competent legislator 6 1, 0, 35| within the limits of that person’s competence, without prejudice 7 1, 0, 36| restrict the rights of a person, injure the acquired rights 8 1, 0, 41| to the circumstances of person or place, the executor is 9 1, 0, 47| legitimately made known to the person for whom it has been given.~ 10 1, 0, 49| legitimately enjoins a specific person or persons to do or omit 11 1, 0, 54| it is made known to the person by the authority of the 12 1, 0, 55| known if it is read to the person to whom it is destined in 13 1, 0, 61| another even without the person’s assent and has force before 14 1, 0, 61| and has force before the person’s acceptance, without prejudice 15 1, 0, 66| error in the name of the person to whom it is given or by 16 1, 0, 66| or of the place where the person resides, or in the matter 17 1, 0, 66| there is no doubt about the person or the matter.~ 18 1, 0, 67| later one or unless the person who obtained the earlier 19 1, 0, 74| favor granted orally, the person is bound to prove the favor 20 1, 0, 78| namely one which follows the person, is extinguished with that 21 1, 0, 78| is extinguished with that person’s death.~§3. A real privilege 22 1, 0, 80| renunciation.~§2. Any physical person can renounce a privilege 23 1, 0, 80| privilege granted only in that person’s favor.~§3. Individual 24 1, 0, 80| granted to some juridic person or granted in consideration 25 1, 0, 80| thing, nor is a juridic person free to renounce a privilege 26 1, 0, 96| Christ and is constituted a person in it with the duties and 27 1, 0, 97| Can. 97 §1. A person who has completed the eighteenth 28 1, 0, 97| majority; below this age, a person is a minor.~§2. A minor 29 1, 0, 98| Can. 98 §1. A person who has reached majority 30 1, 0, 100| Can. 100 A person is said to be: a resident ( 31 1, 0, 100| in the place where the person has a domicile; a temporary 32 1, 0, 100| in the place where the person has a quasi-domicile; a 33 1, 0, 100| traveler (peregrinus) if the person is outside the place of 34 1, 0, 100| transient (vagus) if the person does not have a domicile 35 1, 0, 107| and quasi-domicile, each person acquires his or her pastor 36 1, 0, 107| pastor of the place where the person is actually residing.~ 37 1, 0, 110| considered the children of the person or persons who have adopted 38 1, 0, 111| iuris; in that case, the person belongs to the Church which 39 1, 0, 112| ritual Church sui iuris:~1/ a person who has obtained permission 40 1, 0, 112| has ended, however, the person can freely return to the 41 1, 0, 113| the character of a moral person by divine ordinance itself.~§ 42 1, 0, 118| Representing a public juridic person and acting in its name are 43 1, 0, 118| Representing a private juridic person are those whose competence 44 1, 0, 120| Can. 120 §1. A juridic person is perpetual by its nature; 45 1, 0, 120| years. A private juridic person, furthermore, is extinguished 46 1, 0, 120| members of a collegial juridic person survives, and the aggregate 47 1, 0, 121| personality, this new juridic person obtains the goods and patrimonial 48 1, 0, 122| united with another juridic person or that a distinct public 49 1, 0, 122| distinct public juridic person is erected from the separated 50 1, 0, 122| divisible accrue to each juridic person and that the obligations 51 1, 0, 123| extinction of a public juridic person, the allocation of its goods, 52 1, 0, 123| they go to the juridic person immediately superior, always 53 1, 0, 123| extinction of a private juridic person, the allocation of its goods 54 1, 0, 124| is placed by a qualified person and includes those things 55 1, 0, 125| of force inflicted on a person from without, which the 56 1, 0, 125| from without, which the person was not able to resist in 57 1, 0, 131| that which is granted to a person but not by means of an office.~§ 58 1, 0, 133| those things for which the person was delegated in some manner 59 1, 0, 136| establishes otherwise, a person is able to exercise executive 60 1, 0, 139| otherwise, the fact that a person approaches some competent 61 1, 0, 140| from doing so unless that person subsequently was impeded 62 1, 0, 141| delegated successively, that person is to take care of the affair 63 1, 0, 149| ecclesiastical office, a person must be in the communion 64 1, 0, 152| the same time by the same person, are not to be conferred 65 1, 0, 152| to be conferred upon one person.~ 66 1, 0, 155| Can. 155 A person who confers an office in 67 1, 0, 155| power thereafter offer the person upon whom the office was 68 1, 0, 155| juridic condition of that person, however, is established 69 1, 0, 158| ecclesiastical office by a person who has the right of presentation 70 1, 0, 158| right of presentation, the person to be presented is to be 71 1, 0, 159| unwillingly; therefore, a person who is proposed for presentation 72 1, 0, 159| be presented unless the person declines within eight useful 73 1, 0, 160| Can. 160 §1. The person who possesses the right 74 1, 0, 161| establishes otherwise, a person who has presented one found 75 1, 0, 161| once more only.~§2. If the person presented renounces or dies 76 1, 0, 162| Can. 162 A person who has not made presentation 77 1, 0, 162| presented an unsuitable person loses the right of presentation 78 1, 0, 162| the proper ordinary of the person appointed.~ 79 1, 0, 163| competent to install the person presented according to the 80 1, 0, 166| Can. 166 §1. The person presiding offer a college 81 1, 0, 166| the instance of that same person and when the oversight and 82 1, 0, 168| Can. 168 Even if a person has the right to vote in 83 1, 0, 168| under several titles, the person can vote only once.~ 84 1, 0, 171| are effected to vote:~1/ a person incapable of a human act;~ 85 1, 0, 171| incapable of a human act;~2/ a person who lacks active voice;~ 86 1, 0, 171| lacks active voice;~3/ a person under a penalty of excommunication 87 1, 0, 171| imposed or declared;~4/ a person who has defected notoriously 88 1, 0, 171| the above is admitted, the person’s vote is null, but the 89 1, 0, 172| therefore the vote of a person who has been coerced directly 90 1, 0, 172| malice to vote for a certain person or different persons separately 91 1, 0, 173| openly how many votes each person has received.~§3. If the 92 1, 0, 176| statutes provide otherwise, the person who has received the required 93 1, 0, 177| communicated immediately to the person elected who must inform 94 1, 0, 177| elected has not accepted, the person loses every right deriving 95 1, 0, 178| Can. 178 The person elected who has accepted 96 1, 0, 178| immediately; otherwise, the person acquires only the right 97 1, 0, 179| requires confirmation, the person elected must personally 98 1, 0, 179| election; otherwise, the person is deprived of every right 99 1, 0, 179| has been proved that the person was prevented from seeking 100 1, 0, 179| deny confirmation if the person elected has been found suitable 101 1, 0, 179| notified of confirmation, the person elected is not permitted 102 1, 0, 179| acts possibly placed by the person are null.~§5. Once notified 103 1, 0, 180| prevents the election of a person whom the electors believe 104 1, 0, 180| they can postulate that person from the competent authority 105 1, 0, 182| malice or negligence.~§3. The person postulated acquires no right 106 1, 0, 183| to be made known to the person postulated, who must respond 107 1, 0, 183| norm of can. 177, §1.~§3. A person who accepts a postulation 108 1, 0, 185| can be conferred upon a person who loses an office by reason 109 1, 0, 190| transfer can be made only by a person who has the right of providing 110 1, 0, 191| prescribed otherwise.~§2. The person transferred receives the 111 1, 0, 191| the prior office until the person has taken canonical possession 112 1, 0, 192| Can. 192 A person is removed from office either 113 1, 0, 193| Can. 193 §1. A person cannot be removed from an 114 1, 0, 193| valid for the removal of a person from an office conferred 115 1, 0, 193| prescript of can. 624, §3.