The Code of Canon Law (new)
Book 5
The Temporal Goods Of The Church
Can. 1254 §1 The catholic Church has the inherent right, independently of any
secular power, to acquire, retain, administer and alienate temporal goods, in
pursuit of its proper objectives.
§2 These proper objectives are principally the regulation of divine worship,
the provision of fitting support for the clergy and other ministers, and the
carrying out of works of the sacred apostolate and of charity, especially for
the needy.
Can. 1255 The universal Church, as well as the Apostolic See, particular
Churches and all other public and private juridical persons are capable of
acquiring, retaining, administering and alienating temporal goods, in accordance
with the law.
Can. 1256 Under the supreme authority of the Roman Pontiff, ownership of
goods belongs to that juridical person which has lawfully acquired them.
Can. 1257 §1 All temporal goods belonging to the universal Church, to the
Apostolic See or to other public juridical persons in the Church, are
ecclesiastical goods and are regulated by the canons which follow, as well as by
their own statutes.
§2 Unless it is otherwise expressly provided, temporal goods belonging to a
private juridical person are regulated by its own statutes, not by these canons.
Can. 1258 In the canons which follow, the term Church signifies not only the
universal Church or the Apostolic See, but also any public juridical person in
the Church, unless the contrary is clear from the context or from the nature of
the matter.
TITLE I: THE ACQUISITION OF GOODS
Can. 1259 The Church may acquire temporal goods in any way in which, by
either natural or positive law, it is lawful for others to do this.
Can. 1260 The Church has the inherent right to require from the faithful
whatever is necessary for its proper objectives.
Can. 1261 §1 The faithful have the right to donate temporal goods for the
benefit of the Church.
§2 The diocesan Bishop is bound to remind the faithful of the obligation
mentioned in Can. 222 §1, and in an appropriate manner to urge it.
Can. 1262 The faithful are to give their support to the Church in response to
appeals and in accordance with the norms laid down by the Episcopal Conference.
Can. 1263 The diocesan Bishop, after consulting the finance committee and the
council of priests, has the right to levy on public juridical persons subject to
his authority a tax for the needs of the diocese. This tax must be moderate and
proportionate to their income. He may impose an extraordinary and moderate tax
on other physical and juridical persons only in a grave necessity and under the
same conditions, but without prejudice to particular laws and customs which may
give him greater rights.
Can. 1264 Unless the law prescribes otherwise, it is for the provincial
Bishops' meeting to:
1° determine the taxes, to be approved by the Apostolic See, for acts of
executive authority which grant a favour, or for the execution of rescripts from
the Apostolic See;
2° determine the offerings on the occasion of the administration of the
sacraments and sacramentals.
Can. 1265 §1 Without prejudice to the right of mendicant religious, all
private juridical or physical persons are forbidden to make a collection for any
pious or ecclesiastical institute or purpose without the written permission of
their proper Ordinary and of the local Ordinary.
§2 The Episcopal Conference can draw up rules regarding collections, which
must be observed by all, including those who from their foundation are called
and are 'mendicants'.
Can. 1266 §1 In all churches and oratories regularly open to Christ's
faithful, including those belonging to religious institutes, the local Ordinary
may order that a special collection be taken up for specified parochial,
diocesan, national or universal initiatives. The collection must afterwards be
carefully forwarded to the diocesan curia.
Can. 1267 §1 Unless the contrary is clear, offerings made to Superiors or
administrators of any ecclesiastical juridical person, even a private one, are
presumed to have been made to the juridical person itself.
§2 If there is question of a public juridical person, the offerings mentioned
in §1 cannot be refused except for a just reason and, in matters of greater
importance, with the permission of the Ordinary. Without prejudice to the
provisions of Can. 1295, the permission of the Ordinary is also required for the
acceptance of offerings to which are attached some qualifying obligation or
condition.
§3 Offerings given by the faithful for a specified purpose may be used only
for that purpose.
Can. 1268 The Church recognises prescription, in accordance with cann.
197199, as a means both of acquiring temporal goods and of being freed from
their obligations.
Can. 1269 Sacred objects in private ownership may be acquired by private
persons by prescription, but they may not be used for secular purposes unless
they have lost their dedication or blessing. If, however, they belong to a
public ecclesiastical juridical person, they may be acquired only by another
public ecclesiastical juridical person.
