Oblicon Reviewer
Oblicon Reviewer
Oblicon Reviewer
REVIEWER
TITLE I OBLIGATIONS
CHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
1156. An obligation is a juridical necessity to give, to do, or not to do.
JURIDICAL NECESSITY juridical tie; connotes that in case of noncompliance, there will
be legal sanctions.
KINDS OF OBLIGATION
A. From the viewpoint of sanction (a) CIVIL OBLIGATION that defined in Article 1156; an obligation, if not fulfilled
when it becomes due and demandable, may be enforced in court through
action; based on law; the sanction is judicial due process
(b)NATURAL OBLIGATION defined in Article 1423; a special kind of obligation
which cannot be enforced in court but which authorizes the retention of the
voluntary payment or performance made by the debtor; based on equity
and natural law. (i.e. when there is prescription of duty to pay, still, the
obligor paid his dues to the obligee the obligor cannot recover his
payment even there is prescription) the sanction is the law, but only
conscience had originally motivated the payment.
(c) MORAL OBLIGATION the sanction is conscience or morality, or the law of
the church. (Note: If a Catholic promises to hear mass for 10 consecutive
Sundays in order to receive P1,000, this obligation becomes a civil one.)
B. From the viewpoint of subject matter (a) REAL OBLIGATION the obligation to give
(b)PERSONAL OBLIGATION the obligation to do or not to do (e.g. the duty to
paint a house, or to refrain from committing a nuisance)
C. From the affirmativeness and negativeness of the obligation (a) POSITIVE OR AFFIRMATIVE OBLIGATION the obligation to give or to do
(b)NEGATIVE OBLIGATION the obligation not to do (which naturally inludes
not to give)
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D. From the viewpoint of persons obliged - sanction (a) UNILATERAL where only one of the parties is bound (e.g. Plato owes
Socrates P1,000. Plato must pay Socrates.)
(b)BILATERAL where both parties are bound (e.g. In a contract of sale, the
buyer is obliged to deliver)
- may be:
(b.1) reciprocal
(b.2) non-reciprocal where performance by one is non-dependent upon
performance by the other
ELEMENTS OF OBLIGATION
a) ACTIVE SUBJECT (Creditor / Obligee) the person who is demanding the
performance of the obligation;
b) PASSIVE SUBJECT (Debtor / Obligor) the one bound to perform the prestation or to
fulfill the obligation or duty;
c) PRESTATION (to give, to do, or not to do) object; subject matter of the obligation;
conduct required to be observed by the debtor;
d) EFFICIENT CAUSE the JURIDICAL TIE which binds the parties to the obligation;
source of the obligation.
PRESTATION (Object)
1. TO GIVE delivery of a thing to the creditor (in sale, deposit, pledge, donation);
2. TO DO covers all kinds of works or services (contract for professional services);
3. NOT TO DO consists of refraining from doing some acts (in following rules and
regulations).
Requisites of Prestation / Object:
1) licit (if illicit, it is void)
2) possible (if impossible, it is void)
3) determinate or determinable (or else, void)
4) pecuniary value
1157. Obligation arises from (1) law; (2) contracts; (3) quasi-contracts; (4)
acts or omissions punished by law; (5) quasi-delicts.
(1) LAW (Obligation ex lege) imposed by law itself; must be expressly or impliedly
set forth and cannot be presumed
- [See Article 1158]
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regulated by the precepts of the law which establishes them; and as to what
has not been foreseen, by the provisions of this code.
Unless such obligations are EXPRESSLY provided by law, they are not
demandable and enforceable, and cannot be presumed to exist.
The Civil Code can be applicable suppletorily to obligations arising from laws
other than the Civil Code itself.
Special laws refer to all other laws not contained in the Civil Code.
1159. Obligations arising from contracts have the force of law between the
contracting parties and should be complied with in good faith.
CONTRACT meeting of minds between two persons whereby one binds himself, with
respect to the other, to give, to do something or to render some service; governed
primarily by the agreement of the contracting parties.
VALID CONTRACT it should not be against the law, contrary to morals, good customs,
public order, and public policy.
In the eyes of law, a void contract does not exist and no obligation will arise from
it.
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by virtue of which, both parties become bound to each other, to the end that no one
will be unjustly enriched or benefited at the expense of the other. (See Article 2142)
(1)NEGOTIORUM GESTIO juridical relation which takes place when somebody
voluntarily manages the property affairs of another without the knowledge
or consent of the latter; owner shall reimburse the gestor for necessary
and useful expenses incurred by the latter for the performance of his
function as gestor.
(2)SOLUTIO INDEBITI something is received when there is no right to
demand it and it was unduly delivered through mistake; obligation to
return the thing arises on the part of the recipient. (e.g. If I let a
storekeeper change my P500 bill and by error he gives me P560, I have the
duty to return the extra P60)
1161. Civil obligations arising from criminal offenses shall be governed by
the penal laws, subject to the provisions of Article 2177, and of the pertinent
provisions of Chapter 2, Preliminary in Human Relations, and of Title 18 of
this book, regulating damages.
Governing rules:
1. Pertinent provisions of the RPC and other penal laws subject to Art 2177 Civil
Code
[Art 100, RPC Every person criminally liable for a felony is also civilly liable]
2. Chapter 2, Preliminary title, on Human Relations ( Civil Code )
3. Title 18 of Book IV of the Civil Code on damages
Every person criminally liable for a felony is also criminally liable (art. 100, RPC)
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DELICTS
Criminal / malicious
Affects PUBLIC interest
3. LIABILITY
4. PURPOSE
5.COMPROMI
SE
6. GUILT
QUASI-DELICTS
Negligence
Affects PRIVATE
interest
Civil liability
Indemnification
Can be compromised
Preponderance of
evidence
CHAPTER 2
NATURE AND EFFECT OF OBLIGATIONS
1163. Every person obliged to give something is also obliged to take care of
it with the proper diligence of a good father of a family, unless the law or the
stipulation of the parties requires another standard of care.
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DUTIES OF DEBTOR:
** Debtor is not liable if his failure to deliver the thing is due to fortuitous events or
force majeure without negligence or fault in his part.
1164. The creditor has a right to the fruits of the thing from the time the
obligation to deliver it arises. However, he shall acquire no real right over it
until the same has been delivered to him.
REAL RIGHT (jus in re) right pertaining to person over a specific thing, without a
passive subject individually determined against whom such right may be personally
enforced.
a right enforceable against the whole world
PERSONAL RIGHT (jus ad rem) a right pertaining to a person to demand from another,
as a definite passive subject, the fulfillment of a prestation to give, to do or not to do.
a right enforceable only against a definite person or group of persons.
Before the delivery, the creditor, in obligations to give, has merely a personal
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right against the debtor a right to ask for delivery of the thing and the fruits
thereof.
Once the thing and the fruits are delivered, then he acquires a real right over
them.
Ownership is transferred by delivery which could be either actual or constructive.
(Art. 1477)
The remedy of the buyer when there is no delivery despite demand is to file a
complaint for SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE AND DELIVERY because he is not yet the
owner of the property before the delivery.
ACTUAL DELIVERY actual delivery of a thing from the hand of the grantor to the
hand of the grantee (presonally), or manifested by certain possessory acts executed by
the grantee with the consent of the grantor (realty).
FRUITS:
1. NATURAL spontaneous products of the soil, the young and other products of
animals;
2. INDUSTRIAL produced by lands of any cultivation or labor;
3. CIVIL those derived by virtue of juridical relation.
** SEE Article 1164 (retroactivity of the effects of conditional obligation to give once
the condition has been fulfilled)
1165. When what is to be delivered is a determinate thing, the creditor
may compel the debtor to make delivery. If the thing is indeterminate or
generic, he may ask that the obligation be complied with at the expense of
the debtor. If the obligor delays or has promised to deliver the same ting to
two or more persons who do not have the same interest, he shall be
responsible for any fortuitous event until he has effected the delivery.
*This provision applies to an obligation to give.
DETERMINATE THING
something which is susceptible of particular designation or specification;
obligation is extinguished if the thing is lost due to fortuitous events.
Article 1460: a thing is determinate when it is particularly designated and
physically segregated from all others of the same class.
INDETERMINATE THING
something that has reference only to a class or genus;
obligation to deliver is not so extinguished by fortuitous events.
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As a general rule, no person shall be responsible for those events which could
not be foreseen, or which, though foreseen, are inevitable, except:
1. in cases expressly specified by the law
2. when it is stipulated by the parties
3. when the nature of the obligation requires assumption of risk
An indeterminate thing cannot be object of destruction by a fortuitous event
because genus never perishes.
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KINDS:
1) mora solvendi ex re default in real obligations (to give)
2) mora solvendi ex persona default in personal obligations (to do)
b) MORA ACCIPIENDI delay on the part of the creditor to accept the
performance of the obligation;
Effects:
1. creditor liable for damages
2. creditor bears the risk of loss of the thing
3. debtor not liable for interest from the time of creditors delay
4. debtor release himself from the obligation
c) COMPENSATIO MORAE delay of the obligors in reciprocal obligation.
Effect: the default of one compensates the default of the other; their respective
liabilities shall be offset equitable.
Default / Delay in negative obligation is not possible. (In negative obligation, only
fulfillment and violation are possible)
1170. Those who in the performance of their obligations are guilty of fraud,
negligence, or delay, and those who in any manner contravene the tenor
thereof, are liable for damages.
FRAUD (dolo) deliberate intentional evasion of the faithful fulfillment of an obligation;
NEGLIGENCE (culpa or fault) voluntary act or omission of diligence, there being no
malice, which prevents the normal fulfillment of an obligation;
DELAY (mora) default or tardiness in the performance of an obligation after it has
been due and demandable;
CONTRAVENTION OF TERMS OF OBLIGATION (violation) violation of terms and
conditions stipulated in the obligation; this must not be due to a fortuitous event.
1171. Responsibility arising from fraud is demandable in all obligations. Any
waiver of an action for future fraud is void.
To allow such waiver will necessarily render the obligatory force of contracts
illusory.
The law does not prohibit waiver of an action for damages based on fraud
already committed.
Any deliberate deviation from the normal way of fulfilling the obligation may be a
proper basis for claim for damages against the guilty party.
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INCIDENTAL FRAUD (applicable provisions are Arts. 1170 & 1344) committed in the
performance of an obligation already existing because of a contract; incidental fraud
obliges the person employing it to pay damages.
CAUSAL FRAUD (Art. 1338) employed in the execution of contract in order to secure
consent; remedy is annulment because of vitiation of consent.
1172. Responsibility arising from negligence in the performance of every
kind of obligation is also demandable, but such liability may be regulated by
the courts, according to circumstances.
Courts discretion because:
(a) negligence depends upon the circumstances of a case good or bad
faith of the obligor may be considered as well as the conduct or
misconduct of the obligee;
(b)it is not as serious as fraud.
Negligence lack of foresight or knowledge
Imprudence lack of skill or precaution
TEST OF NEGLIGENCE
Did the defendant, in doing the alleged negligent act, use the reasonable care and
caution which an ordinary prudent man would have used in the same situation?
TWO TYPES OF NEGLIGENCE:
Basis
DEFINITION
NATURE OF
NEGLIGENCE
GOOD FATHER OF
THE FAMILY
DEFENSE
PRESUMPTION OF
NEGLIGENCE
1. Culpa Aquiliana
(Quasi-delict)
Negligence between
parties not so related by
pre-existing contract
Direct, substantive and
independent
Complete and proper
defense (parents,
guardian, employers)
No presumption injured
party must prove
negligence of the
defendant.
2. Culpa Contractual
(Breach of contract)
Negligence in the performance
of contractual obligation
Incidental to the performance of
the obligation.
Not complete and proper
defense in the selection of
employees.
There is presumption
defendant must prove that there
was no negligence in the
carrying out of the terms of the
contract.
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1173. The fault or negligence of the obligor consists in the omission of that
diligence which is required by the nature of the obligation and corresponds
with the circumstances of the persons, of he time and of the place If the
law or contract does not state the diligence which is to be observed in the
performance, that which is expected if a good father of a family shall be
required.
- This provision provides for a negative definition of proper diligence of a good father
of a family
FRAUD distinguished from NEGLIGENCE
FRAUD
NEGLIGENCE
There is deliberate intention to
There is no deliberate intention to cause
cause damage.
damage.
Liability cannot be mitigated.
Liability may be mitigated.
Waiver for future fraud is void.
Waiver for future negligence may be
allowed in certain cases:
DILIGENCE the attention and care required of a person in a given situation and is
opposite of negligence.
NEGLIGENCE consists in the omission of that diligence which is required by the nature
of the particular obligation and corresponds with the circumstances of the persons, of
the time, and of the place.
KINDS of DILIGENCE:
1. DILIGENCE OF A GOOD FATHER a good father does not abandon his family,
he is always ready to provide and protect his family; ordinary care which an
average and reasonably prudent man would do.
2. Diligence required by the law governing the particular obligation
3. Diligence stipulated by the parties
1174. Except in cases expressly specified by the law, or when it is otherwise
declared by stipulation, or when the nature of the obligation requires the
assumption of risk, no person shall be responsible for those events which
could not be foreseen, or which, though foreseen, were inevitable.
FORTUITOUS EVENT an occurrence or happening which could not be foreseen or even
if foreseen, is inevitable; absolutely independent of human intervention; act of God.
FORCE MAJEURE - an event caused by the legitimate or illegitimate acts of persons
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To be sure write the interest and the dates covered by such payment in the
receipt.
1177. The creditors, after having pursued the property in possession of the
debtor to satisfy their claims, may exercise all the rights and bring all the
actions of the latter for the same purpose, save those which are inherent in
his person; they may also impugn the acts which the debtor may have done
to defraud them.
REMEDIES AVAILABLE TO CREDITORS FOR THE SATISFACTION OF THEIR CLAIMS:
1. Exact fulfillment with right to damages
2. Exhaustion of the debtors properties still in his possession writ of attachment
(before judgment) or writ of execution (for final judgment not yet executed)
3. ACCION SUBROGATORIA an action where the creditor whose claims had not
been fully satisfied, may go after the debtors (3rd person) of the defendant
debtor.
4. ACCION PAULIANA an action where the creditor files an action in court for the
RESCISSION of acts or contracts entered into by the debtor designed to defraud
the former.
1178. Subject to the laws, all rights acquired in virtue of an obligation are
transmissible, if there has been no stipulation to the contrary.
EXCEPTIONS:
a) Those not transmissible by their nature like purely personal rights;
b) Those not transmissible by provision of law;
c) Those not transmissible by stipulation of parties.
CHAPTER 3
DIFFERENT KINDS OF OBLIGATIONS
Section 1 Pure and Conditional Obligations
1179. Every obligation whose performance does not depend upon a future or
uncertain event, or upon a past event unknown to the parties, is demandable
at once.
Every obligation which contains a resolutory condition shall also be
demandable, without prejudice to the effects of the happening of the event.
PURE OBLIGATION an obligation which does not contain any condition or term upon
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which the fulfillment is made to depend; immediately demandable by the creditors and
the debtor cannot be excused from not complying with his prestation.
CONDITIONAL OBLIGATION an obligation which depends upon a future or uncertain
event, or upon a past event unknown to the contracting parties.
an obligation subject to a condition.
a) Suspensive Obligation its fulfillment gives rise to an obligation; the
demandability of the obligation or the effectivity of the contract can take
place only after the condition has been fulfilled.
b) Resolutory Obligation its happening extinguishes the obligation which is
already existing;
1180. When the debtor binds himself to pay when his means permit him to
do so, the obligation shall be deemed to be one with a period, subject to the
provisions of Article 1197.
PERIOD a future and certain event upon the arrival of which, the obligation subject to
it either arises or is extinguished.
INDICATIONS OF A TERM OR PERIOD:
When the debtor binds himself to pay
when his means permit him to do so
little by little
as soon as possible
from time to time
as soon as I have the money
in partial payment
when in the position to pay
1181. In conditional obligations, the acquisition of rights, as well as the
extinguishment or loss of those already acquired, shall depend upon the
happening of the event which constitutes the condition.
Suspensive Condition the acquisition of rights by the creditor depends upon the
happening of the event which constitutes the condition; if such condition does not take
place, it would be as of the conditional obligation had never existed.
(e.g. promise to give a car after graduating from law school as cum laude)
Resolutory Condition the rights and obligations already existing are under threat of
extinction upon the happening or fulfillment of such condition.
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1184. The condition that some event happen at a determinate time shall
extinguish the obligation as soon as the time expires or if it has become
indubitable that the event will not take place.
Positive condition refers to the fulfillment of an event or performance of an act
Negative condition refers to the non-fulfillment or non-performance of an act.
POSITIVE SUSPENSIVE CONDITION
The obligation is extinguished:
1. As soon as the TIME EXPIRES without the event taking place;
2. As soon as it has become certain that the EVENT WILL NOT TAKE PLACE although
the time specified has not yet expired.
1185. The condition that some event will not happen at a determinate time
shall render the obligation effective from the moment the time indicated has
elapsed, or if it has become evident that the event cannot occur.
If no time has been fixed, the condition shall be deemed fulfilled at such time
as may have probably been contemplated, bearing in mind the nature of the
obligation.
** This is a condition of non-happening of a future event.
The obligation shall become effective and binding:
a) From the moment the time indicated has elapsed without the event taking place;
b) From the moment it has become evident that the event cannot occur, although
the time indicated has not yet elapsed.
1184 -vs- 1185
1184
(POSITIVE SUSPENSIVE)
Jose obliges himself to give the pregnant
woman Maria P5000 if she would give
birth on or before December 30.
a. Jose is LIABLE if Maria gives birth on or
before December 30.
b. Jose is NOT LIABLE if Maria gives birth
after December 30.
c. If Maria would have a miscarriage
1185
(NEGATIVE SUSPENSIVE)
Jose obliges himself to give the
pregnant woman Maria P5000 if she
would NOT give birth on December 30.
a. Jose is NOT LIABLE if Maria gives birth
on December 30.
b. Jose is LIABLE if Maria DID NOT give
birth on December 30 if Maria gives
birth BEFORE or AFTER December 30.
c. If Maria would have a miscarriage
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1186. The condition shall be deemed fulfilled when the obligor voluntarily
prevents its fulfillment.
This provision speaks of the DOCTRINE OF CONSTRUCTIVE FULFILLMENT
Compare with Art. 1203
- REQUISITES:
1. The condition is SUSPENSIVE;
2. The obligor ACTUALLY PREVENTS the fulfillment of the condition;
3. He acts VOLUNTARILY.
Malice or fraud is not required, as long as his purpose is to prevent the fulfillment
of the condition.
No person shall profit by his own wrong.
1187. The effects of a conditional obligation to give, once the condition has
been fulfilled, shall retroact to the day of the constitution of the obligation.
Nevertheless, when the obligation imposes reciprocal prestations upon the
parties, the fruits and interests during the pendency of the condition shall be
deemed to have been mutually compensated. If the obligation is unilateral,
the debtor shall appropriate the fruits and interests received, unless from
the nature and circumstances of the obligation it should be inferred that the
intention of the person constituting the same was different.
In obligations to do and not to do, the courts shall determine, in each case,
the retroactive effect of the condition that has been complied with.
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1188. The creditor may, before the fulfillment of the condition, bring the
appropriate actions for the preservation of his right.
The debtor may recover what during the same time he has paid by mistake in
case of a suspensive condition.
Actions available to the creditor:
Action for prohibition restraining the alienation of the thing pending the
happening of the suspensive condition;
Action to demand security if the debtor has become insolvent;
Action to set aside alienations made by the debtor in fraud of creditors;
Actions against adverse possessors to interrupt the running prescriptive period.
To have his rights annotated in the registry.
Rights of the DEBTOR entitled to recover what has been paid by mistake prior to the
happening of the suspensive condition.
1189. When the conditions have been imposed with the intention of
suspending the efficacy of an obligation to give, the following rules shall be
observed in case of the improvement, loss or deterioration of the thing
during the pendency of the condition:
LOSS
(1)debtor without fault obligation is extinguished
(2)debtor with fault obligation to pay damages
DETERIORATION
(1)debtor without fault impairment is to be borne by the creditor
(2)debtor with fault creditor chooses: rescission of obligation, fulfillment,
indemnity
IMPROVEMENT
(1)by nature or time improvement: inure to the benefit of the creditor
(2)at the expense of the debtor granted to the usufructuary
1190. When the conditions have for their purpose the extinguishment of an
obligation to give, the parties, upon the fulfillment of said conditions, shall
return to each other what they have received.
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REMEDIES:
1. Specific performance or fulfillment of obligation with damages;
2. Rescission of contract with damages.
Effect of rescission: the parties must surrender whatever they have received from the
other, and the obligation to pay is extinguished.
If there is an express stipulation of automatic rescission between parties such
resolution shall take place only after the creditor has notified the debtor of his choice of
rescission subject to judicial scrutiny.
1192. In case both parties have committed a breach of the obligation, the
liability of the first infractor shall be equitably tempered by the courts. If it
cannot be determined which of the parties first violated the contract, the
same shall be deemed extinguished, and each shall bear his own damages.
FIRST INFRACTOR KNOWN
The liability of the first infractor should be equitably reduced. equitably offset each
others damages.
FIRST INFRACTOR CANNOT BE DETERMINED
The court shall declare the extinguishment of the obligation and each shall bear his
own damages.
Section 2 Obligations with a Period
1193. Obligations for whose fulfillment a day certain has been fixed, shall be
demandable only when that day comes.
Obligations with a resolutory period take effect at once, but terminate upon
arrival of the day certain.
A day certain is understood to be that which must necessarily come,
although it may not be known when.
If the uncertainty consists in whether the day will come or not, the obligation
is conditional, and it shall be regulated by the rules of the preceding Section.
PERIOD / TERM consists in a space or length of time upon the arrival of which, the
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Period/Term
Always refers to FUTURE
2. FULFILLMENT
Sure to happen at an
exact date or indefinite
time but sure to come.
Merely fixes the time for
the demandability or
performance of
obligation.
1. TIME
3. INFLUENCE
Condition
Can refer to past events
unknown to the parties
May or may not happen.
May cause the arising or
cessation of the obligation.
If he was not aware of the period or he believes that the obligation has
become due and demandable he can recover what he paid or delivered
including fruits and interests;
If he was aware and he paid voluntarily he cannot recover the delivery
made; it is deemed a waiver of the benefit of the term and the obligation is
considered already matured.
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The presumption is that the debtor knew that the debt was not yet due. He has
the burden of proving that he was unaware of the period.
PRESUMPTION: Obligation with a period is for the benefit of both the creditor and
debtor.
EXCEPTION: when it appears that the period is for the benefit of one or the other
The benefit of the term may be the subject of stipulation of the parties.
1. Term is for the benefit of the debtor alone he cannot be compelled to pay
prematurely, but he can if he desires to do so.
- Example: A obliges himself to pay B within 5 years. A cannot be compelled to pay
prematurely, but he can pay anytime within 5 years (A will benefit because he can pay
anytime he wants as long as it is within 5 years; B will not benefit from the interests if
A decides to pay early).
2. Term is for the benefit of the creditor He may demand fulfillment even
before the arrival of the term but the debtor cannot require him to accept
payment before the expiration of the stipulated period.
- Example: A borrows money from B and is obliged to make the payment on December
5. B may compel A to make the payment before December 5, but A may not compel B
to receive the payment before December 5 (B will benefit from the interests that will
accrue before December 5).
The creditor may have reasons other than the maturity of interest, thats why,
unless the creditor consents, the debtor has no right to accelerate the time of
payment even if the premature tender includes an offer to pay the principal and
interest in full.
1197. If the obligation does not fix a period, but from its nature and the
circumstances it can be inferred that a period was intended, the courts may
fix the duration thereof.
The courts shall also fix the duration of the period when it depends upon the
will of the debtor.
In every case, the courts shall determine such period as may under the
circumstances have been probably contemplated by the parties. Once fixed
by the courts, the period cannot be changed by them.
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If the obligation does not state and intend a period, the court is not authorized to
fix a period.
The court must fix the duration of the period to prevent the possibility that the
obligation may never be fulfilled or to cure a defect in a contract whereby it is
made to depend solely upon the will of one of the parties.
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1202. The debtor shall lose the right of choice when among the prestations
whereby he is alternatively bound, only one is practicable.
There being but one prestation available, this prestation becomes a simple
obligation.
1203. If through the creditor's acts the debtor cannot make a choice
according to the terms of the obligation, the latter may rescind the contract
with damages.
(1)If the debtor could not make a choice due to the creditors act of making
the prestations impossible, debtor may RESCIND the contract with
damages - rescission takes place at the initiative of the debtor.
(2)If the debtor is being prevented to choose only a particular prestation, and
there are others available, he is free to choose from them, after notifying
the creditor of his decision.
1204. The creditor shall have a right to indemnity for damages when,
through the fault of the debtor, all the things which are alternatively the
object of the obligation have been lost, or the compliance of the obligation
has become impossible.
The indemnity shall be fixed taking as a basis the value of the last thing
which disappeared, or that of the service which last became impossible.
Damages other than the value of the last thing or service may also be
awarded.
If the impossibility of all the objects of the alternative obligation is caused by the
debtor, the creditor is entitled to damages.