~§3. A person upon whom an office is conferred 116 1, 0, 194| by the law itself:~1/ a person who has lost the clerical 117 1, 0, 194| the clerical state;~2/ a person who has publicly defected 118 1, 0, 195| Can. 195 If a person is removed not by the law 119 1, 0, 195| office which provides the person’s support, the same authority 120 1, 0, 201| understood as that which a person has to exercise or to pursue 121 1, 0, 201| that it does not run for a person who is unaware or unable 122 2, 1, 217| the maturity of the human person and at the same time to 123 2, 1, 220| good reputation which a person possesses nor to injure 124 2, 1, 220| injure the right of any person to protect his or her own 125 2, 1, 266| reception of the diaconate, a person becomes a cleric and is 126 2, 1, 306| Can. 306 In order for a person to possess the rights and 127 2, 1, 306| and sufficient that the person has been validly received 128 2, 1, 307| association.~§2. The same person can be enrolled in several 129 2, 1, 310| established as a juridic person cannot, as such, be a subject 130 2, 1, 313| is constituted a juridic person and, to the extent it is 131 2, 1, 316| Can. 316 §1. A person who has publicly rejected 132 2, 1, 318| time in its name.~§2. The person who appointed or confirmed 133 2, 1, 318| a just cause, after the person has heard, however, the 134 2, 1, 318| norm of the statutes. The person who appointed a chaplain 135 2, 2, 332| consecration. Therefore, a person elected to the supreme pontificate 136 2, 2, 332| moment of acceptance. If the person elected lacks episcopal 137 2, 2, 351| announced the selection of a person to the dignity of cardinal 138 2, 2, 351| reserves the name of the person in pectore, the one promoted 139 2, 2, 352| to submit the name of the person elected to the Roman Pontiff 140 2, 2, 357| which pertain to their own person, cardinals living outside 141 2, 2, 386| frequently preaching in person, is bound to propose and 142 2, 2, 426| When a see is vacant, the person who is to govern the diocese 143 2, 2, 433| be erected as a juridic person.~ 144 2, 2, 509| same bishop to confirm the person elected by the chapter to 145 2, 2, 517| to a deacon, to another person who is not a priest, or 146 2, 2, 520| Can. 520 §1. A juridic person is not to be a pastor. With 147 2, 2, 527| Can. 527 §1. The person who has been promoted to 148 2, 2, 531| Can. 531 Although another person has performed a certain 149 2, 2, 531| parochial function, that person is to put the offerings 150 2, 2, 538| the circumstances of the person and place. Attentive to 151 2, 3, 607| consecration of the whole person, religious life manifests 152 2, 3, 618| reverence for the human person, they are to listen to them 153 2, 3, 638| patrimonial condition of a juridic person can worsen, the written 154 2, 3, 639| Can. 639 §1. If a juridic person has contracted debts and 155 2, 3, 639| answer, but not the juridic person.~§4. It is a fixed rule, 156 2, 3, 656| is required that:~1/ the person who is to make it has completed 157 2, 3, 666| chastity of a consecrated person.~ 158 2, 3, 668| states otherwise.~§4. A person who must renounce fully 159 2, 3, 685| Can. 685 §1. Until a person makes profession in the 160 2, 3, 688| Can. 688 §1. A person who wishes to leave an institute 161 2, 3, 688| temporary profession, a person who asks to leave the institute 162 2, 3, 709| erected even as a juridic person and under whose supreme 163 2, 3, 721| Can. 721 §1. A person is admitted to initial probation 164 2, 3, 721| Moreover, to be received, the person must have the maturity necessary 165 3, 0, 747| fundamental rights of the human person or the salvation of souls 166 3, 0, 750| Can. 750 §1. A person must believe with divine 167 3, 0, 768| and freedom of the human person, the unity and stability 168 3, 0, 795| complete formation of the human person that looks to his or her 169 3, 0, 803| public ecclesiastical juridic person directs or which ecclesiastical 170 3, 0, 807| development of the human person, and the fulfillment of 171 4, 1, 842| Can. 842 §1. A person who has not received baptism 172 4, 1, 852| the use of reason.~§2. A person who is not responsible for 173 4, 1, 861| a catechist or another person designated for this function 174 4, 1, 861| a case of necessity any person with the right intention, 175 4, 1, 864| Can. 864 Every person not yet baptized and only 176 4, 1, 864| baptized and only such a person is capable of baptism.