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    Bigamy (in Canon Law)
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According to the strict meaning, the word should signify the marrying of a second after the death of the first wife, in contradistinction to polygamy, which is having two simultaneous wives. The present usage in criminal law of applying the term bigamy to that which is more strictly called polygamy is, according to Blackstone (Lib. IV, n. 163), a corruption of the true meaning of bigamy.
Canonically viewed, bigamy denotes (a) the condition of a man married to two real or interpretative wives in succession, and as a consequence (b) his unfitness to receive, or exercise after reception, tonsure, minor and sacred orders. This unfitness gives rise to an irregularity which is an impediment impedient and not diriment, hence orders conferred in violation of it are valid but illicit. This irregularity is not a punishment, medicinal nor punitive, as there is no sin nor fault of any kind in a man marrying a second wife after the death of his first, or a third after the death of his second; it is a bar against his receiving or exercising any ecclesiastical order or dignity.
ORIGIN
This irregularity is not affixed to bigamy by either the natural or Mosaic law. It has its true origin in the apostolic injunction of St. Paul : "It behoveth, therefore, a bishop to be blameless, the husband of one wife" ( 1 Timothy 3:2 ); "Let deacons be the husbands of one wife" (loc. cit., 12) and, ". . . the husband of one wife" (Tit., i, 6). By these words the Apostle does not enjoin marriage on bishops and deacons [Sts. Paul, Titus, and Timothy were celibates as were, according to Tertullian ("Monogamy", iv, in "Ante Nicene Fathers", Amer. Edit.) all the Apostles with exception of St. Peter], but he forbids bigamists to be admitted to Sacred orders. Owing to the small number of those who practiced celibacy at the coming of Christ, the Apostles found it impossible to supply celibates for bishops, priests, and deacons and were forced to admit married men to Sacred orders. Blamelessness of life, however, was required, and since iteration of marriage was considered by the Apostles and the people as a strong presumption of incontinency it was decreed that should the bishop-elect (priest- or deacon-elect) be a married man, he must have had only one wife, and further, that after his ordination he should live apart from her. St. Epiphanius (Hær. lxiv, 4) and St. Jerome (Epist. Contra Vigilantium, 1) assert that such was the general custom of the Church. This practice of celibacy before or after ordination was universal in all the Churches of the East as well as of the West until about the year A.D. 700 when in the Synod of Trullo concession was made to Greek priests to cohabit with the wives they had married before ordination. They were forbidden, however, to marry again under penalty of absolute deposition from the ministry. In the Pauline injunction no mention is made of subdeacons or clerics in minor orders, for the simple reason that those orders were not then instituted. The Apostolic Canons (fourth century), which extended the Pauline prohibition to all grades of the sacrament of orders, were not universally observed. Vestiges of a lax discipline on this point are to be met with in France (Council of Orange, c. xxv) and in Spain (Counc. of Toledo, cc. iii and iv). The Church of Rome, on the contrary, strictly followed the Apostolic canons. This is evident from the decrees of the Sovereign Pontiffs Innocent I (401-417), Hilary (461-469), Gregory I (590-604), Celestine III (1191-98), and Innocent III (1198-1216). Gregory IX (1227-41) and Gregory X (1271-76) further decreed that bigamists should be deprived of every clerical privilege and the right to wear the clerical garb and tonsure under penalty of excommunication. The Council of Trent finally forbade bigamists to exercise functions attached to minor orders , even though these functions were, on account of the necessity of the times, allowed to be performed by laymen (Sess. XXIII, c. xvii, de Reform.).
