Constitution of the Republic of Peru, 1933
From Roach Busters
CONSTITUTION
OF THE
REPUBLIC OF PERU
( April 9, 1933 )
OF THE
REPUBLIC OF PERU
( April 9, 1933 )
TITLE I
The State, Territory, and Nationality
The State, Territory, and Nationality
Art. 1. Peru is a democratic republic.
The power of the State emanates from the people and is exercised by officials with the limitations which the constitution and the laws establish.
Art. 2. The State is one and indivisible.
Art. 3. The territory of the State is inalienable.
Art. 4. Persons born in the territory of the Republic are Peruvians. The children of a Peruvian father or mother, whatever may have been the place of their birth, provided they are domiciled in the Republic or register themselves in the civil register or in the respective consulate, are also Peruvians. It is presumed that minors who are resident in the national territory, and are the children of unknown parents, have been born in Peru.
Art. 5. Adult aliens domiciled in the Republic for more than two consecutive years who renounce their nationality may be naturalized. Naturalization is granted according to the law and has only individual effect.
Their nationality of origin is not lost by persons born in Spanish territory who become naturalized Peruvians according to the procedure and requisites laid down by law and in conformity with the provisions of the treaty which is concluded with the Spanish Republic on the basis of reciprocity.
Art. 6. A foreign woman married to a Peruvian acquires the nationality of her husband. A Peruvian woman married to a foreigner retains Peruvian nationality unless it is expressly renounced.
Art. 7. Peruvian nationality is lost:
(1) By entering the armed service of a foreign power without the permission of Congress, or by accepting employment from another State which involves the exercise of authority or jurisdiction; and
(2) By acquiring foreign nationality. The case of reciprocity contemplated in the second paragraph of Article 5 is excepted.
TITLE II
Constitutional Guarantees
Constitutional Guarantees
Chapter I
National and Social Guarantees
National and Social Guarantees
Art. 8. Only for the public service may the law create, alter, or abolish taxes, and exempt from the payment thereof, wholly or in part.
There are no personal privileges as regards taxes.
Art. 9. The general budget determines annually the revenues and expenditures of the Republic. The law regulates the preparation, approval, and execution of the general budget. In the case of any sum collected or employed contrary to law, the person ordering the illegal collection or expenditure shall be held responsible. The person carrying the order into effect shall also be held responsible if he does not prove his innocence.
Immediate publication of the budgets and of the accounts of revenues and expenditures of all the branches of the public powers is obligatory, those who fail to comply being held responsible.
Art. 10. A special department, the functions of which shall be subject to the law, shall control the execution of the general budget of the Republic and the activities of agencies which collect or administer revenue or property of the State. The head of the department shall be appointed by the President of the Republic in agreement with the Council of Ministers. The law shall specify his duties.
Art. 11. The State guarantees the payment of the public debt contracted in conformity with the Constitution and the laws.
Art. 12. The law determines the monetary system of the Republic.
The issue of banknotes is the privilege of the State, which exercises it through a national central banking institution entrusted with the regulation of the currency.
Art. 13. A special department, the functions of which shall be determined by law, shall exercise, on behalf of the State, the supervision of banking enterprises.
Art. 14. The State shall maintain by the means at its disposal the stability of the currency and the free conversion of banknotes. Only in exceptional cases, at the request of the Executive Power and with the assent of the agency entrusted with the regulation of the currency and the head of the department supervising banking enterprises, shall Congress have the power to pass a law decreeing temporary non-conversion of banknotes.
Art. 15. National loans must be authorized or approved by law fixing the conditions and indicating the objects for which they are to be employed, which must be of a reproductive character or connected with national defense.
Art. 16. Industrial and commercial monopolies and cornering of the market are prohibited. The law shall fix the penalties to be imposed on offenders. Only the law may establish state monopolies and exclusive privileges solely in the national interest.
Art. 17. Commercial companies, national or foreign, are subject, without restrictions, to the laws of the Republic. In every state contract with foreigners, or in the concessions which grant them in the latters' favor, it must be expressly stated that they will submit to the laws and courts of the Republic and renounce all diplomatic claims.
Art. 18. No person may receive more than one salary or emolument from the State, whatever be his functions or post, with the exception of one more for teaching. Salaries or emoluments paid by local corporations or by societies subordinate in any form to the Executive Power are included in this prohibition.
Art. 19. Acts of persons who usurp public functions and posts conferred without the requesites laid down by the Constitution and the laws are null and void.
Art. 20. A person occupying a public post is directly and immediately responsible for his acts in the exercise of his functions. The law shall determine the manner of making this responsibility effective. The Ministry of Justice is obligated to demand compliance with the provisions of this article.
Art. 21. No person may exercise public functions designated in the Constitution without taking an oath to fulfill them.
Art. 22. Every official or public servant, civil or military, possessing property or income independent of his emoluments as such, is obliged expressly and specifically to declare them, in the manner determined by law.
Art. 23. The Constitution and the laws afford protection to and carry obligations equally for all the inhabitants of the Republic. It shall be possible to issue special laws because the nature of things so demands, but not because of the difference of persons.
Art. 24. No one is obliged to do what the law does not demand, nor may he be prevented from doing what it does not forbid.
Art. 25. No law has retroactive force or effect.
Art. 26. Claims may be submitted to Congress for infringements of the Constitution.
Art. 27. The State recognizes freedom of association and of contract. The conditions of their exercises are governed by law.
Art. 28. The law shall establish the maximum interest for loans of money. Every agreement to the contrary is null and void. Those who infringe this rule shall be punished.
Art. 29. Property is inviolable, whether it be material, intellectual, literay, or aristic. No one may be deprived of his own except for reason or public utility legally proven and after appraised compensation.
Art. 30. The State guarantees and protects the rights of authors and inventors. The law shall regulate their exercise.
Art. 31. Property, whoever may be the owner, is governed exclusively by the laws of the Republic, and is subject to the taxes, charges, and limitations established by them.
Art. 32. Foreigners, as regards property, are in the same condition as Peruvians, without being able in any case to invoke an exceptional position in this respect or have recourse to diplomatic claims.
Art. 33. Public things, the use of which is for all, such as rivers, lakes, and public roads, are not objects of private property.
Art. 34. Property must be used in harmony with social interests. The law shall fix the limitations and characteristics of the right of ownership of property.
Art. 35. The law may, for reasons of national interest, establish special restrictions and prohibitions for acquiring and transferring determined classes of property, whether this be by its nature, its condition, or its location in the territory.
Art. 36. Within fifty kilometers of the frontiers, foreigners may not acquire or possess, under any title, lands, waters, mines, or fuels directly or indirectly, individually or collectively, under pain of loss, to the benefit of the State, of the acquired property, except in the case of national necessity declared by express law.
Art. 37. Mines, lands, forests, waters, and, in general, all natural sources of wealth belong to the State, excepting legally acquired rights. This law shall fix the conditions of their utilization by the State, or of their concession, in ownership or usufruct, to private persons.
Art. 38. The State may, by virtue of a law, take over or nationalize land, sea, river, lake, and aerial transport, or other public services in private ownership, after compensation and in conformity with the laws in force.
Art. 39. The rates for passages and freights shall, without any exception, be fixed and collected solely in national currency.
Art. 40. The State recognizes the freedom of commerce and industry.
The law shall indicate the requirements to which its exercise is subject and the guarantees accorded to it. When required by public security or necessity, the law may lay down limitations or reservations to the said exercise, or authorize the Executive Power to lay them down without in any case such restrictions having a personal or confiscatory character.
Art. 41. The State shall receive part of the profits of mining enterprises, in the amount and proportion which the law shall necessarily determine.
Art. 42. The State guarantees the freedom of work. Any profession, industry, or occupation which is not contrary to morals, health, or public security may be exercised freely.
Art. 43. The State shall enact a law governing the collective labor contract.
Art. 44. Any stipulation in a labor contract which restricts the exercise of civil, political, and social rights is prohibited.
Art. 45. The State shall favor a system of participation by employees and workers in the profits of enterprises, and shall legislate upon the other aspects of relations between the former and the latter and upon the protection of employees and workers in general.
Art. 46. The State shall legislate upon the general organization and the securities of industrial labor, and upon the guarantees therein of life, health, and hygiene. The law shall fix the maximum conditions of labor, the compensation for the length of services rendered and for accidents, as well as minimum salaries in relation to the age, sex, nature of work, and conditions and requirements in the various regions of the country.
Art. 47. The State shall favor the preservation and extension of medium and small rural property, and may by means of a law and on payment of compensation, expropriate lands in private ownership, especially those which are not worked, in order to subdivide them or transfer them under the conditions which the law fixes.
Art. 48. The law shall establish a system of social security for the economic consequences of unemployment, age, illness, disability, and death; and shall encourage institutions of social solidarity, savings and insurance establishments, and cooperatives.
Art. 49. In extraordinary circumstances of social necessity, laws may be passed, or the Executive Power may be authorized to adopt measures tending to reduce the cost of living.
Goods shall not be expropriated in any of these cases without due compensation.
Art. 50. The State is charged with the supervision of public health and the care of private health, and shall pass laws providing for the control of hygiene and health as may be necessary, and also those which promote the physical, moral, and social improvement of the population.
Art. 51. Marriage, the family, and maternity are under the protection of the law.
Art. 52. It is the primary duty of the State to protect the physical, mental, and moral health of infants. The State defends the right of the child to home life, education, vocational guidance, and ample assistance when it finds itself abandoned, ill, or in misfortune. The State shall entrust the fulfilment of the provisions of this article to adequate technical organizations.
Art. 53. The State does not recognize the legal existence of political parties of international organization. Persons who belong to such may not fulfill any public function.
Art. 54. The death penalty shall be imposed for crimes of treason to the country and adjudged murder, and for all crimes which the law specifies.
Chapter II
Individual Guarantees
Individual Guarantees
Art. 55. No one may be obliged to perform personal labor without his free consent and without due recompense.
Art. 56. No one may be detained except on a written warrant, with a reason assigned, from the competent judge or from the authorities entrusted with the preservation of public order, except in cases of flagrante delicto, and in any event the detained person must be brought, within twenty-four hours or in the interval of time allowed for distance, before the proper court, which shall order his liberty, or issue a warrant of imprisonment within the period which the law indicates.
Art. 57. No one shall be convicted for an act or omission which, at the time it was committed, is not described in the law in an express and unequivocal manner as a punishable offense, nor shall he be judged except by the courts which the laws establish. Any declaration obtained by violence is devoid of value.
The penalty of confiscation of property may not be imposed.
Art. 58. There is no detention for debt.
Art. 59. Freedom of conscience and belief is inviolable.
No one shall be persecuted on account of his ideas.
Art. 60. The right of petition may be exercised individually or collectively. The armed forces may not exercise it.
Art. 61. The home is inviolable. It may not be entered without the prior production of a written warrant, with a reason assigned, from the judge or competent authority.
Art. 62. All persons have the right to assemble peacefully without arms and without compromising public order. The law shall regulate the exercise of the right of assembly.
Art. 63. The State guarantees freedom of the press. All have the right freely to utter their ideas and opinions by means of the press or by any other method of dissemination, but with the responsibility which the law establishes. This responsibility appertains to the author and the publisher of a punishable publication, who shall be jointly responsible for the indemnification due to the person injured.
Art. 64. The regular courts are competent to deal with press offenses.
Art. 65. Public performances are subject to censorship.
Art. 66. Correspondence is inviolable. Letters and private papers may not be seized, intercepted, or searched, except by judicial authority, in the cases and in the manner established by law.
Letters and private papers violated or abstracted have no effect in courts of law.
Art. 67. The right to enter, cross, and leave the country is free, within the limitations which are established by penal, sanitary, and aliens laws.
Art. 68. No one may be banished from the territory of the Republic, nor removed from his place of residence, except by a writ of sentence or by application of the aliens law.
Art. 69. All the individual and social rights recognized by the Constitution admit of the action of habeas corpus.
Art. 70. When necessary for the security of the State, the Executive Power may totally or partially suspend the guarantees declared in Articles 56, 61, 62, 67, and 68 throughout or in part of the national territory. If the suspension of guarantees is decreed while Congress is in session, the Executive Power shall immediately inform it thereof.
The period of the suspension of guarantees shall not exceed thirty days. Any extension requires a new decree.
The law shall determine the rights of the Executive Power during the suspension of guarantees.
TITLE III
Education
Education
Art. 71. The technical direction of education devolves on the State.
Art. 72. Elementary instruction is obligatory and free.
Art. 73. There shall be at least one school in every place where the school-going population amounts to thirty people.
Complete elementary instruction shall be given in every provincial and district capital.
Art. 74. Schools functioning in industrial, agricultural, or mining centers shall be maintained by the respective proprietors or enterprises.
Art. 75. The State promotes education in its secondary and superior grades, with a tendency to free education.
Art. 76. In each department there shall be at least one school of an industrial scope.
Art. 77. The State promotes the technical education of workers.
Art. 78. The State promotes and contributes to the maintenance of preschool and postschool education, and of schools for backward and abnormal children.
Art. 79. The moral and civic education of the child is obligatory, and shall necessarily be inspired by national aggrandizement and human solidarity.
Art. 80. The State guarantees the freedom of the pressorate.
Art. 81. Teaching is a public career and gives right to the emoluments which the law fixes.
Art. 82. Archaelogical, artistic, and historic treasures are under the guardianship of the State.
Art. 83. The law shall indicate the minimum amount of revenue destined for the maintenance and diffusion of education and the proportion by which it must be increased annually.
TITLE IV
Citizenship and Suffrage
Citizenship and Suffrage
Art. 84. Citizens are Peruvian men and women of adult age, married persons over eighteen years and those who are emancipated.
Art. 85. The exercise of citizenship is suspended:
1. By physical or mental incapacity; and
2. By serving a sentence which imposes a penalty of deprivation of liberty.
Art. 86. The right of suffrage is enjoyed by citizens who know how to read and write.
Art. 87. Persons may not vote if their exercise of citizenship has been suspended, nor may the members of the armed forces while they are in the service. There are no other disqualifications.
Art. 88. The electoral power is autonomous. The register is permanent.
Registration and voting are obligatory for citizens until the age of sixty, and optional beyond that age.
The vote is secret.
The system of elections shall give representation to minorities, with a tendency to proportionality.
TITLE V
The Legislative Power
The Legislative Power
Art. 89. Congress is composed of a Chamber of Deputies, elected by direct suffrage, and a functional Senate.
Art. 90. The Deputies and Senators are elected in the manner and by the electoral circumscriptions which the law determines.
Art. 91. The number of Deputies and Senators shall be fixed by law.
Art. 92. The Deputies and Senators represent the nation and are not subject to any imperative mandate.
Art. 93. The Chamber of Deputies is elected for a term of six years, and is renewed in full at the expiration of its mandate.
Art. 94. The Senate is elected for a term of six years, and is renewed in full upon the termination of its mandate, pending the organization of the functional Senate.
Art. 95. The Senators and Deputies elected to fill vacancies which occur shall conclude the term commenced by the Deputy or Senator whom they replace.
Art. 96. The legislative mandate cannot be renounced, except in the case of reelection. The resignation shall be presented to the Chamber in question.
Art. 97. The Executive Power convokes general elections for the President of the Republic and Deputies, and for the renewal of the senatorial thirds.
It also convokes by-elections to fill vacancies produced during the legislative period in the Senate or the Chamber of Deputies, after a declaration of the vacancy and the agreement of the Chamber in question.
If the Executive Power does not make the convocations on the dates or within the periods which the law specifies, they shall be made, as the case may be, by the President of Congress for general elections and by the President of each Chamber for by-elections.
Act. 98. To be a deputy it is necessary to be a Peruvian by birth, to enjoy the right of suffrage, to have completed twenty-five years of age, and to be a native of the department to which the electoral circumscription belongs or to have had three years' continuous residence therein.
To be a Senator it is necessary to be a Peruvian by birth, to enjoy the right of suffrage, and have completed thirty-five years of age.
Art. 99. The following persons are not eligible to be deputies or Senators, if they have not left their posts six months before the election:
(1) The President of the Republic, the Ministers of State and the Prefects, Subprefects, and Governors;
(2) Members of the Judicial Power;
(3) Members of the Departmental Councils or of the Municipal Councils of the electoral circumscription in question; and
(4) Members of the armed forces who are in the service, public employees directly removable by the Executive Power, those of the departmental or municipal councils, public benevolent societies and institutions or corporations which are in any manner subordinate to this Power and those which are subject to its veto.
Art. 100. Members of the clergy are likewise not eligible to be Deputies or Senators.
Art. 101. There is incompatibility between the legislative mandate and any public office, whether of national, departmental, or municipal administration. Included in this incompatibility are the employees of Public Charitable Societies, the Departmental or Municipal Councils, and of corporations in any manner subordinate to the Executive Power.
Art. 102. The law shall fix the incompatibility between the legislative mandate and the posts of manager, attorney, promoter, or lawyer of foreign or national companies which have contracts with the State, exploit natural sources of production, or administer revenues or public services; or of institutions in which the Executive Power intervenes directly or indirectly.
Art. 103. The legislative mandate is vacated ipso facto by accepting any employment, post, or benefice the appointment to which, or the nomination or proposal to which, devolves on the Executive Power. The post of Minister of State is excepted. There are also excepted posts of extraordinary commissions of an international character, with the approval of the Chamber in question, without, in this case, the Deputy or Senator on commission being able to prolong his absence for more than a year. There may be accepted, in the same manner, unrenumerated commissions from the Executive Power, with the prior authorization of the Chamber in question.
Art. 104. Deputies and Senators are not responsible to any court or to any authority, for the votes they may cast or the opinions they may express in the exercise of their functions.
Art. 105. Senators and Deputies are inviolable in the exercise of their functions, and may not be accused or arrested without previous authorization of the Chamber to which they belong, from one month before the opening of the legislative session until one month after its close, except in flagrante delicto, in which case they shall be placed at the disposal of the Chamber in question within twenty-four hours.
Art. 106. Senators and Deputies may not conclude by themselves or through an intermediary contracts with the national administration, or with the departmental or municipal administration, nor may they obtain concessions of public property.
This prohibition does not include the ordinary concessions of mines, waters, and lands on the eastern side of the Andes (de montaña).
Deputies and Senators may not accept from anyone mandates to bring about business in which are concerned, in the exercise of their functions, the administrative authorities in general.
The transgression of these prohibitions involves nullity of the act and loss of the legislative mandate.
Art. 107. Congress shall be installed each year on July 28, with or without the convocation of the Executive Power.
A regular legislative session lasts one hundred and twenty natural days.
Art. 108. The President of the Republic, in agreement with the Council of Ministers, may convoke Congress to an extraordinary legislative session. The dates of installation and of closing shall be fixed in the decree of convocation.
The President of the Republic must convoke Congress to an extraordinary session when it is requested by half plus one of the available members of Congress. In this case, the session ends when Congress so decides.
Art. 109. The quorum for the installation of Congress in ordinary or extraordinary session is fifty-five percent of the legal number of members of each chamber.
Art. 110. The installation of Congress in ordinary session shall be effected in the presence of the President of the Republic. This presence is not essential in order that Congress may inaugurate its functions.
Art. 111. In extraordinary session, Congress and each of the Chambers has the same powers as in the ordinary session.
Art. 112. Neither Chamber may function during a recess of the other.
Art. 113. The Presidency of Congress shall be taken alternately by the Presidents of the Chambers. The President of the Senate presides at the inaugural meeting.
Art. 114. Each Chamber elects its directive officers annually.
Art. 115. Each Chamber organizes its secretariat, appoints and removes its employees, sanctions its expenditures, and arranges its economy and internal policing; in conformity with the law it grants retirement and superannuation pensions and gratuities to its employees or to their relatives.
Art. 116. Relations between both Chambers, and of each of them and Congress with the Executive Power, and the functioning of Congress and the Chambers, shall be established by the internal rules of Congress, which shall have the force of law.
Art. 117. The sessions of Congress and of each of the Chambers shall be public, except in the cases specified in the internal rules.
Art. 118. The armed forces may not enter the precints of Congress nor of the Chambers at any time without the authorization of the respective President.
The Executive Power is obligated to place at the disposal of Congress and of each Chamber, during the legislative session and the functioning of the Chamber in preparatory councils, the armed forces requested by the President in question.
Art. 119. Each Chamber has the right to appoint committees of inquiry. The national, departmental, or municipal administrative authorities, and the judicial authorities, are obligated to submit to the said committees the information and documents which they request.
Any Deputy or Senator may ask the Ministers of State for data and reports which he considers necessary for the exercise of his functions.
Art. 120. Congress may not grant personal thanks which are translated into treasury expenditure, nor increase the emoluments of public officials and employees, except on the initiative of the Executive Power.
Art. 121. It appertains to the Chamber of Deputies to impeach before the Senate the President of the Republic, the members of both Chambers, the Ministers of State and the Members of the Supreme Court of Justice, for infractions of the Constitution and for any crime committed in the execution of their functions which, according to law, must be punished.
Art. 122. It appertains to the Senate to declare whether there is or is not a true case in consequence of the accusations made by the Chamber of Deputies. In the first case, the accused shall be suspended in the exercise of his functions and shall be subjected to justice according to law.
Art. 123. The functions of Congress are:
(1) To enact laws; to interpret, amend, and repeal existing laws;
(2) To open and close ordinary and extraordinary legislative sessions at the time which the Constitution fixes;
(3) To designate its meeting place and determine whether there are or are not to be armed forces, in what number and at what distance;
(4) To examine infractions of the Constitution and do what is necessary in order to make effective the responsibility of those who infringe it;
(5) To impose taxation and abolish existing taxation; sanction the budget; approve or disapprove the general accounts of the Republic submitted annually by the Executive Power, and approve the estimates of the Departmental Councils;
(6) To authorize the Executive Power to negotiate loans pledging the national treasury and indicating funds for their amortization;
(7) To enact customs tariffs;
(8) To recognize the national debt and indicate the means for its consolidation and amortization;
(9) To create and abolish public posts and assign to them the proper emoluments, with the exception of those whose creation or abolition devolves on other bodies according to the law;
(10) To fix the content, weight, type and the denomination of the currency, as well as the system of weights and measures;
(11) To accept or reject the resignation from his post of the President of the Republic;
(12) To declare vacant the Presidency of the Republic in the cases which the Constitution indicates;
(13) To approve or disapprove the proposals for promotion which, subject to the law, are made by the Executive Power for Generals of Division and Vice-Admirals, Generals of Brigade and Rear-Admirals, Colonels and Naval Captains; and to grant them, without the requirement of proposal by the Executive Power, for eminent services calling for national gratitude;
(14) To establish new archbishoprics and bishoprics or to abolish those already existing at the request of the Executive Power;
(15) To effect the demarcation and division of the national territory;
(16) To solve conflicts which arise between the Executive Power and the Departmental Councils;
(17) To make awards to towns, corporations, or individuals for eminent services rendered to the Republic;
(18) To grant consent for the entry of foreign troops into the territory of the Republic, provided that it does not affect national sovereignty in any way;
(19) To decide upon declaration of war on the initiative or following a statement by the Executive Power, and to call upon the latter to negotiate peace;
(20) To determine in each ordinary legislative session, and in extraordinary sessions when required, the effectives of the armed forces;
(21) To approve or disapprove treaties, concordats, and other conventions concluded with foreign governments;
(22) To exercise the right of pardon. Only during the recess of Congress may the Executive Power grant pardon to persons convicted for political-social crimes; and
(23) To exercise the other essential attributes of legislative power.
TITLE VI
Enactment and Promulgation of the Laws
Enactment and Promulgation of the Laws
Art. 124. Senators, Deputies, and the Executive Power have the right of initiative in the enactment of laws and legislative resolutions; and the members of the Judicial Power through the Supreme Court of Justice in judicial matters.
Art. 125. Bills approved by one Chamber shall pass to the other for review. Additions shall be subjected to the same procedure as bills.
Art. 126. Bills amended or rejected by the reviewing Chamber shall be sent back to the Chamber of origin in order that it may decide whether or not it insists on its original decision.
Art. 127. In the case of insistence, Congress shall decide.
Art. 128. Within ten days following the receipt by the President of the Republic of a law approved by Congress, the former must promulgate it and order its observance.
Art. 129. If the President of the Republic does not promulgate and order the observance of the law within ten days, it shall be promulgated and its observance ordered by the President of Congress, who shall order its publication in some newspaper.
Art. 130. In drafting laws Congress shall use this formula:
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The Executive, in promulgating and ordering the observance of laws, shall use this formula:
Whereas Congress has enacted the following law:
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Therefore: I order that it be published and observed.
Art. 131. To interpret, amend, or repeal laws, the same procedure shall be observed as for their enactment.
Art. 132. A law is obligatory from the day following its promulgation and publication, except when the law itself provides otherwise.
Art. 133. Members of the public can take action before the Judicial Power against regulations, and against the government resolutions and decrees of a general character which infringe the Constitution or the laws, without prejudice to the political responsibility of Ministers.
The law shall establish the judicial procedure in question.
TITLE VII
The Executive Power
The Executive Power
Chapter I
The President of the Republic
The President of the Republic
Art. 134. The President of the Republic is the head of the State, and personifies the nation.
Art. 135. The President of the Republic is elected by direct suffrage.
Art. 136. In order to be elected President of the Republic, it is necessary to be a Peruvian by birth, to enjoy the right of suffrage, to be thirty-five years of age, and to have resided ten years continuously in the territory of the Republic.
Art. 137. The following are not eligible for the Presidency or Vice-Presidencies of the Republic:
(1) The Ministers of State and the members of the armed forces who are in service, if they have not left their posts six months before the election;
(2) The citizen who, by whatever title, is exercising the Presidency of the Republic at the time of the election;
(3) Relatives within the fourth degree of consanguinity or the second of affinity of the person who exercises the Presidency of the Republic, or who has exercised it during the year preceding the election;
(4) Members of the Judicial Power;
(5) Members of the Clergy.
Art. 138. In order to be proclaimed President of the Republic by the National Electoral Board (Jurado Nacional de Elecciones), it is necessary to have obtained a majority of the votes, provided that this majority is not less than one third of the valid votes.
If none of the candidates has received the required majority, the National Electoral Board shall inform Congress of the result of the count. In this case, Congress shall elect the President of the Republic from among the three candidates who have obtained the largest number of valid votes.
Art. 139. The presidential term shall last for six years, and commence on July 28 of the year in which the election is held, even though the elected person may not have assumed his functions on that date.
Art. 140. The citizen proclaimed President of the Republic shall take an oath before Congress on assuming his functions.
Art. 141. The election of the President of the Republic shall be made at the time of the general election for Deputies.
Art. 142. There is no immediate presidential reelection. This prohibition may not be modified or repealed. The author or authors of a proposal for modification or repeal, and those who support it, directly or indirectly, shall cease ipso facto in the occupation of their respective posts and shall be permanently incapacitated for the exercise of any public office.
Art. 143. A citizen who has exercised the Presidency of the Republic may not be elected again until after the expiration of one presidential term.
Art. 144. The Presidency of the Republic is vacated, besides in case of death:
(1) By permanent physical or moral incapacity of the President, declared by Congress;
(2) By the acceptance of his resignation;
(3) By a judicial sentence condemning him for the offenses enumerated in Article 150;
(4) By leaving the territory of the Republic without the permission of Congress; and
(5) By not returning to the territory of the Republic on the expiration of the permission granted to him by Congress.
Art. 145. The exercise of the presidency of the Republic is suspended:
(1) By the President's commanding the armed forces in person;
(2) By the temporary physical incapacity of the President declared by Congress; and
(3) By being brought to trial according to Article 150.
Art. 146. [Repealed by Article 6 of Law No. 8237, April 1, 1936.]
Art. 147. In case of vacancy of the Presidency of the Republic, Congress shall elect the President for the rest of the presidential term.
If Congress is in session when a vacancy occurs, the election of the President shall be made within three days. If Congress is in recess, it must assemble in extraordinary session for the sole object of electing the President and receiving his oath. The election, in this case, shall be made within twenty days counting from that on which the vacancy occurred.
The convocation of Congress to assemble in extraordinary session to elect the President of the Republic is effected by the President of the Senate or, in default of the latter, by the President of the Chamber of Deputies.
Art. 148. The election of the President of the Republic by Congress shall be made by secret vote, in permanent and continuous session. The person obtaining an absolute majority of the votes shall be proclaimed (elected).
Art. 149. The President of the Republic shall present a message on the termination of his presidential term and on the inauguration of Congress in ordinary legislature. He may present messages at any time. The presidential messages must be submitted to the Council of Ministers for approval.
Art. 150. The President of the Republic, during his term of office, may only be accused of treason to the country; for having prevented the presidential or parliamentary elections; for having dissolved Congress, or having prevented or impeded its meeting or functioning, or the meeting or functioning of the National Electoral Board.
Art. 151. The emoluments of the President of the Republic shall be fixed by law, and their increase shall only have effect in the next presidential term.
Art. 152. The President of the Republic may not leave the national territory without the permission of Congress, which shall fix the period for which this is granted.
Art. 153. The President of the Republic may not personally command the armed forces without permission from Congress. In the event of his commanding them, he shall have only the attributes of commander-in-chief, subject to the military laws and regulations, and shall be responsible in conformity with them.
Art. 154. The powers of the President of the Republic are:
(1) To represent the State at home and abroad;
(2) To maintain internal order and the external security of the Republic, without contravening the Constitution or the laws;
(3) To convoke, according to the Constitution, a general election for President of the Republic and for Deputies, and for the renewal of the senatorial thirds; and by-elections for Deputies and Senators;
(4) To convoke Congress to ordinary and extraordinary sessions;
(5) To attend the opening of Congress in ordinary session;
(6) To intervene in the enactment of laws and legislative resolutions, in conformity with the Constitution;
(7) To appoint and remove the President of the Council of Ministers and the Ministers of State, in conformity with the Constitution;
(8) To issue regulations in respect of laws, without transgressing them or misinterpreting them and, with this same restriction, to issue decrees and resolutions;
(9) To administer the national finances;
(10) To organize and distribute the armed forces and to use them in the service of the Republic;
(11) To appoint, remove, and grant leave of absence, in conformity with the law, to public officials and employees whose appointment or removal does not devolve on other officials or agencies;
(12) To grant, in conformity with the law, severance and retirement pensions and annuities (cesantía, jubilación y montepío).
(13) To settle disputes which arise between the Departmental Councils;
(14) To enforce the observance of the decisions of the Judicial Power;
(15) To require the tribunals and courts to administer justice promptly;
(16) To direct international relations;
(17) To appoint and remove diplomatic agents, with the approval of the Council of Ministers;
(18) To appoint consuls;
(19) To receive diplomatic agents and recognize consuls;
(20) To conclude, with the approval of the Council of Ministers, international treaties, concordats, and conventions and submit them to the cognizance of Congress;
(21) To exercise the national patronage in accordance with existing laws and practices;
(22) [Repealed by Article 4 of Law No. 9166, September 5, 1940];
(23) and (24) Peruvian ecclesiastics who are to fill vacancies in archbishoprics and bishoprics shall be designated by the President of the Republic, in Council of Ministers. The Chief of State shall submit the names to the Holy See and recognize the respective Bulls.
(25) To make nominations for the dignities and canonries of the cathedrals and for the curacies and other ecclesiastical benefices, having regard to existing laws and practices;
(26) To accept or to reject, with the assent of Congress, having heard beforehand the Supreme Court of Justice if contentious subjects are in question, the pontifical Conciliar Decrees, Briefs, and Rescripts; and the Bulls when they do not refer to the institution of Archbishop or Bishop; and
(27) To exercise the other functions of government and administration which the Constitution and the laws entrust to him.
Art. 155. At the termination of his constitutional term, the President of the Republic shall become part of the Senate for one senatorial term.
Chapter II
Ministers of State
Ministers of State
Art. 156. The law shall determine the number of Ministries, their denominations, and the departments of administration appertaining to each.
Art. 157. The Ministers of State in assembly form the Council of Ministers. Its organization and function are determined by law. The Council of Ministers has its President.
Art. 158. The President of the Republic appoints and removes the President of the Council. He appoints and removes the other Ministers, on the proposal and with the agreement, respectively, of the President of the Council.
Art. 159. The President of the Council countersigns his own appointment and that of the other ministers.
Art. 160. In order to be a Minister of State, it is necessary to have the same personal qualifications as to be a Deputy.
Art. 161. The members of the Judicial Power and the members of the clergy may not be appointed Ministers of State.
Art. 162. There are no Ministers pro tempore. The President of the Republic may, on the proposal of the President of the Council, entrust to a Minister, who retains his own Ministry, the charge of another in the event of vacancy or impediment on the part of the serving Minister, but this charge may not be prolonged for more than thirty days or be transferred successively to the other Ministers.
Art. 163. The President of the Republic convokes extraordinarily and presides over the Council of Ministers; he has the right to preside over it when it is convoked ordinarily or extraordinarily by the President of the Council.
Any decision of the Council requires the affirmatory votes of the majority of its members.
Art. 164. The Council of Ministers has a deliberative vote and a consultative vote in the cases specified by law.
Art. 165. The President of the Republic adjusts, with the consultative vote of the Council, conflicts of competence among the Ministers. His decision is countersigned by the President of the Council.
Art. 166. The acts of Government and administration of the President of the Republic are countersigned by the Ministers of the Departments. Without this requirement they are null and void.
Art. 167. The President of the Council, on assuming his functions, shall attend the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate separately, in company with the other Ministers, and shall explain the general policy of the Executive Power.
Art. 168. The Council of Ministers in full, or the Ministers separately, may attend the sessions of Congress or of the Chambers and participate in the debates.
Art. 169. The attendance of the Council of Ministers, or of any of the Ministers, is obligatory if Congress or either of the Chambers calls for them in order to interpellate them.
Art. 170. The interpellation shall be made in writing. For its acceptance it requires one fifth of the votes of the sitting representatives.
Art. 171. Congress, or the Chamber, shall indicate the day and hour for the Ministers to reply to the interpellations.
Art. 172. A vote of censure against the Council of Ministers or against any of the Ministers may be moved by a single Deputy or Senator, and the vote shall be taken at the same session.
Art. 173. The censured Minister must resign. The President of the Republic shall accept the resignation.
Art. 174. The nonapproval of a ministerial initiative does not oblige the minister to resign, except in the case of his having made approval a matter of confidence.
Art. 175. The exercise of the functions of a Deputy or Senator is not suspended while he holds office as a Minister.
Art. 176. The Ministers may not exercise any other public function, or any professional activities.
They shall not intervene, directly or indirectly, in the direction or management of any private undertaking or association.
Art. 177. The Minister of Finance shall transmit to the Chamber of Deputies within thirty days of the installation of Congress in ordinary session, the draft general budget of the Republic for the next year, with its explanatory memorandum.
A copy of the explanatory memorandum and draft budget shall be transmitted to the Senate by the Minister.
He shall also send, within the same period, to the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies the general accounts of the revenues and expenditures of the Republic for the preceding fiscal year, with the report of the official entrusted with the control of the execution of the budget.
The accounts shall be submitted to the study of a commission of Senators and Deputies, who shall have all the powers of the parliamentary committees of inquiry.
Art. 178. Each Minister directs, in conformity with the general policy of the Executive Power, the subjects within the competence of his respective Ministry.
Art. 179. The Ministers are responsible civilly and criminally for their own acts and for the presidential acts which they countersign.
Unless they resign immediately, all Ministers are collectively responsible for offenses against or infractions of the Constitution and of the laws which the President of the Republic commits, or which are agreed on in the Council, even though they refrain from voting.
Chapter III
The Consultative Commissions and Technical Councils
The Consultative Commissions and Technical Councils
Art. 180. In each Ministry there shall be one or more Consultative Commissions composed of Peruvian citizens who are specialists in the branches of the administration in question. The law shall determine their organization and functions.
Art. 181. There shall be Technical Councils of administrative cooperation in the Departments of Education; Agriculture, including Waters and Livestock and exploitation of forests; Industries, including Commerce; Mining; Health; Public Works, Posts and Tekegraphs; Indian Affairs; Labor; and others specified by law.
TITLE VIII
National Economic Council
National Economic Council
Art. 182. There shall be a National Economic Council composed of representatives of the consuming population, capital, labor, and the liberal professions. A law shall determine its organization and functions.
TITLE IX
The Internal Administration of the Republic
The Internal Administration of the Republic
Art. 183. The territory of the Republic is divided into departments, provinces, and districts. There exist, moreover, the coastal provinces of Tumbes and Moquegua and the Constitutional Province or Callao.
For the creation of departments, the same procedure shall be followed as for amendment of the Constitution.
Art. 184. The city of Lima is the capital of the Republic.
Art. 185. There shall be Prefects in the departments; subprefects in the provinces, except in the coastal provinces, the constitutional province of Callao and those which have as capital that of the department; Governors in the districts; and Lieutenant-Governors where necessary.
The Prefects shall be appointed with the approval of the Council of Ministers. The law shall establish the requirements for appointment as Prefect.
Art. 186. The law shall specify the powers of the political authorities.
Art. 187. The political officials dealt with in this title who, by judicial action, have been declared responsible for acts performed in the exercise of their functions shall be permanently disqualified from holding any public post, without prejudice to punishment that may be imposed on them by the courts.
TITLE X
Departmental and Municipal Administration
Departmental and Municipal Administration
Chapter I
Departmental Councils
Departmental Councils
Art. 188. The territorial divisions have administrative and economic autonomy, in conformity with the Constitution and the organic law in question.
Art. 189. There shall be Departmental Councils in the places specified by law.
Art. 190. The law shall fix the number of members of each Departmental Council, who shall be elected by direct and secret suffrage, giving representation to minorities, with a tendency to proportionality. The Councils shall be renewed every four years. Their members may not be reelected.
Art. 191. Resolutions and decisions of the Councils shall be executed by their President.
Art. 192. The Councils have the power to organize, administer, and control, according to provisions of law, the Departments of Education, Health, Public Works of a departmental character, Roads, Agriculture, Livestock, Industries, Mining, Charity, Social Welfare, Labor, and others concerned with the needs of their jurisdictions.
Art. 193. The powers of the Departmental Councils, in addition to those which the law indicates, are the following:
(1) To collect and use their revenues;
(2) To draw up, in the month of August of each year, their budgets for the following year;
(3) To make representations, with explanations, to the Executive Power to secure the dismissal of political authorities of their districts;
(4) To give an account to the Executive Power of the shortcomings committed by officials and employees whose appointment and whose removal devolve on that power;
(5) To give an account to the Supreme Court of Justice of the shortcomings committed by the members of the Judicial Power;
(6) To see that the body entrusted with the collection of the fiscal revenues fulfills its legal and contractual obligations, and to render an account to Congress and the Executive Power of the infractions which it commits;
(7) To decide in the last instance on administrative matters of the Municipal Councils, Public Charitable Societies, National Universities and Schools, in the cases in which a petition of appeal is in accordance with law;
(8) To approve each year the budgets of the Provincial Municipal Councils, Public Charitable Societies, National Schools, and Technical Water Commissions, and to be competent to deal with the budgets of the District Municipal Councils when these are in appeal;
(9) To register officially the Indian communities in conformity with the law in the appropriate register, for the purposes of their recognition as juridical persons; and
(10) To protect the Indian communities; take a census and form a register of their real property, and grant, in conformity with the law, to those who do not possess them, the title-deeds to property which they apply for. Decisions to this effect arrived at by the Departmental Councils shall be revised by the Executive Power if the communities complain of them.
Art. 194. Revenues of the Departmental Councils, in addition to those assigned by special laws, are the following:
(1) The proceeds of their own property which the law assigns to them;
(2) The real estate and mining taxes;
(3) Industrial and ecclesiastical licenses;
(4) The fees on transfers of property and inheritances;
(5) The fees for registration of public instruments;
(6) The progressive income tax;
(7) The tax on income from invested capital;
(8) The additional import duties destined for land improvement and the other additional duties of departmental application;
(9) The receipts of the Registers of Real Property, Commerce and of Agricultural Pledges;
(10) The tax on motive power;
(11) The concession fees on forests, uncultivated land, and land on the eastern side of the Andes (montaña);
(12) Taxes of a departmental or local character which do not appertain to the Municipal Councils, Public Charitable Societies, or other corporations; and
(13) The subventions and appropriations granted by the State.
Art. 195. The creation and existence of general taxes for the benefit of a determined area are prohibited, unless they are assigned to works which have a national character declared by Congress.
Art. 196. No taxes may be imposed on internal imports or exports.
Art. 197. For the creation of local taxes and excise duties, it is necessary to have at least two thirds of the votes of the Council. If the two thirds is not reached, the Council may appeal to Congress requesting the creation. If the Executive Power vetoes a tax or excise duty created by the Departmental Council, Congress shall decide.
Art. 198. For the permanent reduction or suppression of local taxes or excise duties, the procedure laid down in the preceding article shall be followed.
Art. 199. The Departmental Councils shall submit to Congress, in the month of August of each year, the budgets for the following year. In the case of non-fulfillment of this provision, the Councils shall be subject to the sanctions which the law establishes. If the budgets are not approved by Congress by December 31, they shall commence to be executed.
Art. 200. In the month of March of each year, the Departmental Councils shall transmit their accounts for the preceding year to the Higher Tribunal of Accounts for examination and approval.
Art. 201. The Departmental Councils may contract loans if the sinking fund and interest do not affect more than fifteen percent of their revenues for the previous year, but only with the affirmative vote of two thirds of the council. All loans contracted by the Councils must be employed in works of a reproductive character.
Art. 202. The organic law of the Departmental Councils shall establish their organization, powers, functioning, and all that is not provided by the Constitution.
Chapter II
The Municipal Councils
The Municipal Councils
Art. 203. There shall be Municipal Councils in the provincial and district capitals and in towns specified by the respective Departmental Council.
Art. 204. Women with a right to vote may be elected to the Municipal Councils.
Art. 205. Indian communities shall have a representative, designated by them in the manner which the law specifies, in each district Municipal Council and in those created by a decision of th Departmental Council.
Art. 206. The Provincial Municipal Councils have administrative and economic autonomy in the exercise of the functions appertaining to them in conformity with the laws, without prejudice to the provisions of pararaphs (7) and (8) of Article 193.
TITLE XI
Indian Communities
Indian Communities
Art. 207. The Indian communities have a legal existence and juridical personality.
Art. 208. The State guarantees the integrity of the property of the communities.
The law shall organize the corresponding register of real property.
Art. 209. The property of the communities is imprescriptible and inalienable, except in the case of expropriation on account of public utility, on payment of compensation. It is, moreover, not attachable.
Art. 210. Neither the Municipal Councils nor any corporation or authority shall intervene in the collection or administration of the income and property of the communities.
Art. 211. The State shall endeavor to provide by preference lands for Indian communities which do not possess them in sufficient quantity for their needs, and may expropriate lands in private ownership for this purpose, on payment of compensation.
Art. 212. The State shal enact the civil, penal, economic, educational, and administrative legislation which the peculiar conditions of the Indians demand.
TITLE XII
The Armed Forces
The Armed Forces
Art. 213. The purpose of the armed forces is to assure the rights of the Republic, compliance with the Constitution and the laws and the preservation of public order.
Art. 214. Every Peruvian is obliged to contribute toward national defense and to submit to military obligations.
Art. 215. Military laws and regulations govern the organization of the armed forces and their discipline.
Art. 216. The effectives of the armed forces and the number of General, Superior, and Subaltern Officers shall be fixed by law. The Executive Power may not propose promotions, nor Congress approve them, except in the case of vacancies.
Art. 217. Military ranks, honors, and pensions may not be withdrawn except by a judicial sentence in the cases determined by law.
Art. 218. Members of the armed forces who belong to Congress may not be promoted to the rank of General of Division, Vice-Admiral, General of Brigade, Rear-Admiral, Colonel, and Naval Captain while their legislative mandate continues.
This prohibition is not applicable to those who, after receiving the consent of their respective Chamber, reenter the service in the case of national war.
Art. 219. Recruitment in cases not authorized by military laws and regulations is an offense which may be denounced by any person before the judges or Congress, against the person who orders it.
TITLE XIII
The Judicial Power
The Judicial Power
Art. 220. The power of administering justice is exercised by the tribunals and courts, with the guarantees and according to the procedure established in the Constitution and the laws.
Art. 221. There shall be a Supreme Court of Justice in the Capital of the Republic; superior courts in the departmental capitals which the law specifies; courts of first instance in the provincial capitals; courts of lawyer justices of the peace in the places which the law specifies; and courts of justices of the peace in all towns.
The law shall lay down the organization of the Judicial Power, the manner of appointments, and the conditions and requirements to which they shall be subject.
Art. 222. The Members and Attorneys of the Supreme Court of Justice shall be elected by Congress among ten candidates proposed by the Executive Power.
Art. 223. The Members and Attorneys of the Superior Courts shall be appointed by the Executive Power, on the proposal of the Supreme Court, in two lists of three names each; and the Judges of First Instance and the Fiscal Agents, on the proposal of the respective Superior Court in two lists of three names each.
Art. 224. Appointments of the Members and Attorneys of the Superior Courts and of the Judges and Fiscal Agents, shall be ratified by the Supreme Court in the time and form which the law determines. Nonratification does not constitute a penalty, nor take away the right to emoluments acquired in conformity with the law; but it does prevent reentry into the judicial service.
Art. 225. The following may not be appointed to any judicial post: the President of the Republic, the Ministers of State, the members of the Legislative Power, the directors of the Ministries and officials who exercise political authority while in the exercise of their functions.
Art. 226. The members of the Judicial Power may not occupy any post dependent on the election by Congress, or appointment by the Executive Power, or of any other administrative authority or corporation. Exception is made for diplomatic posts, those of university education, codification or law reform commissions, delegations of Peru to international or scientific congresses and conferences, and the functions of arbitrator or attorney in courts of international arbitration in which any right of Peru is disputed.
The acceptance of an appointment prohibited by this article involves the loss of the judicial post and all the emoluments appertaining thereto.
Art. 227. Publicity is essential in trials. The courts may deliberate in secret, but the vote shall be pronounced aloud and publicly.
Reasons for judgments shall be given, as also the law or the grounds on which they are based.
Art. 228. All trials by commission are prohibited. No power or authority may assume jurisdiction in cases pending before the Judicial Power. Neither may terminated cases be revived.
Art. 229. The law shall determine the organization and the powers of the military tribunals and of other special tribunals and courts which are set up in accordance with the nature of affairs.
Art. 230. The State shall compensate the victims of judicial errors in criminal matters, after a review of the case in the manner specified by law.
Art. 231. Any person has the right to denounce offenses against official duties or any others committed by members of the Judicial Power in the exercise of their functions. Any person may likewise denounce offenses against the execution of judicial decisions committed by officials of the Executive Power.
TITLE XIV
Religion
Religion
Art. 232. Respecting the sentiments of the national majority, the State protects the Roman Catholic Apostolic religion. All other religions enjoy freedom in the exercise of their respective beliefs.
Art. 233. The State exercises the national patronage in conformity with existing laws and practices.
Art. 234. Relatons between the State and the Catholic Church shall be governed by concordats concluded by the Executive Power and approved by Congress.
Art. 235. To fill the position of Archbishop and Bishop it is necessary to be a Peruvian by birth or to have held Peruvian nationality for at least three years prior to such designation, with continuous residence in the national territory during that period of time.
TITLE XV
Amendment of the Constitution
Amendment of the Constitution
Art. 236. Any constitutional amendment must be approved by the Chambers in ordinary session and be ratified by both Chambers in another ordinary session. The approval and ratification require the majority of votes of the legal number of members in each of the Chambers.
The initiative is vested in the Deputies and Senators, and in the President of the Republic, with the approval of the Council of Ministers.
TITLE XVI
Transitory Provisions
Transitory Provisions
1. The legislative and presidential terms of 1936-41 shall commence on December 8, 1936.
The President of the Republic and the Deputies who assume their functions on that day shall be maintained in the exercise of them until July 28, 1941. After that the Executive Power and the Chamber of Deputies shall be renewed every five years, as provided for in Articles 93 and 139.
2. The Senate shall be composed, in the present legislative term, of forty Senators: twenty-five elected from among its members by the present Constituent Congress, and fifteen elected by direct suffrage.
The senatorial mandate shall terminate in this case on December 8, 1936.
3. The Constituent Congress shall continue to function until the Senate is installed with the full membership, designated in the manner which the preceding transitory provisions indicate. In the meantime the constitutional articles on the bicameral functioning of Congress shall remain in suspense.
4. Congress shall enact the laws of organization of trade unions and corporations and of the election of the Functional Senate to be installed on July 28, 1941, the date on which Article 94, establishing the biennial renewal by third of the Senate, shall enter into force.
5. The fifteen Senators to be elected by direct suffrage in conformity with the second transitory provision must have been born in the electoral circumscription in question or have resided in it for at least three consecutive years.
6. Pending the constitution of the Senate, the second paragraph of Article 128 shall be read as follows: "If the Executive has observations to make, they shall be presented to Congress within ten days certain. The law having been reconsidered in Congress with the observations of the Executive and, nevertheless, again approved, shall be sanctioned and its promulgation and enforcement ordered."
7. The provision contained in Article 167 shall enter into force only when the Senate is constituted.
8. The electoral law which the Constituent Congress enacts in order that the next elections for representatives to Congress may be held in confirmity therewith, shall determine the time in which the officials enumerated in Article 99 must resign their posts, the effects of the said article remaining in suspense on this occasion.
9. Pending the enactment of a law to determine who shall exercise the functions which the present laws entrust to the subprefects in the capitals of departments, the constitutional province of Callao and the coastal provinces of Tumbes and Moquegua, the provisions of Article 185 shall not apply insofar as it suppresses these subprefectures.
Let it be communicated to the executive power.
LAW OF CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM
No. 8237
April 1, 1936
No. 8237
April 1, 1936
Art. 1. There shall be two Vice Presidents of the Republic, designated as First and Second, who shall be elected at the same time, in the same manner, with the same qualifications, and for the same term as the President.
Art. 2. In the cases of a vacancy indicated in Article 144 of the Constitution, the First Vice President shall complete a term that has begun. In the cases indicated in Article 145, he shall only assume the office for such time as the impediment of the President persists.
Art. 3. In case of a vacancy of the Presidency and of the First Vice Presidency, the Second Vice President shall complete the term that has begun.
In the event of a temporary impediment of the President of the First Vice President, the Second shall assume the office until the person designated by law is available.
Art. 4. Only in the event of absence of the President and the two Vice Presidents shall the Executive Power be assumed by the Council of Ministers, until Congress elects a President for the remainder of the presidential term, in accordance with the provisions of Article 147 of the Constitution.
Art. 5. (Incorporated in the Constitution as amended Article 137.)
Art. 6. (Repealed Article 146 of the Constitution.)