If such impossibility is caused by a fortuitous event, the obligation is
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extinguished and the debtor is released from responsibility, unless the contrary is
stipulated by the parties.
The creditor cannot claim for damages if the debtor can still perform the
remaining prestations.
The damages that may be recovered is based on the last thing which
disappeared or the service which became impossible. This last one is converted
into a simple obligation.
1205. When the choice has been expressly given to the creditor, the
obligation shall cease to be alternative from the day when the selection has
been communicated to the debtor.
Until then the responsibility of the debtor shall be governed by the following
rules:
A. only one thing lost fortuitous event creditor chooses from the remainder
debtor delivers the choice to creditor;
B. only one remains debtor delivers the same to the creditor;
C. only one thing lost fault of the debtor
1. creditor may choose any one of the remainders;
2. creditor may choose the price or value of the one which was lost;
3. may choose 1 or 2 plus damages
D. all things lost fault of the debtor creditor may choose the price of ANYONE of
the things, with damages if warranted.
The same rules shall be applied to obligations to do or not to do in case one,
some or all of the prestations should become impossible.
This article applies only when the right of choice has been expressly granted to
the creditor.
1206. When only one prestation has been agreed upon, but the obligor may
render another in substitution, the obligation is called facultative.
The loss or deterioration of the thing intended as a substitute, through the
negligence of the obligor, does not render him liable. But once the
substitution has been made, the obligor is liable for the loss of the substitute
on account of his delay, negligence or fraud.
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CONSEQUENCES OF SOLIDARITY:
1. Passive Solidarity full payment made by anyone of the solidary debtors
extinguishes the obligation. The one who paid can claim reimbursement from his
co-debtors as regards their corresponding shares in the obligation.
A, B, & C are solidary debtors of D in the sum of P900.
D can demand payment of the entire obligation when it becomes due, from any one of
the debtors or from all of them at the same time.
If C paid the whole P900 to D, he may claim reimbursement from A and B.
2. Active Solidarity full payment to any of the creditors extinguishes the
obligation. The creditor who received the entire amount will be liable to pay the
corresponding shares of his co-creditors in accordance with their internal
agreement.
Garfield owes the sum of P40,000 to Mickey, Minnie, Donald, and Pluto, who are
solidary creditors. Garfield can pay anyone of them. If Mickey received the P40,000, he
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1208. If from the law, or the nature or the wording of the obligations to
which the preceding article refers the contrary does not appear, the credit or
debt shall be presumed to be divided into as many shares as there are
creditors or debtors, the credits or debts being considered distinct from one
another, subject to the Rules of Court governing the multiplicity of suits.
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Indivisibility
Refers to the prestation of
the contract
2. Number
of subjects /
parties
3. Effect of
breach of
obligation
Solidarity
Refers to the tie existing
between parties of the
obligation (who is liable)
Requires plurality of parties
The liability, even if
converted into indemnity for
damages, remains solidary.
1211. Solidarity may exist although the creditors and the debtors may not be
bound in the same manner and by the same periods and conditions.
The solidarity of the debtors is not affected even if different terms and conditions
are made applicable to them.
Enforcement of the terms and conditions may be made at different times. The
obligations which have matured can be enforced while those still undue will have
to be awaited. Enforcement can be made against any one of the solidary debtors
although it can happen that a particular obligation chargeable to a particular
debtor is not yet due. He will be answerable for all the prestations which fall due
although chargeable to the other co-debtors.
Sad Face, Happy, and Fanny got a loan of P150 from Smiley. They signed a promissory
note solidarily binding themselves to pay Smiley under the following terms:
Sad Face will pay P50 with 3% on December 30, 2006
Happy will pay P50 with 4% on December 30, 2007
Fanny will pay P50 with 5% on December 30, 2008
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On December 31, 2006, Smiley can collect his P50 with 3% from any one of the
debtors, but not the whole P150 because it is not yet entirely due. The maturity of the
other amounts should still be awaited. If maturity comes, Smiley can collect from any
of the debtors, because they are expressly solidary in liabilities, and not affected by
the secondary stipulations.
1212. Each one of the solidary creditors may do whatever may be useful to
the others, but not anything which may be prejudicial to the latter.
Every solidary creditor is benefited by the useful acts of any one of them.
If a solidary creditor performs an act which is not fair to his co-creditors, the act
may have valid legal effects or the obligation of the debtor due to them may be
extinguished, but the performing creditor shall be liable to his co-creditors.
Question: May solidary creditors perform an act that is beneficial to others?
1213. A solidary creditor cannot assign his rights without the consent of the
others.
Assign transfer of right
The assignee does not become a solidary creditor, and any payment made upon
him by the debtor does not extinguish the obligation. He is considered a
STRANGER, and his acts are not binding to the solidarity.
1214. The debtor may pay any one of the solidary creditors; but if any
demand, judicial or extrajudicial, has been made by one of them, payment
should be made to him.
The debtor can pay any one of the solidary creditors. Such payment when
accepted by any of the solidary creditors will extinguish the obligation.
To avoid confusion on the payment of the obligation, the debtor is required to ay
only to the demanding creditor and that payment is sufficient to effect the
extinguishment of the obligation.
In case two or more demands made by the other creditors, the first demand
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1216. The creditor may proceed against any one of the solidary debtors or
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some or all of them simultaneously. The demand made against one of them
shall not be an obstacle to those which may subsequently be directed
against the others, so long as the debt has not been fully collected.
Extrajudicial demands - first demand shall not prevent subsequent demands on the
other co-debtors, if co-debtor first to have been required to fulfill obligation did not act
on it.
1217. Payment made by one of the solidary debtors extinguishes the
obligation. If two or more solidary debtors offer to pay, the creditor may
choose which offer to accept.
He who made the payment may claim from his co-debtors only the share
which corresponds to each, with the interest for the payment already made.
If the payment is made before the debt is due, no interest for the intervening
period may be demanded.
When one of the solidary debtors cannot, because of his insolvency,
reimburse his share to the debtor paying the obligation, such share shall be
borne by all his co-debtors, in proportion to the debt of each.
Payment consists in the delivery of the thing or the rendition (rendering) of the
service whish is the object of the obligation.
Interest compensation for the use of borrowed money
Partial payment the solidary debtor who made the partial payment is entitles to be
reimbursed only for such amount of money which he had paid and which exceeds his
own share in the obligation.
If one of the debtors is insolvent and could not pay his share in the obligation, all
solidary debtors including the paying debtor shall share proportionately in the
settlement of the corresponding share of the insolvent debtor. [In short, his co-debtors
will save his ass.]
1218. Payment by a solidary debtor shall not entitle him to reimbursement
from his co-debtors if such payment is made after the obligation has
prescribed or become illegal.
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No reimbursement if:
1. Obligation PRESCRIBES
The creditor did not make any demand for more than 10 years.
2. Obligation becomes ILLEGAL
Law has been passed, making such prestation illegal.
1219. The remission made by the creditor of the share which affects one of
the solidary debtors does not release the latter from his responsibility
towards the co-debtors, in case the debt had been totally paid by anyone of
them before the remission was effected.
Atty De Chavez: Ito ay provision sa tanga... (siyempre, 'pag nagbayad na, wala
nang obligation, wala na ding ire-remit...)
Any belated (delayed) remission by the creditor of the share of any of the debtor
has no effect on the internal relationship of the co-debtors.
Payment before remission: A, B, and C solidarily owe D P1,500.00. B paid the entire
obligation. After which, D remitted the share of C. B can collect P500.00 each from A
and C even if the share of C in the obligation had been remitted.
Remission before payment: A, B, and C solidarily owe D P1,500.00. D remitted the
share of C. Thereafter, B paid the entire obligation. B can collect P500.00 from A but
not from C. However, B may ask D to give back P500, which is the supposed-to-be
share of C.
After the prior payment of the entire obligation, there is nothing to remit because
the obligation had been extinguished.
1220. The remission of the whole obligation, obtained by one of the solidary
debtors, does not entitle him to reimbursement from his co-debtors.
There is nothing to be reimbursed because he did not spend any money, the
remission being a gratuitous act.
1221. If the thing has been lost or if the prestation has become impossible
without the fault of the solidary debtors, the obligation shall be
extinguished.
If there was fault on the part of any one of them, all shall be responsible to
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the creditor, for the price and the payment of damages and interest, without
prejudice to their action against the guilty or negligent debtor.
If through a fortuitous event, the thing is lost or the performance has
become impossible after one of the solidary debtors has incurred in delay
through the judicial or extrajudicial demand upon him by the creditor, the
provisions of the preceding paragraph shall apply.
Loss of the thing or impossibility of prestation
1. NO FAULT solidary debtors obligation is extinguished
2. FAULT of any one of them all are liable because of their mutual agency
3. FORTUITOUS EVENT delay on the part of the debtors all will be liable
If the thing due was not lost, but there is merely a delay, fraud or negligence on
the part of one of the solidary debtors, all (including the innocent) debtors will
share in the payment of the PRINCIPAL prestation. The damages and interest
imposed will be borne by the guilty debtor.
Obligation to deliver is converted into an obligation to pay indemnity when there
us loss or impossibility of performance.
1222. A solidary debtor may, in actions filed by the creditor, avail himself of
all defenses which are derived from the nature of the obligation and of those
which are personal to him, or pertain to his own share. With respect to those
which personally belong to the others, he may avail himself thereof only as
regards that part of the debt for which the latter are responsible.
DEFENSES OF A SOLIDARY DEBTOR:
1. Defense arising from the nature of the obligation such as payment,
prescription, remission, statute of frauds, presence of vices of consent, etc.
2. Defenses which are personal to him or which pertains to his own share alone
such as minority, insanity and others purely personal to him.
3. Defenses personal to the other solidary creditors but only as regards that part of
the debt for which the other creditors are liable.
Section 5 Divisible and Indivisible Obligations
1223. The divisibility or indivisibility of the things that are the object of
obligations in which there is only one debtor and only one creditor does not
alter or modify the provisions of Chapter 2 of this Title.
DIVISIBILITY refers to the susceptibility of an obligation to be performed partially.
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If a thing could be divided into parts and as divided, its value is impaired
disproportionately, that thing is INDIVISIBLE.
1224. A joint indivisible obligation gives rise to indemnity for damages from
the time anyone of the debtors does not comply with his undertaking. The
debtors who may have been ready to fulfill their promises shall not
contribute to the indemnity beyond the corresponding portion of the price of
the thing or of the value of the service in which the obligation consists.
* Relate this provision to Articles 1165, 1208 and 1209.
JOINT INDIVISIBLE OBLIGATION the object is indivisible but the liability of the parties
is joint.
1225. For the purposes of the preceding articles, obligations to give definite
things and those which are not susceptible of partial performance shall be
deemed to be indivisible.
When the obligation has for its object the execution of a certain number of
days of work, the accomplishment of work by metrical units, or analogous
things which by their nature are susceptible of partial performance, it shall
be divisible.
However, even though the object or service may be physically divisible, an
obligation is indivisible if so provided by law or intended by the parties.
In obligations not to do, divisibility or indivisibility shall be determined by
the character of the prestation in each particular case.
The following are considered INDIVISIBLE obligations:
1. Obligation to give definite things
2. Obligations which are not susceptible of partial performance
3. Even though the object or service may be physically divisible, it is indivisible if:
a. the law so provides
b. when the parties intended it to be indivisible
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If the contract is divisible, and a part of it is illegal, the illegal part is void, and
the rest shall be valid and enforceable.
If the contract is indivisible, and a part of it is illegal, the entire contract is void.
Partial performance of an indivisible obligation is tantamount to nonperformance.
Purposes:
1. Funcion coercitiva o de garantia to insure the performance of the
obligation
2. Funcion liquidatoria to liquidate the amount of damages to be awarded to
the injured party in case of breach of the principal obligation; and
3. Funcion estrictamente penal in certain exceptional cases, to punish the
obligor in case of breach of the principal obligation.
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the period agreed upon, or else, he suffers a fixed civil penalty without need of
proving the damages of the other party.
The penalty imposable is a substitute for the indemnity for:
a. damages
b. payment of interest in case of breach of obligation
-unless the contrary is stipulated!
EXCEPTIONS additional damages may be recovered from the following acts:
If the debtor refuses to pay the penalty
If the debtor is guilty of fraud in the fulfillment of the obligation
If there is express stipulation that the other damages or interests are
demandable to the penalty in the penal clause
1227. The debtor cannot exempt himself from the performance of the
obligation by paying the penalty, save in the case where this right has been
expressly reserved for him. Neither can the creditor demand the fulfillment
of the obligation and the satisfaction of the penalty at the same time, unless
this right has been clearly granted him. However, if after the creditor has
decided to require the fulfillment of the obligation, the performance thereof
should become impossible without his fault, the penalty may be enforced.
