1917 Constitution of Mexico
(As Amended)
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Contents
TITLE IV
Responsibilities of Public Officials
TITLE V The States of the Federation
TITLE VI Labor and
Social Security
TITLE VII
General Considerations
TITLE VIII
Amendments to the Constitution
TITLE IX The Inviolability of the Constitution
Constitution of Mexico
Individual
Guarantees
Article 1. Every person in the United Mexican States shall enjoy the
guarantees granted by this Constitution, which cannot be restricted or
suspended except in such cases and under such conditions as are herein provided
Article 2. Slavery
is forbidden in the United Mexican States. Slaves who enter national territory
from abroad shall, by this act alone, recover their freedom and enjoy the
protection afforded by the laws.
Article 3.(1)
The education imparted by the Federal State shall be designed to develop
harmoniously all the faculties of the human being and shall foster in him at
the same time a love of country and a consciousness of international
solidarity, in independence and justice.
Article 4. No
person can be prevented from engaging in the profession, industrial or
commercial pursuit, or occupation of his choice, provided it is lawful. The
exercise of this liberty shall only be forbidden by judicial order when the
rights of third parties are infringed, or by administrative order, issued in
the manner provided by law, when the rights of society are violated. No
one may be deprived of the fruits of his labor except by judicial decision.
The law in each state shall determine
the professions which may be practiced only with a degree, and set forth the
requirements for obtaining it and the authorities empowered to issue it.
Article 5.(2)
No one can be compelled to
render personal services without due remuneration and without his full consent,
excepting labor imposed as a penalty by the judiciary,
which shall be governed by the provisions of clauses I and II of Article 123.
ENCOMIENDA
Only the following public services
shall be obligatory, subject to the conditions set forth in the respective
laws: military service and jury service as well as the discharge of the office
of municipal councilman and offices of direct or indirect popular election.
Duties in relation to elections and the census shall be compulsory and unpaid.
Professional services of a social character shall be compulsory and paid
according to the provisions of law and with the exceptions fixed thereby.
The
State cannot permit the execution of any contract, covenant, or agreement
having for its object the restriction, loss or irrevocable sacrifice of the
liberty of man, whether for work, education, or religious vows. The law,
therefore, does not permit the establishment of monastic orders, whatever be
their denomination or purpose.
Likewise no person can legally agree
to his own proscription or exile, or to the temporary or permanent renunciation
of the exercise of a given profession or industrial or commercial pursuit.
A
labor contract shall be binding only to render the services agreed on for the
time set by law and may never exceed one year to the detriment of the worker,
and in no case may it embrace the waiver, loss, or restriction of any civil or
political right.
Non-compliance
with such contract by the worker shall only render him civilly liable for
damages, but in no case shall it imply coercion against his person.
Article 6. The expression of ideas
shall not be subject to any judicial or administrative investigation, unless it
offends good morals, infringes the rights of others, incites to crime, or
disturbs the public order.
Article 7. Freedom
of writing and publishing writings on any subject is inviolable. No law
or authority may establish censorship, require bonds from authors or printers,
or restrict the freedom of printing, which shall be limited only by the respect
due to private life, morals, and public peace. Under no circumstances may a
printing press be sequestrated as the instrument of the offense.
The organic laws shall contain
whatever provisions may be necessary to prevent the imprisonment of the
vendors, newsboys, workmen, and other employees of the establishment publishing
the work denounced, under pretext of a denunciation of offenses of the press,
unless their guilt is previously established.
Article 8. Public officials and employees shall respect the exercise
of the right of petition, provided it is made in writing and in a peaceful and
respectful manner; but this right may only be exercised in political matters by
citizens of the Republic.
Every
petition shall be replied to in writing by the official to whom it is
addressed, and said official is bound to inform the petitioner of the decision
taken within a brief period.
Article 9. The
right to assemble or associate peaceably for any lawful purpose cannot be
restricted; but only citizens of the Republic may do so to take part in the
political affairs of the country. No armed deliberative meeting is authorized.
No meeting or assembly shall be
deemed unlawful which has for its object the petitioning of any authority or
the presentation of a protest against any act; nor may it be dissolved, unless
insults be proffered against said authority or
violence is resorted to, or threats are used to intimidate or compel such
authority to render a favorable decision.
Article 10. The
inhabitants of the United Mexican States are entitled to have arms of any kind
in their possession for their protection and legitimate defense, except such as
are expressly forbidden by law, or which the nation may reserve for the
exclusive use of the army, navy, or national guard; but they may not carry arms
within inhabited places without complying with police regulations.
Article 11. Everyone has the right to enter and leave the Republic, to
travel through its territory and to change his residence without necessity of a
letter of security, passport, safe-conduct or any other similar requirement.
The exercise of this right shall be subordinated to the powers of the
judiciary, in cases of civil or criminal liability, and to those of the
administrative authorities insofar as concerns the limitations imposed by the
laws regarding emigration, immigration and public health of the country, or in
regard to undesirable aliens resident in the country.
Article 12. No titles of nobility, or hereditary or prerogatives or
honors shall be granted in the United Mexican States, nor shall any effect be
given to those granted by other countries.
Article 13. No one
may be tried by private laws or special tribunals. No person or corporate body
shall have privileges or enjoy emoluments other than those given in
compensation for public services and which are set by law. Military
jurisdiction shall be recognized for the trial of crimes against and violation
of military discipline, but the military tribunals shall in no case have
jurisdiction over persons who do not belong to the army. Whenever a civilian is
implicated in a military crime or violation, the respective civil authority
shall deal with the case.
Article 14. No law
shall be given retroactive effect to the detriment of any person whatsoever.
No person shall be deprived of life,
liberty, property, possessions, or rights without a trial by a duly created
court in which the essential formalities of procedure are observed and in
accordance with laws issued prior to the act.
In criminal cases no penalty shall
be imposed by mere analogy or by a prior [a
priori? Evidence based on deductions or
hypothesis?] evidence. The penalty must be decreed
in a law in every respect applicable to the crime in question.
In civil suits the final judgment
shall be according to the letter or the juridical interpretation of the law; in
the absence of the latter it shall be based on the general principles of law.
Article 15. No treaty shall be authorized for the extradition of
political offenders or of offenders of the common order who have been slaves in
the country where the offense was committed. Nor shall any agreement or treaty
be entered into which restricts or modifies the guarantees and rights which
this Constitution grants to the individual and to the citizen.
Article 16. No one
shall be molested in his person, family, domicile, papers, or possessions except
by virtue of a written order of the competent authority stating the legal
grounds and justification for the action taken. No order of arrest or detention
shall be issued against any person other than by the competent judicial
authority, and unless same is preceded by a charge, accusation, or complaint
for a credible party or by other evidence indicating the probable guilt of the
accused; in cases
of flagrante delicto, any person may arrest
the offender and his accomplices, turning them over without delay to the
nearest authorities. Only
in urgent cases instituted by the public attorney without previous
complaint or indictment and when there is no judicial authority available, may the administrative
authorities, on their strictest accountability, order the detention of an
accused person, turning him over immediately to the judicial authorities.
Every search warrant, which can be issued only by judicial authority and which
must be in writing, shall specify the place to be searched, the person or
persons to be arrested, and the objects sought, the proceedings to be limited
thereto; at the conclusion
of which a detailed statement shall be drawn up in the presence of two
witnesses proposed by the occupant of the place searched, or by the
official making the search in his absence or should he refuse to do so.
Administrative officials may enter
private homes for the sole purpose of ascertaining whether the sanitary and
police regulations have been complied with; and may demand to be shown the
books and documents required to prove compliance with fiscal rulings, in which
latter cases they must abide by the provisions of the respective laws and be
subject to the formalities prescribed for cases of search.
Article 17. No one may be imprisoned for debts of a purely civil
nature. No one may take the law into his own hands, or resort to violence in
the enforcement of his rights. The courts shall be open for the administration
of justice at such times and under such conditions as the law may establish;
their services shall be gratuitous and all judicial costs are, accordingly,
prohibited.
Article 18.(3)
Arrest is permissible only
for offenses punishable by imprisonment. The place of detention shall be
completely separate from the place used for the serving of sentences.
The federal and state governments
shall organize the penal system within their respective jurisdictions on the
basis of labor, training, and education as a means of social readjustment of
the offender. Women shall serve their sentences in places separate from those
intended for men for the same purpose.
Governors of States, subject to the
provisions of the respective local laws, may conclude agreements of a general
nature with the federal government, under which offenders convicted for common
offenses may serve their sentence in establishments maintained by the federal
executive.
The federal government and the state
governments shall establish special institutions for the treatment of juvenile
delinquents.
Article 19. No
detention shall exceed three days without a formal order of commitment, which
shall state the offense with which the accused is charged; the substance
thereof; the place, time and circumstances of its commission; and the facts
brought to light in the preliminary examination. These facts must be
sufficient to establish the corpus delicti [the actual crime committed] and the
probable guilt of the accused. All authorities who order a detention or consent
thereto, as well as all agents, subordinates, wardens, or jailers who execute
it, shall be liable for any breach of this provision.
The trial shall take place only for
the offense or offenses set forth in the formal order of commitment. Should it
develop, during the course of the proceedings, that another offense, different
from that charged, has been committed, a separate accusation must be brought.
This, however, shall not prevent the joinder of both
proceedings, if deemed advisable.
Any ill-treatment during arrest or confinement;
any molesting without
legal justification; any exaction or contribution
levied in prison are abuses which shall be punishable by law and
repressed by the authorities.
Article 20. In every criminal trial the accused shall enjoy the
following guarantees:
The
security or bond shall be not more than 250, 000 pesos except for offenses by
which the offender profits or the victim suffers financially; for such offenses
the security shall be at least three times the amount of the profit obtained or
the damage suffered.(4)
Nor shall detention be extended
beyond the time set by law as the maximum for the offense charged.
The period of detention shall be
reckoned as a part of the term of imprisonment imposed by sentence.
Article 21. The
imposition of all penalties is an exclusive attribute of the judiciary.
The prosecution of offenses pertains to the public prosecutor and to the
judicial police, who shall be under the immediate command and authority of the
public prosecutor. The punishment of violations of governmental and police
regulations pertains to the administrative authorities, which punishment shall
consist solely of imprisonment for a period not exceeding thirty-six hours or
of a fine. Should the offender fail to pay the fine, it shall be substituted by
a corresponding period of detention, which in no case may exceed fifteen days.
If the offender is a day laborer or
a workman, his punishment cannot consist of a fine exceeding the amount of his
wages, for one week.
Article 22. Punishment
by mutilation and infamy, branding, flogging, beating with sticks, torture of
any kind, excessive fines, confiscation of property and any other unusual or
extreme penalties are prohibited.
Attachment proceedings covering the
whole or part of the property of a person made under judicial authority to
cover payment of civil liability arising out of the commission of an offense or
for the payment of taxes or fines shall not be deemed a confiscation of
property.
Capital punishment for political
offenses is likewise prohibited; as regards other offenses, it can only be
imposed for high treason committed during a foreign war, parricide, murder that
is treacherous, premeditated, or committed for profit, arson, abduction,
highway robbery, piracy, and grave military offenses.
Article 23. No criminal trial shall have more than three instances. No
person, whether acquitted or convicted, can be tried twice for the same
offense. The practice of
absolving from the instance(5)
is prohibited.