The reason for the existence of this irregularity is twofold: moral and mystical. The moral reason, which was that of the Orientals and some Latin Fathers, is the presumed incontinency on the part of the bigamist and his consequent unfitness to discharge efficiently the office of the priesthood among a people who looked with great suspicion upon a bigamist and held him in little or no esteem. The mystical reason, which was and is the primary reason of the Western Church (it admits the moral reason, but as secondary to the mystical ) is the defect in the perfect resemblance of the second marriage to the great type of Christian marriage -- the mystical union of Christ with the Church. This union is the union of one husband ( Christ ) with one spouse (the Church ) without spot or blemish. Second marriages destroy the unity of one husband with one virgin wife, and cause a dividing of one flesh with two bodies, instead of cementing the union of two bodies in one, according to Genesis, ii, 24, "They shall be two [one husband, one wife] in one flesh". This division of one body with two, instead of union with one body, is the bed-rock of this irregularity. This defect in the perfect resemblance of the second marriage (real or interpretative) to the great type of marriage gives rise to the irregularity, and to the name by which it is known, "ex defectu sacramenti". It is not proper that one who has received a sacrament defective in its resemblance to its exemplar should become a dispenser of sacraments to others.
DIVISION
In the first centuries there was only one kind of bigamy called true, or real, or proper. A second kind, called interpretative or fictitious, was afterwards added. In the Middle Ages a third kind, called similar , was introduced by the scholastics ( Devoti, can. univ., II, p. 206). Durandus was the first to use the term similitudinaria (Specul., pars. I, de dispens. Juxta. n. 6). Since then the traditional division has been and is threefold, viz. real, interpretative, and similar. Many canonists of this century and last hold that similar bigamy should not be included under the irregularity ex bigamia . Another division is made, but there is no unanimity concerning it, i.e. bigamy ex defectu sacramenti (by reason of defective sacrament ) and bigamy ex delicto (by reason of guilt). D'Annibale (Summul. Theol., Pars. 1, n. 417 and 418, note 11 fourth edit.) holds that similar bigamists and not a few interpretative bigamists are irregular ex delicto , and not ex defectu sacramenti . St. Alphonsus (lib. VII, de IrregUl., n. 436) and very many others, as well as the National Synods of the Syrians (an. 1888, p. 173, edit. 1899) and of the Copts (Cairo, an. 1898, p. 142), class all three kinds of bigamists as irregular ex defectu sacramenti. Bigamy in general is the state of a man who has really or interpretatively contracted and consummated two valid or two invalid marriages, or one valid and the other invalid, or one real, and the other a spiritual, marriage. Two things are essential to every kind of bigamy: (1) a marriage valid or invalid-adulterous connections or concubinage do not enter into the question at all; (2) a carnal knowledge by which the parties legally married become one flesh, and without which there is neither bigamy nor irregularity.
Real bigamy demands two valid and legal and consummated marriages with virgins ; therefore, two real wives one after the other. It is indifferent whether or not the marriages took place before or after baptism, or one before and the other after; the second successive marriage imperfectly symbolizes "the great Sacrament of Christ in the Church " ( Ephesians 5:32 ), and the irregularity is present ( Pope Innocent I, Decret., can. 13, dist. 34). There is, therefore, no real bigamy (a) if either or both marriages are invalid, (b) if either or both have not been consummated, (c) if either or both women have not been virgins, (d) if one of the two ceremonies was a valid, consummated marriage, and the other a mere betrothal followed by carnal union.
 Interpretative bigamy  is the state of a man who has not  as a matter of fact had two legal wives in succession, but whose  matrimonial ventures--whether one or two--are accompanied with such  circumstances as to warrant the  law  by a legal fiction to hold him as a bigamist and irregular. It is to be remembered  that the laws  which govern fictitious  (similar and interpretative) bigamy must be strictly construed, for  two reasons: (1) because there is question of an irregularity  --something  odious; and (2) it is a fiction of  law  and therefore does not hold unless in  those cases expressly mentioned in the  law  (Fagnanus, cap. In Præsen., n.  23, de Probat.).  Pope Benedict XIV  wisely remarks (Ad addendum, 15 February, 1753, par. 15), "It is  the sole  right  of the  legislator, and beyond the power of any private author or doctor,  to draw legal conclusion from a fiction of  law. Many, therefore, of the ablest  canonists of recent years (v.g. D'Annibale, Gaspari, Icard, Wernz,  Lombardi,  Ballerini  -Palmieri), as  also the  national synods  of the Copts  and  Syrians, restrict real and interpretative  bigamies to the case where a man marries either two valid and legal  wives, or a  widow, or a corrupt woman, or knows his wife carnally  after she has been corrupted by a third party. 