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The mere non-fulfillment of the principal obligation entitles the creditor to the
penalty stipulated.
The purpose of the penalty clause is precisely to avoid proving damages.
1229. The judge shall equitably reduce the penalty when the principal
obligation has been partly or irregularly complied with by the debtor. Even if
there has been no performance, the penalty may also be reduced by the
courts if it is iniquitous or unconscionable.
JUDICIAL REDUCTION OF PENALTY
Principal obligation partly complied with by the debtor (but not in indivisible
obligation, because it is tantamount to non-compliance)
Principal obligation complied not in accordance with the tenor of the agreement
(refers to irregular performance)
Penalty iniquitous or unconscionable
page 41 [dioryRabajante]
void contract but it is not an excuse that you don't have to pay the principal which is
P10,000.
CHAPTER 4
EXTINHGUISHMENT OF OBLIGATIONS
GENERAL PROVISIONS
1231. Obligations are extinguished:
5. by payment or performance
6. by loss of the thing due
7. by condonation or remission
8. by confusion or merger of the rights of creditor and debtor
9. by compensation
10. by novation
Other causes of extinguishment of obligations, such as annulment,
rescission, fulfillment of a resolutory condition, and prescription, are
governed elsewhere in this Code.
1232. Payment means not only the delivery of money but also the
performance, in any other manner of an obligation.
Payment means not only delivery of money but also the performance.
It is the fulfillment of the prestation due that extinguishes the obligation by the
realization of the purposes for which it was constituted
It is a juridical act which is voluntary, licit and made with the intent to extinguish
an obligation
Requisites:
1. person who pays
2. the person to whom payment is made
3. the thing to be paid
4. the manner, time and place of payment etc
The paying as well as the one receiving should have the requisite capacity
Kinds:
1. normal when the debtor voluntarily performs the prestation stipulated
2. abnormal when he is forced by means of a judicial proceeding either to comply
with prestation or to pay indemnity
1233. A debt shall not be understood to have been paid unless the thing or
service in which the oligatoin consists has been completely delivered or
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When
the
oblige
accepts
the
performance,
knowing
its
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1251. Payment shall be made in the place designated in the obligation. There
being no express stipulation and if the undertaking is to deliver a
determinate thing, the payment shall be made wherever the thing might be
at the moment the obligation was constituted. In any other case the place of
payment shall be the domicile of the debtor.
If the debtor changes his domicile in bad faith or after he has incurred in delay,
the additional expenses shall be borne by him. These provisions are without
prejudice to venue under the Rules of Court.(1171a)
Since the law fixes the place of payment at the domicile of the debtor, it is the
duty of the creditor to go there and receive payment; he should bear the
expenses in this case because the debtor cannot be made to shoulder the
expenses which the creditor incurs in performing a duty imposed by law and
which is for his benefit.
But if the debtor changes his domicile in bad faith or after he has incurred in
delay, then the additional expenses shall be borne by him
When the debtor has been required to remit money to the creditor, the latter
bears the risks and the expenses of the transmission. In cases however where
the debtor chooses this means of payment, he bears the risk of loss.
SUBSECTION 1
APPLICATION OF PAYMENTS
1252. He who has various debts of the same kind in favor of one and the
same creditor, may declare at the time of making the payment, to which of
them the same must be applied. Unless the parties so stipulate, or when the
application of payment is made by the party for whose benefit the term has
been constituted, application shall not be made as to debts which are not yet
due.
If the debtor accepts from the creditor a receipt in which an application of
the payment is made, the former cannot complain of the same, unless there
is a cause for invalidating the contract. (1172a)
Requisites:
1. 1 debtor and 1 creditor only
2. 2 or more debts of the same kind
3. all debts must be due
4. amount paid by the debtor must not be sufficient to cover the total amount
of all the debts
It is necessary that the obligations must all be due. Exceptions: (1) whe there is a
stipulation to the contrary; and (2) the application of payment is made by the
party for whose benefit the term or period has been constituted (relate to Art.
1196).
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It is also necessary that all the debts be for the same kind, generally of a
monetary character. This includes obligations which were not originally of a
monetary character, but at the time of application of payment, had been
converted into an obligation to pay damages by reason of breach or
nonperformance.
If the debtor makes a proper application of payment but the creditor refuses to
accept it because he wants to apply it to another debt, such creditor will incur in
delay
RIGHT OF DEBTOR TO MAKE APPLICATION. If at the time of payment, the debtor
does not exercise his right to apply it to any of his debts, the application shall be
understood as provided by law, unless the creditor makes the application and his
decision is accepted by the debtor. This application of payment can be made by
the creditor only in the receipt issued at the time of payment (although the
application made by creditor may be contested by the debtor if the latters
assent to such application was vitiated by such causes as mistake, violence,
intimidation, fraud, etc)
The debtor and the creditor by agreement, can validly change the application of
payment already made without prejudice to the rights of third persons acquired
before such agreement
1253. If the debt produces interest, payment of the principal shall not be
deemed to have been made until the interests have been covered. (1173)
Interest paid first before principal
Applies both to compensatory interest (that stipulated as earnings of the amount
due under the obligation) and to interest due because of delay or mora on the
part of the debtor
SC held that this provision applies only in the absence of a verbal or written
agreement to the contrary (merely directory, not mandatory)
1254. When the payment cannot be applied in accordance with the preceding
rules, or if application can not be inferred from other circumstances, the
debt which is most onerous to the debtor, among those due, shall be deemed
to have been satisfied. If the debts due are of the same nature and burden,
the payment shall be applied to all of them proportionately. (1174a)
As to which of 2 debts is more onerous is fundamentally a question of fact, which
courts must determine on the basis of the circumstances of each case
st
Debts are not of the same burden (1 par.) Rules:
1. Oldest are more onerous than new ones
2. One bearing interest more onerous than one that does not
3. secured debt more onerous than unsecured one
4. principal debt more onerous than guaranty
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SUBSECTION 2
PAYMENT BY CESSION
1255. The debtor may cede or assign his property to his creditors in payment
of his debts. This cession, unless there is stipulation to the contrary, shall
only release the debtor from responsibility for the net proceeds of the thing
assigned. The agreements which, on the effect of the cession, are made
between the debtor and his creditors shall be governed by special laws.
(1175a)
Cession is a special form of payment whereby the debtor abandons or assigns all
of his property for the benefit of his creditors so that the latter may obtain
payment of their credits from the proceeds of the property.
Requisites:
1. plurality of debts
2. partial or relative insolvency of the debtor
3. acceptance of cession by the creditors
Kinds of Cession:
1. Contractual (Art. 1255)
2. Judicial (Insolvency Law)
Must be initiated by debtors
Requires two or more creditors, debtors insolvent, cession accepted by creditors
Such assignment does not have the effect of making the creditors the owners of
the property of the debtor unless there is an agreement to that effect
CESSION
many creditors
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delivery of a thing
a novation
payment extinguishes obligation
(to the extent of the value of the
thing delivered)
SUBSECTION 3
TENDER OF PAYMENT AND CONSIGNATION
1256. If the creditor to whom tender of payment has been made refuses
without just cause to accept it, the debtor shall be released from
responsibility by the consignation of the thing or sum due.
Consignation alone shall produce the same effect in the following cases:
(1) When the creditor is absent or unknown, or does not appear at the place
of payment;
(2) When he is incapacitated to receive the payment at the time it is due;
(3) When, without just cause, he refuses to give a receipt;
(4) When two or more persons claim the same right to collect;
(5) When the title of the obligation has been lost. (1176a)
Tender of payment : manifestation made by the debtor to the creditor of his
desire to comply with his obligation; The act of the debtor of offering to the
creditor the thing or amount due
Consignation : Deposit of the object or the amount due with the proper court
after refusal or inability of the creditor to accept the tender of payment
Tender of payment by certified check is valid; a mere check would also be valid
for tender of payment if the creditor makes no prompt objection, but this does
not estop the latter from later demanding payment in cash
When a tender of payment is made in such a form that the creditor could have
immediately realized payment if he had accepted the tender, followed by a
prompt attempt of the debtor to deposit the means of payment in court by way
of consignation, the accrual of interest on the obligation will be suspended from
the date of such tender. But when the tender of payment is not accompanied by
the means of payment, and the debtor did not take any immediate step to make
a consignation, then the interest is not suspended from the time of such tender.
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1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
1.
2.
3.
4.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
If the reason for consignation is the unjust refusal of the creditor to accept
payment, it must be shown:
That there was previous tender of payment, without which the consignation is
ineffective
That the tender of payment was of the very thing due, or in case of money
obligations that legal tender currency was offered
That the tender of payment was unconditional and
That the creditor refused to accept payment without just cause
Exception to requirement for tender of payment: [AIR-TT]
[A] When creditor is absent or unknown or does not appear at place of payment
[I] When he is incapacitated to receive payment
[R] When he refuses to give receipt, without just cause
[T] When two or more persons claim same right to collect
[T] When title of the obligation has been lost
The 1st and 2nd Special Requisites of Consignation are embodied in Article 1256.
nd
As to the 2 requisite ([L] legal cause) the following musst be present:
(a) the tender of payment must have been made prior to the consignation
(b)that it must have been unconditional [e.g. where the debtor tendered a check for
P3,250 to the creditor as payment of a debt conditioned upon the signing by the
latter of a motion to dismiss a complaint for legal separation, such tender of
payment is invalid.]
(c) that the creditor must have refused to accept the payment without just cause [it
is not necessary for the court where the thing or the amount is deposited to
determine whether the refusal of the creditor to accept the same was with or
without just cause. The question will be resolved anyway in a subsequent
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proceeding. Hence, the mere refusal of the creditor to accept the tender of
payment will be sufficient (Manresa)]
1257. In order that the consignation of the thing due may release the obligor,
it must first be announced to the persons interested in the fulfillment of the
obligation.
The consignation shall be ineffectual if it is not made strictly in consonance
with the provisions which regulate payment. (1177)
The lack of notice does not invalidate the consignation but simply makes the
debtor liable for the expenses
The tender of payment and the notice of consignation sent to the creditor may
be made in the same act. In case of absent or unknown creditors, the notice may
be made by publication
1st paragraph of this article pertains to the 3rd Special Requisite of Consignation
([N] Previous Notice)
- Tender of Payment vs Previous Notice : the former is a friendly and private act
manifested only to the creditor; the latter is manifested also to other persons
interested in the fulfillment of the obligation.
2nd paragraph of this article pertains to the General Requisites of Consignation
(Arts. 1232-1251), which must be complied with
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SECTION 2
LOSS OF THE THING DUE
1262. An obligation which consists in the delivery of a determinate thing
shall be extinguished if it should be lost or destroyed without the fault of the
debtor, and before he has incurred in delay.
When by law or stipulation, the obligor is liable even for fortuitous events,
the loss of the thing does not extinguish the obligation and he shall be
responsible for damages. The same rule applies when the nature of the
obligation requires the assumption of risk.
1263: In an obligation to deliver a generic thing, the loss or destruction of
anything of the same kind does not extinguish the obligation. (n)
1264. The courts shall determine whether, under the circumstances, the
partial loss of the object of the obligation is so important as to extinguish
the obligation. (n)
1265. Whenever the thing is lost in the possession of the debtor, it shall be
presumed that the loss was due to his fault, unless there is proof to the
contrary, and without prejudice to the provisions of article 1165. This
presumption does not apply in case of earthquake, flood, storm, or other
natural calamity. (1183a)
3rd paragraph of Art. 1165: whe the obligor delays, or has promised to deliver the
same thing to two or more persons who do not have the same interest, he shall
be liable for any fortuitious event until he has effected the delivery
Hence, in cases where Art. 1165, par. 3 is applicable, even if the debtor can
prove that the loss of the thing in his possession was not through his fault or that
it was through a fortuitous event, he shall still be liable to the creditor for
damages.
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perfectly licit, as where the obligor is drafted for military service or for a civil
function)
PHYSICAL IMPOSSIBILTY : examples death of the debtor; when there is an accident...
1267. When the service has become so difficult as to be manifestly beyond
the contemplation of the parties, the obligor may also be released therefrom,
in whole or in part. (n)
DOCTRINE OF UNFORESEEN EVENT / DOCTRINE OF RELATIVE IMPOSSIBILITY
(rebus sic stantibus)
It refers to obligation "to do" (personal obligation)
Parties are presumed to have the risk
It does not apply to aleatory contracts (insurance contract)
Excludes highly speculative business (stock exchange)
Monatory obligations are also excluded (governed by 1357)
Requisites:
1. event or change in the circumstances could have been foreseen of the time of
the execution contract
2. it makes the performance of the contract extremely difficult but not impossible
3. the event must not be due to the act of any of the parties
4. the contract is for a future prestation. If the contract is of immediate fulfillment,
the gross inequality of the reciprocal prestations may be involve desion or want
of cause.
