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CIVIL LAW REVIEWER TABLE of CONTENTS
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OBLIGATIONSTable of Contents
Chapter I. General Provisions.......................91I. Obligations ..........................................91II. Sources of Obligations ........................91
Chapter II. Nature and Effect of Obligations93I. Kinds of Prestations ............................93II. Breach of Obligation............................94III. Fortuitous Event (Force Majeure) .......96IV. Remedies to Creditors ........................96V. Usurious Transactions and Rules onInterest .........................................................97
Chapter III. Different Kinds of Obligations ..98I. Pure and Conditional Obligations .......98II. Reciprocal Obligations ......................100III. Obligations with a Period ..................100IV. Alternative and Facultative Obligations
101V. Joint and Solidary Obligations ..........103Effects of Prejudicial and Beneficial Acts(Art.1212) ...................................................105VI. Divisible and Indivisible Obligations..106VII. Oblligations with a Penal Clause ..106
Chapter IV. Extinguishment of Obligations.......................................................................107
I. Payment or Performance ..................107II. Loss or Impossibility..........................109III. Condonation or Remission of the Debt
109IV. Confusion or Merger of Rights ..........110V. Compensation ...................................110VI. Novation ............................................111
Charts: Payment & Performance................114
CIVIL LAW REVIEWER Chapter I. GENERAL PROVISIONS
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Chapter I. General Provisions
I. OBLIGATIONSII. SOURCES OF OBLIGATIONS
A. LAWB. CONTRACTSC. QUASI-CONTRACTSD. DELICTSE. QUASI-DELICTS
Article 1156, Civil Code. An obligation is a juridicalnecessity to give, to do or not to do.
I. Obligations
Elements of an Obligation (De Leon, 2003)—1. ACTIVE SUBJECT (Obligee/Creditor): the
person who has the right or power todemand the prestation.
2. PASSIVE SUBJECT (Obligor/Debtor): theperson bound to the perform the prestation.
3. PRESTATION (Object): the conductrequired to be observed by thedebtor/obligor (to give, to do or not to do).
4. VINCULUM JURIS (Juridical or Legal Tie;Efficient Cause): that which binds orconnects the parties to the obligation.
II. Sources of Obligations
A. LawArt. 1158, Civil Code. Obligations derived from laware not presumed. Only those expressly determined inthis Code or in special laws are demandable, andshall be regulated by the precepts of the law whichestablishes them; and as to what has not beenforeseen, by the provisions of this Book.
B. Contracts
Art. 1159. Has the Force of Law BetweenParties. Obligations arising from contracts havethe force of law between the contracting partiesand should be complied with in good faith
C. Quasi-ContractsArt. 2142, Civil Code. Certain lawful, voluntary andunilateral acts give rise to the juridical relation ofquasi-contract to the end that no one shall be unjustlyenriched or benefited at the expense of another.
Lawful Distinguished from crimesVoluntary Distinguished from quasi-delict,
which are based on fault andnegligence
Unilateral Distinguished from contract which isbased on agreementO
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&CO
NTRACTS
OBLIGATIONS & CONTRACTS TEAM
Prof. Solomon LumbaFaculty Editor
Leo LedesmaLead Writer
Krizel MalabananIvy VelascoTin Reyes
Frances DomingoHazel Abenoja
Writers
CIVIL LAW
Kristine BongcaronPatricia TobiasSubject Editors
ACADEMICS COMMITTEE
Kristine BongcaronMichelle Dy
Patrich LeccioEditors-in-Chief
PRINTING & DISTRIBUTION
Kae Guerrero
DESIGN & LAYOUT
Pat HernandezViktor FontanillaRusell Aragones
Romualdo Menzon Jr.Rania Joya
LECTURES COMMITTEE
Michelle AriasCamille MarananAngela Sandalo
Heads
Katz ManzanoSam Nuñez
Arianne Cerezo
Mary Rose BeleyKrizel MalabananMarcrese Banaag
Volunteers
MOCK BAR COMMITTEE
Lilibeth Perez
BAR CANDIDATES WELFARE
Dahlia Salamat
LOGISTICS
Charisse Mendoza
SECRETARIAT COMMITTEE
Jill HernandezHead
Loraine MendozaMary Mendoza
Faye CelsoJoie Bajo
Members
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Kinds of Quasi-Contracts Negotiorum Gestio: officious or voluntary
management of the property or affairs ofanother without the knowledge or consent ofthe latter.
Solutio Indebiti: undue payment. Thejuridical relation arises when:o a thing is received without any right; ando the thing delivered by mistake.
Others: See Arts. 2164-2175(De Leon, 2003)
D. Delicts (Acts or omissions punished by law;crimes)
Extent of Civil LiabilityGoverned by the Revised Penal Code and theCivil Code, includes:1. Restitution;2. Reparation of damages caused; and3. Indemnity for consequential damages (Art.
104, Revised Penal Code).(Tolentino, 1987)
Enforcement of Civil Liability1. Independent: Criminal and civil action
arising from the same offense may beinstituted separately.
2. Suspended: However, after criminal actionhas been commenced prosecution for civilaction is suspended in whatever stage itmay be found, until final judgment in thecriminal proceeding is rendered;
3. Impliedly Instituted: Civil action is impliedlyinstituted with the criminal action, when:○ offended party expressly waives the civil
action or reserves the right to institute aseparate civil action; or
○ the law provides for an independent civilaction
Barredo v. Garcia, (1942): The same negligent actmay give rise to an action based on delict or quasi-delict and the injured party is free to choose whichremedy to enforce.