Interpretative bigamy is threefold:--
(1) When a man contracts and consummates only one, and that a valid marriage, or weds one wife to whom he is united in one flesh, yet the circumstances are such that the law considers two marriages and two wives. Of this class there are three cases: (a) When a single man marries a widow already made one flesh with a former husband (Decretal Greg., Lib. I, Tit. xxi, Cap. iii). Here the woman has had two husbands and has divided her flesh with two instead of being cemented to only one. Her marriage to the second husband is defective in its resemblance to the marriage symbol--union of Christ with the Church ; the second husband is not the only husband of the one wife who herself should have been the wife of only one husband. As the wife in this case has had two real husbands, so, by fiction of law, her husband is considered to have had two interpretative wives. (b) When he marries an unmarried woman, already by a third party corrupted (Pope Hilary, Synod. Rom. Cap. ii, Dist. XXXIV, c. ix, Decret.). Here again is a division of flesh with two instead of union with one, and hence the defect, and, as a consequence, the irregularity. (c) When he carnally knows his own wife after she has committed adultery or has been forcibly oppressed (Decretum, c. xi; c. xii). The husband in this case is not barred from orders unless the adultery of the wife whom he as a layman has married was conclusively proved ; nevertheless, in this case, as in cases (a) and (b), ignorance on the part of the husband (sc. of the widowhood or corruption or adultery or rape of his wife) would not except him from bigamy and irregularity, since there is here question of an irregularity ex defectu sacramenti and not ex delicto . The defect is present irrespective of his knowledge.
(2) When he marries once, but the marriage is invalid. (a) The one in Sacred orders who marries a widow-marriage invalid on account of diriment impediment of S. Orders-and is carnally joined to her, is an interpretative bigamist and irregular (Cap. VII, Tit. XXI, De. Big.). Pope Innocent (loc. cit.) says that although this cleric is not a real bigamist, yet with him, as with a real bigamist, it was not lawful to dispense as the husband of a widow, not because of the defect in the sacrament, but on account of the marital intention joined with carnal union. Although not expressed in the above canon, yet it is the common opinion that the cleric in major order who marries a woman corrupted by a third party is a bigamist and irregular. He would not be irregular if We married a woman seduced by himself and known by no other man (Schmalz., Tit. XXI, De Bigam., n. 6). Civil marriage will suffice in this case, even where the Tridentine law is published (S. U. I., December 22, 1880). (b) Invalid by reason of a preexisting marriage bond ( ligamen ), as, for instance, where the man marries a woman who has been divorced, repudiated, or rejected by a former husband, or who has divorced or left him. In this case the marriage is defective, the woman having shared her body with two, and hence he who married her is irregular for the above-mentioned reason (Lib. 1, Tit. XXI, C. I; Dist. XXXIV, Can. xv). (c) If the marriage was invalid by reason of a diriment impediment other than order and ligamen , the more prominent opinion holds that the irregularity is incurred. Fagnanus (Comment., Cap. iv, De Big., n. 45) asserts that the prelates of the Rota, to whom the case was specially referred by the pope, decided that a cleric in minor orders who contracted and consummated an invalid marriage with a widow was an interpretative bigamist and irregular and stood in need of dispensation, and that Pope Urban, upon the strength of that decision, granted dispensation. Many of the best canonists of today (e.g. D'Annibale and Gaspari) hold the contrary. The case is not expressed in law, they say, and is a legal fiction which at all times is dangerous and is totally unwarranted if the two cases differ in every respect, as do these--the one being in major, and the other in minor orders ; the one in bad faith and the other in good faith. Yet, after all is said pro and con , it still remains true that the proximate cause of the irregularity in the law cited is identical with that of the second case, to wit, marital intent with carnal consummation.
 (3) When a man marries twice and either or both marriages are  invalid, as (a) he who having contracted. 
 and consummated a marriage with a  virgin, upon her death received Sacred  orders, and afterwards, 
 without any deception on his part, contracts and consummates a sacrilegious  and invalid  marriage with a  virgin  or  widow, becomes an interpretative  a  virgin  and irregular, not because  of any defect in the  sacrament  in the second marriage, which is  no marriage and no  sacrament, but because of the marital  intent followed by consummation by means of which the  necessary  division of his body with two has  been effected ( Innocent III, cap.  iii, iv, De Big.). Should the  cleric  feign, rather than honestly intend,  the second marriage, in order to accomplish the carnal union, some  are of the opinion that he does not incur the  irregularity, the marital intent required  by the  Innocentian law  not being verified;  others more commonly  affirm  that  irregularity  is contracted. The reason  given by the  affirmants is that the  Innocentian  marital intent is not so much the  intention  to  contract  a valid marriage, as to externally contract  and consummate,  an  intention  that is  always presumed to be present in such cases. External marriages are  always supposed to be free and  voluntary. Simulation is never presumed,  but must, on the contrary, be demonstrated. (b) Should the first  marriage before receiving Sacred orders be invalid on account of  any diriment  impediment  (ve.g.,  consanguinity  or the like),  although the case is not expressly stated in the  law, the general opinion, with a few  exceptions, is that he is an interpretative bigamist and irregular. In answer to  their opponents, the affirmants say that the marriage mentioned  (Cap. iv, De Big.) may have been invalid, as there is no  certainty  that it was valid, in which case  the argument from one  species  to another would be legitimate. (c)  Should both marriages be invalid, some assert there is no  interpretative bigamy or  irregularity. Certainly there is no law  for it. Others, as  St. Alphonsus (Vol. VII, n. 455; Francisco Suárez., Disp.  XLIX,  Sect. II, n. 11)  teach as the most common and notable opinion that there is present  the marital intent with the carnal consummation which alone  suffices to induce the irreclarity. Canonists differ in opinion as  to the case where two invalid marriages were contracted and  consummated in  good faith. The most  common and probable opinion is that  irregularity  is contracted, for the reason  that it is not the guilt of the desire, but the  intention  to  contract  and consummate the two marriages  which is the  reason  of  the  irregularity  as laid  down by  Innocent III  (Cap. 4, De  Big). By almost common  consent  the  irregularity  is said to be contracted by  the  cleric tonsured  or in  minor orders  or  layman  who, after having contracted and  consummated a marriage invalid on account of a known impediment  and  afterwards, whether his wife be living or dead, contracts and  consummates another marriage even with a  virgin. There is present in the case a  division of flesh and the marital intent  necessary  to produce  irregularity.
 Similar Bigamy  is nowhere clearly and expressly stated in  the  law. It owes its existence  to the almost  universal and constant teaching of canonists and  theologians  since the  time  of Durandus. Similar bigamy is  twofold: (1) When a religious who has been solemnly professed in a religious  order approved by the Church  marries a virgin  and carnally  knows her as such. (2) When a  cleric  in Sacred orders, in violation of  the  law of celibacy, contracts and  consummates a marriage with a  virgin. This form of bigamy presupposes  only one carnal marriage and a spiritual marriage, which are  interpretatively considered two  marriages, and each putative husband is  considered 
 to have two interpretative wives. The carnal marriages are invalid  by reason of the diriment impedi 