1268. When the debt of a thing certain and determinate proceeds from a
criminal offense, the debtor shall not be exempted from the payment of its
price, whatever may be the cause for the loss, unless the thing having been
offered by him to the person who should receive it, the latter refused without
justification to accept it. (1185)
1269. The obligation having been extinguished by the loss of the thing, the
creditor shall have all the rights of action which the debtor may have against
third persons by reason of the loss. (1186)
1270. Condonation or remission is essentially gratuitous, and requires the
acceptance by the obligor. It may be made expressly or impliedly.
One and the other kind shall be subject to the rules which govern inofficious
donations. Express condonation shall, furthermore, comply with the forms of
donation. (1187)
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1276. Merger which takes place in the person of the principal debtor or
creditor benefits the guarantors. Confusion which takes place in the person
of any of the latter does not extinguish the obligation. (1193)
The extinguishment of the principal obligation through confusion releases the
guarantors because the obligation of the latter is merely accessory. When the
merger takes place in the person of a guarantor, the obligation is not
extinguished.
1277. Confusion does not extinguish a joint obligation except as regards the
share corresponding to the creditor or debtor in whom the two characters
concur. (1194)
SECTION 5
COMPENSATION
1278. Compensation shall take place when two persons, in their own right,
are creditors and debtors of each other. (1195)
Compensation is a mode of extinguishing to the concurrent amount, the
obligations of those persons who in their own right are reciprocally debtors and
creditors of each other. It is the offsetting of two obligations which are
reciprocally extinguished if they are of equal value. Or extinguished to the
concurrent amount if of different values.
Kinds of Compensation:
As to their effects
compensation may be total (when the two obligations are of the
same amount); or
partial (when the amounts are not equal).
As to origin
1. it may be legal;
2. facultative;
3. conventional;
4. or judicial.
It is legal when it takes place by operation of law because all requisites are
present.
It is facultative when it can be claimed by one of the parties, who,
however, has the right to object to it, such as when one of the obligations
has a period for the benefit of one party alone and who renounces that
period so as to make the obligation due.
It is conventional when the parties agree to compensate their mutual
obligations even if some requisite is lacking.
It is judicial when decreed by the court in a case where there is a
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counterclaim.
Compensation vs. Payment: In compensation, there can be partial extinguishment
of the obligation; in payment, the performance must be completer, unless waived by
the creditor. Payment involves delivery of action, while compensation (legal
compensation) takes place by operation of law without simultaneous delivery.
Compensation vs. Merger: In compensation, there are at least two persons who
stand as principal creditors and debtor of each other, in merger, there is only one
person involved in whom the characters of creditor and debtor are merged. In merger,
there is only one obligation, while in compensation, there are two obligations involved.
1279. In order that compensation may be proper, it is necessary:
(1) That each one of the obligors be bound principally, and that he be at the
same time a principal creditor of the other;
(2) That both debts consist in a sum of money, or if the things due are
consumable, they be of the same kind, and also of the same quality if the
latter has been stated;
(3) That the two debts be due;
(4) That they be liquidated and demandable;
(5) That over neither of them there be any retention or controversy,
commenced by third persons and communicated in due time to the debtor.
(1196)
For compensation to take place, the parties must be mutually debtors and
creditors (1) in their own right, and (2) as principals. Where there is no
relationship of mutual creditors and debtors, there can be no compensation.
Because the 1st requirement that the parties be mutually debtors and creditors
in their own right, there can be no compensation when one party is occupying a
representative capacity, such as a guardian or an administrator. The 2nd
requirement is that the parties should be mutually debtors and creditors as
principals. This means that there can be no compensation when one party is a
principal creditor in one obligation but is only a surety or guarantor in the other.
The things due in both obligations must be fungible, or things which can be
substituted for each other.
Both debts must be due to permit compensation.
Demandable means that the debts are enforceable in court, there being no
apparent defenses inherent in them. The obligations must be civil obligations,
including those that are purely natural. An obligation is not demandable,
therefore, and not subject to compensation, in the following cases: (1) when
there is a period which has not yet arrived, including the cases when one party is
in a state of suspension of payments; (2) when there is a suspensive condition
that has not yet happened; (3) when the obligation cannot be sued upon, as in
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natural obligation.
A debt is liquidated when its existence and amount is determined. Compensation
can only take place between certain and liquidated debts.
* The five requisites of a legal compensation are enumerated in the Article. All
requisites must be present before compensation can be effectual.
1. That each of the obligators be bound principally and that he be at the same
time a principal creditor of the other. The parties must be mutual creditor and
debtor of each other and their relationship is a principal one, that is, they are
principal debtor and creditor of each other.
2. That both debts consist in such a sum of money, or if the things due are
consumable, they be of the same kind, and also of the same quality if the
latter has been stated. >>When the debts consist of money, there is not
much of a problem when it comes to compensation to the concurrent amount.
It is a matter of mathematical computation. When the debt consist of things, it
is necessary that the things are consumable which must be understood as
fungible and therefore susceptible of substitution. More than that they must
be of the same kind. If the quality has been states, the things must be of the
same quality.
3. That the two debts are due. >> A debt is due when its period of performance
has arrived. If it is a subject to a condition, the condition must have already
been fulfilled. However, in voluntary compensation, the parties may agree
upon the compensation of debts which are not yet due.
4. That they be liquidated and demandable. >> A debt is considered liquidated
when its amount is clearly fixed. Of if it is not yet specially fixed, a simple
mathematical computation will determine its amount or value. It is
unliquidated when the amount is not fixed because it is still subject to a
dispute or to certain condition. It is not enough that the debts be liquidated. It
is also essential that the same be demandable. A debt is demandable if it is
not yet barred by prescription and it is not illegal or invalid.
5. That over neither of them there be any retention or controversy, commenced
by third persons and communicated in due time to the debtor. >> A debt of a
thing cannot be a subject of compensation if the same had been subject of a
garnishment of which the debtor was timely notified. When a credit or
property had been properly garnished of attached, it cannot be disposed of
without the approval of the court.
1280. Notwithstanding the provisions of the preceding article, the guarantor
may set up compensation as regards what the creditor may owe the principal
debtor. (1197)
The liability of the guarantor is only subsidiary; it is accessory to the principal
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obligation of the debtor. If the principal debtor has a credit against the creditor,
which can be compensated, it would mean the extinguishment of the guaranteed
debt, either totally or partially. This extinguishment benefits the guarantor, for he
can be held liable only to the same extent as the debtor.
Exception to the Rule On Compensation: Right of Guarantor to Invoke
Compensation Against Creditor. The general rule is that for compensation to operate,
the parties must be related reciprocally as principal creditors and debtors of each
other. Under the present Article, the guarantor is allowed to set up compensation
against the creditor.
1281. Compensation may be total or partial. When the two debts are of the
same amount, there is a total compensation. (n)
Total Compensationdebts are of the same amount.
Partial CompensationDebts are not of the same amount; operative only up to
the concurrent amount.
1282. The parties may agree upon the compensation of debts which are not
yet due. (n)
Voluntary compensation is not limited to obligations which are not yet due. The
parties may compensate by agreement any obligations, in which the objective
requisites provided for legal compensation are not present. It is necessary,
however, that the parties should have the capacity to dispose of the credits
which they compensate, because the extinguishment of the obligations in this
case arises from their wills and not from law.
1283. If one of the parties to a suit over an obligation has a claim for
damages against the other, the former may set it off by proving his right to
said damages and the amount thereof. (n)
Art. 1284. When one or both debts are rescissible or voidable, they may be
compensated against each other before they are judicially rescinded or
avoided. (n)
Although a rescissible or voidable debt can be compensated before it is
rescinded or annulled, the moment it is rescinded or annulled, the decree of
rescission or annulment is retroactive, and the compensation must be considered
as cancelled. Recission of annulment requires mutual restitution; the party whose
obligation is annulled or rescinded can thus recover to the extent that his credit
was extinguished by the compensation, because to that extent he is deemed to
have made a payment.
1285. The debtor who has consented to the assignment of rights made by a
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creditor in favor of a third person, cannot set up against the assignee the
compensation which would pertain to him against the assignor, unless the
assignor was notified by the debtor at the time he gave his consent, that he
reserved his right to the compensation.
If the creditor communicated the cession to him but the debtor did not
consent thereto, the latter may set up the compensation of debts previous to
the cession, but not of subsequent ones.
If the assignment is made without the knowledge of the debtor, he may set
up the compensation of all credits prior to the same and also later ones until
he had knowledge of the assignment. (1198a)
Assignment after Compensation:
When compensation has already taken place before the assignment, inasmuch
as it takes place ipso jure, there has already been an extinguishment of one of
the other of the obligations. A subsequent assignment of an extinguished
obligation cannot produce any effect against the debtor. The only exception to
this rule is when the debtor consents to the assignment of the credit; his consent
constitutes a waiver of the compensation, unless at the time he gives consent,
he informs the assignor that he reserved his right to the compensation.
Assignment before compensation.
The assignment may be made before compensation has taken place, either
because at the time of assignment one of the debts is not yet due or liquidated,
or because of some other cause which impedes the compensation. As far as the
debtor is concerned, the assignment does not take effect except from the time
he is notified thereof. If the notice of assignment is simultaneous to the transfer,
he can set up compensation of debts prior to the assignment. If notice was given
to him before the assignment, this takes effect at the time of the assignment;
therefore the same rule applies. If he consents to the assignment, he waives
compensation even of debts already due, unless he makes a reservation.
But if the debtor was notified of the assignment, but he did not consent, and the
credit assigned to a third person matures after that which pertains to the debtor,
the latter may set up compensation when the assignee attempts to enforce the
assigned credit, provided that the credit of the debtor became due before the
assignment. But it f the assigned credit matures earlier than that of the debtor,
the assignee may immediately enforce it, and the debtor cannot set up
compensation, because the credit is not yet due.
If the debtor did not have knowledge of the assignment, he may set up by way of
compensation all credits maturing before he is notified thereof. Hence, if the
assignment is concealed, and the assignor still contracts new obligation in favor
of the debtor, such obligation maturing before the latter learns of the assignment
will still be allowable by way of compensation. The assignee in such case would
have a personal action against the assignor.
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1286. Compensation takes place by operation of law, even though the debts
may be payable at different places, but there shall be an indemnity for
expenses of exchange or transportation to the place of payment. (1199a)
This article applies to legal compensation and not to voluntary compensation.
1287. Compensation shall not be proper when one of the debts arises from a
depositum or from the obligations of a depositary or of a bailee in
commodatum.
Neither can compensation be set up against a creditor who has a claim for
support due by gratuitous title, without prejudice to the provisions of
paragraph 2 of Article 301. (1200a)
E. The prohibition of compensation when one of the debts arises from a depositum
(a contract by virtue of which a person [depositary] receives personal property
belonging to another [depositor], with the obligation of safely keeping it and
returning the same) or commodatum (a gratuitous contract by virtue of which
one of the parties delivers to the other a non-consumable personal property so
that the latter may use it for a certain time and return it) is based on justice. A
deposit of commodatum is given on the basis of confidence in the depositary of
the borrower. It is therefore, a matter of morality, the depositary or borrower
performs his obligation.
With respect to future support, to allow its extinguishment by compensation
would defeat its exemption from attachment and execution. , and may expose
the recipient to misery and starvation. Common humanity and public policy
forbid this consequence. Support under this provision should be understood, not
only referring to legal support, to include all rights which have for their purpose
the subsistence of the debtor, such as pensions and gratuities.
1288. Neither shall there be compensation if one of the debts consists in civil
liability arising from a penal offense. (n)
If one of the debts consists in civil liability arising from a penal offense,
compensation would be improper and inadvisable because the satisfaction of
such obligation is imperative.
The person who has the civil liability arising from crime is the only party who
cannot set up the compensation; but the offended party entitled to the indemnity
can set up his claim in compensation of his debt.
Art. 1289. If a person should have against him several debts which are
susceptible of compensation, the rules on the application of payments shall
apply to the order of the compensation. (1201)
It can happen that a debtor may have several debts to a creditor. And vice versa.
Under these circumstances, Articles 1252 to 1254 shall apply.
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1290. When all the requisites mentioned in Article 1279 are present,
compensation takes effect by operation of law, and extinguishes both debts
to the concurrent amount, even though the creditors and debtors are not
aware of the compensation.
Legal compensation takes place from the moment that the requisites of the
articles 1278 and 1270 co-exist; its effects arise on the very day which all its
requisites concur.
Voluntary of conventional compensation takes effect upon the agreement of the
parties.
Facultative compensation takes place when the creditor declares his option to set
it up.