Mendoza vs. Arrieta, (1979): If the civil action isbased on quasi-delict, there is no need to reserve theright to file a civil action in the criminal case.
Effect of Acquittal on Civil Actions
Barred No Effect if based on the very
same facts on whichthe criminal actionwhich ended inacquittal was based
if the facts alleged inthe civil case has beenfound to be non-existent in the criminal
an independent civilaction is allowed by law
acquittal is due to lackof proof beyondreasonable doubt
action (res judicata) if judgment of acquittal
contained a declarationthat no negligence canbe attributed to theaccused and that thefact from which civilaction might arise didnot exist
E. Quasi-Delicts (Voluntary acts or omissionswith fault or negligence causing damage toanother; not a crime nor a contract)
Quasi-Delict CrimesPrivate, againstindividual
Public, against the State
Criminal intent is notnecessary
Criminal intent isnecessary for criminalliability
Present in any act oromission where fault ornegligence intervenes
An act can is onlypunishable when there isa law penalizing it
Gives rise to liability fordamages to the injuredparty
There are crimes fromwhich no civil liabilityarises
Reparation,compensation orindemnification of theinjury suffered by theinjured party
Fine or imprisonment orboth, to public treasury
Preponderance ofevidence
Proof of guilt beyondreasonable doubt
Can be compromised Can never becompromised
Requisites of Liability (DWD)1. Wrongful act or omission by fault or
negligence2. Damage or injury proven by the person
claiming recovery3. Direct causal connection between the fault
or negligence and the damage or injury
Liability for Quasi-Delict (Art. 2180, NCC)
Liability for Crimes(Art. 103, RPC)
Primary, can be directlysued by the injuredparty
Subsidiary, employeemust first be convictedand sentenced to paycivil indemnity
All employers, whetherengaged in someenterprise or not, areliable for acts ofemployees, evenhousehold helpers
Employer is only liablewhen he is engaged insome kind of businessor industry
Avoid civil liability byproving exercise ofdiligence of a goodfather of a family
Subsidiary liability isabsolute and cannot beavoided by any proof ofdiligence
CIVIL LAW REVIEWER Chapter II. NATURE and EFFECT of OBLIGATIONS
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Chapter II. Nature and Effect ofObligations
I. KINDS OF PRESTATIONSII. BREACH OF OBLIGATIONSIII. FORTUITOUS EVENTSIV. REMEDIESV. USURIOUS TRANSACTIONS
I. Kinds of Prestations
KINDS OF PRESTATION1. TO GIVE: real obligation; to deliver either
(1) a specific or determinate thing, or (2) ageneric or indeterminate thing.
2. TO DO: positive personal obligation;includes all kinds of work or services.
3. NOT TO DO: negative personalobligation; to abstain from doing an act;includes the obligation not to give.
Accessories: those joined to or included withthe principal for the latter’s completion, betteruse, perfection or enjoyment
Accessions: additions to or improvement upona thing, either naturally or artificially
OBLIGATION TO GIVE
Specific Thing Generic Thing LimitedGeneric Thing
Particularlydesignated orphysicallysegregatedfrom all other ofthe same class;identified byindividuality.
Object isdesignated onlyby its class/genus/ species.Debtor can giveanything of thesame class aslong as it is ofthe same kind.
When thegeneric objectsare confined toa particularclass.
Cannot besubstituted.
Can besubstituted byany of the sameclass and samekind.
Personal Right Real RightVested before delivery Vested after deliveryA right enforceable onlyagainst the debtor
A right enforceableagainst the world
Right of the creditor todemand from the debtor,the fulfillment of aprestation to give, to door not to do
Right pertaining to aperson over a specificthing, without a passivesubject individuallydetermined againstwhom such right may bepersonally enforced
Duties of the Debtor Rights of the creditorTo GiveSpecificThing(Askedin ’83,’84, ’85and’86)
To preserve or take care of the thingdue
To deliver the thing itself To deliver the fruits of the thing To deliver the accessions and
accessories To pay for damages in case of breach
To compel specific performance To recover damages in case of breach of
the obligation, exclusive or in addition tospecific performance
Entitlement to fruits and interests from thetime the obligation to deliver arises
To GiveGenericThing
To deliver a thing of the quality intendedby the parties taking into considerationthe purpose of the obligation and othercircumstances
Creditor cannot demand a thing ofsuperior quality neither can the debtordeliver a thing of inferior quality
To be liable for damages in case ofbreach
To ask for performance of the obligation To ask that the obligation be complied with
by a third person at the expense of thedebtor
To recover damages in case of breach ofobligation
To Do To do it To shoulder the cost of having someone
else do it To undo what has been poorly done To pay for damages in case of breach
To compel performance To recover damages where personal
qualifications of the debtor are involved
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Not ToDo
Not to do what should not be done To shoulder the cost of undoing what
should not have been done To pay for damages in case of breach
To ask to undo what should not be done To recover damages, where it would be
physically or legally impossible to undowhat has been undone, because of :o the very nature of the act itself;o rights acquired by third persons who
acted in good faith;o when the effects of the acts prohibited
are definite in character and will notcease even if the thing prohibited beundone.