 ment of solemn  religious profession  and of orders respectively; but because of the marital intent  followed by carnal consummation, some claim that similar bigamy and irregularity  are  incurred by reason of the defective signification of the sacrilegious  marriage to  the symbol of matrimony; some admit that there is no bigamy, but an irregularity  arising  from the  sacrilegious  marriage; others again insist that there is an  irregularity  on account of some kind of a  defect in the  sacrament,  but there is no  law  declaring it to be bigamous and  irregular. Gaspari (De Sacra Ordin., nn.  393 sqq.) and others reject the first opinion altogether and very  conclusively show that the canons of  common law  and the canons of Gratian upon  which the first opinion is grounded are not to the point. Gaspari  shows that the  decrees  (Decretales--Lib. IV, Tit. 6, Cap. i, 2 and 4) of  Pope Alexander III  do not refer to bigamy  or  irregularity, but  speak of  suspensions  and  excommunication  ; that the Gratian canons  treat of religious men and  women  who have broken their  vows  and are  to be removed from their grade, and subjected to the same penances  as were at that period imposed upon bigamists.  Pope  Clement, in his  decree  (Lib. 4, Tit. Unicus de Cons. et  aff. Clem.) also speaks of  excommunication  and not  irregularity. The constitution of  Pius IX,  "Apostolicae Sedis"  imposes upon similar  bigamists  excommunication  reserved  to the  ordinaries, and  nothing more. It is evident, therefore, that the  law  affixes no note of  irregularity  to a so-called similar  bigamist. Practically speaking, however, there is little  difference, as the so-called similar bigamists are prevented, on  account of the censure and the  infamy  of their act, from receiving higher  orders or exercising those already received; and should they  solemnly exercise the functions of their grade, they would become irregular  on account of  the violated censure. The  bishop  can, when they have put away the  woman, done penance, and led edifying  lives,  absolve  them from  the censure and dispense them from any  irregularity, if any has been incurred, and  promote them to higher orders. It is   certain, however,  that religious, not in Sacred orders, with simple  vows, who  contract  and consummate marriage with a virgin  or with a  renegade  nun  who has broken her  solemn  vows, is neither a bigamist  nor  irregular. No such  case is found in the canon.
EFFECTS
Bigamy begets irregularity, the principal effect of which is to entirely exclude from the reception and use and exercise of any ecclesiastical order and benefice attached to any order. Pope Gregory X (Lib. 1, Tit. XII, Cap. Unic. in Sexto) further declared that bigamists should be stripped of every clerical privilege, removed from the protection of the ecclesiastical, and subjected to civil, jurisdiction, deprived of the canon safeguarding their person from personal attack, and forbidden to wear the tonsure and clerical garb, under penalty of excommunication to be incurred at the moment of their attempted marriage. The Council of Trent also forbids to bigamists the exercise of any office or function of minor orders, even of such functions as are usually, by permission, allowed to married laymen on account of scarcity of celibate clerics (Sess. XXIII, C. 17, De Reform). Clerics in minor orders whose marriages were invalid are not comprehended under the Tridentine law. Clerics in Sacred orders and religious clerics, who, by virtue of the law of celibacy and religious profession, are spiritually wedded to the clerical and religious states respectively, are not comprehended under the law stripping them of every clerical privilege, and the use of tonsure and clerical garb, and this out of respect to their sacred character. Clerics on the other hand, in minor orders are not wedded to the clerical state; hence they come under the law. Bishops who knowingly an without permission confer Sacred orders on a bigamist are by the Third Council of Arles (Dist . LV, Can. 2) suspended from saying Mass for one year, and by the decretal law (Lib. 1, Tit. 21, Cap. ii) were deprived of the power of giving to others the orders they had conferred on a bigamist. Since the constitution "Apostolicae Sedis", the only punishment is that which the Holy Father may deem fit to impose upon the bishop violating the canons.
