Ask Question

Canon 1687

Book 7: Processes
§1
Can. 1687 §1. After he has received the acts, the diocesan bishop, having consulted with the instructor and the assessor, and having considered the observations of the defender of the bond and, if there are any, the defense briefs of the parties, is to issue the sentence if moral certitude about the nullity of marriage is reached. Otherwise, he refers the case to the ordinary method.
§2
Can. 1687 §2. The full text of the sentence, with the reasons expressed, is to be communicated to the parties as swiftly as possible.
§3
Can. 1687 §3. An appeal against the sentence of the bishop is made to the metropolitan or to the Roman Rota; if, however, the sentence was rendered by the metropolitan, the appeal is made to the senior suffragan; if against the sentence of another bishop who does not have a superior authority below the Roman Pontiff, appeal is made to the bishop selected by him in a stable manner.
§4
Can. 1687 §4. If the appeal clearly appears merely dilatory, the metropolitan or the bishop mentioned in §3, or the dean of the Roman Rota, is to reject it by his decree at the outset; if the appeal is admitted, however, the case is remitted to the ordinary method at the second level.
💬

Have Questions About Canon Law?

Get instant, expert answers from our AI-powered Canon Law assistant. Trained on all 1,752 canons of the 1983 Code.

✓ Instant Answers ✓ All 1,752 Canons ✓ Expert Accuracy ✓ Free to Use
Try CanonLawAI Now →

Join thousands of priests, canonists, and faithful Catholics

← Back to Canon Law AI Search