Article 24. Everyone is free to embrace the religion of his choice and
to practice all ceremonies, devotions, or observances of his respective faith,
either in places of public worship or at home, provided they do not constitute
an offense punishable by law.
Every religious act of public
worship must be performed strictly inside places of public worship, which shall
at all times be under governmental supervision.
Article 25. Sealed correspondence sent through the mail shall be exempt
from search and its violation shall be punishable by law.
Article 26. No member of the army shall in time of peace be quartered
in private dwellings without the consent of the owner, nor may he impose any
obligation whatsoever. In time of war the military may demand lodging,
equipment, provisions, and other assistance, in the manner laid down in the
respective martial law.
Article 27. Ownership of the lands and waters within the boundaries of
the national territory is vested originally in the Nation, which has had, and
has, the right to transmit title thereof to private persons, thereby
constituting private property.
Private property shall not be
expropriated except for reasons of public use and subject to payment of indemnity.
The
Nation shall at all times have the right to impose on private property such
limitations as the public interest may demand, as well as the right to regulate
the utilization of natural resources which are susceptible of appropriation, in
order to conserve them and to ensure a more equitable distribution of public
wealth. With this end in view, necessary measures shall be taken to divide up
large landed estates; to develop small landed holdings in operation; to create
new agricultural centers, with necessary lands and waters; to encourage
agriculture in general and to prevent the destruction of natural resources, and
to protect property from damage to the detriment of society. Centers of
population which at present either have no lands or water or which do not
possess them in sufficient quantities for the needs of their inhabitants, shall
be entitled to grants thereof, which shall be taken from adjacent properties,
the rights of small landed holdings in operation being respected at all times.
In the Nation is vested the direct
ownership of all natural resources of the continental shelf and the submarine
shelf of the islands; of all minerals or substances, which in veins, ledges,
masses or ore pockets, form deposits of a nature distinct from the components
of the earth itself, such as the minerals from which industrial metals and
metalloids are extracted; deposits of precious stones, rock-salt and the
deposits of salt formed by sea water; products derived from the decomposition
of rocks, when subterranean works are required for their extraction; mineral or
organic deposits of materials susceptible of utilization as fertilizers; solid
mineral fuels; petroleum and all solid, liquid, and gaseous hydrocarbons; and
the space above the national territory to the extent and within the terms fixed
by international law.(6)
In the Nation is likewise vested the
ownership of the waters of the territorial seas, within the limits and terms
fixed by international law; inland marine waters; those of lagoons and
estuaries permanently or intermittently connected with the sea; those of
natural, inland lakes which are directly connected with streams having a
constant flow; those of rivers and their direct or indirect tributaries from
the point in their source where the first permanent, intermittent, or
torrential waters begin, to their mouth in the sea, or a lake, lagoon, or
estuary forming a part of the public domain; those of constant or intermittent
streams and their direct or indirect tributaries, whenever the bed of the
stream, throughout the whole or a part of its length, serves as a boundary of
the national territory or of two federal divisions, or if it flows from one
federal division to another or crosses the boundary line of the Republic; those
of lakes, lagoons, or estuaries whose basins, zones, or shores are crossed by
the boundary lines of two or more divisions or by the boundary line of the
Republic and a neighboring country or when the shoreline serves as the boundary
between two federal divisions or of the Republic and a neighboring country;
those of springs that issue from beaches, maritime areas, the beds, basins, or
shores of lakes, lagoons, or estuaries in the national domain; and waters
extracted from mines and the channels, beds, or shores of interior lakes and
streams in an area fixed by law. Underground waters may be brought to the
surface by artificial works and utilized by the surface owner, but if the
public interest so requires or use by others is affected, the Federal Executive
may regulate its extraction and utilization, and even establish prohibited
areas, the same as may be done with other waters in the public domain. Any
other waters not included in the foregoing enumeration shall be considered an
integral part of the property through which they flow or in which they are
deposited, but if they are located in two or more properties, their utilization
shall be deemed a matter of public use, and shall be subject to laws enacted by
the States.(7)
In those cases to which the two
preceding paragraphs refer, ownership by the Nation is inalienable and imprescriptible, and the exploitation, use, or appropriation
of the resources concerned, by private persons or by companies organized
according to Mexican laws, may not be undertaken except through concessions
granted by the Federal Executive, in accordance with rules and conditions
established by law. The legal rules relating to the working or exploitation of
the minerals and substances referred to in the fourth paragraph shall govern
the execution and proofs of what is carried out or should be carried out after
they go into effect, independent of the date of granting the concessions, and
their nonobservance will be grounds for cancellation thereof. The Federal
Government has the power to establish national reserves and to abolish them.
The declarations pertaining thereto shall be made by the Executive in those cases
and conditions prescribed by law. In the case of petroleum, and solid, liquid,
or gaseous hydrocarbons no concessions or contracts will be granted nor may
those that have been granted continue, and the Nation shall carry out the
exploitation of these products, in accordance with the provisions indicated in
the respective regulatory law.(8)
It is exclusively a function of the
general Nation to conduct, transform, distribute, and supply electric power
which is to be used for public service. No concessions for this purpose will be
granted to private persons and the Nation will make use of the property and
natural resources which are required for these ends.(9)
(Note: A transitory provision of the amendment adding the foregoing paragraph
to Article 27 states:
"A regulatory law shall
establish the rules to which concessions granted prior to the enactment of the
present law (amendment) shall be subject".)
Legal capacity to acquire ownership
of lands and waters of the Nation shall be governed by the following
provisions:
The State,
in accordance with its internal public interests and with principles of
reciprocity, may in the discretion of the Secretariat of Foreign Affairs
authorize foreign states to acquire, at the permanent sites of the Federal
Powers, private ownership of real property necessary for the direct services of
their embassies or legations.(10)
The
federal and state laws, within their respective jurisdictions, shall determine
in what cases the occupation of private property shall be considered to be of
public utility; and in accordance with such laws, the administrative authorities
shall issue the respective declaration. The amount fixed as compensation for
the expropriated property shall be based on the value recorded in assessment or
tax offices for tax purposes, whether this value had been declared by the owner
or tacitly accepted by him by having paid taxes on that basis. The increased or
decreased value of such private property due to improvements or depreciation
which occurred after such assessment is the only portion of the value that
shall be subject to the decision of experts and judicial proceedings. This same
procedure shall be followed in the case of property whose value is not recorded
in the tax offices.
The
exercise of actions pertaining to the Nation by virtue of the provisions of
this article shall be made effective by judicial procedure, but during these
proceedings and by order of the proper courts, which must render a decision
within a maximum of one month, the administrative authorities shall proceed
without delay to occupy, administer, auction, or sell the lands and waters in
question and all their appurtenances, and in no case may the acts of such
authorities be set aside until a final decision has been rendered.
All
questions, regardless of their origin, concerning the boundaries of communal
lands, which are now pending or that may arise hereafter between two or more
centers of population, are matters of federal jurisdiction. The Federal
Executive shall take cognizance of such controversies and propose a solution to
the interested parties. If the latter agree thereto, the proposal of the
Executive shall take full effect as a final decision and shall be irrevocable;
should they not be in conformity, the party or parties may appeal to the
Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation, without prejudice to immediate
enforcement of the presidential proposal.
The law
shall specify the brief procedure to which the settling of such controversies
shall conform.
The sole
exception to the aforesaid nullification shall be the lands to which title has
been granted in allotments made in conformity with the Law of June 25, 1856,
held by persons in their own name for more than ten years and having an area of
not more than fifty hectares.
The area
or individual unit of the grant shall hereafter be not less than ten hectares
of moist or irrigated land, or in default of such land its equivalent in other
types of land in accordance with the third paragraph of section XV of this
article.(12)
The
governors shall refer the petitions to the mixed commissions, which shall study
the cases during a fixed period of time and render a report; the State
governors shall approve or modify the report of the mixed commission and issue
orders that immediate possession be given to areas which they deem proper. The
case shall then be turned over to the Federal Executive for decision.
Whenever
the governors fail to comply with the provisions of the preceding paragraph,
within the peremptory period of time fixed by law, the report of the mixed
commission shall be deemed rejected and the case shall be referred immediately
to the Federal Executive.
Inversely,
whenever a mixed commission fails to render a report during the peremptory time
limit, the Governor shall be empowered to grant possession of the area of land
he deems appropriate.
Persons
affected by such decisions shall have solely the right to apply to the Federal
Government for payment of the corresponding indemnity. This right must be
exercised by the interested parties within one year counting from the date of
publication of the respective resolution in the Diario
Oficial. After this period has elapsed, no claim
is admissible.
Owners or
occupants of agricultural or stockraising properties
in operation who have been issued or to whom there may be issued in the future
certificates of non-affectability may institute amparo
proceedings against any illegal deprivation or agrarian claims on their lands
or water.(13)
Small
agricultural property is that which does not exceed one hundred hectares of
first-class moist or irrigated land or its equivalent in other classes of land,
under cultivation.
To
determine this equivalence one hectare of irrigated land shall be computed as
two hectares of seasonal land; as four of good quality pasturage (agostadero) and as eight as monte
(scrub land) or arid pasturage.
Also to be
considered as small holdings are areas not exceeding two hundred hectares of
seasonal lands or pasturage susceptible of cultivation; or one hundred fifty
hectares of land used for cotton growing if irrigated from fluvial canals or by
pumping; or three hundred, under cultivation, when used for growing bananas,
sugar cane, coffee, henequen, rubber, coconuts, grapes, olives, quinine, vanilla,
cacao, or fruit trees.
Small
holdings for stockraising are lands not exceeding the
area necessary to maintain up to five hundred head of cattle (ganado mayor) or their equivalent in smaller animals (ganado menor - sheep, goats,
pigs) under provisions of law, in accordance with the forage capacity of the
lands.
Whenever,
due to irrigation or drainage works or any other works executed by the owners
or occupants of a small holding to whom a certificate of non-affectability has
been issued, the quality of the land is improved for agricultural or stockraising operations, such holding shall not be subject
to agrarian appropriation even if, by virtue of the improvements made, the
maximums indicated in this section are lowered, provided that the requirements
fixed by law are met.
Article 28. In the
United Mexican States there shall be no monopolies or estancos
of any kind; nor exemption from taxes; nor prohibitions under the guise
of protection to industry; excepting only those relating to the coinage of
money, the mails, telegraph, and radiotelegraphy, to the issuance of paper
money by a single bank to be controlled by the Federal Government, and to the
privileges which for a specified time are granted to authors and artists for
the reproduction of their works, and to those which, for the exclusive use of
their inventions, may be granted to inventors and those who perfect some
improvement.
Consequently,
the law shall punish severely and the authorities shall effectively prosecute
every concentration or cornering in one or a few hands of articles of prime
necessity for the purpose of obtaining a rise in prices; every act or
proceeding which prevents or tends to prevent free competition in production,
industry or commerce, or services to the public; every agreement or
combination, in whatever manner it may be made, of producers, industrialists,
merchants, and common carriers, or those engaged in any other service, to
prevent competition among themselves and to compel consumers to pay exaggerated
prices; and in general, whatever constitutes an exclusive and undue advantage
in favor of one or more specified persons and to the prejudice of the public in
general or of any social class.
Associations
of workers, formed to protect their own interests, do not constitute
monopolies.