DISPENSATION
 This  irregularity  is  removed neither by  baptism  nor  religious solemn profession, but by  dispensation. The  pope, and he alone, can dispense with this  prohibition to receive orders. He can dispense with a mere  ecclesiastical law, such as is the Pauline injunction, although it  is of  Apostolic  origin. Pope Lucius III, whilst  urging the unlawfulness of granting a  dispensation  in   face of St. Paul's  prohibition, did,  however, grant it to Nicholas de Tudeschis, a celebrated canonist,  better known as Abbas Panormitanus (Glossa, ad verb.   Fiat  ,  C.  Lector, XVIII, Dist.  XXXIV). Dispensations in cases of one who marries two real wives or  a  widow  are exceedingly difficult  to obtain (Lib. I, Tit. 9, De Renunt. Sec. Personae). Worthy of  note is the fact that the  dispensation  does not efface the defect in  the  sacrament, but the  unfitness arising therefrom is removed. It is the universal opinion  of today, whatever may have been the opinion of canonists in the  past, that the  pope  alone can  dispense all bigamists, real and interpretative, as regards minor  as well as Sacred  orders, and the collation and use of the simple, as of great, benefices. The  reason  is evident:  bishops  cannot dispense in the  laws  of their superiors, to wit, the pope  or General Council. Some  canonists claim that  bishops, by  virtue of the  Council of Trent  (Sess. XXIV, C. 6, De Ref), can dispense with interpretative bigamy  arising from  occult  guilt. D'Annibale (loc. cit.) on this point well remarks that it is  exceedingly difficult for such acts to be private. Sanchez asserts  that it is of little moment whether or not the fact is private  or 
 public, since the  irregularity  is not   ex delicto  , but  ex defectu Sacramenti  . It is  certain  that  bishops, where there is a grave and  positive  doubt  about the existence  of  interpretative bigamy and its consequent  irregularity, can grant  dispensation.  Bishops  can dispense with all similar  bigamists as above defined after they have left their putative  wives, done penance, and led edifying lives, and can admit them to  the exercise of all  ecclesiastical  functions (Lib. IV, Tit. VI, Cap. i, Qui Clerici et Vov.; Lib. III,  Tit. III, Cap. Sane 4). Regular  prelates, i.e. generals, 
provincials,  abbots,  priors,  guardians, having quasi-episcopal  jurisdiction, cannot, in virtue of the common law  and apart from special privileges, dispense  their own subjects with real or 
 interpretative bigamy, even as regards  minor  as well as major orders. No such  power has been given them by  pope  or general council. By virtue of  privilege  of  Pius V  (Constit. "Rom. Pont. Circumspecta",  June 21, 1571, Sec. 3), joined with that of the  Council of Trent  (Sess. XXIV, Cap. vi,  etc.) power to dispense in irregularities on account of occult  guilt, given to bishops, was extended to regular prelates. By virtue of the privilege  of  Sixtus IV, regular  prelates  cannot dispense with real,  interpretative, and public similar bigamists (P. Venantius, 0. F.  M., Compend. Privil. Regularium, ed. 1906; Piat, Vol. II, p. 577,  2). As a matter of fact, the Sixtine constitution (Reg. Univ.  Eccles., August 31, 1474) makes a special exception in the case of  bigamy. The general opinion, that they cannot grant  dispensation  to their subjects who are real  or interpretative bigamists, is evident from the fact that the decretal law  (C. Altercationis in 6º) has  reserved that faculty to the  pope  ;  second,  Tridentine law  is against such  faculty; third, declaration of s. c. c. (3 January, 1589) has so  decided; fourth, present practice of granting  privileges  and faculties to  religious  orders as a rule makes an  exception of bigamy, e.g., constit. of  Leo XII, 1826, "Plura Intra", directed to  the  Society of Jesus, withholds the  faculty of dispensing with bigamists. If religious  prelates  do possess the faculty of  dispensing in such cases, it must be by virtue of some special privilege  of recent date. Bishops  of the  United States  and of  England, and  vicars Apostolic  subject to the  Propaganda  (these latter only   in  foro interno  ) have special faculties (Formula I, II, and IV  respectively) to dispense interpretative bigamists; and in cases of  paramount importance, on account of great scarcity of  priests,  bishops  in the  United States  can dispense also with real  bigamists. According to general opinion, the multiplication of  marriages does not increase the number of irregularities  contracted; so the bigamist and trigamist equally incur only one irregularity. In  applications for  dispensations  mention of only two out of the many marriages is sufficient, and  that whether they are all real or interpretative or mixed bigamies.  In the opinion, however, of those who divide interpretative  bigamies into   ex defectu sacramenti  and   ex delicto  bigamies, it is  necessary, in the  case where a grave  sin  is the cause  of the  irregularity, to  name both the  irregularity  ex delicto  (with sin  ) and the  irregularity  ex defectu sacramenti  (without  sin  ).
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