II. Breach of Obligation
A. Voluntary – fraud, negligence, delay orcontravention of tenor of the obligation
B. Involuntary – fortuitous event
TYPES OF BREACH
Substantial Breach Slight or Casual BreachTotal breachAmounts to Non-Performance;Basis for rescissionunder Art. 1191 andpayment of damages
Partial breachObligation is partiallyperformed;Gives rise to liability fordamages only
1. FRAUD (DOLO): deliberate or intentionalevasion of the normal fulfillment of anobligation (De Leon, 2003).
Future Fraud: Any waiver of action forfuture fraud is void (Art. 1171).
Past Fraud: can be subject of a validwaiver by the aggrieved party (De Leon,2003).
Woodhouse vs. Halili, (1953): In orderthat fraud may vitiate consent, it must bethe dolo causante and not merely thedolo incidente, inducement to themaking of the contract. The falserepresentation was used by plaintiff toget from defendant a bigger share of netprofits. This is just incidental to thematter in agreement. Because despiteplaintiff’s deceit, respondent would havestill entered into the contract.
2. NEGLIGENCE or FAULT (CULPA):omission of that diligence which is requiredby the nature of the obligation andcorresponds with the circumstances of theperson, of the time and of the place (Art.1173).
Effect of Contributory NegligenceReduces or mitigates the recoverabledamages, UNLESS, the negligent act oromission of the creditor is theproximate cause of the event which ledto the damage or injury complained of.In this case, he cannot recover.
Diligence Required (De Leon, 2003)a. By stipulation: that agreed upon by
the parties.b. By law: in the absence of
stipulation, that required by law inthe particular case.
c. Diligence of a good father of afamily: if both the contract and laware silent.
Future Negligence: may be waivedexcept in cases where the nature of theobligation or the public requires anotherstandard of care (i.e. extraordinarydiligence as for a common carrier)
Fraud NegligenceThere is deliberateintention to causedamage
There is no deliberateintention to cause damage
Liability cannot bemitigated
Liability may be mitigated
Waiver for future fraudis void
Waiver for futurenegligence may beallowed in certain cases: gross – can NEVER
be excused inadvance; amounts towanton attitude; ruleson fraud shall apply
simple – may beexcused in certaincases
Mandarin Villa Inc. v. CA (1996): Test of Negligence:Did the defendant in doing the alleged negligent actuse the reasonable care and caution which anordinary and prudent person would have used in thesame situation? If not, then he is guilty of negligence.
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Extent of Damages to be Awarded
Bad Faith Good FaithDebtor is liable for alldamages which can bereasonably attributed tothe non-performance ofthe obligation. Any waiveror renunciation made inanticipation of suchliability is null and void
Debtor is liable only forthe natural andprobableconsequences of thebreach of obligation andfortuitous events
Culpa Contractual Culpa Aquiliana Askedin ’83, ’84, and ’86)
Negligence is merelyincidental in theperformance of anobligation
Negligence is substantiveand independent
There is always a pre-existing contractualrelation
There may or may not bea pre-existing contractualobligation
The source of obligationof defendant to paydamages is the breach ornon-fulfillment of thecontract
The source of obligationis the defendant’snegligence itself
Proof of the existence ofthe contract and of itsbreach or non-fulfillmentis sufficient prima facie towarrant recovery
The negligence of thedefendant must beproved
Proof of diligence in theselection and supervisionof the employees is NOTavailable as defense
Proof of diligence in theselection and supervisionof the employee is adefense
Culpa Criminal: wrong or negligence inthe commission of a crime
3. DELAY or DEFAULT (MORA): failure toperform an obligation on time whichconstitutes breach of the obligation (DeLeon, 2003). Mora Solvendi: delay on the part of the
debtor to fulfill his obligation either togive (Ex re) or to do (Ex persona),(Asked in ’83, ’84, ’85, and ’86);
No Mora Solvendi in: Negative Obligations because delay
is impossible (De Leon, 2003); Natural Obligations (Tolentino,
1987).
Mora Accipiendi: delay on the part ofthe creditor to accept the performance ofthe obligation
Compensatio Morae: delay of theparties in reciprocal obligations; effect:as if there is no default.
Mora Solvendi Mora AccipiendiRequisites1. Obligation must be
liquidated, due anddemandable
2. Non-performance bythe debtor on periodagreed upon
3. Demand, judicial orextra-judicial, by thecreditor
Requisites1. Debtor offers of
performance2. Offer must be in
compliance with theprestation
3. Creditor refuses theperformancewithout just cause
Effects1. The debtor is liable
for damages2. The debtor is liable
even if the loss is dueto fortuitous events
3. For determinateobjects, the debtorshall bear the risk ofloss
Effects1. The responsibility of
the debtor isreduced to fraudand grossnegligence
2. The debtor isexempted from riskof loss of the thingwhich is borne bythe creditor
3. The expensesincurred by thedebtor for thepreservation of thething after the morashall be chargeableto the creditor
4. If the obligationbears interest, thedebtor does nothave to pay fromthe time of delay
5. The creditor is liablefor damages
6. The debtor mayrelieve himself ofobligation byconsigning the thing
Rules on Mora, Delay or Default
Unilateral Obligations Reciprocal ObligationsGeneral Rule:
“No demand no delay”.
