You’re right, the finding was that there were no grounds for nullity. The marriage is already presumed valid so there wouldn’t be a finding of validity. In my head I understand that, it doesn’t always translate to paper.
As I understand it the petition is usually based on a specific impediment. In the Kennedy case he petitioned based on his belief that “he was mentally incapable of entering into marriage at the time.” If one petitioned based on A and there was no finding of nullity then one could then petition based on B if there was more evidence of B.
It’s true that the Kennedy case went to the Rota as the court of second instance. I’m not sure how many cases are appealed to the Rota as second instance. Actually, how many cases are appealed at all? How common is it that the parties contest a finding of nullity? I would think it would be more common to petition the Rota if both first instance and second instance didn’t find a cause for nullity or if they didn’t agree.
Do we know for sure how long it takes the Rota to render a decision?
I have only found a couple of references, all within the last 17 years. In once case, there was a note that the Rota had received 600+ cases and had rendered a decision on 100.
Two references (both for a given year) noted percentage of cases “reversed” or “overturned” ( I don’t rely on the author’s comment as to any decision); one referred to two thirds of US cases being “overturned” and the other to “90%”. Neither noted the number of cases these statistics applied to. One other reference I cam across indicated something like 300 cases the Rota had dealt with from the US.
Further confusing the matter is that the Rota can receive a case as the starting place (as opposed to a tribunal); it can be the second on appeal as opposed to the normal second tribunal, and it can be an appeal after two tribunals have had the case (and the two could be conflicting or agreeing). Thus, any numbers become less meaningful, when one has no clue as to each case history.
The “Kennedy” case was held by the Rota for 10 years. No explanation; possibly some very intricate matter of law; as to the best of my knowledge none of the casework has been made public, and any speculation concerning the case is just that. One reference in the early 2000 era indicated that the case might be still ongoing as of that time.
Some people have thrown around Rota statistics with a whole lot of fervor and precious little understanding. “90%” is 90% of what? 100 cases? 300? And that is out of how many - 30,000? 50,000 or more that year? While that might not be a statistical anomaly, it is close to it, as we know nothing of the history of the cases, including why they ended up at the Rota in the first place.
A case can start at the Rota, though normally they start at the local tribunal; they can then be appealed to the Rota instead of the second tribunal, or there can be two tribunals hearing the matter and then it is appealed. Further, the decision of the Rota may not be that the case had no merit, but that there may have been some weakness, for example, in the evidence, which might have been sufficient for a different grounds of decision - not simply no decision at all. And much if not most information seems to be by reporters, who are not Canon lawyers and are not trying to report law, but rather a decision, or an overall view of nullity cases in general.
IMHO, there is also a tremendous gap between many, if not most clergy, and the people in the pews (and those who should be there but are not). I have found on more than one occasion a priest somewhat aghast that people do not know much about their faith - the presumption was that those folks do. Whether and if this spills over to tribunals (and by extension, to the Rota and to Rome) might be fodder for CARA. Given the degree that secularism has crept into the lives of society, and the abysmal degree (if any degree) to which a vast number of people were catechized,… well, we have far more cultural Catholics than I think most people perceive. And from that, far more marriages that might be found to have impediments or lack of consent.
But I am not a Canon lawyer, so I have no (name removed by moderator)ut.