Judicial compensation takes place upon final judgment.
Effects of Compensation:
(1) Both debts are extinguished to the concurrent amount;
(2) interests stop accruing on the extinguished obligation of the part extinguished;
(3) the period of prescription stops with respect to the obligation or part extinguished;
(4) all accessory obligations of the principal obligation which has been extinguished are
also extinguished.
Renunciation of Compensation. Compensation can be renounces, either at the
time an obligation is contracted or afterwards. Compensation rests upon a
potestative right, and a unilateral decision of the debtor would be sufficient
renunciation. Compensation can be renounced expressly of impliedly.
No Compensation. Even when all the requisites for compensation occur, the
compensation may not take place in the following cases: (1) When there is
renunciation of the effects of compensation by a party; and (2) when the law
prohibits compensation.
(Unless otherwise indicated, commentaries are sourced from the Civil Code book IV by
Tolentino).
SECTION 6
NOVATION
HOW OBLIGATIONS ARE MODIFIED
1291. Obligations may be modified by:
(1) Changing their object or principal condition
(2) Substituting the person of the debtor
(3) Subrogating a third person in the rights of a creditor
Novation is the extinguishment of an obligation by a substitution or change of
the obligation by a subsequent one which extinguishes or modifies the first either
by:
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TITLE II.
CONTRACTS
CHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 1305. A contract is a meeting of the minds between two persons
whereby one binds himself, with respect to the other to give something or to
render some service.
* relate to Art. 1159 of CC
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do ut des (I give that you may give) An agreement in which A will give one thing to B,
so that B will give another thing to A.
do ut facias (I give that you may do) An agreement under which A will give something
to B, so that B may do something for A.
facio ut facias (I do that you may do) An agreement under which A does something
for B, so that B may render some other service for A.
facio ut des (I do that you may give) An agreement under which A does something for
B, so that B may give something to A.
* Analogous contracts:
Innominate contracts, in the absence of stipulations and specific provisions of law on
the matter, are to be governed by rules applicable to the most analogous contracts.
Art. 1308. The contract must bind both contracting parties; its validity or
compliance cannot be left to the will of one of them.
* Principle of Mutuality of Contract:
The binding effect of contract on both parties is based on the principles:
- that obligations arising from contracts have the force of law between the
contracting parties
- that there must be mutuality between the parties based on their essential
equality, to which is repugnant to have one party bound by the contract
leaving the other free therefrom.
A contract containing a condition which makes its fulfillment dependent exclusively
upon the uncontrolled will of one of the contracting parties is void.
* Unilateral Cancellation:
Just as nobody can be forced to enter into a contract, in the same manner once a
contract is entered into, no party can renounce it unilaterally or without the consent of
the other.
Nobody is allowed to enter into a contract, and while the contract is in effect, leaves,
denounces or disavows the contract to the prejudice of the other.
* When Stipulated:
However, when the contract so stipulates that one may terminate the contract upon a
reasonable period is valid.
Judicial action for the rescission of the contract is no longer necessary when the
contract so stipulates that it may be revoked and cancelled for the violation of any of
its terms and conditions. This right of rescission may be waived.
Art. 1309. The determination of the performance may be left to a third
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person, whose decision shall not be binding until it has been made known to
both contracting parties.
* Exception to Art. 1308 (Mutuality of Contract)
A third person may be called upon to decide whether or not performance has
been done for the fulfillment of the contract. Such decision becomes binding
when the contracting parties have been informed of it.
Art. 1310. The determination shall be obligatory if it is evidently
inequitable. In such case, the courts shall decide what is equitable under the
circumstances.
* Exception to Art. 1308 (Mutuality of Contract)
However, when the decision cannot be arrived due to inequity, the courts shall decide
what is equitable for the parties involved.
Art 1311. Contracts take effect only between the parties, their assigns and
heirs, except in case where the rights and obligations arising from the
contracts are not transmissible by their nature, or by stipulation or by
provision of law. The heir is not liable beyond the value of the property he
received from the decedent.
If a contract should contain some stipulation in favor of a third person, he
may demand its fulfillment provided he communicated his acceptance to the
obligor before its revocation. A mere incidental benefit or interest of a
person is not sufficient. The contracting parties must have clearly and
deliberately conferred a favor upon a third person.
Four exceptional instances where a contract may produce effect on third persons
(stipulation pour autrui): Art. 1311, par.2 1314
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thereof.
* Enforcement of contract:
Only a party to the contract can maintain an action to enforce the obligations arising
under said contract.
* Contracts bind heirs:
Rights and obligations under a contract are transmissible to heirs. Heirs are not third
persons because there is privity of interest between them and their predecessor.
Art 1312. In contracts creating real rights, third persons who come into
possession of the object of the contract are bound thereby, subject to the
provisions of the Mortgage Law and the Land Registration laws.
* Real Rights in Property
A real right directly affects property subject to it; hence, whoever is in possession of
such property must respect that real right.
Art 1313. Creditors are protected in cases of contracts intended to defraud
them.
* Contracts in Fraud of Creditors
When a debtor enters into a contract in fraud of his creditors, such as when he
alienated property gratuitously without leaving enough for his creditors (article 1387),
the creditor may ask for its rescission.
* see Arts. 1177 and 1380
Art 1314. Any third person who induces another to violate his contract shall
be liable for damages to the other contracting party.
* Interference of Third Persons:
If a third person induced a party to violate his side of the contract, the other party may
sue the third person for damages.
Requisites:
1. the existence of a valid contract
2. knowledge by the third person of the existence of a contract
3. interference by the third person in the contractual relation without legal
justification
Jurisprudential doctrine:
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CHAPTER 2
ESSENTIAL REQUISITES OF CONTRACTS
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 1318. There is no contract unless the following requisites concur:
(1) Consent of the contracting parties;
(2) Object certain which is the subject matter of the contract;
(3) Cause of the obligation which is established. (1261)
[COC]
SECTION 1
CONSENT
Art. 1319. Consent is manifested by the meeting of the offer and the
acceptance upon the thing and the cause which are to constitute the
contract. The offer must be certain and the acceptance absolute. A qualified
acceptance constitutes a counter-offer.
Acceptance made by letter or telegram does not bind the offerer except from
the time it came to his knowledge. The contract, in such a case, is presumed
to have been entered into in the place where the offer was made. (1262a)
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perfected.
*A unilateral proposition must be definite (distinguished from mere communications),
complete (stating the essential and non-essential conditions desired by the offeror),
and intentional (serious) when accepted by another party for such proposition to form
a valid contract. However, a unilateral promise is not recognized by our Code as having
obligatory force. To be so, there must be an acceptance that shall convert it into a
contract.
*Mental reservationwhen a party makes a declaration but secretly does not desire
the effects of such declaration. The mental reservation of the offeror, unknown to the
other, cannot affect the validity of the offer.
Art. 1320. An acceptance may be express or implied. (n)
Implied acceptance may arise from acts or facts which reveal the intent to accept, such
as the consumption of the things sent to the offeree, or the fact of immediately
carrying out of the contract offered.
Art. 1321. The person making the offer may fix the time, place, and manner
of acceptance, all of which must be complied with. (n)
The offer with a period lapses upon the termination of the period. Thus the acceptance,
to become effective, must be known to the offeror before the period lapses.
Art. 1322. An offer made through an agent is accepted from the time
acceptance is communicated to him. (n)
An intermediary who has no power to bind either the offeror or the offeree is not an
agent; his situation is similar to that of a letter carrier.
Art. 1323. An offer becomes ineffective upon the death, civil interdiction,
insanity, or insolvency of either party before acceptance is conveyed. (n)
Art. 1324. When the offerer has allowed the offeree a certain period to
accept, the offer may be withdrawn at any time before acceptance by
communicating such withdrawal, except when the option is founded upon a
consideration, as something paid or promised. (n)
It is not the moment of sending but the time of receipt of the revocation or acceptance
which is controlling.
The delay in transmission is at the risk of the sender, because he is the one who
selects the time and the manner of making the transmission.
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Contract of Option: This is a preparatory contract in which one party grants to the
other, for a fixed period and under specified conditions, the power to decide whether or
not to enter into a principal contract. It must be supported by an independent
consideration, and the grant must be exclusive.
Art. 1325. Unless it appears otherwise, business advertisements of things for
sale are not definite offers, but mere invitations to make an offer. (n)
Art. 1326. Advertisements for bidders are simply invitations to make
proposals, and the advertiser is not bound to accept the highest or lowest
bidder, unless the contrary appears. (n)
Art. 1327. The following cannot give consent to a contract:
(1) Unemancipated minors;
(2) Insane or demented persons, and deaf-mutes who do not know how to
write. (1263a)
* see Art. 38
* Unemancipated minors cannot enter into valid contracts, and contracts entered into
by them are not binding upon them, unless upon reaching majority they ratify the
same.
* Insane persons: It is not necessary that there be a previous of declaration of mental
incapacity in order that a contract entered into by a mentally defective person may be
annulled; it is enough that the insanity existed at the time the contract was made.
* Being deaf-mute is not by itself alone a disqualification for giving consent. The law
refers to the deaf-mute who does not know how to write.
Art. 1328. Contracts entered into during a lucid interval are valid. Contracts
agreed to in a state of drunkenness or during a hypnotic spell are voidable.
(n)
*The use of intoxicants does not necessarily mean a complete loss of understanding.
The same may be said of drugs. But a person, under the influence of superabundance
of alcoholic drinks or excessive use of drugs, may have no capacity to contract.
*In hypnotism and somnambulism, the utter want of understanding is a common
element.
Art. 1329. The incapacity declared in Article 1327 is subject to the
modifications determined by law, and is understood to be without prejudice
to special disqualifications established in the laws. (1264)
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* The Rules of Court provide a list of incompetents who need guardianship: persons
suffering from the penalty of civil interdiction, hospitalized lepers, prodigals, deaf and
dumb who are unable to write and read, those of unsound mind (even though they
have lucid intervals), and persons not being of unsound mind but by reason of age,
disease, weak mind, and other similar causes cannot, without outside aid, take care of
themselves and manage their propertybecoming an easy prey for deceit and
exploitation.
* The incapacity to give consent (Arts. 1327 & 1328) to contracts renders the contract
merely voidable, while special disqualification (Art. 1329) makes it void.
Art. 1330. A contract where consent is given through mistake, violence,
intimidation, undue influence, or fraud is voidable. (1265a)
Art. 1331. In order that mistake may invalidate consent, it should refer to the
substance of the thing which is the object of the contract, or to those
conditions which have principally moved one or both parties to enter into the
contract.
Mistake as to the identity or qualifications of one of the parties will vitiate
consent only when such identity or qualifications have been the principal
cause of the contract.
A simple mistake of account shall give rise to its correction. (1266a)
* Ignorance and error are 2 different states of mind. Ignorance means the complete
absence of any notion about a particular matter, while error or mistake means a wrong
or false notion about such matter.
* Annulment of contract on the ground of error is limited to cases in which it may
reasonably be said that without such error the consent would not have been given.
* An error as to the person will invalidate consent when the consideration of the person
has been the principal cause of the same.
* Mistake as to qualifications, even when there is no error as to person, is a cause
vitiating consent, if such qualifications have been the principal cause of the contract.
* A mistake as to the motive of a party does not affect the contract; to give it such
effect would destroy the stability of contractual relations. When the motive has,
however, been expressed and was a condition of the consent given, annulment is
properbecause an accidental element is, by the will of the parties, converted into a
substantial element.
Art. 1332. When one of the parties is unable to read, or if the contract is in a
language not understood by him, and mistake or fraud is alleged, the person
enforcing the contract must show that the terms thereof have been fully
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* Requisites of intimidation:
1) that the intimidation must be the determining cause of the contract, or must have
caused the consent to be given;
2) that the threatened act be unjust or unlawful;
3) that the threat be real and serious, there being an evident disproportion between
the evil and the resistance which all men can offer; and
4) that it produces a reasonable and well-grounded fear from the fact that the person
from whom it comes has the necessary means or ability to inflict the threatened injury.
Art. 1336. Violence or intimidation shall annul the obligation, although it may
have been employed by a third person who did not take part in the contract.
(1268)
Art. 1337. There is undue influence when a person takes improper advantage
of his power over the will of another, depriving the latter of a reasonable
freedom of choice. The following circumstances shall be considered: the
confidential, family, spiritual and other relations between the parties, or the
fact that the person alleged to have been unduly influenced was suffering
from mental weakness, or was ignorant or in financial distress. (n)
* In intimidation, there must be an unlawful or unjust act which is threatened and
which causes consent to be given, while in undue influence there need not be an
unjust or unlawful act. In both cases, there is moral coercion.
*Moral coercion may be effected through threats, expressed or implied, or through
harassing tactics.
