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505

  1. For anyone to be eligible for the office of prior provincial, besides the conditions mentioned in nn. 443 and  459, § I, it is required that:
    1. he be thirty years old and ten years from first profession;
    2. he shall not have been prior provincial in the same province for the two four-year terms immediately preceding;
    3. he is not a visitator general in that province.
  2. If a brother cannot be elected because of a lack of one or more of the conditions mentioned in § I, 1, 2, and 3, the brethren may postulate him to the Master of the Order.
Constitution
In fieri:
No
Valere coepit:
Primo promulgata:

503

  1. If it happens that a prior provincial ceases to hold office before the end of the four-year term, the Master of the Order, after consulting the vicar and the council of the province, shall determine the date of the election and the conditions – namely, whether the prior provincial shall be elected in an ordinary provincial chapter or in a simple elective assembly.
  2. In this case, the Master of the Order has power to shorten or extend the four-year term of the prior provincial to be elected in such a way that the following election may be celebrated again during the normal provincial chapter at the usual time.
Constitution
In fieri:
No
Valere coepit:
Primo promulgata:

502

The election of a prior provincial shall normally occur in a provincial chapter, or extraordinarily in a simple elective assembly (see n. 351, II).

Constitution
In fieri:
No
Valere coepit:
Primo promulgata:

492

Given the requirements of n. 443, § I, all the electors are eligible except for those who have exercised the same office for the same convent in the chapter immediately preceding.

Constitution
In fieri:
No
Valere coepit:
Primo promulgata:

490

  1. The right to elect a socius to a prior going to a provincial chapter belongs only to those convents which, for six months before the chapter, have eight voters, unless during the year the aforesaid number has been diminished by the death of a brother (see Appendix, no. 26).
  2. Convents, however, that have at least sixteen voters have the right to elect two socii, three if they have twenty-four voters, and four if they have more than thirty-two.
  3. The brothers in a convent which does not have a sufficient number of voters to elect a socius to the prior going to a provincial chapter shall be joined to a college for electing
    a delegate.
Constitution
In fieri:
No
Valere coepit:
Primo promulgata:

489

The socius of a conventual prior going to a provincial chapter is the brother elected by a convent to have a vote in the provincial chapter.

Constitution
In fieri:
No
Valere coepit:
Primo promulgata:

474

Without prejudice to n. 373, 1, the right of appointing a conventual prior (see Appendix, n. 23) devolves upon the prior provincial:

  1. when a convent, at the time of a prioral vacancy, does not have the conditions mentioned in n. 260; if it fulfils those conditions but one or more of the voters will not or cannot cast their vote, then one voter is sufficient to carry out an election legitimately provided he waits until the last day of a month;
  2. when all the voters have renounced their vote and have not been reinstated by the prior provincial;
  3. when the voters have not elected or postulated within a month of coming to know of the prioral vacancy, or of the cassation or non-acceptance of the previous election;
  4. when, three months have elapsed from the prioral vacancy, the convent, for any reason whatsoever, still does not have a confirmed prior, without prejudice to 302, § II.
  5. when in the process of election there have been seven inconclusive ballots;
  6. when the voters elect the same brother again after the first election has been cassated, unless that election was cassated only because of a defect of form and not because of the person elected;
  7. when there have been two or at most three elections confirmed by the prior provincial and not accepted by those elected, then after the second election the prior provincial may, and after the third, he must, appoint a prior.
Constitution
In fieri:
No
Valere coepit:
Primo promulgata:

471

The letter of confirmation and of acceptance shall be read in the presence of the community. Then, when the profession of faith has been made by the person elected (see Appendix n. 21), he is understood to have taken possession of the office of prior (see n. 301).

Constitution
In fieri:
No
Valere coepit:
Primo promulgata:

469

  1. One who is elected prior may accept or refuse his election (see n. 466); but the prior provincial may command him, even under formal precept, to accept the burden of priorship.
  2. A prior actually in office cannot be forced to accept the priorship of another convent.
Constitution
In fieri:
No
Valere coepit:
Primo promulgata:

467

  1. Having consulted brothers of sound judgement from outside the community, the prior provincial may confirm or cassate an election and accept or reject a postulation, if he judges that the good of the Order demands this, even if the election has been carried out according to law; he shall not, however, defer his decision any longer than is necessary.
  2. If it seems to the prior provincial that the legitimate postulation should be confirmed admitted, he himself shall have recourse to the Master of the Order for a dispensation; having obtained it, he may confirm the one postulated in accordance with § I.
Constitution
In fieri:
No
Valere coepit:
Primo promulgata: