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Delegata potestas non potest delegari is a principle in constitutional and administrative law that means in Latin that "no delegated powers can be further delegated". Alternatively, it can be stated delegatus non potest delegare ("one to whom power is delegated cannot himself further delegate that power"). [1]
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The axiom "That it may be permitted to him to depose emperors" qualified the early medieval balance of power embodied in the letter Famuli vestrae pietatis of Pope Gelasius I to the Eastern Roman Emperor Anastasius (494), which outlined the separation and complementarity of spiritual and temporal powers - auctoritas (spiritual) and potestas or ...
Delegata potestas non potest delegari; Derogation; Dispensation. Taxa Innocentiana; Faculty; Indult; ... [7] Andorra. The Bishop of Urgell is a ruling co-prince of ...
Ratum sed non consummatum; ... Delegata potestas non potest delegari; Derogation; Dispensation. ... Automatic suspensions, reserved to the Pope (7 censures) [7]
The Catholic Church developed the inquisitorial system in the Middle Ages. [7] This judicial system features collegiate panels of judges and an investigative form of proceeding, [8] in contradistinction to the adversarial system found in the common law of England and many of her former colonies, which utilises concepts such as juries and single ...
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On 15 August 2015, Pope Francis issued the motu proprio Mitis et Misericors Iesus which amended canons 1357 to 1377 of the CCEO. [7] It reformed the procedures for matrimonial nullity trials and instituted a briefer process. [8]