~ 177 4, 1, 865| adult to be baptized, the person must have manifested the 178 4, 1, 865| truths of the faith, the person has manifested in any way 179 4, 1, 868| least one of them or the person who legitimately takes their 180 4, 1, 869| there is a doubt whether a person has been baptized or whether 181 4, 1, 869| baptism is explained to the person to be baptized, if an adult, 182 4, 1, 869| baptism are explained to the person or, in the case of an infant, 183 4, 1, 872| 872 Insofar as possible, a person to be baptized is to be 184 4, 1, 872| also helps the baptized person to lead a Christian life 185 4, 1, 874| the function of sponsor a person must:~1/ be designated by 186 4, 1, 874| baptized, by the parents or the person who takes their place, or 187 4, 1, 874| baptized.~§2. A baptized person who belongs to a non-Catholic 188 4, 1, 875| Can. 875 A person who administers baptism 189 4, 1, 876| the one baptized if the person received baptism as an adult.~ 190 4, 1, 883| bishop;~2/ as regards the person in question, the presbyter 191 4, 1, 889| 889 §1. Every baptized person not yet confirmed and only 192 4, 1, 889| confirmed and only such a person is capable of receiving 193 4, 1, 889| of death requires that a person who has the use of reason 194 4, 1, 892| to be a sponsor for the person to be confirmed; the sponsor 195 4, 1, 892| care that the confirmed person behaves as a true witness 196 4, 1, 893| the function of sponsor, a person must fulfill the conditions 197 4, 1, 899| presiding and acting in the person of Christ. All the faithful 198 4, 1, 900| of the Eucharist in the person of Christ is a validly ordained 199 4, 1, 912| Can. 912 Any baptized person not prohibited by law can 200 4, 1, 916| Can. 916 A person who is conscious of grave 201 4, 1, 916| confess; in this case the person is to remember the obligation 202 4, 1, 917| Can. 917 A person who has already received 203 4, 1, 917| celebration in which the person participates, without prejudice 204 4, 1, 919| Can. 919 §1. A person who is to receive the Most 205 4, 1, 930| properly instructed lay person.~ ~ 206 4, 1, 935| keep the Eucharist on one’s person or to carry it around, unless 207 4, 1, 938| especially at night.~§5. The person responsible for the church 208 4, 1, 949| Can. 949 A person obliged to celebrate and 209 4, 1, 955| Can. 955 §1. A person who intends to entrust to 210 4, 1, 962| required not only that the person is properly disposed but 211 4, 1, 962| An exhortation that each person take care to make an act 212 4, 1, 963| mentioned in can. 989, a person whose grave sins are remitted 213 4, 1, 982| to be absolved unless the person has first formally retracted 214 4, 1, 984| revelation is excluded.~§2. A person who has been placed in authority 215 4, 1, 987| purpose of amendment, the person is turned back to God.~ 216 4, 1, 988| confession, of which the person has knowledge after diligent 217 4, 1, 995| given this expressly to the person.~ 218 4, 1, 996| of gaining indulgences, a person must be baptized, not excommunicated, 219 4, 1, 1004| be repeated if the sick person, having recovered, again 220 4, 1, 1005| of doubt whether the sick person has attained the use of 221 4, 1, 1008| of God, fufilling in the person of Christ the Head the functions 222 4, 1, 1015| Can. 1015 §1. Each person is to be ordained to the 223 4, 1, 1015| an Eastern rite.~§3. The person who can give dimissorial 224 4, 1, 1026| Can. 1026 A person must possess due freedom 225 4, 1, 1032| competent major superior.~§3. A person aspiring to the permanent 226 4, 1, 1033| Can. 1033 A person is promoted licitly to orders 227 4, 1, 1034| Can. 1034 §1. A person aspiring to the diaconate 228 4, 1, 1034| the same authority.~§2. A person who has been received into 229 4, 1, 1041| for receiving orders:~1/ a person who labors under some form 230 4, 1, 1041| ministry properly;~2/ a person who has committed the delict 231 4, 1, 1041| heresy, or schism;~3/ a person who has attempted marriage, 232 4, 1, 1041| the same type of vow;~4/ a person who has committed voluntary 233 4, 1, 1041| cooperated in either;~5/ a person who has mutilated himself 234 4, 1, 1041| attempted suicide;~6/ a person who has placed an act of 235 4, 1, 1042| permanent diaconate;~2/ a person who exercises an office 236 4, 1, 1044| of orders received:~1/ a person who has received orders 237 4, 1, 1044| irregularity to receive them;~2/ a person who has committed a delict 238 4, 1, 1044| the delict is public;~3/ a person who has committed a delict 239 4, 1, 1044| exercise of orders:~1/ a person who has received orders 240 4, 1, 1044| from receiving them;~2/ a person who is aVected by amentia 241 4, 1, 1048| grave harm or infamy, a person impeded by an irregularity 242 4, 1, 1050| Can. 1050 For a person to be promoted to sacred 243 4, 1, 1070| the investigations, the person is to notify the pastor 244 4, 1, 1071| in a case of necessity, a person is not to assist without 245 4, 1, 1071| law;~3/ a marriage of a person who is bound by natural 246 4, 1, 1071| union;~4/ a marriage of a person who has notoriously rejected 247 4, 1, 1071| faith;~5/ a marriage of a person who is under a censure;~ 248 4, 1, 1071| assist at the marriage of a person who has notoriously rejected 249 4, 1, 1072| before the age at which a person usually enters marriage 250 4, 1, 1073| diriment impediment renders a person unqualified to contract 251 4, 1, 1085| Can. 1085 §1. A person bound by the bond of a prior 252 4, 1, 1086| baptized, is invalid.~§2. A person is not to be dispensed from 253 4, 1, 1090| marriage with a certain person has brought about the death 254 4, 1, 1090| about the death of that person’s spouse or of one’s own 255 4, 1, 1097| 1. Error concerning the person renders a marriage invalid.~§ 256 4, 1, 1097| concerning a quality of the person does not render a marriage 257 4, 1, 1098| Can. 1098 A person contracts invalidly who 258 4, 1, 1103| unintentionally inflicted, so that a person is compelled to choose marriage 259 4, 1, 1104| present together, either in person or by proxy.~§2. Those being 260 4, 1, 1105| contract with a specific person;~2/ the proxy is designated 261 4, 1, 1108| and 1127, §§1-2.~§2. The person who assists at a marriage 262 4, 1, 1108| understood to be only that person who is present, asks for 263 4, 1, 1112| See.~§2. A suitable lay person is to be selected, who is 264 4, 1, 1114| Can. 1114 The person assisting at marriage acts 265 4, 1, 1114| acts illicitly unless the person has made certain of the 266 4, 1, 1114| the pastor whenever the person assists in virtue of general 267 4, 1, 1116| Can. 1116 §1. If a person competent to assist according 268 4, 1, 1120| remains in effect that the person who assists at the marriage 269 4, 1, 1121| of the celebration or the person who takes his place, even 270 4, 1, 1121| names of the spouses, the person who assisted, and the witnesses, 271 4, 1, 1122| the parish in which the person was baptized, the pastor 272 4, 1, 1149| Can. 1149 A non-baptized person who, after having received 273 4, 2, 1177| with the consent of the person who governs it and after 274 4, 2, 1177| death occurred outside the person’s own parish, and the body 275 4, 2, 1185| Mass must also be denied a person who is excluded from ecclesiastical 276 4, 2, 1192| A vow is personal if the person making the vow promises 277 4, 2, 1192| promises an action; real if the person making the vow promises 278 4, 2, 1193| nature a vow obliges only the person who makes it.~ 279 4, 2, 1195| Can. 1195 The person who has power over the matter 280 4, 2, 1195| brings disadvantage to that person.~ 281 4, 2, 1197| Can. 1197 The person who makes a private vow 282 4, 2, 1198| are suspended while the person who made the vow remains 283 4, 2, 1200| Can. 1200 §1. A person who freely swears to do 284 4, 2, 1202| if it is remitted by the person for whose benefit the oath 285 4, 2, 1204| to the intention of the person taking the oath or, if that 286 4, 2, 1204| taking the oath or, if that person acts out of malice, according 287 4, 2, 1204| to the intention of the person to whom the oath is made.