The mere expiration ofthe period fixed by theparties is not enough inorder that the debtor mayincur in delay.
General Rule:Delay occurs from themoment one party fulfillshis undertaking, while theother does not comply oris not ready to comply ina proper manner withwhat is incumbent uponhim.No delay if neither partyperforms his undertaking(Art. 1169, par. 2).
Exceptions1. the obligation or law
provides2. time is of the
essence3. demand useless4. debtor
acknowledges thathe is in default
Exception:different dates for theperformance ofrespective obligations arefixed by the parties
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4. CONTRAVENTION OF THE TENOR:violation of the terms and conditionsstipulated in the obligation, which must notbe due to a fortuitous event or force majeure(De Leon, 2003). “In any manner contravenes the
tenor” means any illicit act, whichimpairs the strict and faithful fulfillmentof the obligation, or every kind ofdefective performance (Tolentino, 1987).
III. Fortuitous Event (Force Majeure)
Any event which could not be foreseen, or whichthough foreseen are inevitable (Art. 1174)
A happening independent of the will of thedebtor and which makes the normal fulfillment ofthe obligation impossible (De Leon, 2003).
A. Act of God: an accident, due directly orexclusively to natural causes without humanintervention, which by no amount offoresight, pains or care, reasonably to havebeen expected, cold have been prevented.
B. Act of Man: force majeure is a superior orirresistible force, which is essentially an actof man; Includes unavoidable accidents,even if there has been an intervention ofhuman element, provided that no fault ornegligence can be imputed to the debtor
(Asked in ’81, ’87 and ’88)
Liability in case of Fortuitous EventNo person shall be responsible for fortuitousevents, UNLESS:1. expressly specified by law (Arts. 552(2),
1942, 2147, 2148, 2159)2. liability specified by stipulation3. the nature of the obligations requires
assumption of risk (Art. 1174)4. when debtor is guilty of concurrent or
contributory negligence5. debtor has promised to deliver the same
thing to two or more persons who do nothave the same interests (Art. 1165 par. 3)
6. the thing is lost due to the obligor’s fraud,negligence, delay or contravention of thetenor of the obligation (Art. 1170)
7. the obligation to deliver a specific thingarises from a crime (Art. 1268)
8. the object is a generic thing, i.e. the genusnever perishes
Requisites for Exemption1. The event must be independent of the
debtor’s will (fraud or negligence)
2. The event must be unforeseeable orinevitable
3. The event renders it impossible for debtor tofulfill his obligation in a normal manner
4. The debtor must be free from anyparticipation in the aggravation of the injuryto the creditor (Tolentino, 1987; De Leon,2003)
5. It must be the only and sole cause, notmerely a proximate cause.
IV. Remedies to Creditors
Art. 1170, Civil Code. Those who in the performanceof their obligations are guilty of fraud, negligence, ordelay and those who in any manner contravene thetenor thereof, are liable for damages.
Transmissibility of RightsArt. 1178: Rights acquired by virtue of anobligation are transmissible in character,UNLESS prohibited:
1. by their very nature (i.e. personalobligations)
2. by stipulation of the parties3. by operation of law
(De Leon, 2003)
Primary RemediesArts. 1165-1168: PRESS1. Specific Performance – performance
by the debtor of the prestation itself2. Substituted Performance – someone
else performs or something else isperformed at the debtor’s expense
3. Equivalent Performance – right toclaim damages (in either performance orrescission)
4. Rescission – right to rescind or cancelthe contract
5. Pursue the Leviable – to attach theproperties of the debtor, except thoseexempt by law from execution
Subsidiary Remedies of Creditor
General Rule: Contracts are binding onlybetween the parties thereto, and their heirs,assignees, and the estate, UNLESS: AccionSubrogatoria and Accion Pauliana1. Accion Subrogatoria: right of creditor to
exercise all of the rights and bring all of theactions which his debtor may have againstthird persons; Novation by change of debtor(Art. 1291, par.3).
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Requisitesa. Debtor to whom the right of action
properly pertains must be indebted tothe creditor
b. The debt is due and demandablec. The creditor must be prejudiced by the
failure of the debtor to collect his owndebt from 3
rdpersons either through
malice or negligenced. The debtor’s assets are insufficient
(debtor is insolvent)e. The right of action is not purely personal
to the debtor
2. Accion Pauliana: Rescission, whichinvolves the right of the creditor to attack orimpugn by means of a rescissory action anyact of the debtor which is in fraud and to theprejudice of his rights as creditor.
Requisites: CASALa. There is a credit in favor of plaintiff
prior to alienationb. The debtor has performed a
subsequent contract conveying apatrimonial benefit to third persons
c. The creditor has no other legal remedyto satisfy his claim
d. The debtor’s acts are fraudulent to theprejudice of the creditor
e. The third person who received theproperty is an accomplice in the fraud
Accion Subrogatoria Accion PaulianaNot necessary thatcreditor’s claim is prior tothe acquisition of the rightby the debtor
Credit must exist beforethe fraudulent act
No need for fraudulentintent
Fraudulent intent isrequired if the contractrescinded is onerous
No period for prescription Prescribes in 4 yearsfrom the discovery of thefraud
3. Accion Directa (Art. 1729, 1652, 1608,1893): the right of lessor to go directly to asublessee for unpaid rents of the lessee
4. The right of laborers or persons who furnishmaterials for a piece of work undertaken bya contractor to go directly to the owner forany unpaid claim due to the contractor
5. The right of vendor against every possessorwhose right is derived from the vendee
6. The right of a principal against a substitutionappropriated by an agent
Siguan v. Lim, (1999): Petitioner cannot invoke thecredit of a different creditor to justify the rescission ofthe subject deed of donation, because the onlycreditor who may benefit from the rescission is thecreditor who brought the action; those who arestrangers to the action cannot benefit from its effects.
