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CHAPTER II. Expiatory Penalties
Can.1336 §1. In addition to other penalties which the law may have established, the following are expiatory
penalties which can affect an offender either perpetually, for a prescribed time, or for an indeterminate time:
1/ a prohibition or an order concerning residence in a certain place or territory;
2/ privation of a power, office, function, right, privilege, faculty, favor, title, or insignia, even merely
3/ a prohibition against exercising those things listed under n. 2, or a prohibition against exercising them in
a certain place or outside a certain place; these prohibitions are never under pain of nullity;
4/ a penal transfer to another office;
5/ dismissal from the clerical state.
§2. Only those expiatory penalties listed in §1, n. 3 can be latae sententiae.
Can.1337 §1. A prohibition against residing in a certain place or territory can affect both clerics and religious;
however, the order to reside in a certain place or territory can affect secular clerics and, within the limits of the
§2. To impose an order to reside in a certain place or territory requires the consent of the ordinary of that
place unless it is a question of a house designated for clerics doing penance or being rehabilitated even from
Can.1338 §1. The privations and prohibitions listed in can. 1336, §1, nn. 2 and 3, never affect powers, offices,
functions, rights, privileges, faculties, favors, titles, or insignia which are not subject to the power of the superior
who establishes the penalty.
§2. Privation of the power of orders is not possible but only a prohibition against exercising it or some of its
acts; likewise, privation of academic degrees is not possible.
§3. The norm given in can. 1335 for censures must be observed for the prohibitions listed in can. 1336, §1,