~ ~ ~ 288 4, 3, 1248| Can. 1248 §1. A person who assists at a Mass celebrated 289 5, 0, 1254| well as any other juridic person, public or private, are 290 5, 0, 1255| belongs to that juridic person which has acquired them 291 5, 0, 1256| goods of a private juridic person are governed by its own 292 5, 0, 1257| also any public juridic person in the Church unless it 293 5, 0, 1264| mendicants, any private person, whether physical or juridic, 294 5, 0, 1264| written permission of that person’s own ordinary and of the 295 5, 0, 1266| any ecclesiastical juridic person, even a private one, are 296 5, 0, 1266| presumed given to the juridic person itself.~§2. The offerings 297 5, 0, 1266| concerns a public juridic person, with the permission of 298 5, 0, 1268| public ecclesiastical juridic person, however, only another public 299 5, 0, 1268| public ecclesiastical juridic person can acquire them.~ 300 5, 0, 1269| public ecclesiastical juridic person, they are prescribed by 301 5, 0, 1278| immediately governs the person to which the goods belong 302 5, 0, 1278| goods of a public juridic person which does not have its 303 5, 0, 1279| Can. 1280 Each juridic person is to have its own finance 304 5, 0, 1280| own advantage, a juridic person is not bound to answer for 305 5, 0, 1280| administrators. A juridic person itself, however, will answer 306 5, 0, 1283| purposes of the juridic person;~7/ keep well organized 307 5, 0, 1287| name of a public juridic person unless they have obtained 308 5, 0, 1290| patrimony of a public juridic person and whose value exceeds 309 5, 0, 1291| economic state of the juridic person whose goods are proposed 310 5, 0, 1294| patrimonial condition of a juridic person.~ 311 5, 0, 1298| Can. 1299 §1. A person who by natural law and canon 312 5, 0, 1301| Can. 1302 §1. A person who has accepted goods in 313 5, 0, 1301| prohibited this, however, the person is not to accept the trust.~§ 314 5, 0, 1302| and erected as a juridic person by competent ecclesiastical 315 5, 0, 1302| way to a public juridic person with the obligation for 316 5, 0, 1302| been entrusted to a juridic person subject to a diocesan bishop, 317 5, 0, 1302| they accrue to the juridic person itself.~ 318 5, 0, 1303| 1304 §1. For a juridic person to be able to accept a foundation 319 5, 0, 1303| determined that the juridic person can satisfy both the new 320 5, 0, 1305| the archive of the juridic person to which the foundation 321 6, 1, 1314| Can. 1315 §1. A person who has legislative power 322 6, 1, 1318| Can. 1319 §1. Insofar as a person can impose precepts in the 323 6, 1, 1318| power of governance, the person can also threaten determinate 324 6, 1, 1320| precept, committed by the person, is gravely imputable by 325 6, 1, 1320| law or precept binds the person who has deliberately violated 326 6, 1, 1320| law or precept; however, a person who violated a law or precept 327 6, 1, 1322| violated a law or precept:~1/ a person who has not yet completed 328 6, 1, 1322| sixteenth year of age;~2/ a person who without negligence was 329 6, 1, 1322| equivalent to ignorance;~3/ a person who acted due to physical 330 6, 1, 1322| chance occurrence which the person could not foresee or, if 331 6, 1, 1322| if foreseen, avoid;~4/ a person who acted coerced by grave 332 6, 1, 1322| the harm of souls;~5/ a person who acted with due moderation 333 6, 1, 1322| defense of another;~6/ a person who lacked the use of reason, 334 6, 1, 1322| 1, n. 2 and 1325;~7/ a person who without negligence thought 335 6, 1, 1323| delict was committed:~1/ by a person who had only the imperfect 336 6, 1, 1323| imperfect use of reason;~2/ by a person who lacked the use of reason 337 6, 1, 1323| of sixteen years;~5/ by a person who was coerced by grave 338 6, 1, 1323| the harm of souls;~6/ by a person who acted without due moderation 339 6, 1, 1323| and unjustly provokes the person;~8/ by a person who thought 340 6, 1, 1323| provokes the person;~8/ by a person who thought in culpable 341 6, 1, 1323| or 5 was present;~9/ by a person who without negligence did 342 6, 1, 1323| law or precept;~10/ by a person who acted without full imputability 343 6, 1, 1325| precept has established:~1/ a person who after a condemnation 344 6, 1, 1325| obstinate ill will of the person can prudently be inferred;~ 345 6, 1, 1325| prudently be inferred;~2/ a person who has been established 346 6, 1, 1325| the delict;~3/ an accused person who, when a penalty has 347 6, 1, 1325| avoid it, which any diligent person would have employed.