V. Usurious Transactions and Rules onInterest
USURY: stipulation of interest rates higher thanthe ceiling provided by law.
Note: Usury Law (Act No. 2655, as amended)was repealed by Central Bank Circular No. 905,Dec. 10, 1982.
INTEREST
Art. 1176, Civil Code. Receipt of the principal withoutreservation as to the interest shall give rise to adisputable presumption that the interest has beenpaid. Receipt of the latter installment withoutreservation as to prior installments shall likewise giverise to a disputable presumption that such priorinstallments have been paid.
Determination of InterestsEastern Shipping Lines v. CA (1961)
Stage 1For loan or forbearanceof money, goods orcredit, the interest rateis 12%
NOT for loan orforbearance of money,goods or credit, theinterest rate is 6%
a) Interest = interestrate stipulated inwriting + 12% legalinterest, computedfrom date of judicialdemand (filing ofcomplaint)
a) If date of demand iscertain, compute fromthe date when demandis made (judicial orextra-judicial)
b) If there is nostipulated interest rate,the interest rate is 12%computed from date ofdefault or demand(judicial or extra-judicial)
b) If date of demand isNOT certain, computefrom the date of trialcourt decision (judicialdemand)
Stage 2Add 12% interest from finality of SC decision untilfully paid (equivalent to a forbearance of credit)
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Chapter III. Different Kinds of Obligations
I. PURE AND CONDITIONAL OBLIGATIONSII. RECIPROCAL OBLIGATIONSIII. OBLIGATIONS WITH A PERIODIV. ALTERNATIVE AND FACULTATIVE
OBLIGATIONSV. JOINT AND SOLIDARY OBLIGATIONSVI. DIVISIBLE AND INDIVISIBLE OBLIGATIONSVII. OBLIGATIONS WITH A PENAL CLAUSE
I. Pure and Conditional Obligations
(Asked in ’79, ’88, ’00, ’03)
Pure Obligation (Art.1179): Effectivity orextinguishment does not depend upon thefulfillment or non-fulfillment of a condition orupon the expiration of a term or period andcharacterized by the quality of its beingIMMEDIATELY DEMANDABLE.
Conditional Obligation (Art.1181): Effectivity issubject to the fulfillment or non-fulfillment of acondition, which is characterized to be aFUTURE and UNCERTAIN event.
Effects of Conditions1. Suspensive Condition: Obligation shall
only be effective upon the fulfillment of thecondition (Art.1181). What is acquired by theobligee upon the constitution of theobligation is mere hope or expectancy, but isprotected by law.
Before Fulfillment After FulfillmentThe demandability andacquisition or effectivityof the rights arising fromthe obligation issuspended. Anythingpaid by mistake duringsuch time may berecovered.
The obligation arises orbecomes effective.The obligor can becompelled to comply withwhat is incumbent uponhim.
Doctrine of Constructive Fulfillmentof Suspensive ConditionsArt. 1186: the condition shall be deemedfulfilled when the obligor actuallyprevented the obligee from complyingwith the condition, and that suchprevention must have been voluntary orwillful in character. Applicable to suspensive conditions
and not to resolutory conditions. The article can have no application
to an external contingency which islawfully within the control of theobligor.
The mere intention of the debtor toprevent, without actually preventingfulfillment is not sufficient.Constructive fulfillment will not holdwhen the debtor acts pursuant to aright. There is constructivefulfilment:a. Intent of the obligor to prevent
fulfilment; andb. Actual prevention of compliance
Principle of Retroactivity inSuspensive ConditionsArt.1187, par.1: once the condition isfulfilled its effects must logically retroactto the moment when the essentialelements, which gave birth to theobligation have taken place. Thecondition which is imposed is onlyaccidental, not an essential element ofthe obligation. Applied only to consensual
contracts. No application to realcontracts which can only beperfected by delivery.
To Give To Do/Not To DoIf reciprocal, the fruitsand interests shall bedeemed to have beenmutually compensatedas a matter of justice andconvenience(Art. 1187, par. 1)
In obligations to do or notto do, the court shalldetermine the retroactiveeffect of the conditionthat has been compliedwith.(Art. 1187, par. 2)
If unilateral, the debtorshall appropriate thefruits and interestsreceived, unless from thenature and circumstanceit should be inferred thatthe intention of thepersons constituting thesame was different.
The power of the courtincludes thedetermination whether ornot there will be anyretroactive effects. Thisrule shall likewise applyin obligations with aresolutory condition (Art.1190 par. 3)
Preservation of Creditor’s RightsArt.1188, par.1: The creditor may,before the fulfillment of the condition,bring the appropriate action for thepreservation of his rights. However, thisdoes not grant any preference of creditbut only allows the bringing of the properaction for the preservation of thecreditor’s rights.