*Undue influence is any means employed upon a party which, under the
circumstances, he could not well resist, and which controlled his volition and induced
him to give his consent to the contractwhich otherwise he would not have entered
into.
Art. 1338. There is fraud when, through insidious words or machinations of
one of the contracting parties, the other is induced to enter into a contract
which, without them, he would not have agreed to. (1269)
*Fraud is every kind of deception, whether in the form of insidious machinations,
manipulations, concealments, or misrepresentations, for the purpose of leading
another party into error and thus executing a particular act.
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* Fraud produces qualified error; it induces in the other party an inexact notion of facts.
The will of another is maliciously misled by means of false appearance of reality.
*Insidious words or machinations include false promises; exaggeration of hopes or
benefits; abuse of confidence; and fictitious names, qualifications, or authority.
* Kinds of fraud:
1) dolo causante (Art. 1338) which determines or is the essential cause of the
consent; fraud in the perfection of contract
2) dolo incidente (Arts. 1344 & 1170) which does not have such a decisive influence
and by itself cannot cause the giving of consent, but refers only to some particular or
accident of the obligation.
*Dolo causante can be a ground for annulment; dolo incident cannot be a ground for
annulment.
*The result of fraud is error on the part of the victim.
*Requisites of fraud:
1) it must have been employed by one contracting party upon the other;
2) it must have induced the other party to enter into the contract;
3) it must have been serious;
4) and it must have resulted in damage or injury to the party seeking annulment.
Art. 1339. Failure to disclose facts, when there is a duty to reveal them, as
when the parties are bound by confidential relations, constitutes fraud. (n)
*Silence or concealment, by itself, does not constitute fraud, unless there is a special
duty to disclose certain facts, or unless according to good faith and the usages of
commerce, the communication should be made.
*Thus, the innocent non-disclosure of a fact does not affect the formation of the
contract or operate to discharge the parties from their agreement.
Art. 1340. The usual exaggerations in trade, when the other party had an
opportunity to know the facts, are not in themselves fraudulent. (n)
*Tolerated fraud includes minimizing the defects of the thing, exaggeration of its good
qualities, and giving it qualities that it does not have. This is lawful misrepresentation
known as dolus bonus. This is also called lawful astuteness.
*These misrepresentations are usually encountered in fairs, markets, and almost all
commercial transactions. They do not give rise to an action for damages, either
because of their insignificance or because the stupidity of the victim is the real cause
of his loss.
*The thinking is that where the means of knowledge are at hand and equally available
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to both parties, one will not be heard to say that he has been deceived.
Art. 1341. A mere expression of an opinion does not signify fraud, unless
made by an expert and the other party has relied on the former's special
knowledge. (n)
An opinion of an expert is like a statement of fact, and if false, may be considered a
fraud giving rise to annulment.
Art. 1342. Misrepresentation by a third person does not vitiate consent,
unless such misrepresentation has created substantial mistake and the same
is mutual. (n)
*The general rule is that the fraud employed by a third person upon one of the parties
does not vitiate consent and cause the nullity of a contract.
*Exception: If one of the parties is in collusion with the third person, or knows of the
fraud by the third person, and he is benefited thereby, he may be considered as an
accomplice to the fraud, and the contract becomes voidable.
Art. 1343. Misrepresentation made in good faith is not fraudulent but may
constitute error. (n)
Art. 1344. In order that fraud may make a contract voidable, it should be
serious and should not have been employed by both contracting parties.
Incidental fraud only obliges the person employing it to pay damages. (1270)
*Fraud is serious when it is sufficient to impress, or to lead an ordinarily prudent person
into error; that which cannot deceive a prudent person cannot be a ground for nullity.
*Besides being serious, the fraud must be the determining cause of the contract. It
must be dolo causante.
*When both parties use fraud reciprocally, neither one has an action against the other;
the fraud of one compensates that of the other. Neither party can ask for the
annulment of the contract.
Art. 1345. Simulation of a contract may be absolute or relative. The former
takes place when the parties do not intend to be bound at all; the latter,
when the parties conceal their true agreement. (n)
* Simulation is the declaration of a fictitious will, deliberately made by agreement of
the parties, in order to produce, for the purposes of deception, the appearance of a
juridical act which does not exist or is different from that which was really executed.
Art. 1346. An absolutely simulated or fictitious contract is void. A relative
simulation, when it does not prejudice a third person and is not intended for
any purpose contrary to law, morals, good customs, public order or public
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The object of a contract is its subject matter. It is the thing, right, or service
which is the subject-matter of the obligation arising from the contract.
Requisites: [CILID]
1) [C] within the commerce of man;
2) [I] not intransmissible
3) [L] must be licit, or not contrary to law, morals, good customs, public policy, or
public order;
3) [I]not an impossible thing or service; and
4) [D] it must be determinate as to its kind.
Art. 1347. All things which are not outside the commerce of men, including
future things, may be the object of a contract. All rights which are not
intransmissible may also be the object of contracts.
No contract may be entered into upon future inheritance except in cases
expressly authorized by law.
All services which are not contrary to law, morals, good customs, public
order or public policy may likewise be the object of a contract. (1271a)
* Things which are outside the commerce of man:
Services which imply an absolute submission by those who render them,
sacrificing their liberty, their independence or beliefs, or disregarding in any
manner the equality and dignity of persons, such as perpetual servitude or
slavery;
Personal rights, such as marital authority, the status and capacity of a person,
and honorary titles and distinctions;
Public offices, inherent attributes of the public authority, and political rights of
individuals, such as the right of suffrage;
Property, while they pertain to the public dominion, such as the roads, plazas,
squares, and rivers;
Sacred things, common things, like the air and the sea, and res nullius, as long as
they have not been appropriated.
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Even future things can be the object of contracts, as long as they have the
possibility or potentiality of coming into existence.
The law, however, generally does not allow contracts on future inheritance. A
contract entered into by a fideicommissary heir with respect to his eventual
rights would be valid provided that the testator has already died. The right of a
fideicommissary heir comes from the testator and not from the fiduciary.
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1) it must exist;
2) it must be true; and
3) it must be licit.
Art. 1350. In onerous contracts the cause is understood to be, for each
contracting party, the prestation or promise of a thing or service by the
other; in remuneratory ones, the service or benefit which is remunerated;
and in contracts of pure beneficence, the mere liberality of the benefactor.
(1274)
* In onerous contracts, the cause need not be adequate or an exact equivalent in point
of actual value, especially in dealing with objects which have a rapidly fluctuating
price. There are equal considerations.
* A remuneratory contract is one where a party gives something to another because of
some service or benefit given or rendered by the latter to the former, where such
service or benefit was not due as a legal obligation. The consideration of one is greater
than the others.
*A gratuitous contract is essentially an agreement to give donations. The generosity or
liberality of the benefactor is the cause of the contract. There is nothing to equate.
Art. 1351. The particular motives of the parties in entering into a contract
are different from the cause thereof. (n)
* Cause is the objective, intrinsic, and juridical reason for the existence of the contract
itself, while motive is the psychological, individual, or personal purpose of a party to
the contract.
* As a general principle, the motives of a party do not affect the validity or existence of
a contract. Exceptions: When motive predetermines the purpose of the contract, such
as:
*When the motive of a debtor in alienating property is to defraud his creditors,
the alienation is rescissible;
* When the motive of a person in giving his consent is to avoid a threatened
injury, as in the case of intimidation, the contract is voidable; and
*When the motive of a person induced him to act on the basis of fraud or
misrepresentation by the other party, the contract is voidable.
Art. 1352. Contracts without cause, or with unlawful cause, produce no effect
whatever. The cause is unlawful if it is contrary to law, morals, good customs,
public order or public policy. (1275a)
Art. 1353. The statement of a false cause in contracts shall render them void,
if it should not be proved that they were founded upon another cause which
is true and lawful. (1276)
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Where the cause stated in the contract is false, the latter may nevertheless be
sustained by proof of another licit cause.
Art. 1354. Although the cause is not stated in the contract, it is presumed
that it exists and is lawful, unless the debtor proves the contrary. (1277)
Unless the contrary is proved, a contract is presumed to have a good and sufficient
consideration. This presumption applies when no cause is stated in the contract.
Art. 1355. Except in cases specified by law, lesion or inadequacy of cause
shall not invalidate a contract, unless there has been fraud, mistake or
undue influence. (n)
* In case of lesion or inadequacy of cause, the general rule is that the contract is not
subject to annulment.
* In cases provided by law, however, such as those mentioned in Art 1381, the lesion is
a ground for rescission of the contract.
* Gross inadequacy naturally suggests fraud and is evidence thereof, so that it may be
sufficient to show it when taken in connection with other circumstances.
DEFECTIVE CONTRACTS:
RESCISSIBLE
Valid and
enforceable until
rescinded;
there is a sort of
extrinsic defect
consisting of
economic damage
or lesion
Causes:
injury or damage to
one of the parties or
to third persons
[GAFLAI Arts. 1381
1382]
VOIDABLE
UNENFORCEABLE
Valid and
enforceable until
annulled;
The defect is more
or less intrinsic
Validable
transaction;
Cannot be enforce
unless ratified
VOID &
INEXISTENT
Does not and
cannot produce
legal effect
Causes:
(void) illicit,
prohibited or
declared by law as
void
(inexistent) lacks
one or all of the
requisites of a
contract
[CS-DOICE Art.
page 85 [dioryRabajante]
Cured by
prescription
Need not be ratified
Can be assailed by
the injured or
damaged party or
injured or damaged
third person
Assailed directly
only
Outline of
provisions:
1380: Nature of
rescissible contract
1381-1382: types of
rescissible contract
1383: subsidiary
character
1384: extent of
rescission
1385: mutual
restitution; no
rescission when the
thing is legally
possessed by a third
person
1386: no rescission
in case of 1381 (1)
and (2) when the
contract is approved
by court
1387: preseumption
(existence of fraud);
alienation by
gratuitous title;
alienation by
onerous title
1388: acquisition in
bad faith (of things
alienated in fraud of
Cured by
prescription
Can be ratified
Can be assailed by
a contracting party
(Art. 1397)
Not cured by
prescription
Can be ratified
Can be assailed by
a contracting party
(Art. 1408)
Assailed directly or
collaterally
Outline of
provisions:
1390: voidable
contracts may be
annullable even if
there is no damage
to parties;
types of voidable
contracts;
binding character
unless annulled;
susceptibility to
ratification
1391: prescriptive
period
1392-1397:
ratification
1398-1402: Mutual
restitution
1398: mutual
restitution
1399: exception to
mutual restitution
defect is the
incapacity of one
1400: loss of the
thing through
fault/fraud of party
obliged to return
the thing but has
Assailed directly or
collaterally
Outline of
provisions:
1403: types of
unenforceable
contracts
1405: ratification of
contracts infringing
statute of frauds
1407: express or
implied ratification
by the parent or
guardian of one
(when both are
incapacitated)
same effect as if
only one is
incapacitated;
Ratification by
parent or guardian
of both contract is
validated from
inception
1408: cannot be
assailed by third
persons.
1409]
Not cured by
prescription
Cannot be ratified
Can be assailed by a
contracting party or
a third person
whose interest is
affected (Art. 1421)
Assailed directly or
collaterally
1409: types of void
or inexistent
contracts
1410:
imprescriptibility
1411: contracts that
are both illegal and
criminal both
parties have no
action against each
other and shall be
prosecuted
1412: contracts that
are illegal but do
not constitute
criminal offense
1413-1419:
exceptions to in pari
delicto rule
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creditors)
1389: prescriptive
period
no right to institute
proceeding, he
shall return the
fruits and the
value of the thing
1401: loss of the
thing through
fault/fraud of the
person who may
institute the
proceeding (action
for annulment is
extinguished)
1402: one does not
restore the other
cannot be
compelled to
comply
RESCISSIBLE CONTRACTS
Art. 1380. Contracts validly agreed upon may be rescinded in the cases
established by law. (1290)
Art. 1381. The following contracts are rescissible:
(1) Those which are entered into by guardians whenever the wards whom
they represent suffer lesion by more than one-fourth of the value of the
things which are the object thereof;
(2) Those agreed upon in representation of absentees, if the latter suffer the
lesion stated in the preceding number;
(3) Those undertaken in fraud of creditors when the latter cannot in any
other manner collect the claims due them;
(4) Those which refer to things under litigation if they have been entered
into by the defendant without the knowledge and approval of the litigants or
of competent judicial authority;
(5) All other contracts specially declared by law to be subject to rescission.