~§2. 348 6, 1, 1327| Can. 1328 §1. A person who has done or omitted 349 6, 1, 1330| 1331 §1. An excommunicated person is forbidden:~1/ to have 350 6, 1, 1331| and 2 bind an interdicted person. If the interdict has been 351 6, 1, 1332| establish that a suspended person cannot place acts of governance 352 6, 1, 1332| pertain to the office of the person suspended if the penalty 353 6, 1, 1332| suspension prohibiting a person from receiving benefits, 354 6, 1, 1334| an act of governance; a person is permitted to request 355 6, 1, 1338| through another, can warn a person who is in the proximate 356 6, 1, 1338| 2. He can also rebuke a person whose behavior causes scandal 357 6, 1, 1338| special conditions of the person and the deed.~§3. The warning 358 6, 1, 1343| determined by the judge, the person is to pay the penalty due 359 6, 1, 1344| thinks that reform of the person can be better accomplished 360 6, 1, 1347| provide for the welfare of the person and for the public good 361 6, 1, 1349| take care to provide for a person dismissed from the clerical 362 6, 1, 1357| be denied, however, to a person who withdraws from contumacy.~§ 363 6, 1, 1357| from contumacy.~§2. The person who remits a censure can 364 6, 1, 1358| several penalties bind a person, a remission is valid only 365 6, 1, 1360| given conditionally or to a person who is absent.~§2. A remission 366 6, 2, 1364| Can. 1365 A person guilty of prohibited participation 367 6, 2, 1366| Can. 1367 A person who throws away the consecrated 368 6, 2, 1367| Can. 1368 A person who commits perjury while 369 6, 2, 1368| Can. 1369 A person who in a public show or 370 6, 2, 1369| Can. 1370 §1. A person who uses physical force 371 6, 2, 1369| gravity of the delict.~§2. A person who does this against a 372 6, 2, 1369| sententiae suspension.~§3. A person who uses physical force 373 6, 2, 1370| mentioned in can. 1364, §1, a person who teaches a doctrine condemned 374 6, 2, 1370| See or an ordinary;~2/ a person who otherwise does not obey 375 6, 2, 1371| Can. 1372 A person who makes recourse against 376 6, 2, 1372| Can. 1373 A person who publicly incites among 377 6, 2, 1373| Can. 1374 A person who joins an association 378 6, 2, 1373| just penalty; however, a person who promotes or directs 379 6, 2, 1375| Can. 1376 A person who profanes a movable or 380 6, 2, 1376| Can. 1377 A person who alienates ecclesiastical 381 6, 2, 1377| penalty of suspension:~1/ a person who attempts the liturgical 382 6, 2, 1377| case mentioned in §1, a person who, though unable to give 383 6, 2, 1378| mentioned in can. 1378, a person who simulates the administration 384 6, 2, 1379| Can. 1380 A person who celebrates or receives 385 6, 2, 1381| pontifical mandate and the person who receives the consecration 386 6, 2, 1382| conferring the order. The person who has received the ordination, 387 6, 2, 1383| mentioned in cann. 1378-1383, a person who illegitimately performs 388 6, 2, 1384| Can. 1385 A person who illegitimately makes 389 6, 2, 1385| Can. 1386 A person who gives or promises something 390 6, 2, 1388| Can. 1389 §1. A person who abuses an ecclesiastical 391 6, 2, 1388| penalty for this abuse.~§2. A person who through culpable negligence 392 6, 2, 1389| Can. 1390 §1. A person who falsely denounces before 393 6, 2, 1389| also a suspension.~§2. A person who offers an ecclesiastical 394 6, 2, 1390| gravity of the delict:~1/ a person who produces a false public 395 6, 2, 1390| false or altered one;~2/ a person who uses another false or 396 6, 2, 1390| ecclesiastical matter;~3/ a person who asserts a falsehood 397 6, 2, 1392| Can. 1393 A person who violates obligations 398 6, 2, 1395| Can. 1396 A person who gravely violates the 399 6, 2, 1396| Can. 1397 A person who commits a homicide or 400 6, 2, 1396| mutilates, or gravely wounds a person by force or fraud is to 401 6, 2, 1397| Can. 1398 A person who procures a completed 402 7, 1, 1408| actual residence.