2. Resolutory Condition: Obligation becomesdemandable immediately after itsestablishment or constitution. The rights areimmediately vested to the creditor, butalways subject to the threat or danger ofextinction by the happening of the resolutorycondition (Tolentino, 1987).
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Before Fulfillment After FulfillmentPreservation of creditor’srights (Art. 1188, par. 1)also applies toobligations with aresolutory condition
Whatever may havebeen paid or delivered byone or both of the partiesupon the constitution ofthe obligation shall haveto be returned upon thefulfillment of thecondition. There is noreturn to the status quo.However, when conditionis not fulfilled, rights areconsolidated and theybecome absolute incharacter
3. Potestative Condition
Exclusivelyupon the
Creditor’s Will
Exclusivelyupon the
Debtor’s Willin case of aSuspensiveCondition(Art. 1182)
Exclusivelyupon the
Debtor’s Willin case of aResolutoryCondition
(Art. 1179, par2)
Condition andobligation isvalid
Condition andobligation arevoid because toallow suchcondition wouldbe equivalent tosanctioningobligationswhich areillusory. It alsoconstitutes adirectcontravention ofthe principle ofmutuality ofcontracts.
Condition andobligation isvalid because insuch situation,the position ofthe debtor isexactly thesame as theposition of thecreditor whenthe condition issuspensive. Itdoes not renderthe obligationillusory.
4. Casual Condition: The fulfillment of thecondition depends upon chance and/or uponthe will of a third person (Art. 1182)
5. Mixed Condition: The fulfillment of thecondition depends partly upon the will of aparty to the obligation and partly uponchance and/or will of a third person
Osmena v. Rama: Defendant executed anendorsement saying that she’ll pay her debt if thehouse in which she lives is sold. Such conditiondepended upon her exclusive will thus it is void.
Hermosa v. Longara: The condition that paymentshould be made by Hermosa as soon as he receivesfunds from the sale of his property in Spain is a mixedcondition. The condition implies that the obligoralready decided to sell the house and all that was
needed to make the obligation demandable is that thesale be consummated and the price thereof remittedto the islands. There were still other conditions thathad to concur to effect the sale, mainly that of thepresence of a buyer, ready, able and willing topurchase the property under the conditions set by theintestate.
6. Impossible Condition: conditions whichare impossible, contrary to good customs, orpublic policy and those prohibited by lawshall annul the obligations which dependupon them (Art. 1183). If pre-existing obligation, only the
impossible condition is void, but not theobligation.
If divisible obligation, that part which isnot affected by the impossible orunlawful condition shall be valid.
If the condition is not to do animpossible thing, it shall be consideredas not having been agreed upon (Art1183, par. 2). Consequently, it becomespure and immediately demandable.
If attached to a simple or remuneratorydonation (Art. 727), or testamentarydisposition (Art. 873), condition isconsidered as not imposed while theobligation is valid.
7. Positive Condition: Obligation shall beextinguished as soon as the time expires orif it becomes indubitable that the event willnot take place (Art.1184)
8. Negative Condition: Obligation shall berendered effective from the moment the timeindicated has lapsed, or if it has becomeevident that the event will not occur(Art.1185) When no period has been fixed, the
intention of the parties is controlling,and the time shall be that which theparties may have contemplated, takinginto account the nature of the obligation(Art 1185, par. 2).
Effects of Loss, Deterioration, andImprovement in Real Obligations Pending theCondition (Art. 1189)
WithoutDebtor’sFault/Act
With Debtor’sFault/Act
Loss Obligation isextinguished
Obligation isconverted intoone ofindemnity fordamages
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Deterioration Impairment to beborne by thecreditor
Creditor maychoosebetweenbringing anaction forrescission ofthe obligationOR bringing anaction forspecificperformancewith damagesin either case.
Improvement Improvement atthe debtor’sexpense, thedebtor shallONLY haveusufructuaryrights
Improvementby the thing’snature or bytime shall inureto the benefit ofthe creditor
Loss, defined: when the thing perishes; goesout of commerce; disappears in such a way thatits existence is unknown or it cannot berecovered
II. Reciprocal Obligations
Obligations which are established from samecause, such that one obligation is correlative tothe other. It results in mutual relationshipbetween the creditor and the debtor. It isperformed simultaneously, so that theperformance of one is conditioned upon thesimultaneous fulfillment of the other.
Tacit Resolutory Condition: if one of theparties fail to comply with what is incumbentupon him, there is a right on the part of the otherto rescind the obligation. The power to rescind isgiven to the injured party (Tolentino, 1987).
Rescission of Reciprocal Obligations (Art.1191, CC) Right to rescind is implied in reciprocal
obligations thus where one party fails tocomply with this obligation under a contact,the other party has the right to eitherdemand the performance or ask for theresolution of the contract.
Based on the breach of faith committed bythe person who is supposed to comply withthe obligation as compared to the rescissionreferred to in Art. 1308 which involves thedamage or lesion, or injury to the economicinterest of a person.
Where both parties have committed abreach of obligation, the liability will be
shouldered by the first infractor. This shallbe determined by the courts. However, if itcannot be determined who was the firstinfractor, the contract shall be deemedextinguished and each shall bear his owndamages (Art.1192).