Nor
do cooperative associations or societies of producers constitute monopolies, which in defense of their interests or of the general
interest, sell directly in foreign markets the domestic or industrial products
which are the main source of wealth in the region in which they are produced,
and which are articles of prime necessity, provided that such associations are
under the supervision and protection of the Federal or State Governments and
that they were previously duly authorized for the purpose by the respective
legislatures, which latter of themselves or on proposal of the Executive may,
when the public need so requires, repeal the authorizations granted for the
formation of the associations in question.
Article 29. In the event of invasion, serious disturbance of the public
peace, or any other event which may place society in great danger or conflict,
only the President of the Mexican Republic, with the consent of the Council of
Ministers and with the approval of the Federal Congress, and during
adjournments of the latter, of the Permanent Committee, may suspend throughout
the country or in a determined place the guarantees which present an obstacle
to a rapid and ready combatting of the situation; but
he must do so for a limited time, by means of general preventive measures
without such suspensions being limited to a specified individual. If the
suspension should occur while the Congress is in session, the latter shall
grant such authorizations that it deems necessary to enable the Executive to
meet the situation. If the suspension occurs during a period of adjournment,
the Congress shall be convoked without delay in order to grant them.
Mexicans
Article 30. Mexican nationality is acquired by birth or by
naturalization:
Article 31. The obligations of Mexicans are:
Article 32. (14)Mexicans shall have
priority over foreigners under equality of circumstances for all classes of concessions
and for all employment, positions, or commissions of the Government in which
the status of citizenship is not indispensable. In time of peace no foreigner
can serve in the Army nor in the police or public
security forces.
In
order to belong to the National Navy or the Air Force, and to discharge any
office or commission, it is required to be a Mexican by birth. This same status is indispensable for captains, pilots,
masters, engineers, mechanics, and in general, for all personnel of the crew of
any vessel or airship protected by the Mexican merchant flag or insignia It is
also necessary to be Mexican by birth to discharge the position of captain of
the port and all services of pratique and airport
commandant, as well as all functions of customs agent in the Republic.
Foreigners
Article 33. Foreigners are those who do not possess the qualifications
set forth in Article 30.
They are entitled to the guarantees granted by Chapter I, Title I,
of the present Constitution; but the Federal Executive shall have the exclusive
power to compel any foreigner whose remaining he may deem inexpedient to
abandon the national territory immediately and without the necessity of
previous legal action.
Foreigners
may not in any way participate in the political affairs of the country.
Mexican
Citizens
Article 34. Men and women who, having the status of Mexicans, likewise
meet the following requirements are citizens of the Republic:
Article 35. The prerogatives of citizens are:
Article 36. The
obligations of citizens of the Republic are:
Article 38. The rights or prerogatives of citizens are suspended:
The law shall specify those cases in
which civil rights may be lost or suspended and the manner of rehabilitation.
National
Sovereignty and Form of Government
Article 39. The national sovereignty resides essentially and originally
in the people All public power originates in the
people and is instituted for their benefit. The people at all times have the
inalienable right to alter or modify their form of government.
Article 40. It is the will of the Mexican people to organize themselves
into a federal' democratic, representative Republic composed of free and
sovereign States in all that concerns their internal government' but united in
a Federation established according to the principles of this fundamental law.
Article 41. The people exercise their sovereignty through the powers of
the Union in those cases within its jurisdiction, and through those of the
States, in all that relates to their internal affairs, under the terms
established by the present Federal Constitution and the individual
constitutions of the States' respectively, which latter shall in no event
contravene the stipulations of the Federal Pact.
Integral
Parts of the Federation and of the National Territory
Article 42.(15)
The national territory comprises:
Article 43.(16)
The integral parts of the Federation are the States of Aguascalientes, Baja
California, Campeche, Coahuila, Colima, Chiapas, Chihuahua, Durango,
Guanajuato, Guerrero, Hidalgo, Jalisco, México, Michoacán, Morelos, Nayarit,
Nuevo León, Oaxaca, Puebla, Querétaro, San Luis Potosí, Sinaloa, Sonora,
Tabasco, Tamaulipas, Tlaxcala, Veracruz, Yucatán, Zacatecas, the Federal
District, and the Territories of Baja California Sur, and Quintana Roo.
Article 44. The Federal District shall embrace its present territory,
and in the event of the removal of the federal branches to some other place, it
shall be erected into the State of Valle de México, with such boundaries and
area as the General Congress shall assign to it.
Article 45.(17)
The States and Territories of the Federation shall keep their present area and
boundaries as of this day, provided no difficulties arise concerning them.
Article 46. The States having pending boundary questions shall arrange
or settle them as provided in this Constitution.
Article 47. The State of Nayarit shall have the territorial area and
boundaries which at present comprise the Territory of Tepic.
Article 48.(18)
The islands, keys, and reefs of the adjacent seas which belong to the national
territory, the continental shelf, the submarine shelf of the islands, keys, and
reefs, the inland marine waters, and the space above the national territory
shall depend directly on the Government of the Federation, with the exception
of those islands over which the States have up to the present exercised
jurisdiction.
Division
of Powers
Article 49.(19)
The supreme power of the Federation is divided, for its exercise, into
legislative, executive, and judicial branches.
Two or more of these powers shall
never be united in one single person or corporation, nor shall the legislative
power be vested in one individual except in the case of extraordinary powers
granted to the Executive, in accordance with the provisions of Article 29.
The
Legislative Branch
Article 50. The legislative power of the United Mexican States is
vested in a General Congress, which shall be divided into two chambers, one of
deputies and the other of senators.
Election
and Installation of Congress
Article 51. The
Chamber of Deputies is composed of representatives of the Nation,
all elected every three years by the Mexican citizens.
Article 52.(20)
One proprietary deputy shall be elected for each two hundred thousand
inhabitants or fraction of over one hundred thousand, according to the general
census of the Federal District and of each State and Territory; but in no case
shall the representation of a State be less than two deputies, and that of a
Territory whose population is less than that fixed by this article shall be one
proprietary deputy.
Article 53. For each proprietary deputy there shall be elected one
alternate.
Article 54.(21)
The election of deputies shall be direct, subject to the provisions of Article 52,
and will be supplemented, in addition, by party deputies, in both cases
according to the provisions of the electoral law, and in the latter case
according to the following rules:
Article 55. The following are the requirements to be a deputy:
The
secretaries of government of the States, federal magistrates and judges or
those of the States, cannot be elected in the
districts of their respective jurisdictions unless they definitively resign
their position ninety days before the election;
Article 56. The Chamber of Senators shall be composed of two members
for each State and two for the Federal District, all directly elected every six
years.
The legislature of each State shall
declare elected the person obtaining a majority of the votes cast.
Article 57. For each proprietary senator one alternate shall be
elected.
Article 58. To be a senator the same requisites must be met as to be a
deputy except that of age, which shall be thirty-five years of age attained by
the date of the election.
Article 59. Senators and deputies to the Congress of the Union cannot
be reelected for the immediately following term.
Alternate senators and deputies may
be elected for the immediately following term as proprietaries,
provided that they have not been serving (in the office of their principals);
but proprietary senators and deputies cannot be elected for the immediately
following term in the capacity of alternates.
Article 60. Each chamber shall be the judge of the elections of its
members and shall decide any questions with respect thereto. Its decision shall
be final and unimpeachable.
Article 61. Deputies and senators are inviolable for opinions expressed
by them in the discharge of their offices and shall never be called to account
for them.
Article 62. Proprietary deputies and senators, during their terms of
office, may not hold any other commission or employment of the Federation or of
the States for which they receive a salary, without prior permission from the
respective chamber; but their representative functions shall thereupon cease,
while they are holding the new position. The same rule shall apply to alternate
deputies and senators when serving (as principals). Infraction of this
provision shall be punishable by loss of the status of deputy or senator.
Article 63.(22)
The chambers cannot open their sessions nor exercise their duties without the
presence, in the Senate, of two thirds, and in the Chamber of Deputies, of more
than half of the total number of members; but those present in either chamber
must assemble on the day appointed by law and compel the absentees to attend
within thirty days following, with the warning that if they do not do so it
shall be understood that by that sole fact they do not accept their office, and
the alternates shall be immediately called and must present themselves within a
like period, and if they fail to do so, the postion
shall be declared vacant and a new election shall be called.
It is also understood that deputies
or senators who fail to attend for ten consecutive days, without justifiable
cause or previous leave from the president of their respective chamber, of
which the chamber shall be advised, renounce their attendance until the next
period, and their alternates shall be called at once.
If there shall be no quorum to install
either chamber or to exercise their functions when once installed, the
alternates shall be called immediately to present themselves within the
shortest possible time, to discharge their office until the expiration of the
thirty days above mentioned.
Anyone elected deputy or senator who
does not present himself and assume the office, without justifiable cause as
determined by the respective Chamber, within the time limit indicated in the
first paragraph of this article, shall be held responsible and subject to the
sanctions prescribed by law. National political parties that have entered
candidates in an election for deputies or senators but which agree that those
elected shall not present themselves to assume office, will likewise be held
responsible and punishable by the same law.
Article 64. Deputies and senators who, without
justifiable cause or without permission of the president of the respective
chamber, do not attend a session, shall have no right to remuneration for the
day on which they were absent.
Article 65. The Congress shall meet on the first day of September of
each year in regular session, when it shall occupy itself with the following
matters:
There can
be no secret items other than those considered necessary because of that
character in the budget itself and which the secretaries shall employ by
written order of the President of the Republic.
Article 66. The period of regular sessions shall continue for the time
necessary to dispose of all matters mentioned in the preceding article; but it
cannot be prolonged beyond December 31 of the same year.
If the two chambers are not in
accord as to the termination of the sessions before the date indicated, the
President of the Republic shall decide.
Article 67. The Congress or only one of its chambers, when a matter
exclusive to it is concerned, shall meet in extraordinary sessions whenever the
Permanent Committee shall convoke them for that purpose; but in both cases they
shall occupy themselves only with the matter or matters which the said
Committee submits to their attention, which shall be stated in the respective
call.
Article 68. The two chambers shall reside at the same place and cannot
remove to another unless they previously agree to the removal and on the time
and manner of so doing, designating the same place for the meeting of both. But
if the two in agreeing on removal, differ in regard to the time, manner, and
place, the Executive shall settle the difference by choosing one of the two
extremes in question. Neither chamber may suspend its sessions for more than
three days without the consent of the other.
Article 69. The President of the Republic shall attend the opening of
the regular sessions of the Congress and shall submit a report, in writing, in
which he shall indicate the general state of the administration of the country.
At the opening of extraordinary sessions of Congress, or of only one of the
chambers, the Chairman of the Permanent Committee shall report as to the
motives or reasons that led to the call.
Article 70. Every resolution of the Congress shall have the character
of a law or of a decree. The laws or decrees shall be communicated to the
Executive signed by the Presidents of both chambers and by a secretary of each,
and shall be promulgated in this form: "The Congress of the United Mexican
States decrees (Text of the law or decree)."
Introduction
and Enactment of Laws
Article 71. The right to introduce laws or decrees belongs:
The bills submitted by the President
of the Republic, by the legislatures of the States or by deputations thereof
shall be referred at once to Committee. Those which are introduced by deputies
or senators shall be subject to the procedure prescribed in the regulations on
debate.
Article 72. Every bill or proposed decree, the resolution of which does
not pertain exclusively to one of the chambers, shall be discussed successively
in both, the regulations on debate being observed as to form, intervals of
time, and mode of procedure in discussions and voting.
The voting
on a law or decree shall be by roll call.
Neither may he do so in regard to a
decree of convocation to extraordinary sessions issued by the Permanent
Committee.
Powers
of Congress
Article 73. The Congress has the power:
The
Territories shall be divided into Municipalities, which shall have a land area
and number of inhabitants sufficient to be able maintain themselves on their
own resources and contribute to their ordinary expenditures. Each Municipality
in the Territories shall be entrusted to an ayuntamiento
elected by direct popular vote.
In cases
of temporary inability of magistrates to act for more than three months, they
shall be replaced by appointments which the President of the Republic shall
submit to the approval of the Chamber of Deputies, and during its adjournment,
to that of the Permanent Committee, in either instance by observing the
provisions of the preceding clauses.
In cases
of temporary inability which do not exceed three months, the Organic Law shall
determine the manner of making the substitution. If a magistrate should cease
to act because of death, resignation, or incapacity, the President of the
Republic shall submit a new appointment for the approval of the Chamber of
Deputies. If the Chamber is not in session, the Permanent Committee shall give
provisional approval, until the Chamber meets and gives final approval.
The judges
of first instance, and the minor and correctional judges of the Federal
District and the Territories, shall be appointed by the supreme court of
justice of the Federal District; they must have the qualifications which the
law prescribes and shall be replaced during their temporary inability to act,
in the manner provided by law.
The
remuneration which magistrates and judges receive for their services cannot be
decreased during their terms of office.
The
magistrates and judges to whom this basis refers,
shall continue in office for six years; but they may be removed from their
positions when guilty of bad conduct, in accordance with the final part of Article 111
or after corresponding action for responsibility.(24)
Federal entitites shall share in the revenues from these special
taxes in the proportion fixed by secondary federal law. The local legislatures
shall fix the percentage corresponding to the Municipalities from revenues
obtained from the tax on electric power.
Article 74. The exclusive powers of the Chamber of Deputies are:
Article 75. The Chamber of Deputies, upon approving the budget of
expenditures, may not fail to fix the remuneration which corresponds to an
office which is established by law; and in the event that for any reason it
fails to fix such remuneration, the amount fixed in the previous budget or in
the law which established the office shall be understood to be designated.
Article 76. The exclusive powers of the Senate are:
The law
shall regulate the exercise of this and of the foregoing powers.
Article 77. Each of the chambers, without the intervention of the
other, may:
The
Permanent Committee
Article 78. During the adjournment of Congress there shall be a
Permanent Committee composed of twenty-nine members, of whom fifteen shall be
deputies and fourteen senators, named by their respective chambers on the eve
of the close of the sessions.
Article 79. The Permanent Committee, in addition to the powers which
this Constitution expressly confers upon it, shall have the following:
The
Executive Branch
Article 80. The exercise of the supreme executive power of the Union is
vested in a single individual who is designated "President of the United
Mexican States."
Article 81. The election of the President shall be direct and under the
terms prescribed by the Electoral Law.
Article 82. In order to be President it is required:
Article 83. The President shall assume the duties of office on the
first of December for a term of six years. A citizen who has held the office of
President of the Republic, by popular election or by appointment as ad interim,
provisional, or substitute President, can in no case and for no reason again
hold that office.
Article 84. In the event of the absolute disability of the President of
the Republic, occurring during the first two years of his term, if the Congress
is in session, it shall immediately constitute itself as an electoral college,
and if there is at least two thirds of the total membership present, it shall
name by secret ballot, and by an absolute majority of votes, an interim
President; the same Congress shall issue, within ten days following the
designation of the interim President, a call for the election of a President to
complete the respective term; between the date of the call and that designated
for holding the election, there must be an interval of not less than fourteen
months nor more than eighteen.
If the Congress is not in session,
the Permanent Committee shall immediately name a provisional President and
shall call Congress in extraordinary session in order that it, in turn, may
designate an interim President and issue the call for presidential elections as
indicated in the preceding paragraph.
When the disability of the President
occurs within the last four years of his term, if the Congress is in session,
it shall designate a substitute President to complete the term; if the Congress
is not in session, the Permanent Committee shall name a provisional President
and shall convoke the Congress in extraordinary session in order that it may
constitute itself into an electoral college and elect the s ub
stitute Pr e s ident.
Article 85. If at the commencement of a constitutional period the
President-elect does not present himself, or if the elections have not been
held and the results declared on December first, the President whose term has
ended shall nevertheless cease to function, and at once the executive power
shall be entrusted to an individual whom the Congress shall designate as
interim President, or if Congress is not in session, to an individual whom the
Permanent Committee shall designate as provisional President; proceeding
according to the provisions of the preceding article.
When the disability of the President
is temporary, the Congress, if in session, or if not, the Permanent Committee,
shall designate an interim President to function during the period of the
disability.
When the disability is for more than
thirty days and the Congress is not in session, the Permanent Committee shall
convoke an extraordinary session of the Congress in order that it may decide
upon the leave of absence, or as the case may be, name an interim President.
If the temporary disability becomes
absolute, the procedure described in the preceding article shall be observed.
Article
86. The office of President of the Republic can be resigned
only for grave cause, which shall be passed upon by the Congress of the Union,
to which the resignation must be presented.
Article 87. The President, upon taking possession of his office, shall
make before the Congress of the Union, or if in adjournment before the
Permanent Committee, the following affirmation: "I solemnly promise that I
will observe and enforce the Political Constitution of the United Mexican
States and the laws enacted in pursuance thereof, and that I will discharge
loyally and patriotically the office of President of the Republic which the
people have conferred upon me, in all ways looking to the welfare and
prosperity of the Union; and if I do not do so may the Nation demand it of
me."
Article 88.(36)
The President of the Republic may not absent himself from the national
territory without the permission of the Congress of the Union or of the
Permanent Committee, as the case may be.
Article 89. The powers and duties of the President are the following:
Article 90. For the dispatch of the administrative business of the
Federations there shall be the number of secretaries that the Congress shall
establish by law, which shall distribute the business to be entrusted to each
Secretariat.
Article 91. To be a secretary it is required to be a Mexican citizen by
birth, to be in exercise of his rights, and be at least thirty years of age.
Article 92. All regulations, decrees, and orders of the President must
be signed by the secretary (Secretario del Despacho) in charge of the
branch (of administration) to which the matter pertains, and without this
requisite they shall not be obeyed. The regulations, decrees, and orders of the
President relating to the government of the Federal District and to the
administrative departments, shall be sent directly by the President to the
governor of the District and to the chief of the respective department.
Article 93. The secretaries (del Despacho), as soon as the regular period of sessions is
opened, shall give a report to the Congress on the state of their respective
branches. Either of the Chambers may summon the secretaries of state for
information, whenever a law is under discussion or a matter is being studied
relating to their secretariat.
The
Judicial Branch
Article 94.(40)
The judicial power of the Federation is vested in a Supreme Court of Justice,
in circuit courts, as a body in matters of amparo
and as single judges in matters of appeal, and in district courts. The Supreme
Court of Justice of the Nation shall consist of twenty-one ministers and shall
function as a full court (en tribunal pleno) or
divided into sections (salas). There shall also be
five supernumerary ministers. Hearings of the full court or of the sections
shall be public, with the exception of cases in which morals or the public interest require secrecy. The terms of sessions of the
Supreme Court, as a full court or in sections, the powers and duties of the
supernumerary ministers, and the number and jurisdiction of the circuit courts
and district judges shall be governed by this Constitution and by provisions of
law. In no case shall the supernumerary ministers sit in the full court. The
remuneration received for their services by the ministers of the Supreme Court,
by the circuit magistrates and by the district judges may not be reduced during
their term of office.
The ministers of the Supreme Court
of Justice may be removed from office whenever they are guilty of bad conduct,
in accordance with the final part of Article 111,
after judgment of their corresponding liability.
Article 95. To be elected minister of the Supreme Court of Justice, it
is necessary:
Article 96. Appointments of the ministers of the Supreme Court shall be
made by the President of the Republic and submitted to the approval of the
Chamber of Senators, which shall grant or deny approval within the unalterable
period of ten days. If the Chamber fails to decide within that time, the
appointments shall be considered as approved Without
the approval of the Senate, the magistrates of the Supreme Court named by the
President of the Republic cannot take office. In the event that the Chamber of
Senators does not approve two successive nominations for the same vacancy, the
President of the Republic shall make a third appointment, which shall become
effective at once as provisional, and which shall be submitted to the said
Chamber at the following regular period of sessions At such period of sessions,
within the first ten days, the Senate must approve or disapprove the
appointment, and if it approves it, or takes no decision, the magistrate
appointed provisionally shall continue in office permanently. If the Senate
rejects the appointment, the provisional minister shall cease to act and the
President of the Republic shall submit a new appointment to the approval of the
Senate, in the manner indicated.
Article 97. The circuit magistrates and district judges shall be appointed
by the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation, shall have the qualifications
which the law requires' and shall
hold office for four years, at the expiration of which, if they are
reelected or elevated to a higher position, they may be removed from office
only if guilty of bad conduct, in accordance with the final part of Article 111
or after judgment of their corresponding liability.
The Supreme Court of Justice may
also change the seat of the district judges, transferring them from one
district to another, or fixing their residence in another town, as it may deem
convenient for better public service. The same may be done with respect to
circuit magistrates.
The Supreme Court of Justice of the
Nation may also appoint supernumerary circuit magistrates and district judges
to assist in the work of the courts and tribunals where there is an excess of
business, in order to provide for prompt and expeditious administration of
justice; and it shall appoint one or more of its members, or some district
judge or circuit magistrate, or designate one or more special commissioners,
when deemed advisable, or if the federal Executive, or one of the chambers of
Congress, or the governor of a State so requests, solely to investigate the
conduct of any federal judge or magistrate, or any act or acts which may
constitute a violation of any individual guarantee, or the violation of the
public election, or some other crime punishable by federal law.
The circuit courts and district
courts shall be distributed among the ministers of the Supreme Court, who shall
visit them periodically, observe the conduct of the magistrates and judges
presiding over them, hear complaints presented against such officials, and
perform any other duties prescribed by law. The Supreme Court of Justice may
freely appoint and remove its clerk and any other employees serving it, with
strict observance of the appropriate law. In the same way, the circuit
magistrates and district judges shall appoint and remove their respective
clerks and employees.
The Supreme Court of Justice shall
designate each year one of its members as president, with the right of
reelection.
Each
minister of the Supreme Court of Justice' on assuming office, shall affirm
before the Senate, or before the Permanent Committee
if the former is in adjournment, in the following form:
President:
"Do you solemnly promise that you will discharge loyally and patriotically
the office of Minister of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation which has
been conferred upon you, and that you will observe and enforce the Political
Constitution of the United Mexican States and the laws enacted in pursuance
thereof, in all ways looking to the welfare and prosperity of the Union?"
Minister:
"Yes, I promise. "
President:
"If you fail to do so, may the Nation call you to account. "
The circuit magistrates and district
judges shall make their affirmation before the Supreme Court or before an
authority designated by law.
A minister of the Supreme Court of
Justice of the Nation who is temporarily absent from office, for a period not
exceeding one month, shall be replaced in the corresponding section by a
supernumerary. If the absence exceeds that period, the President of the
Republic shall submit the appointment of a provisional minister to the approval
of the Senate, or if adjourned, to the Permanent Committee, observing in each
case the provisions of the final part of Article 96.
In the event of the death,
resignation, or incapacity of a minister, the President of the Republic shall
submit a new appointment to the approval of the Senate. If the Senate is not in
session, the Permanent Committee shall give its approval, until the former
meets to give definitive approval.
Article 99. Resignations of ministers of the Supreme Court of Justice
may be submitted only for serious reasons; they shall be submitted to the
Executive, and if he accepts them they shall be sent to the Senate for
approval, or if adjourned to the Permanent Committee.
Article
100. Leaves of
absence of ministers, when they do not exceed one month, shall be granted by
the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation; those that exceed that time shall
be granted by the President of the Republic, with the approval of the Senate,
or during its adjournment, of the Permanent Committee.
Article
101. The
ministers of the Supreme Court of Justice, the circuit magistrates, the
district judges, and their respective clerks may not in any case accept and
hold employment or office of the Federation, the States, or of a private
nature, except honorary positions in scientific, literary, or charitable
associations. Violation of this provision shall be punishable by loss of
office.
Article
102.(41)
The law shall organize a public ministry of the Federation, the officials of
which shall be appointed and removed by the Executive, in accordance with the
respective law, and which shall be presided over by an attorney general (Procurador General) who shall have the same qualifications
as those required to be a magistrate of the Supreme Court of Justice.
The prosecution before the courts of
all federal offenses shall be the duty of the public ministry of the
Federation; and, therefore, it shall request orders of arrest for offenders;
procure and present evidence as to their liability; see that trials are
conducted with due regularity in order that the administration of justice may
be prompt and efficient; request the imposition of sentence; and intervene in
all matters that the law may determine.
The Attorney General of the Republic
shall personally intervene in all matters in which the Federation is a party;
in cases affecting ministers, diplomats, and consuls general, and in those that
arise between two or more States of the Union, between one State and the
Federation, or between the powers of one State. The Attorney General may intervene
in person or through one of his agents in other cases where the intervention of
the public ministry of the Federation is necessary.
The Attorney General shall be the
legal counselor of the Government. Both he and his agents shall strictly obey
the provisions of law, being responsible for every offense, omission, or
violation that they may incur in the discharge of their duties.
Article
103. The
federal courts shall decide all controversies that arise:
Article
104. The
federal courts shall have jurisdiction over:
In cases
in which the Federation is interested, the laws may provide for appeals to the
Supreme Court of Justice against judgments in second instance or against those
of administrative courts created by federal law, provided that such courts are
granted full autonomy to render their decisions.(42)
Article
105. The
Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation has exclusive jurisdiction in all
controversies that arise between two or more States, between the powers of one
State concerning the constitutionality of their acts, and in disputes between
the Federation and one or more States, and all those in which the Federation is
a party.
Article
106. The
Supreme Court of Justice shall likewise have the power to settle questions of
jurisdiction that arise between courts of the Federation, between the latter
and State courts, or between the courts of one State and those of another.
Article
107.(43)
All controversies mentioned in Article 103
shall be subject to the legal forms and procedure prescribed by law, on the
following bases:
A defect
in the complaint may be corrected, whenever the act complained of is based on
laws declared unconstitutional by previous decisions of the Supreme Court of
Justice.
A defect
in the complaint may also be corrected in criminal matters and in behalf of
workers in labor disputes, when it is found that there has been a manifest
violation of the law against the injured party who is left without defense, and
in criminal matters, likewise, when the trial has been based on a law not
precisely applicable to the case.
In trials
in amparo which contest acts that resulted or
could result in depriving ejidos or population
groups, or members of an ejido or communal
holders having a de facto or de jure communal status, from ownership or
possession and enjoyment of their lands, waters, pastures, and woodlands,
defects in the complaint must be corrected as provided in regulations; and
there shall be no abandonment, discontinuance due to inactivity, or lapse of
the legal action, if the rights of ejidos or
communal population groups are affected.(44)
Whenever a
writ of amparo is sought against final civil
or criminal judgments or awards relating to labor matters, based on alleged
substantial violations committed during the course of the trial or violations
contained in the judgment or award, it must be invoked jointly for all such
allegations, submitting the writ to the appropriate full circuit court, which
shall render a decision solely with respect to the substantial violations
during the trial, and if the judgment is unfavorable to the aggrieved party,
shall remit the case to the Supreme Court of Justice to decide on the
violations committed in the judgment or award.
As to the
application and procedure in amparo cases
before the full circuit court, the provisions of the preceding section shall be
observed. When this procedure has been completed, a judgment shall be rendered
according to the procedure prescribed by law.
In all
other cases the review will be made by a full circuit court and their decisions
may not be appealed.
A decision
of a full circuit court may not be appealed if it is based on a precedent
established by the Supreme Court of Justice as to the constitutionality of a
law or the direct interpretation of a provision of the Constitution.
A
suspension must be granted with respect to final judgments in criminal matters
at the time notice is given of the application for a writ of amparo, and in civil matters when bond is posted by
the complainant to cover liability for damages occasioned by the suspension,
but this is waived if the other party gives bond (contrafianza)
to ensure restoration of things as they were if amparo
is granted and to pay resulting damages.
If the
district judge resides in the same place as the responsible authority, the law
shall specify the judge before whom the writ of amparo
is to be presented, and that judge may provisionally suspend the act in
question, in those cases and under the terms established in the same law.
If the
full circuit courts sustain contradictory opinions in amparo
cases within their jurisdiction, the ministers of the Supreme Court of Justice,
the Attorney General of the Republic, or those courts, may denounce the
contradiction before the appropriate section, to decide which opinion shall
prevail.
When the
sections of the Supreme Court of Justice sustain contradictory opinions in
cases of amparo within their jurisdiction, any
one section or the Attorney General of the Republic may denounce the
contradiction before the Supreme Court of Justice, which, sitting as a full
court, shall decide which opinion shall prevail. Both in this instance and in
the case provided for in the preceding paragraph, the decision rendered shall
be solely for the effect of fixing the precedent and shall not affect the
concrete juridical situation deriving from contradictory judgments in the case in
which they were rendered.
Anyone
violating the article cited in this provision will be immediately turned over
to a competent authority.
Likewise,
anyone who, after an arrest, does not take the arrested person before a judge
within twenty-four hours, shall himself be turned over
to such authority or his agent.
If the
detention takes place outside the locality in which the judge resides,
sufficient time is to be added to the above period to cover the distance
involved.
Responsibilities
of Public Officials
Article
108. Senators
and deputies of the Congress of the Union, magistrates of the Supreme Court of
Justice of the Nation, secretaries of the Cabinet, and the Attorney General of
the Republic are liable for common crimes that they may commit during their
term of office, and also for crimes, offenses, or omissions that they incur in
the exercise of their office.
Governors of the States and deputies
of the local legislatures are liable for violations of the federal Constitution
and laws.
The President of the Republic,
during his term of office, may be impeached only for treason to the country and
serious common crimes.
Article
109. If the
offense is of a common order, the Chamber of Deputies acting as a grand jury
shall determine, by an absolute majority of votes of its total membership,
whether or not there are grounds for proceeding against the accused.
If the finding is negative, there
shall be no grounds for any further proceedings; but such decision shall not be
an obstacle to continuing the prosecution of the charge, whenever the accused
has relinquished his immunity, since the decision of the Chamber in no way
prejudges the merits of the charge.
If the finding is affirmative, the
accused shall thereby be suspended from office and is immediately subject to
action by the ordinary courts, excepting the case of the President of the
Republic, who may be impeached only before the Chamber of Senators, as in the
case of an official offense.
Article
110.
Constitutional immunity shall not be enjoyed by high officials of the
Federation with respect to official crimes, offenses or omissions incurred in
the discharge of any office, employment or public commission which they have
accepted during the period in which, according to law, they enjoy
constitutional immunity. The same shall apply with respect to common crimes
which they may commit during the performance of such office, employment, or
commission. The procedure to be followed to institute proceedings against a
high official who has resumed the exercise of his own functions is that
prescribed in the preceding article
Article
111. The
Senate, constituted as a grand jury, shall take cognizance of all official
offenses; but it may not open the pertinent investigation without a previous bill
of impeachment by the Chamber of Deputies. If after conducting such proceedings
as it deems advisable and hearing the accused, the Chamber of Senators shall
decide by a two-thirds majority of all its members that he is guilty, the
latter shall be removed from office by virtue of such decision and disqualified
from holding any other office for a period determined by law.
Whenever the law provides another
penalty for the same act, the accused shall be placed at the disposal of the
regular authorities, who shall judge and punish him according to such law.
In the cases governed by this
article and those referred to in Article 109,
the decisions of the grand jury and the findings of the Chamber of Deputies
shall be final.
Any person has the right to denounce
before the Chamber of Deputies the common or official offenses of high
officials of the Federation Whenever the aforesaid Chamber finds that there are
grounds for impeachment, it shall appoint a committee
from among its members to sustain before the Senate the charges brought.
As soon as possible, the Congress of
the Union shall enact a law covering the responsibilities of all officials and
employees of the Federation and of the Federal District and Territories,
defining as official offenses or misdemeanors all acts or omissions that may
result in injury to public interests or to the proper conduct of business, even
though they have not been considered previously as wrongful acts These offenses
or misdemeanors shall always be tried before a jury of the people, in the
manner established by Article 20
for offenses of the press.
The President of the Republic may
request from the Chamber of Deputies the removal, for bad conduct, of any
ministers of the Supreme Court of Justice, of circuit magistrates, of district
judges, of the magistrates of the superior court of justice of the Federal
District and of the Territories, and of the judges of common rank in the
Federal District and Territories. In these cases, if the Chamber of Deputies
first and the Senators thereafter decide by an absolute majority of votes that
the request is justified, the accused official shall be removed from office
immediately, independently of the legal liability that may have been incurred,
and the Executive shall proceed with a new appointment.
The President of the Republic,
before asking the chambers for the removal of any judicial official, shall
grant a hearing to the latter privately in order to conscientiously appraise
the justification of such request.(45)
Article
112. The offender cannot be pardoned
after a verdict of guilty is pronounced for official offenses.
Article
113.
Responsibility for official offenses or misdemeanors may be exacted only during
the term of office of the official in question, and within one year thereafter.
Article
114. There are
no privileges or immunities for any public official with respect to claims of a
civil character.
The
States of the Federation
Article
115. For their
internal government, the States shall adopt the popular, representative,
republican form of government, with the free Municipality as the basis of their
territorial division and political and administrative organization, in
accordance with the following principles:
Municipal
presidents, aldermen (regidores), and syndics (síndicos), chosen by direct popular election, may not be
reelected for the term immediately following. Persons who discharge the
functions of those offices either by indirect election, appointment or
designation by any authority, no matter what title they may be given, likewise
may not be reelected for the term immediately following. None of the
above-mentioned officials, when holding office as incumbents, may be elected
for the term immediately following as alternates, but persons designated as
alternates may be elected for the term immediately following as incumbents,
unless they have performed such duties during the preceding term.
The
federal Executive and the governors of the States shall command the public
forces in the municipalities where they customarily or temporarily reside.
Governors
of the States may not hold office for more than six years.(46)
The
election of governors of the States and the local legislatures shall be direct
and in the manner prescribed by their respective electoral laws.
Governors
of the States who hold office by regular or special election may not, in any
case or for any reason, again occupy that office in an interim, provisional or
substitute character, or be in charge of that office in any capacity.
The
following may never be reelected for the immediately following term:
The
constitutional governor of a State must be a Mexican citizen by birth and a
native of the State or with actual residence therein for not less than five
years immediately preceding the day of the election.
The number
of representatives in the state legislatures shall be proportional to the
inhabitants of each State; but in no case shall there be fewer than seven
deputies in States having a population of less than 4000, 000 inhabitants; or
nine in those in which the population exceeds that number but does not reach
800, 000; and eleven in States having a population greater than the latter
figure.
Deputies
to the legislatures of the States may not be reelected for the term immediately
following. Alternate deputies may be elected for the term immediately following
in the capacity of incumbents, provided they have not performed the duties of
an incumbent deputy, but incumbent deputies may not be elected as alternates in
the term immediately following.
Article
116. The
States have the power to fix their respective boundaries among themselves, by
amicable agreements; but such agreements will not be put into effect without
the approval of the Congress of the Union.
Article
117. The
States may not in any case:
II.
Make any alliance, treaty or
coalition with another State, or with foreign powers.
III.
(47)
Deleted.
IV.
Coin money, issue paper money,
stamps, or stamped paper.
V.
Levy duty on persons or goods
passing through their territory.
VI.
Prohibit or levy duty upon, directly
or indirectly, the entrance into or exit from their territory of any domestic
or foreign goods.
VII.
Tax the circulation of domestic or
foreign goods by imposts or duties, the exemption of which is made by local
customhouses, requiring inspection or registration of packages or documentation
to accompany the goods.
VIII.
Enact or maintain in force fiscal
laws or provisions that relate to differences in duties or requirements by
reason of the origin of domestic or foreign goods, whether this difference is
established because of similar production in the locality or because, among
such similar production there is a different place or origin.
IX.
Issue bonds of public debt payable
in foreign currency or outside the national territory; contract loans directly
or indirectly with the Governments of other nations, or contract obligations in
favor of foreign companies or individuals, when the bonds or securities are
payable to bearer or are transmissible by endorsement.
States and
municipalities may not negotiate loans except for the construction of works
intended to produce directly an increase in their revenues.(48)
X.
Levy duties on the production,
storage, or sale of tobacco in a manner distinct from or with quotas greater
than those authorized by the Congress of the Union.(49)
The
Congress of the Union and the state legislatures shall immediately enact laws
designed to combat alcoholism.
Article
118. Nor shall the States, without the consent of the Congress of the
Union:
XI.
Establish ship tonnage dues or any
other port charges, or levy imposts or taxes on imports or exports.
XII.
Have at any time permanent troops or
ships of war.
XIII.
Make war themselves on any foreign
power, except in cases of invasion and of danger so imminent that it does not
admit of delay. In such cases, a report shall be made immediately to the
President of the Republic.
Article
119. Each
State has the obligation to deliver without delay the criminals of another
State or of a foreign State to the authorities who claim themIn
such cases, the writ of the judge who orders the certificate of extradition
shall be sufficient to cause detention of the accused for one month in the case
of extradition between States and for two months if it is international.
Article
120. The
governors of the States are required to publish and enforce federal laws.
Article
121. Complete
faith and credence shall be given in each State of the Federation to the public
acts, registries, and judicial proceedings of all the others. The Congress of
the Union, through general laws, shall prescribe the manner of proving such
acts, registries, and proceedings, and their effect, by subjecting them to the
following principles:
XIV.
The laws of a State shall have
effect only within its own territory and consequently are not binding outside
of that State;
XV.
Real and personal property shall be
subject to the laws of the place in which they are located;
XVI.
Judgments pronounced by the courts
of one State on real rights or real property located in another State shall
have executory effect in the latter only if its own
laws so provide;
Judgments
on personal rights shall be executed in another State only when the defendant
has expressly or by reason of domicile submitted to the court that pronounced
it and provided he has been personally cited to appear at the judicial hearing;
XVII.
Acts of a civil nature done in
accordance with the laws of one State shall have validity in the others;
XVIII.
Professional degrees issued by the
authorities of one State, subject to its laws, shall be respected in the
others.
Article
122. The
powers of the Union have the duty of protecting the States against all foreign
invasion or violence. In any case of internal uprising or disturbance, they
shall give equal protection, provided it is requested by the legislature of the
State or by its Executive if the former is not assembled.
Labor and Social
Security
Article
123.(50)
The Congress of the Union, without contravening the following basic principles,
shall formulate labor laws which shall apply to:
S.
Workers, day laborers, domestic
servants, artisans (obreros, jornaleros,
empleados domésticos, artesanos) and in a general way to all labor contracts:
I.
The
maximum duration of work for one day shall be eight hours.
II.
(51) The maximum duration
of nightwork shall be seven hours. The following are
prohibited: unhealthful or dangerous work by women and by minors under sixteen
years of age; industrial nightwork by either of these
classes; work by women in commercial establishments after ten o'clock at night
and work (of any kind) by persons under sixteen after ten o'clock at night.
III.
The
use of labor of minors under fourteen years of age is prohibited. Persons above
that age and less than sixteen shall have a maximum work day of six hours.
IV.
For
every six days of work a worker must have at least one day of rest.
V.
During
the three months prior to childbirth, women shall not perform physical labor
that requires excessive material effort. In the month following childbirth they
shall necessarily enjoy the benefit of rest and shall receive their full wages
and retain their employment and the rights acquired under their labor contract.
During the nursing period they shall have two special rest periods each day, of
a half hour each, for nursing their infants.
VI.
The
minimum wage to be received by a worker shall be general or according to
occupation. The former shall govern in one or more economic zones; the latter
shall be applicable to specified branches of industry or commerce or to special
occupations, trades, or labor.
The general minimum wage must be sufficient to
satisfy the normal material, social, and cultural needs of the head of a family
and to provide for the compulsory education of his children. The occupational
minimum wage shall be fixed by also taking into consideration the conditions of
different industrial and commercial activities
Farm workers shall be entitled to a minimum wage
adequate to their needs.
The minimum wage is to be fixed by regional
committees, composed of representatives of the workers, employers, and the
Government, and will be subject to approval by a national committee, organized
in the same manner as the regional committees.
VII.
Equal
wages shall be paid for equal work, regardless of sex or nationality.
VIII.
The
minimum wage shall be exempt from attachment, compensation, or deduction.
IX.
(52) Workers shall be
entitled to a participation in the profits of enterprises, regulated in
conformity with the following rules:
a.
A
national committee, composed of representatives of
workers, employers, and the Government, shall fix the percentage of profits to
be distributed among workers.
b.
The
national committee shall undertake research and make necessary and appropriate
studies in order to become acquainted with the general conditions of the
national economy. It shall also take into consideration the need to promote the
industrial development of the country, the reasonable return that should be
obtained by capital, and the necessary reinvestment of capital.
c.
The committee may revise the fixed
percentage whenever new studies and research so justify.
d.
The law may exempt newly established
enterprises from the obligation of sharing profits for a specified and limited
number of years for exploration work and other activities so justified by their
nature or peculiar conditions.
e.
To determine the amount of the
profits of each enterprise the basis to be taken is the taxable income
according to the provisions of the income tax law. Workers may submit to the
appropriate office of the Secretariat of Finance and Public Credit any
objections they may deem pertinent, in accordance with procedure indicated in
the law.
f.
The right of workers to participate
in profits does not imply the power to intervene in the direction or
administration of an enterprise.
X.
Wages must necessarily be paid in
money of legal tender and cannot be paid in goods, promissory notes, or any
other token intended as a substitute for money.
XI.
Whenever, due to extraordinary
circumstances, the regular working hours of a day must be increased, one
hundred percent shall be added to the amount for normal hours of work as
remuneration for the overtime. Overtime work may never exceed three hours a day
nor three times consecutively. Persons under sixteen
years of age and women of any age may not be admitted to this kind of labor.
XII.
In
any agricultural, industrial, or mining enterprise or in any other kind of
work, employers shall be obliged to furnish workmen comfortable and hygienic
living quarters for which they may collect rent that shall not exceed one half
percent monthly of the assessed valuation of the property. They also must
establish schools, hospitals, and any other services necessary to the
community. If the enterprise is situated within a town and employs more than
one hundred workers, it shall be responsible for the first of the above
obligations.
XIII.
In addition, in these same work
centers, when the population exceeds 200 inhabitants, a tract of land of not
less than five thousand square meters must be reserved for the establishment of
public markets, the erection of buildings destined for municipal services, and
recreation centers. Establishments for the sale of intoxicating liquors and
houses for games of chance are prohibited in all work centers.
XIV.
Employers shall be responsible for
labor accidents and for occupational diseases of workers, contracted because of
or in the performance of their work or occupation; therefore, employers shall
pay the corresponding indemnification whether death or only temporary or
permanent incapacity to work has resulted, in accordance with what the law
prescribes. This responsibility shall exist even if the employer contracts for
the work through an intermediary.
XV.
An employer shall be required to
observe, in the installation of his establishments, the legal regulations on
hygiene and health, and to adopt adequate measures for the prevention of
accidents in the use of machines, instruments, and materials of labor, as well
as to organize the same in such a way as to ensure the greatest possible
guarantee for the health and safety of workers as is compatible with the nature
of the work, under the penalties established by law in this respect.
XVI.
Both employers and workers shall
have the right to organize for the defense of their respective interests, by
forming unions, professional associations, etc.
XVII.
The laws shall recognize strikes and
lockouts as rights of workmen and employers.
XVIII.
Strikes shall be legal when they
have as their purpose the attaining of an equilibrium
among the various factors of production, by harmonizing the rights of labor
with those of capital. In public services it shall be obligatory for workers to
give notice ten days in advance to the Board of Conciliation and Arbitration as
to the date agreed upon for the suspension of work. Strikes shall be considered
illegal only when the majority of strikers engage in acts of violence against
persons or property, or in the event of war, when the workers belong to
establishments or services of the Government.
XIX.
Lockout shall be legal only when an
excess of production makes it necessary to suspend work to maintain prices at a
level with costs, and with prior approval of the Board of Conciliation and
Arbitration.
XX.
Differences or disputes between
capital and labor shall be subject to the decisions of a Board of Conciliation
and Arbitration, consisting of an equal number of workmen and employers, with
one from the Government.
XXI.
(53)
If an employer refuses to submit his differences to arbitration or to accept
the decision rendered by the Board, the labor contract shall be considered
terminated and he shall be obliged to indemnify the worker to the amount of
three months' wages and shall incur any liability resulting from the dispute.
This provision shall not be applicable in the case of actions covered in the
following section. If the refusal is made by workers, the labor contract shall
be considered terminated.
XXII.
(54)
An employer who dismisses a worker without justifiable cause or because he has
entered an association or union, or for having taken part in a lawful strike,
shall be required, at the election of the worker, either to fulfill the
contract or to indemnify him to the amount of three months' wages. The law
shall specify those cases in which the employer may be exempted from the
obligation of fulfilling the contract by payment of an indemnity. He shall also
have the obligation to indemnify a worker to the amount of three months' wages,
if the worker leaves his employment due to lack of honesty on the part of the
employer or because of ill treatment from him, either to himself or to his
wife, parents, children, or brothers and sisters. An employer may not relieve
himself of this responsibility when the ill treatment is attributable to his
subordinates or members of his family acting with his consent or tolerance.
XXIII.
Credits in favor of workers for
wages or salary earned within the last year, and for indemnity compensation,
shall have priority over all other obligations in the event of receivership or
bankruptcy.
XXIV.
A worker alone shall be responsible
for debts contracted by himself and payable to his employer, his associates,
members of his family, or dependents, and in no case and for no purpose may
payment be exacted from members of the worker's family, nor are these debts
demandable for an amount exceeding the wages of the worker for one month.
XXV.
Services of employment placement for
workers shall be gratuitous, whether such service is performed by a municipal
office, labor exchange, or any other official or private institution.
XXVI.
Every labor contract made between a
Mexican and a foreign employer must be notarized by a competent municipal
authority and countersigned by the consul of the nation to which the worker
intends to go, because, in addition to the ordinary stipulations, it shall be
clearly specified that the expenses of repatriation shall be borne by the
contracting employer.
XXVII.
The
following conditions shall be considered null and void and not binding on the
contracting parties, even if expressed in the contract:
a.
Those
that stipulate a day's work that is inhuman because it is obviously excessive,
considering the kind of work;
b.
Those
that fix wages that are not remunerative, in the judgment of Boards of
Conciliation and Arbitration;
c.
Those
stipulating a period of more than one week before payment of a day's wages;
d.
Those
indicating as the place of payment of wages a place of recreation, an inn,
café, tavern, bar, or store, except for the payment of employees of such
establishments;
e.
Those
that include the direct or indirect obligation of acquiring consumer goods in
specified stores or places;
f.
Those
that permit the retention of wages as a fine;
g.
Those
that constitute a waiver by the worker of indemnification to which he is
entitled due to labor accidents or occupational diseases, damages occasioned by
the nonfulfillment of the contract, or by being
discharged;
h.
All
other stipulations that imply waiver of any right designed to favor the worker
in the laws of protection and assistance for workmen;
XXVIII.
The laws shall determine what
property constitutes the family patrimony, property that shall be inalienable,
not subject to encumbrances of attachment, and that shall be transmissible by
inheritance with simplification of the formalities of succession.
XXIX.
Enactment of a social security law
shall be considered of public interest and it shall include insurance against
disability, on life, against involuntary work stoppage, against sickness and
accidents, and other forms for similar purposes;
XXX.
Likewise, cooperative societies
established for the construction of low-cost and hygienic houses to be
purchased on installments by workers, shall be considered of social utility;
XXXI.
(55)
Enforcement of the labor laws belongs to the authorities of the States, in
their respective jurisdictions, but it is the exclusive jurisdiction of the
federal authorities in matters relating to the textile, electrical, motion
picture, rubber, sugar, mining, petrochemical, metallurgical, and steel
industries, including the exploitation of basic minerals, their processing and smeltering, as well as the production of iron and steel in
all their forms and alloys and rolled products, hydrocarbons, cement,
railroads, and enterprises that are administered directly or in decentralized
form by the federal Government; enterprises that operate by virtue of a federal
contract or concession, and connected industries; enterprises that carry on
work in federal zones and territorial waters; disputes that affect two or more
federal entities; collective contracts that have been declared obligatory in more
than one federal entity, and finally, obligations that in educational matters
belong to employers in the manner and form fixed by the respective law.
T.
(56)
The branches of the Union, the governments of the Federal District and of the
federal Territories and their workers:
.
The maximum working day for day and nightwork shall be eight and seven hours respectively.
Those in excess will be overtime and will be paid by a one hundred percent
addition to the remuneration fixed for regular service. In no case may overtime
exceed three hours a day or three consecutive times.
I.
For every six days of work a worker
shall be entitled to one day of rest, at least, with full wages.
II.
Workers shall be entitled to
vacations of not less than twenty days a year.
III.
(57)
Wages shall be fixed in the respective budgets, and their amount may not be
decreased while a given budget is in effect.
In no case
may wages be lower than the minimum for workers in general in the Federal
District and in agencies of the Republic.
IV.
Equal wages shall be paid for equal
work, without regard to sex.
V.
Withholdings, discounts, deductions,
or attachments from wages may be made only in those cases provided by law.
VI.
The appointment of personnel shall
be made by systems which permit a determination of the skills and aptitudes of
applicants. The State shall organize schools of public administration.
VII.
Workers shall be entitled to the
rights of a classification scale so that promotions may be made on the basis of
skills, aptitudes, and seniority.
VIII.
Workers may be suspended or
discharged only on justifiable grounds, for reasons prescribed by law.
In the
event of unjustifiable discharge, a worker has the right to choose between
reinstatement in his work or to appropriate indemnity, determined by legal
proceedings. In case of abolishment of positions, the affected workers shall
have the right to another position equivalent to the one abolished or to an
indemnity.
IX.
Workers shall have the right to
associate together for the protection of their common interests. They may also
make use of the right to strike after first complying with requirements
prescribed by law, with respect to one or more offices of the public powers,
whenever the rights affirmed by this article are generally and systematically
violated.
X.
Social security shall be organized
on the following minimum bases:
a.
It shall cover work accidents and
occupational diseases, nonoccupational illness and
maternity; and retirement, disability, old age, and death.
b.
In case of accident or illness, the
right to work shall be retained for the time specified by law.
c.
Women shall be entitled to one
month's leave prior to the approximate date indicated for childbirth and to two
months' leave after such date. During the nursing period, they shall have two
extra rest periods a day, of a half hour each, for nursing their children. In
addition, they are entitled to medical and obstetrical attention' medicines,
nursing aid, and infant care services.
d.
Members of a worker's family shall
be entitled to medical attention and medicines, in those cases and in the
proportions specified by law.
e.
Centers are to be established for
vacations and convalescence, as well as economy stores for the benefit of
workers and their families.
f.
Workers will be allotted low-cost
housing for rent or sale, in accordance with previously approved programs.
XI.
Individual, collective, and interunion disputes shall be submitted to a federal
tribunal of conciliation and arbitration to be organized as provided in the
regulatory law.
Disputes
between the federal judicial branch and its employees shall be settled by the
plenary Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation.
XII.
Military and naval personnel and
members of the public security corps, and personnel of the foreign
service, shall be governed by their own laws.
XIII.
The law shall determine what
positions are to be regarded as those of personal trust (de confianza).
Persons who hold such positions shall be entitled to the benefits of measures
for the protection of wages and social security. (Note: A transitory article of
the amendment states that until the respective regulatory law is enacted, the
Statute for Workers in the Service of the Powers of the Union shall remain in
effect insofar as it is not contrary to the present amendment.)
General Considerations
Article
124. The
powers not expressly granted by this Constitution to federal officials are
understood to be reserved to the States.
Article
125. No
individual may fill two popularly elected federal offices at the same time, nor
one federal and one state office, also by popular election; but an elected
candidate may choose which of the two he desires to hold.
Article
126. No
payment may be made that is not included in the budget or provided for by a
subsequent law.
Article
127. The
President of the Republic, the members of the Supreme Court of Justice, the
deputies and senators, and other elective public officials of the Federation
shall receive a compensation for their services that shall be specified by law
and paid by the federal Treasury. This compensation cannot be refused and any
law that increases or decreases it shall not take effect during the term in which
an official holds office.
Article
128. Every
public official, without exception of any kind, before taking possession of his
office, shall take an affirmation to uphold the Constitution and the laws
emanating therefrom.
Article
129. No
military authority may, in time of peace, perform any functions other than
those that are directly connected with military affairs. There shall be fixed
and permanent military commands only in the castles, forts, and warehouses
immediately subordinate to the Government of the Union; or in encampments,
barracks, or arsenals established for the quartering of troops outside towns.
Article
130.(58)
The federal powers shall exercise the supervision required by law in matters
relating to religious worship and outward ecclesiastical forms. Other
authorities shall act as auxiliaries of the Federation.
Congress
cannot enact laws establishing or prohibiting any religion.
Marriage
is a civil contract. This and other acts of a civil nature concerning persons
are within the exclusive competence of civil officials and authorities, in the
manner prescribed by law, and shall have the force and validity defined by said
law.
A simple
promise to tell the truth and to fulfill obligations that are contracted is
binding on the one who so promises, and in the event
of failure to do so, he shall be subject to the penalties that the law
prescribes for this purpose.
The law
does not recognize any personality in religious groups called churches.
Ministers
of denominations shall be considered as persons who practice a profession and
shall be directly subject to the laws enacted on such matters.
Only the
legislatures of the States shall have the power to determine the maximum number
of ministers of denominations necessary for local needs.
To practice the ministry of any denomination in
the United Mexican States it is necessary to be a Mexican by birth.
Ministers of denominations may never, in a public
or private meeting constituting an assembly, or in acts of worship or religious
propaganda, criticize the fundamental laws of the country or the authorities of
the Government, specifically or generally. They shall not have an active or
passive vote nor the right to form associations for
religious purposes.
Permission
to dedicate new places of worship open to the public must be obtained from the
Secretariat of Government, with previous consent of the government of the
State. There must be in every church building a representative who is
responsible to the authorities for compliance with the laws on religious
worship in such building, and for the objects pertaining to the worship.
The
representative of each church building, jointly with ten other residents of the
vicinity, shall inform the municipal authorities immediately who is the person
in charge of the church in question. Any change of ministry must be reported by
the departing minister in person, accompanied by the new incumbent and ten
other residents. The municipal authority, under penalty of removal from office
and a fine of up to one thousand pesos for each violation, shall see that this
provision is complied with; under the same penalty, he shall keep one registry
book of church buildings and another of the representatives in charge. The
municipal authority shall give notice to the Secretariat of Government, through
the governor of the State, of every permit to open a new church building to the
public, or of any changes among representatives in charge. Donations in the form
of movable objects shall be kept in the interior of church buildings.
No
privilege shall be granted or confirmed, nor shall any other step be taken
which has for its purpose the validation in official courses of study, of
courses pursued in establishments devoted to the professional training of
ministers of religion. Any authority who violates this
provision shall be criminally liable, and the privilege or step referred to
shall be void and shall thereby cause the voidance of the professional degree
for the attainment of which the violation of this provision was made.
Periodical publications of a religious character,
whether they be such because of their program, title, or merely because of
their general tendencies, may not comment on national political matters or
public information on acts of the authorities of the country or of private
persons directly related to the functioning of public institutions .
The
formation of any kind of political group, the name of which contains any word
or indication whatever that it is related to any religious denomination, is
strictly prohibited. Meetings
of a political character may not be held in places of worship.
A
minister of any denomination may not himself or through an intermediary inherit or receive any real property occupied by any association
for religious propaganda or for religious or charitable purposes. Ministers of
denominations are legally incapacitated as testamentary heirs of ministers of
the same denomination or of any private person who is not related to them
within the fourth degree.
The
acquisition by private parties of personal or real property owned by the clergy
or by religious organizations shall be governed by Article 27
of this Constitution.
Trials for
violation of the above provisions shall never be heard before a jury.
Article
131. The
Federation has exclusive power to levy duties on goods that are imported or
exported or that pass in transit through the national territory, as well as to
regulate at all times, and even to prohibit, for police or security reasons,
the circulation in the interior of the Republic of all classes of goods,
regardless of origin; however, the Federation itself may not establish or
enact, in the Federal District and the Territories, those taxes and laws
mentioned in sections VI and VII of Article 117.
The
Executive may be empowered by the Congress of the Union to increase, decrease,
or abolish tariff rates on imports and exports, that were imposed by the
Congress itself, and to establish others; likewise to restrict and to prohibit
the importation, exportation, or transit of articles, products, and goods, when
he deems this expedient for the purpose of regulating foreign commerce, the
economy of the country, the stability of domestic production, or for
accomplishing any other purpose to the benefit of the country The Executive
himself, in submitting the fiscal budget to Congress each year, shall submit
for its approval the use that he has made of this power.
Article
132. The
forts, barracks, storage warehouses, and other buildings used by the Government
of the Union for public service or for common use, shall be subject to the
jurisdiction of the federal powers in accordance with provisions to be
established in a law enacted by the Congress of the Union; but, in order that
property acquired in the future within the territory of any State shall
likewise be under federal jurisdiction, the consent of the respective
legislature shall be necessary
Article
133. This
Constitution, the laws of the Congress of the Union that emanate therefrom, and all treaties that have been made and shall
be made in accordance therewith by the President of the Republic, with the
approval of the Senate, shall be the supreme law of the whole Union. The judges
of each State shall conform to the said Constitution, the laws, and treaties,
in spite of any contradictory provisions that may appear in the constitutions
or laws of the States
Article
134. All
contracts that the Government may negotiate for the execution of public works
shall be awarded by auction, after a call for bids to be submitted under seal
and opened in public meeting.
Amendments to the Constitution
Article
135.(59)
The present Constitution
may be added to or amended. In order that the additions or amendments shall
become a part thereof, it shall be required that the Congress of the Union, by
a vote of two thirds of the individuals present, agree to the amendments or
additions and that they be approved by a majority of the legislatures of the
States. The Congress of the Union or the Permanent Committee, as the
case may be, shall count the votes of the legislatures and shall announce those
additions or amendments that have been approved.
The Inviolability of the Constitution
Article
136. This
Constitution shall not lose its force and effect, even it its observance is
interrupted by rebellion. In the event that a government whose principles are
contrary to those that are sanctioned herein should become established through
any public disturbance, as soon as the people recover their liberty, its
observance shall be reestablished, and those who have taken part in the
government emanating from the rebellion, as well as those who have cooperated
with such persons, shall be judged in accordance with this Constitution and the
laws that have been enacted by virtue thereof.
Article 1. This Constitution shall be published at once and with the
greatest solemnity affirmation shall be made to preserve
it and cause it to be preserved throughout the Republic; but with exception of
the provisions relating to the election of the supreme federal and state
powers) which shall enter into force at once, it shall not take effect until
the first day of May 1917, on which date the Constitutional Congress shall be
formally installed and the citizen elected in the next elections shall make the
affirmation of law so as to exercise the office of President of the Republic.
In the
elections that must be called in accordance with the following article, section
V of Article 82
shall not apply, nor shall it be an impediment to being a deputy or senator to
be in active service in the army, provided such service is not command of
forces in the electoral district in question; neither shall secretaries and subsecretaries of state be barred from election to the next
Congress of the Union, provided that they have been definitely separated from
their position on the day that the respective call is issued.
Article 2. As soon as this Constitution is published, the citizen
entrusted with the executive branch of the Nation shall call for elections of
the federal powers, endeavoring to do this in such a way that the Congress
shall be organized promptly in order that following the count of the votes cast
in the presidential election it may declare who has been elected President of
the Republic, so that he may comply with the provisions of the preceding
article.
Article 3. The next constitutional term for deputies and senators
shall begin to run as of last September first, and for the President of the
Republic from December 1, 1916.
Article 4. Senators bearing even numbers at the next election shall
hold office for two years only, in order that thereafter one half of the
Chamber of Senators shall be renewed every two years.
Article 5. The Congress of the Union shall elect the magistrates of
the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation next May in order that this august
body shall be installed by June first.
At this
election Article 96
shall not govern with respect to the proposals of candidates by the local
legislatures; but candidates shall be so proposed for the first two-year term
provided for in Article 94.
Article 6. The Congress of the Union shall have an extraordinary
session period which will begin April 15, 1917, in order to organize the
electoral college, to count the votes and approve the election of a President
of the Republic, by appropriate declaration; and also to enact the Organic Law
for the circuit and district courts and the Organic Law for the Federal
District and territorial courts, in order that the Supreme Court of Justice of
the Nation may immediately appoint the circuit magistrates and district judges,
and the Congress of the Union may select the judges of first instance for the
Federal District and Territories; it shall also enact all laws requested by the
executive branch of the Nation. The circuit magistrates and district judges and
the magistrates and judges of the Federal District and Territories must assume
office before July 1, 1917, at which time those persons who had been appointed
by the official in charge of the executive branch of the Nation shall cease to
function.
Article 7. This once, the count of the votes for Senators shall be
made by the counting board of the first electoral district in each State or the
Federal District, as organized for counting the votes for deputies, and these
boards shall issue appropriate credentials to the senators elected.
Article 8. The Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation shall rule on
pending cases in amparo, subject to laws in
effect.
Article 9. The citizen in command of the constitutionalist army,
entrusted with the executive power of the Union, is empowered to issue the
Electoral Law, under which, this once, the elections shall be held to fill the
powers of the Union.
Article 10. Persons who have taken part in the government formed by the
rebellion against the legitimate Government of the Republic, or those who
cooperated with it, afterwards taking up arms or holding office or employment
with the factions that attacked the constitutionalist Government, shall be
tried under laws in force, unless pardoned by such Government.
Article 11. Until the Congress of the Union and the State legislatures
enact laws governing the agrarian and labor problems, the bases established in
this Constitution for these laws shall be put into effect throughout the
Republic.
Article 12. Mexicans who have fought in the constitutionalist army, and
their children and widows, and other persons who
rendered services to the cause of the Revolution or to public education, shall
have priority in the acquisition of parcels of land referred to in Article 27
and the right to discounts specified by law.
Article 13. All debts contracted by workers, by reason of their labor,
up to the date of this Constitution, with employers, their families, or
intermediaries are hereby extinguished in full.
Article 14. The Secretariat of Justice is hereby abolished.
Article 15. The citizen entrusted with the executive power of the Nation
is empowered to issue a law on civil liability applicable to the principals,
accomplices, and concealers of crimes perpetrated
against the constitutional order during the month of February 1913 and against
the constitutionalist Government.
Article 16. The constitutionalist Congress, in its regular period of
sessions, beginning September 1 this year, shall enact all organic laws of the
Constitution that have not already been enacted in the extraordinary period
referred to in transitory Article 6,
and shall give priority to laws relating to individual guarantees and to Articles 30,
32, 33, 35, 36, 38, 107 and the
final part of Article 111
of this Constitution.
(Original
text signed at Querétaro on January 31, 1917.)
Notes
1.
As amended by decree published in
the Diario Oficial
of December 30, 1946.
2.
As amended by decree published in
the Diario Oficial
of November 17, 1942.
3.
As amended on December 28, 1964,
published in the Diario Oficial
of February 23, 1965.
4.
As amended November 22, 1948.
5.
In Spanish law, when the evidence
was inconclusive, the matter could be disposed of by an order of absolución de la instancia,
which operated as a dismissal but not as a judgment for or against either party
in a civil case, or as an acquittal or conviction in a criminal case. Hence,
upon discovery of more evidence the case might be revived. Similar to the
Scotch verdict of not proved, and to the Roman non liquet
(it does not appear clear). Escriche Diccionario.
6.
As amended by decree published in
the Diario Oficial
of January 20, 1960.
7.
As amended on November 9, 1940, and
by decree published in the Diario Oficial of January 20, 1960.
8.
As amended by decree published in
the Diario Oficial
of January 20, 1960.
9.
Paragraph added by decree of
December 23, published in the Diario Oficial of December 29, 1960.
10.
Paragraph added on November 9, 1940.
11.
Amended by decree dated November 24,
1937 and published in the Diario Oficial of December 6, 1937.
12.
This paragraph added on February 12,
1947.
13.
As amended on February 12, 1947.
14.
As amended on February 10, 1944.
15.
As amended by decree published in
the Diario Oficial
of January 20, 1960.
16.
As amended on December 31, 1951, Diario Oficial of
January 16, 1952.
17.
As amended on December 31, 1951.
18.
Amended by decree published in the Diario Oficial of
January 30, 1960.
19.
As amended on December 30, 1950.
20.
As amended on February 28, 1951, and
by decree published in the Diario Oficial of December 20, 1960.
21.
As amended by decree published in the
Diario Oficial
of June 22, 1963.
22.
Paragraph added by decree published
in the Diario Oficial
of June 22, 1963.
23.
As amended on December 31, 1950.
24.
As amended on September 21, 1944.
25.
As amended on December 30, 1946.
26.
As amended on October 24, 1942.
27.
As amended on November 18, 1942 and December 29, 1947.
28.
As amended on October 11, 1966,
published in the Diario Oficial
of October 21, 1966.
29.
As amended on December 21, 1965,
published in the Diario Oficial
of January 13, 1966.
30.
Added on October 24,1942, the former section XXIX being renumbered XXX.
31.
Added on January 31, 1949.
32.
As amended on February 10, 1944.
33.
As amended on October 11, 1966,
published in the Diario Oficial
of October 21, 1966.
34.
Added by amendment of October 11,
1966, published in the Diario Oficial of October 21, 1966.
35.
As amended on January 8, 1943.
36.
As amended on October 11, 1966,
published in the Diario Oficial
of October 21, 1966.
37.
As amended on February 10, 1944.
38.
Deleted by amendment of October 11,
1966, published in the Diario
Oficial of October 21, 1966.
39.
As amended on October 11, 1966,
published in the Diario Oficial
of October 21, 1966.
40.
As amended on September 21, 1944.
41.
As amended on September 11, 1940.
42.
Added on December 30, 1946.
43.
As amended on December 30, 1950.
44.
Paragraph added by decree published
in the Diario Oficial
of November 2,
1962.
45.
Paragraph added on September 21,
1944.
46.
As amended on January 8, 1943.
47.
Deleted by amendment of October 11,
1966, published in the Diario Oficial of October 21, 1966.
48.
Paragraph added on December 30,
1946.
49.
This section added on October 24,
1942.
50.
Amended by decree of October 21,
1960, published in the Diario Oficial of December 5, 1960.
51.
As amended by decree published in
the Diario Oficial
of November 21, 1962.
52.
As amended by decree published in
the Diario Oficial
of November 21, 1962.
53.
As amended by decree published in
the Diario Oficial
of November 21, 1962.
54.
As amended by decree published in
the Diario Oficial
of November 21, 1962.
55.
This section added on November 18,
1942, and amended by decree published in the Diario
Oficial of November 21, 1962.
56.
Added by decree of October 21, 1960,
Diario Oficial
of December 5, 1960.
57.
Amended in accordance with decree
published in the Diario Oficial
of November 27, 1961.
58.
As amended on December 30, 1950.
59.
As amended on October 11, 1966,
published in the Diario Oficial
of October 21, 1966.
Text
translated from Constitución Política de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos, Trigésima Quinta Edición, 1967,
Editorial Porrua, S. A., México, D. F. Originally
published by the Pan American Union, General Secretariat, Organization of
American States, Washington, D.C., 1968.