(1291a)
Art. 1382. Payments made in a state of insolvency for obligations to whose
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fulfillment the debtor could not be compelled at the time they were effected,
are also rescissible. (1292)
Art. 1383. The action for rescission is subsidiary; it cannot be instituted
except when the party suffering damage has no other legal means to obtain
reparation for the same. (1294)
Art. 1384. Rescission shall be only to the extent necessary to cover the
damages caused. (n)
Art. 1385. Rescission creates the obligation to return the things which were
the object of the contract, together with their fruits, and the price with its
interest; consequently, it can be carried out only when he who demands
rescission can return whatever he may be obliged to restore.
Neither shall rescission take place when the things which are the object of
the contract are legally in the possession of third persons who did not act in
bad faith.
In this case, indemnity for damages may be demanded from the person
causing the loss. (1295)
Art. 1386. Rescission referred to in Nos. 1 and 2 of Article 1381 shall not take
place with respect to contracts approved by the courts. (1296a)
Art. 1387. All contracts by virtue of which the debtor alienates property by
gratuitous title are presumed to have been entered into in fraud of creditors,
when the donor did not reserve sufficient property to pay all debts
contracted before the donation.
Alienations by onerous title are also presumed fraudulent when made by
persons against whom some judgment has been issued. The decision or
attachment need not refer to the property alienated, and need not have been
obtained by the party seeking the rescission.
In addition to these presumptions, the design to defraud creditors may be
proved in any other manner recognized by the law of evidence. (1297a)
Art. 1388. Whoever acquires in bad faith the things alienated in fraud of
creditors, shall indemnify the latter for damages suffered by them on
account of the alienation, whenever, due to any cause, it should be
impossible for him to return them.
If there are two or more alienations, the first acquirer shall be liable first,
and so on successively. (1298a)
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Art. 1389. The action to claim rescission must be commenced within four
years.
For persons under guardianship and for absentees, the period of four years
shall not begin until the termination of the former's incapacity, or until the
domicile of the latter is known. (1299)
Voidable Contracts
Voidable Contracts
* Contracts that are voidable or annullable:
1. When either party is incapable of giving consent to a contract
2. When consent is vitiated by mistake, violence, intimidation, undue
influence, fraud
*Binding, unless annulled by a proper court action
*Ratifiable (Art. 1390)
*Prescription for action of annulment: 4 years to begin:
when vice is due to intimidation, violence or undue influence from the time defect of
consent ceases
mistake or fraud from the time of discovery
entered into by minors or those incapable of giving consent the moment
guardianship ceases (Art. 1391)
*Ratification
extinguishes action for annulment (Art. 1392)
may be express or tacit (Art. 1393)
tacit ratification the execution of an act which necessarily implies an intention to
waive his right by the party, who, knowing of the reason which renders the contract
voidable, has a right to invoke annulment.
-may be effected by the guardian of the incapacitated person (Art. 1394)
- does not require the conformity of the person who does not have a right
to bring an action for annulment (Art. 1395)
-cleanses the contract from all its defects from the moment it was
constituted (Art. 1396)
*Annulment
- Who may institute (Art. 1397)
- By all who are obliged principally or subsidiarily
Exceptions:
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*Persons capable cannot allege the incapacity of those with whom they
contracted
*Persons who exerted violence, undue influence, who employed fraud or caused
mistake action for annulment cannot be based on these flaws
*Gives rise to the responsibility of restoring to each other things subject matter of the
contract, with fruits, price with its interest, except in cases provided by law (Art. 1398)
Service value thereof will serve as the basis for damages
*Incapacitated persons not obliged to make restitutions except insofar as he has been
benefited by the thing or price received by him (Art. 1399)
*If objects cannot be returned because these were lost through his fault, he shall return
the fruits received and the value of the thing at the time of the loss, with interests from
the same date (Art. 1400)
*As long as one of the contracting parties does not restore what in virtue of the
annulment decree he is bound to return, the other cannot be compelled to comply with
what is incumbent upon him. (Art. 1402)
*Extinguishment of action (Art. 1401)
if object is lost through the fault or fraud of person who has the right to
institute the proceedings
if action based on incapacity of any one of contracting parties, loss of thing
shall not be an obstacle to the success of action, unless loss or fraud took
place through the plaintiffs fault
UNENFORCEABLE CONTRACTS
Art. 1403. The following contracts are unenforceable, unless they are
ratified:
(1) Those entered into in the name of another person by one who has been
given no authority or legal representation, or who has acted beyond his
powers;
(2) Those that do not comply with the Statute of Frauds as set forth in this
number. In the following cases an agreement hereafter made shall be
unenforceable by action, unless the same, or some note or memorandum,
thereof, be in writing, and subscribed by the party charged, or by his agent;
evidence, therefore, of the agreement cannot be received without the
writing, or a secondary evidence of its contents:
(a) An agreement that by its terms is not to be performed within a year from
the making thereof;
(b) A special promise to answer for the debt, default, or miscarriage of
page 90 [dioryRabajante]
another;
(c) An agreement made in consideration of marriage, other than a mutual
promise to marry;
(d) An agreement for the sale of goods, chattels or things in action, at a price
not less than five hundred pesos, unless the buyer accept and receive part of
such goods and chattels, or the evidences, or some of them, of such things in
action or pay at the time some part of the purchase money; but when a sale
is made by auction and entry is made by the auctioneer in his sales book, at
the time of the sale, of the amount and kind of property sold, terms of sale,
price, names of the purchasers and person on whose account the sale is
made, it is a sufficient memorandum;
(e) An agreement of the leasing for a longer period than one year, or for the
sale of real property or of an interest therein;
(f) A representation as to the credit of a third person.
(3) Those where both parties are incapable of giving consent to a contract.
*Unenforceable contracts cannot be enforced unless it is first ratified in the manner
provided by law. An unenforceable contract does not produce any effect unless it is
ratified. Unenforceable contracts cannot be sued upon unless ratified (Paras, 2003).
*There are 3 kinds of unenforceable contracts:
a) unauthorized contracts;
b) those that fail to comply with the Statute of Frauds;
c) those where both parties are incapable of giving consent to a contract.
UNAUTHORIZED CONTRACTS
When a person enters into a contract for and in the name of the another, without
authority to do so, the contract does not bind the latter, unless he ratifies the same.
The agent, who has entered into the contract in the name of the purported principal,
but without authority from him, is liable to third persons upon the contract; it must
have been the intention of the parties to bind someone, and, as the principal was not
bound, the agent should be. Ex: Without my authority, my brother sold my car, in my
name to X. The contract is unauthorized and cannot affect me unless I ratify the same
expressly or implicitly, as by accepting the proceeds of the sale. (Paras)
Mere lapse of time, no matter how long, is not the ratification required by law of an
unenforceable contract (Tipton v. Velasco, 6 Phil 67, as cited in Paras).
STATUTE OF FRAUDS
Meaning: descriptive of statutes which require certain classes of contracts to be in
writing.
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Purpose: to prevent fraud and perjury in the enforcement of obligations depending for
their evidence upon the unassisted memory of witnesses by requiring certain
enumerated contracts and transactions to be evidenced by a writing signed by the
party to be charged.
Application: This statute does not deprive the parties the right to contract with respect
to matters therein involved, but merely regulates the formalities of the contract
necessary to render it unenforceable. The statute of frauds, however, simply provides
for the manner in which contracts under it shall be proved. It does not attempt to make
such contracts invalid if not executed in writing but only makes ineffective the action
for specific performance. The statute of frauds is not applicable to contracts which are
either totally or partially performed, on the theory that there is a wide field for the
commission of frauds in executory contracts which can only be prevented by requiring
them to be in writing, a fact which is reduced to a minimum in executed contracts
because the intention of the parties becomes apparent by their execution, and
execution concludes, in most cases, the rights of the parties.
A note or memorandum is evidence of the agreement, and is used to show the
intention of the parties. No particular form of language or instrument is necessary to
constitute a memorandum or note as a writing under the Statute of Frauds.
*General Rules of Application (mainly Paras):
Applies only to executory contracts. But it is not enough for a party to allege partial
performance in order to render the Statute inapplicable; such partial performance must
be duly proved, by either documentary or oral evidence; Cannot apply if the action is
neither for damages because of the violation of an agreement nor for the specific
performance of said agreeement;
*Exclusive, i.e. it applies only to the agreements or contracts enumerated herein;
*Defense of the Statute may be waived;
*Personal defense, i.e. a contract infringing it cannot be assailed by third persons;
*contracts infringing the Statute are not void; they are merely unenforceable;
*The Statute of Frauds is a rule of exclusion, i.e. oral evidence might be relevant to the
agreements enumerated therein and might therefore be admissible were it not for the
fact that the law or the statute excludes oral evidence;
*The Statute does not determine the credibility or weight of evidence. It merely
concerns itself with the admissibility thereof;
*The Statute does not apply if it is claimed that the contract does not express the true
agreement of the parties. As long as true or real agreement is not covered by the
Statute, it is provable by oral evidence.
INCAPACITATED PARTIES
Ratification by one party converts the contract into a voidable contract- voidable at the
option of the party who has not ratified.
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Art. 1404. Unauthorized contracts are governed by Article 1317 and the
principles of agency in Title X of this Book.
*Art. 1317. No one may contract in the name of another without being authorized by
the latter, or unless he has by law a right to represent him.
*A contract entered into in the name of another by one who has no authority or legal
representation, or who has acted beyond his powers, shall be unenforceable, unless it
is ratified, expressly or impliedly, by the person on whose behalf it has been executed,
before it is revoked by the other contracting party. (1259a)
*Requisites for a Person to contract in the name of another: a) he must be duly
authorized (expressly or impliedly) or b) he must have by law a right to represent him
(like the guardian, or the administrator) or c) the contract must be subsequently
ratified (expressly or impliedly, by word or by deed). (Paras).
Art. 1405. Contracts infringing the Statute of Frauds, referred to in No. 2 of
Article 1403, are ratified by the failure to object to the presentation of oral
evidence to prove the same, or by the acceptance of benefit under them.
*Two ways of ratification of contracts infringing the Statute are:
a) failure to object to the presentation of oral evidence;
b) acceptance of benefits under them, since the Statute does not apply to contracts
which are partially executed. Cross examination of the witnesses testifying orally on
the contract amounts to a waiver or to a failure to object.
Art. 1406. When a contract is enforceable under the Statute of Frauds, and a
public document is necessary for its registration in the Registry of Deeds,
the parties may avail themselves of the right under Article 1357.
*Art. 1357. If the law requires a document or other special form, as in the acts and
contracts enumerated in the following article, the contracting parties may compel each
other to observe that form, once the contract has been perfected. This right may be
exercised simultaneously with the action upon the contract. (1279a)
*The right of one party to have the other execute the public document needed for
convenience in registration, is given only when the contract is both valid and
enforceable. (Paras)
Art. 1407. In a contract where both parties are incapable of giving consent,
express or implied ratification by the parent, or guardian, as the case may
be, of one of the contracting parties shall give the contract the same effect
as if only one of them were incapacitated.
If ratification is made by the parents or guardians, as the case may be, of
both contracting parties, the contract shall be validated from the inception.
Art. 1408. Unenforceable contracts cannot be assailed by third persons.
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*The defense of the Statute is personal to the party to the agreement. Thus, it cannot
be set up by strangers to the agreement.
*Just as strangers cannot attack the validity of voidable contracts, so also can they not
attack a contract because of its unenforceability. Indeed the Statute of Frauds cannot
be set up as a defense by strangers to the transaction. (Ayson v. CA, 97 Phil. 965).
VOID OR INEXISTENT CONTRACTS
What contracts are void or inexistent?
The following contracts are void or inexistent from the beginning:
1. Those whose cause, object or purpose is contrary to law, morals, good customs,
public order or public policy;
2. Those which are absolutely simulated or fictitious;
3. Those whose cause or object did not exist at the time of the transaction;
4. Those whose object is outside the commerce of men;
5. Those which contemplate an impossible service;
6. Those where the intention of the parties relative to the principal object cannot be
ascertained;
7. Those expressly prohibited or declared void by law. (a-g, Art 1409, NCC).
8. Those which are the direct results of previous illegal contracts (Art 1422, NCC).
III. NATURAL OBLIGATIONS
Definition
Natural obligations are those based on equity and natural law, which are not
enforceable by means of court action, but which, after voluntary fulfillment by the
obligor, authorize the retention by the oblige of what has been delivered or rendered
by reason thereof. In other words, they refer to those obligations without sanction,
susceptible of voluntary performance, but not through compulsion by legal means.
Natural Obligation vs Civil Obligation
Natural Obligations
Civil Obligations
Basis
Equity and natural law
Positive law
Enforceability
Not enforceable by court Enforceable by court action
action
3. vs Moral Obligations
Natural Obligations
Moral Obligations
Existence of juridical tie There exists a juridical tie No juridical tie whatsoever.
between the parties not
enforceable by court action.
Effect of fulfillment
Voluntary fulfillment produces Voluntary fulfillment does
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