Can. 1270 Immovable goods, precious movable goods, rights and legal claims,
whether personal or real, which belong to the Apostolic See, are prescribed
after a period of one hundred years. For those goods which belong to another
public ecclesiastical juridical person, the period for prescription is thirty
years.
Can. 1271 By reason of their bond of unity and charity, and according to the
resources of their dioceses, Bishops are to join together to produce those means
which the Apostolic See may from time to time need to exercise properly its
service of the universal Church.
Can. 1272 In those regions where benefices properly so called still exist, it
is for the Episcopal Conference to regulate such benefices by appropriate norms,
agreed with and approved by the Apostolic See. The purpose of these norms is
that the income and as far as possible the capital itself of the benefice should
by degrees be transferred to the fund mentioned in Can. 1274 §1.
TITLE II: THE ADMINISTRATION OF
GOODS
Can. 1273 The Roman Pontiff, by virtue of his primacy of governance, is the
supreme administrator and steward of all ecclesiastical goods.
Can. 1274 §1 In every diocese there is to be a special fund which collects
offerings and temporal goods for the purpose of providing, in accordance with
Can. 281, for the support of the clergy who serve the diocese, unless they are
otherwise catered for.
§2 Where there is as yet no properly organized system of social provision for
the clergy, the Episcopal Conference is to see that a fund is established which
will furnish adequate social security for them.
§3 To the extent that it is required, a common reserve is to be established
in every diocese by which the Bishop is enabled to fulfill his obligations
towards other persons who serve the Church and to meet various needs of the
diocese, this can also be the means by which wealthier dioceses may help poorer
ones.
§4 Depending on differing local circumstances, the purposes described in §§2
and 3 might better be achieved by amalgamating various diocesan funds, or by
cooperation between various dioceses, or even by setting up a suitable
association for them, or indeed for the whole territory of the Episcopal
Conference itself.
§5 If possible, these funds are to be established in such a manner that they
will have standing also in the civil law.
Can. 1275 A reserve set up by a number of different dioceses is to be
administered according to norms opportunely agreed upon by the Bishops
concerned.
Can. 1276 §1 Ordinaries must carefully supervise the administration of all
the goods which belong to public juridical persons subject to them, without
prejudice to lawful titles which may give the Ordinary greater rights.
§2 Taking into account rights, lawful customs and the circumstances,
Ordinaries are to regulate the whole matter of the administration of
ecclesiastical goods by issuing special instructions, within the limits of
universal and particular law.
Can. 1277 In carrying out acts of administration which, in the light of the
financial situation of the diocese, are of major importance, the diocesan Bishop
must consult the finance committee and the college of consultors. For acts of
extraordinary administration, except in cases expressly provided for in the
universal law or stated in the documents of foundation, the diocesan Bishop
needs the consent of the committee and of the college of consultors. It is for
the Episcopal Conference to determine what are to be regarded as acts of
extraordinary administration.
Can. 1278 Besides the duties mentioned in Can. 494 §§3 and 4, the diocesan
Bishop may also entrust to the financial administrator the duties mentioned in
Can. 1276 §1 and Can. 1279 §2.
Can. 1279 §1 The administration of ecclesiastical goods pertains to the one
with direct power of governance over the person to whom the goods belong, unless
particular law or statutes or legitimate custom state otherwise, and without
prejudice to the right of the Ordinary to intervene where there is negligence on
the part of the administrator.
§2 Where no administrators are appointed for a public juridical person by law
or by the documents of foundation or by its own statutes, the Ordinary to which
it is subject is to appoint suitable persons as administrators for a three-year
term. The same persons can be reappointed by the Ordinary.
Can. 1280 Every juridical person is to have its own finance committee, or at
least two counselors, who are to assist in the performance of the
administrator's duties, in accordance with the statutes.
Can. 1281 §1 Without prejudice to the provisions of the statutes
administrators act invalidly when they go beyond the limits and manner of
ordinary administration, unless they have first received in writing from the
Ordinary the faculty to do so.
§2 The statutes are to determine what acts go beyond the limits and manner of
ordinary administration. If the statutes are silent on this point, it is for the
diocesan Bishop, after consulting the finance committee, to determine these acts
for the persons subject to him.