UP v. Delos Angeles (1970): The injured party mayextra-judicially rescind the contract on account of thebreach of the other party. However, this is withoutprejudice to the option of the other party to resort tothe courts in order to determine if the rescission madeis valid, if not, the party who rescinded the contractwill be sentenced to pay damages.
Where the other party does not oppose theextra-judicial declaration of rescission, suchdeclaration shall produce legal effect.
Effect is retroactive therefore invalidatingand unmaking the juridical tie between thecontracting parties, leaving things in theirstatus before the celebration of the contract.
III. Obligations with a Period
Period or Term (Asked in ’84, ’86 and ’91):Interval of time, which either suspendsdemandability or produces extinguishment.The period must be: future, certain, and possible(Tolentino, 1987).
Fortuitous event does not interrupt therunning of the period. It only relieves thecontracting parties from the fulfillment oftheir respective obligations during theperiod.
Kinds of Period (Art. 1193):1. Ex die - period with a suspensive effect.
Obligation becomes demandable afterthe lapse of the period.
2. In diem - period with a resolutory effect.Obligation is demandable at once but isextinguished upon the lapse of theperiod.
Art. 1180, Civil Code. When the debtor binds himselfto pay when his means permit him to do so, theobligation shall be deemed to be one with a period,subject to the provisions of Article 1197.
Term/Period and Condition Distinguished
Term/Period ConditionInterval of time which isfuture and certain
Fact or event which isfuture and uncertain
Must necessarily come,although it may not beknown when
May or may not happen
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Exerts an influence uponthe time of demandabilityor extinguishment of anobligation
Exerts an influence uponthe very existence of theobligation itself
No retroactive effectunless there is anagreement to the contrary
Has retroactive effect
When it is left exclusivelyto the will of the debtor,the existence of theobligation is not affected
When it is left exclusivelyto the will of the debtor,the very existence of theobligation is affected
Benefit of the PeriodPresumption: Period in an obligation ispresumed to be established for the benefit ofboth the creditor and debtor, UNLESS: If fromthe tenor of the obligation or othercircumstances, it shall appear that the periodhas been established in favor of either thecreditor or debtor (Art. 1196).
Period for the Benefit of either Creditor orDebtor
Creditor DebtorCreditor may demandthe fulfillment orperformance of theobligation at any timebut the obligor cannotcompel him to acceptpayment before theexpiration of the period
Debtor may oppose anypremature demand onthe part of the oblige forthe performance of theobligation, of if he sodesires, he mayrenounce the benefit ofthe period by performinghis obligation in advance
When court may fix periodArt. 1197: as general rule, the court is notauthorized to fix a period for the parties (DeLeon, 2003).
Araneta v. Phil. Sugar Estates, provides:First, the Court shall determine: If the obligation does not fix a period, but from
its nature and circumstances, it can be inferredthat a period was intended
If the period is void, such as when it dependsupon the will of the debtor
If the debtor binds himself when his meanspermit him to do so.
Second, it must decide what period was “probablycontemplated by the parties”.
The only action that can be maintainedunder Art. 1197 is the action to ask thecourts to fix the term within which the debtormust comply with his obligation. Thefulfillment of the obligation itself cannot bedemanded until after the court has fixed theperiod for compliance, therewith, and suchperiod has arrived.
Art. 1197 does not apply to contract ofservices and to pure obligations.
The court, however, to preventunreasonable interpretations of theimmediate demandability of pure obligations,may fix a reasonable time in which thedebtor may pay.
(Tolentino, 1987)
When Debtor Loses Right to Use PeriodArt.1198: I GIV A LA1. Debtor becomes Insolvent, unless he gives
a guaranty or security for his debt, afterobligation is contracted
2. Debtor fails to furnish the Guaranties orsecurities promised
3. Debtor by his own acts Impaired saidguaranties or securities after theirestablishment, and when through afortuitous event they disappear, unless heimmediately gives new one equallysatisfactory
4. Debtor Violates any undertaking, inconsideration of which the creditor agreed tothe period
5. Debtor attempts to Abscond6. By Law or stipulation7. Parties stipulate an Acceleration Clause
In the cases provided, the obligation becomesimmediately due and demandable even if theperiod has not yet expired. The obligation is thusconverted into a pure obligation (Tolentino,1987).
IV. Alternative and FacultativeObligations
Alternative Obligations Facultative ObligationsSeveral objects are due Only one object is dueMay be complied with bydelivery of one of theobjects or by performanceof one of the prestationswhich are alternativelydue
May be complied with bythe delivery of anotherobject or by theperformance of anotherprestation in substitutionof that which is due
Choice may pertain todebtor, creditor, or thirdperson
Choice pertains only tothe debtor
Loss/impossibility of allobjects/prestations due tofortuitous event shallextinguish the obligation.The loss/impossibility ofone of the things does notextinguish the obligation.
Loss/impossibility of theobject/prestation due tofortuitous event issufficient to extinguishthe obligation
Culpable loss of any ofthe objects alternatively
Culpable loss of theobject which the debtor
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due before the choice ismade may give rise toliability on the part of thedebtor
may deliver insubstitution before thesubstitution is effecteddoes not give rise to anyliability on the part of thedebtor
A. Alternative Obligations
Several prestations are due but the performanceof one is sufficient (De Leon, 2003).
