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350

A brother who holds the office of vicar of the province upon the death or removal of the prior provincial must report to the provincial chapter on his administration.

Constitution
Start Date

349

The vicar of the province remains in office until the newly elected or postulated prior provincial is present where the chapter is located, and who from that moment shall discharge the office of vicar of the province and preside over the chapter.

Ordination
Start Date

348

  1. When a prior provincial ceases to hold office in accordance with n. 344, § I, the vicar of the province, as laid down in the statute of the province, will be: either the prior of the convent where the next provincial chapter is to be held or, if that convent does not have a prior at that time, the prior of the convent where the last chapter was held and so on, retrospectively; or the prior provincial himself who has left office. (Bo, n. 300)
  2. When a prior provincial leaves office for any other reason, the vicar of the province will be the socius of that prior provincial up to the day immediately before the vigil of the provincial chapter, from which day the vicar will be the conventual prior where the next provincial chapter is to be held, or if that convent does not have a prior at that time, the prior of the convent where the last chapter was held and so on, retrospectively. The latter ruling should be observed even if there is no socius.
  3. When a prior provincial is prevented from exercising jurisdiction, the Master of the Order must be approached. If this is not possible, the socius of the prior provincial becomes the vicar of the province, as set out above in § II.
  4. A prior provincial who, without hope of recovery within six months, is prevented by illness from properly fulfilling his duties, shall resign from office.
  5. If he is unable or unwilling to resign, the socius of the prior provincial must summon the provincial council and preside over it even without the prior provincial. This council has power to approach the Master of the Order who shall either convoke an extraordinary elective chapter (see n. 351, § II) or appoint the vicar of the province as the vicar of the Master of the Order.
Ordination
End Date
Start Date

378

  1. In each province there shall be a bursar who shall have charge of the goods of the province in accordance with the norms established for administration.
  2. The brother who will have fulfilled this office may be proposed immediately for a second term, but not a third.
Constitution
End Date
Start Date

375

  1. Two years after a prior provincial has been confirmed in office, he must summon to the next provincial council, in addition to its members, regional priors, vicars provincial, and conventual priors, unless the provincial chapter has determined otherwise regarding regional priors, vicars provincial, and priors in remote regions.
  2. At this council meeting, all topics are to be dealt with that seem to be useful for the good of the province; first of all, there shall be a review of whether the ordinations and exhortations of the last provincial chapter and general chapter have been put into practice.
Ordination
End Date
Start Date

373

Among other things, the following must be dealt with in the provincial council:

  1. the appointment or removal of a regional prior vicar provincial and of a conventual prior;
  2. the presentation or removal of a pastor;
  3. the erection of a house as a convent, in accordance with n. 262;
  4. the cassation of a decision of a conventual chapter or council, councillors assigned to that convent being excluded from taking part in the cassation;
  5. the transfiliation of a brother;
  6. temporarily excluding a brother from active voting rights for a grave reason;
  7. a declaration of the fact for the dismissal of a brother in accordance with common law (CCL 694, § 2). 
Ordination
Start Date

372

  1. It is the duty of the provincial council to assist the provincial to perform his duties, especially with regard to decisions which had been made by the provincial chapter and which with the passage of time appear to be timely or necessary for promoting the apostolate and regular life.
  2. In the provincial council more important matters shall be decided by a decisive vote, unless it is determined otherwise in our legislation.
  3. If at any time the votes are tied, the president has the casting vote.
Constitution
End Date
Start Date

352

  1. The voters at a provincial chapter are:
    1. regional priors;
    2. vicars provincial elected in accordance with n. 389;
    3. conventual priors; if the prior cannot attend on account of sickness or another grave reason accepted by the prior pro­vincial, the subprior may take his place.
    4. socii of priors going to the chapter, in accordance with n. 490;
    5. delegates of the brothers, in accordance with nn. 497-501;
    6. a delegate of a non-prioral house with at least four brothers with active voting rights in the territory of any na­tion where there is no other house not another convent or another house of the same province. (B, n. 263, P, n. 492)
    7. a prior provincial who immediately before the chapter completed his term of office in that province.
  2. If the voters at a provincial chapter, elected in ac­cordance with the constitutions, are fewer than twenty, the statute of the province may make provision for extra voters. It is obliged to do this if there are fewer than ten voters. These, of whom there may not be more than three, are to be constituted such by election and not by personal entitlement.
Ordination
End Date
Start Date

348

  1. When a prior provincial ceases to hold office in accordance with n. 344, § I, the vicar of the province, as laid down in the statute of the province, will be: either the prior of the convent where the next provincial chapter is to be held or, if that convent does not have a prior at that time, the prior of the convent where the last chapter was held and so on, retrospectively; or the prior who is senior by profession in the province; or the prior provincial himself who has left office. (Bo, n. 300)
  2. When a prior provincial leaves office for any other reason, the vicar of the province will be the socius of that prior provincial up to the day immediately before the vigil of the provincial chapter, from which day the vicar will be the conventual prior where the next provincial chapter is to be held, or if that convent does not have a prior at that time, the prior of the convent where the last chapter was held and so on, retrospectively. The latter ruling should be observed even if there is no socius.
  3. When a prior provincial is prevented from exercising jurisdiction, the Master of the Order must be approached. If this is not possible, the socius of the prior provincial becomes the vicar of the province, as set out above in § II.
  4. A prior provincial who, without hope of recovery within six months, is prevented by illness from properly fulfilling his duties, shall resign from office.
  5. If he is unable or unwilling to resign, the socius of the prior provincial must summon the provincial council and preside over it even without the prior provincial. This council has power to approach the Master of the Order who shall either convoke an extraordinary elective chapter (see n. 351, § II) or appoint the vicar of the province as the vicar of the Master of the Order.
Ordination
Start Date