§3 Except and insofar as it is to its benefit, a juridical person is not held
responsible for the invalid actions of its administrators. The juridical person
is, however, responsible when such actions are valid but unlawful, without
prejudice to its right to bring an action or have recourse against the
administrators who have caused it damage.
Can. 1282 All persons, whether clerics or laity, who lawfully take part in
the administration of ecclesiastical goods, are bound to fulfill their duties in
the name of the Church, in accordance with the law.
Can. 1283 Before administrators undertake their duties:
1° they must take an oath, in the presence of the Ordinary or his delegate,
that they will well and truly perform their office;
2° they are to draw up a clear and accurate inventory, to be signed by
themselves, of all immovable goods, of those movable goods which are precious or
of a high cultural value, and of all other goods, with a description and an
estimate of their value; when this has been compiled, it is to be certified as
correct;
3° one copy of this inventory is to be kept in the administration office and
another in the curial archive; any change which takes place in the property is
to be noted on both copies.
Can. 1284 §1 All administrators are to perform their duties with the
diligence of a good householder.
§2 Therefore they must:
1° be vigilant that no goods placed in their care in any way perish or suffer
damage; to this end they are, to the extent necessary, to arrange insurance
contracts;
2° ensure that the ownership of ecclesiastical goods is safeguarded in ways
which are valid in civil law;
3° observe the provisions of canon and civil law, and the stipulations of the
founder or donor or lawful authority; they are to take special care that damage
will not be suffered by the Church through the nonobservance of the civil law;
4° seek accurately and at the proper time the income and produce of the
goods, guard them securely and expend them in accordance with the wishes of the
founder or lawful norms;
5° at the proper time pay the interest which is due by reason of a loan or
pledge, and take care that in due time the capital is repaid;
6° with the consent of the Ordinary make use of money which is surplus after
payment of expenses and which can be profitably invested for the purposes of the
juridical person;
7° keep accurate records of income and expenditure;
8° draw up an account of their administration at the end of each year;
9° keep in order and preserve in a convenient and suitable archive the
documents and records establishing the rights of the Church or institute to its
goods; where conveniently possible, authentic copies must be placed in the
curial archives.
§3 It is earnestly recommended that administrators draw up each year a budget
of income and expenditure. However, it is left to particular law to make this an
obligation and to determine more precisely how it is to be presented.
Can. 1285 Solely within the limits of ordinary administration, administrators
are allowed to make gifts for pious purposes or Christian charity out of the
movable goods which do not form part of the stable patrimony.
Can. 1286 Administrators of temporal goods:
1° in making contracts of employment, are accurately to observe also,
according to the principles taught by the Church, the civil laws relating to
labor and social life
2° are to pay to those who work for them under contract a just and honest
wage which will be sufficient to provide for their needs and those of their
dependents.
Can. 1287 §1 Where ecclesiastical goods of any kind are not lawfully
withdrawn from the power of governance of the diocesan Bishop, their
administrators, both clerical and lay, are bound to submit each year to the
local Ordinary an account of their administration, which he is to pass on to his
finance committee for examination. Any contrary custom is reprobated.
§2 Administrators are to render accounts to the faithful concerning the goods
they have given to the Church, in accordance with the norms to be laid down by
particular law.
Can. 1288 Administrators are not to begin legal proceedings in the name of a
public juridical person, nor are they to contest them in a secular court,
without first obtaining the written permission of their proper Ordinary.
Can. 1289 Although they may not be bound to the work of administration by
virtue of an ecclesiastical office, administrators may not arbitrarily
relinquish the work they have undertaken. If they do so, and this occasions
damage to the Church, they are bound to restitution.
TITLE III: CONTRACTS AND
ESPECIALLY ALIENATION
Can. 1290 Without prejudice to Can. 1547 [5]
, whatever the local civil law decrees about contracts, both generally and
specifically, and about the voiding of contracts, is to be observed regarding
goods which are subject to the power of governance of the Church, and with the
same effect, provided that the civil law is not contrary to divine law, and that
canon law does not provide otherwise.
Can. 1291 The permission of the authority competent by law is required for
the valid alienation of goods which, by lawful assignment, constitute the stable
patrimony of a public juridical person, whenever their value exceeds the sum
determined by law.
Can. 1292 §1 Without prejudice to the provision of Can. 638 §3, when the
amount of the goods to be alienated is between the minimum and maximum sums to
be established by the Episcopal Conference for its region, the competent
authority in the case of juridical persons not subject to the diocesan Bishop is
determined by the juridical person's own statutes. In other cases, the competent
authority is the diocesan Bishop acting with the consent of the finance
committee, of the college of consultors, and of any interested parties. The
diocesan Bishop needs the consent of these same persons to alienate goods which
belong to the diocese itself.
§2 The permission of the Holy See also is required for the valid alienation
of goods whose value exceeds the maximum sum, or if it is a question of the
alienation of something given to the Church by reason of a vow, or of objects
which are precious by reason of their artistic or historical significance.
§3 When a request is made to alienate goods which are divisible, the request
must state what parts have already been alienated; otherwise, the permission is
invalid.
§4 Those who must give advice about or consent to the alienation of goods are
not to give this advice or consent until they have first been informed precisely
both about the economic situation of the juridical person whose goods it is
proposed to alienate and about alienations which have already taken place.
Can. 1293 §1 To alienate goods whose value exceeds the determined minimum
sum, it is also required that there be:
1° a just reason, such as urgent necessity, evident advantage, or a
religious, charitable or other grave pastoral reason;
2° a written expert valuation of the goods to be alienated.
§2 To avoid harm to the Church, any other precautions drawn up by lawful
authority are also to be followed.
Can. 1294 §1 Normally goods must not be alienated for a price lower than that
given in the valuation.
§2 The money obtained from alienation must be carefully invested for the
benefit of the Church, or prudently expended according to the purposes of the
alienation.
Can. 1295 The provisions of canon 12911294, to which the statutes of
juridical persons are to conform, must be observed not only in alienation, but
also in any dealings in which the patrimonial condition of the juridical person
may be jeopardized.
Can. 1296 When alienation has taken place without the prescribed canonical
formalities, but is valid in civil law, the competent authority must carefully
weigh all the circumstances and decide whether, and if so what, action is to be
taken, namely personal or real, by whom and against whom, to vindicate the
rights of the Church.
Can. 1297 It is the duty of the Episcopal Conference, taking into account the
local circumstances, to determine norms about the leasing of ecclesiastical
goods, especially about permission to be obtained from the competent
ecclesiastical authority.
Can. 1298 Unless they are of little value, ecclesiastical goods are not to be
sold or leased to the administrators themselves or to their relatives up to the
fourth degree of consanguinity or affinity, without the special written
permission of the competent authority.
FOOTNOTES
5
Translators' note: It would appear that this reference should read 'Can. 1259'.
TITLE IV : PIOUS DISPOSITIONS IN
GENERAL AND PIOUS FOUNDATIONS
Can. 1299 §1 Those who by the natural law and by canon law can freely dispose
of their goods may leave them to pious causes either by an act inter vivos or by
an act mortis causa.
§2 In arrangements mortis causa in favor of the Church, the formalities of
the civil law are as far as possible to be observed. If these formalities have
been omitted, the heirs must be advised of their obligation to fulfill the
intention of the testator.
Can. 1300 The intentions of the faithful who give or leave goods to pious
causes, whether by an act inter vivos or by an act mortis causa, once lawfully
accepted, are to be most carefully observed, even in the manner of the
administration and the expending of the goods, without prejudice to the
provisions of Can. 1301 §3.
Can. 1301 §1 The Ordinary is the executor of all pious dispositions whether
made mortis causa or inter vivos.
§2 By this right the Ordinary can and must ensure, even by making a
visitation, that pious dispositions are fulfilled. Other executors are to render
him an account when they have finished their task.
§3 Any clause contrary to this right of the Ordinary which is added to a last
will, is to be regarded as nonexistent.
Can. 1302 §1 Anyone who receives goods in trust for pious causes, whether by
an act inter vivos or by last will, must inform the Ordinary about the trust, as
well as about the goods in question, both movable and immovable, and about any
obligations attached to them. If the donor has expressly and totally forbidden
this, the trust is not to be accepted.
§2 The Ordinary must demand that goods left in trust be safely preserved and,
in accordance with Can. 1301, he must ensure that the pious disposition is
executed.