~§2. A person whose domicile, quasi-domicile, 403 7, 1, 1418| temporal goods of a juridic person represented by the bishop, 404 7, 1, 1426| a secular cleric or lay person or a non-religious juridic 405 7, 1, 1426| a non-religious juridic person, the diocesan tribunal judges 406 7, 1, 1435| Can. 1436 §1. The same person can hold the office of promoter 407 7, 1, 1447| Can. 1447 A person who has taken part in a 408 7, 1, 1462| joinder of the issue. A person who proposes them later 409 7, 1, 1462| for expenses unless the person proves that the presentation 410 7, 1, 1471| Can. 1471 If a person to be questioned speaks 411 7, 1, 1471| speech or hearing impaired person must be questioned unless 412 7, 1, 1471| the judge may prefer the person to answer the questions 413 7, 1, 1479| the diocesan bishop of the person to whom the guardian or 414 7, 1, 1482| Can. 1482 §1. A person can appoint only one procurator 415 7, 1, 1482| faculty to do so.~§2. If a person appoints several procurators 416 7, 1, 1486| appeal, if the mandating person does not refuse, remains 417 7, 1, 1493| A petitioner can bring a person to trial with several actions 418 7, 1, 1496| Can. 1496 §1. A person, who through at least probable 419 7, 1, 1496| similar circumstances, a person can obtain an order to restrain 420 7, 1, 1499| impose an obligation upon the person to compensate for damages 421 7, 1, 1499| compensate for damages if that person’s right is not proven.~ 422 7, 2, 1502| Can. 1502 A person who wishes to bring another 423 7, 2, 1508| trial in the name of that person according to the norm of 424 7, 2, 1515| restore the property, the person must also return the profits 425 7, 2, 1526| of proof rests upon the person who makes the allegation.~§ 426 7, 2, 1528| hear them through a lay person designated by the judge 427 7, 2, 1540| are those which a public person has drawn up in the exercise 428 7, 2, 1540| in the exercise of that person’s function in the Church, 429 7, 2, 1564| the mental capacity of the person being questioned, not comprised 430 7, 2, 1572| condition or reputation of the person is;~2/ whether the testimony 431 7, 2, 1585| Can. 1585 A person who has a favorable presumption 432 7, 2 | INTERVENTION OF A THIRD PERSON IN A CASE~ 433 7, 2, 1596| Can. 1596 §1. A person who has an interest can 434 7, 2, 1596| 2. To be admitted, the person must present a libellus 435 7, 2, 1596| case; in the libellus the person briefly is to demonstrate 436 7, 2, 1596| right to intervene.~§3. A person who intervenes in a case 437 7, 2, 1596| of time assigned to the person to present proofs if the 438 7, 2, 1597| summon to the trial a third person whose intervention seems 439 7, 2, 1600| negligence of the interested person.~§3. New proofs are to be 440 7, 2, 1620| 2/ it was rendered by a person who lacks the power of judging 441 7, 2, 1646| computed from the day the person became aware of these same 442 7, 2, 1646| run as long as the injured person is a minor.~ 443 7, 2, 1649| recovery of damages owed by a person who not only lost the trial 444 7, 3, 1699| Can. 1699 §1. The person competent to accept a libellus 445 7, 4, 1717| through another suitable person about the facts, circumstances, 446 7, 4, 1717| this investigation.~§3. The person who conducts the investigation 447 7, 4, 1717| in the process; the same person cannot act as a judge in 448 7, 5, 1733| Can. 1733 §1. Whenever a person considers himself or herself 449 7, 5, 1733| particularly desirable that the person and the author of the decree 450 7, 5, 1733| recourse is to urge the person making recourse and the 451 7, 5, 1734| Before proposing recourse a person must seek the revocation 452 7, 5, 1736| proposed afterwards, the person who must deal with the recourse 453 7, 5, 1737| Can. 1737 §1. A person who claims to have been 454 7, 5, 1738| Can. 1738 The person making recourse always has 455 7, 5, 1738| appointed ex officio if the person making recourse lacks one 456 7, 5, 1738| superior always can order the person making recourse to be present 457 7, 5, 1747| belonging to the parish to the person to whom the bishop has entrusted


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