§3 When goods given in trust to a member of a religious institute or society
of apostolic life, are destined for a particular place or diocese or their
inhabitants, or for pious causes, the Ordinary mentioned in §§1 and 2 is the
local Ordinary. Otherwise, when the person is a member of a pontifical clerical
institute or of a pontifical clerical society of apostolic life, it is the major
Superior; when of other religious institutes, it is the member's proper
Ordinary.
Can. 1303 §1 In law the term pious foundation comprises:
1° autonomous pious foundations, that is, aggregates of things destined for
the purposes described in Can. 114 §2, and established as juridical persons by
the competent ecclesiastical authority.
2° nonautonomous pious foundations, that is, temporal goods given in any way
to a public juridical person and carrying with them a longterm obligation, such
period to be determined by particular law. The obligation is for the juridical
person, from the annual income, to celebrate Masses, or to perform other
determined ecclesiastical functions, or in some other way to fulfill the
purposes mentioned in Can. 114 §2.
§2 If the goods of a nonautonomous pious foundation are entrusted to a
juridical person subject to the diocesan Bishop, they are, on the expiry of the
time, to be sent to the fund mentioned in Can. 1274 §1, unless some other
intention was expressly manifested by the donor. Otherwise, the goods fall to
the juridical person itself.
Can. 1304 §1 For the valid acceptance of a pious foundation by a juridical
person, the written permission of the Ordinary is required. He is not to give
this permission until he has lawfully established that the juridical person can
satisfy not only the new obligations to be undertaken, but also any already
undertaken. The Ordinary is to take special care that the revenue fully
corresponds to the obligations laid down, taking into account the customs of the
region or place.
§2 Other conditions for the establishment or acceptance of a pious foundation
are to be determined by particular law.
Can. 1305 Money and movable goods which are assigned as a dowry are
immediately to be put in a safe place approved by the Ordinary, so that the
money or the value of the movable goods is safeguarded; as soon as possible,
they are to be carefully and profitably invested for the good of the foundation,
with an express and individual mention of the obligation undertaken, in
accordance with the prudent judgment of the Ordinary when he has consulted those
concerned and his own finance committee.
Can. 1306 §1 All foundations, even if made orally, are to be recorded in
writing.
§2 One copy of the document is to be carefully preserved in the curial
archive and another copy in the archive of the juridical person to which the
foundation pertains.
Can. 1307 §1 When the provisions of canon 13001302 and 1287 have been
observed, a document showing the obligations arising from the pious foundations
is to be drawn up. This is to be displayed in a conspicuous place, so that the
obligations to be fulfilled are not forgotten.
§2 Apart from the book mentioned in Can. 958 §1, another book is to be kept
by the parish priest or rector, in which each of the obligations, their
fulfillment and the offering given, is to be recorded.
Can. 1308 §1 The reduction of Mass obligations, for a just and necessary
reason, is reserved to the Apostolic See, without prejudice to the provisions
which follow.
§2 If this is expressly provided for in the document of foundation, the
Ordinary may reduce Mass obligations on the ground of reduced income.
§3 In the cases of Masses given in legacies or in foundations of any kind,
which are solely for the purpose of Masses, the diocesan Bishop has the power,
because of the diminution of income and for as long as this persists, to reduce
the obligations to the level of the offering lawfully current in the diocese. He
may do this, however, only if there is no one who has an obligation to increase
the offering and can actually be made to do so.
§4 The diocesan Bishop has the power to reduce the obligations or legacies of
Masses which bind an ecclesiastical institute, if the revenue has become
insufficient to achieve in a fitting manner the proper purpose of the institute.
§5 The supreme Moderator of a clerical religious institute of pontifical
right has the powers given in §§3 and 4.
Can. 1309 Where a fitting reason exists, the authorities mentioned in Can.
1308 have the power to transfer Mass obligations to days, churches or altars
other than those determined in the foundation.
Can. 1310 §1 The intentions of the faithful in pious cases may be reduced,
directed or changed by the Ordinary, if the donor has expressly conceded this
power to him, but only for a just and necessary reason.
§2 If it has become impossible to carry out the obligations because of
reduced income, or for any other reason arising without fault on the part of the
administrators, the Ordinary can diminish these obligations in an equitable
manner, with the exception of the reduction of Masses, which is governed by the
provisions of Can. 1308. He may do so only after consulting those concerned and
his own finance committee, keeping in the best way possible to the intention of
the donor.
§3 In all other cases, the Apostolic See is to be approached.