Right of ChoiceArt. 1200: to the debtor, UNLESS:
1. when it is expressly granted to thecreditor
2. when it is expressly granted to a thirdperson
Limitations to the right of choice1. impossible prestations2. unlawful prestations3. those which could not have been the
object of the obligation4. only one prestation practicable (Art.
1202)(De Leon, 2003)
When choice shall produce effectArt. 1201: Choice shall produce no effect exceptfrom the time it has been communicated. Theeffect of the notice is to limit the obligation of theobject or prestation selected. Notice of selectionor choice may be in any form provided it issufficient to make the other party know that theselection has been made. It can be:
o oralo in writingo tacito any other equivocal means
Choice of the debtor when communicated tothe creditor does not require the latter’sconcurrence.
When the choice is rendered impossiblethrough the creditor’s fault, the debtor maybring an action to rescind the contract withdamages (Art.1203).
Obligation is converted into a simpleobligation when:o When the person who has the right of
choice has communicated his choice(Art. 1201)
o When only one prestation is practicable(Art. 1202)
Effect of Loss of Objects
Art. 1204: Debtor’s ChoiceFortuitousEvent
Debtor’s Fault
All Lost Debtor isreleased from theobligation
Creditor shall havea right to indemnityfor damages basedon the value of thelast thing whichdisappeared orservice whichbecome impossible
Some Debtor to deliverthat which heshall choosefrom among theremainder
Debtor to deliverthat which thecreditor shallchoose from amongthe remainderwithout damages
OneRemains
Debtor to deliverthat whichremains
Debtor to deliverthat which remains
Art. 1205: Creditor’s ChoiceFortuitousEvent
Debtor’s Fault
All Lost Debtor isreleased from theobligation
Creditor may claimthe price/value ofany of them withindemnity fordamages
Some Debtor to deliverthat which heshall choosefrom among theremainder
creditor may claimany of thosesubsisting without aright to damagesOR price/value ofthe thing lost withright to damages
OneRemains
Creditor mayclaim any ofthose subsistingwithout a right todamages ORprice/value of thething lost withright to damages
Creditor may claimthe remaining thingwithout a right todamages OR theprice/value of thething lost with rightto damages
B. Facultative Obligation
Only one prestation has been agreed upon butthe debtor may render another in substitution(De Leon, 2003)
Effect of Loss of Substitute
Before Substitution isMade
After Substitution isMade
If due to bad faith orfraud of obligor: obligoris liable
The loss ordeterioration of thesubstitute on accountof the obligor’s delay,negligence or fraud
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If due to the negligenceof the obligor: obligor isnot liable
obligor is liablebecause oncesubstitution is made,the obligation isconverted into a simpleone with the substitutedthing as the object ofthe obligation.
V. Joint and Solidary Obligations
A. Joint Obligations
One where a concurrence of several creditors,or of several debtors, or of several creditors anddebtors, by virtue of which, each of the creditorshas a right to demand, and each of the debtorsis bound to render compliance with hisproportionate part of the prestation whichconstitute the object of the obligation (ObligacionMancomunada).
Presumption: Obligation is presumed joint ifthere is a concurrence of several creditors, ofseveral debtors, or of several creditors anddebtors in one and the same obligation (Art.1207).
Exceptions:1. When the obligation expressly stated that
there is solidarity2. When the law requires the solidarity3. When the nature of the obligation requires
solidarity4. When the nature or condition is imposed
upon heirs or legatees, and the testamentexpressly makes the charge or condition insolidum
5. When the solidary responsibility is imputedby a final judgment upon several defendants
Principal Effects of Joint Liability1. Demand by one creditor upon the debtor,
produces the effects of default only withrespect to the creditor who demanded andthe debtor on whom the demand was made,but not with respect to others
2. Interruption of prescription by the judicialdemand of one creditor upon a debtor, doesnot benefit the other creditors nor interruptthe prescription as to other debtors
3. Vices of each obligation arising from thepersonal defect of a particular debtor orcreditor does not affect the obligation or rightof the others
4. Insolvency of a debtor does not increase theresponsibility of his co-debtors, nor does it
authorize a creditor to demand anythingfrom his co-debtors
5. Defense of res judicata is not extended fromone debtor to another
Joint Divisible ObligationArt. 1208: Each creditor can demand only for thepayment of his proportionate share of thecredit, while each debtor can be liable only forthe payment of his proportionate share of thedebit
Presumption: Credit or debt shall be presumedto be divided into as many equal shares as thereare creditors or debtors. Joint creditor cannot act in representation of
the others, neither can a joint debtor becompelled to answer for the liability ofothers.
Joint Indivisible ObligationArt. 1209: no creditor can act in representationof the other; no debtor can be compelled toanswer for the liability of the others. If there are two or more debtors, the
fulfillment of or compliance with theobligation requires the concurrence of all thedebtors, although each for his own shareand for the enforcement of the obligation
In case of breach where one of the jointdebtors fails to comply with his undertaking,the obligation can no longer be fulfilled orperformed. Consequently, it is convertedinto one of indemnity for damages.
In case of insolvency of one of thedebtors, the others shall not be liable for hisshares. To hold otherwise would destroy thejoint character of the obligation.
Joint DivisibleObligations
Joint IndivisibleObligations
In case of breach ofobligation by one of thedebtors, damages duemust be borne by himalone
In case of breach whereone of the joint debtorsfails to comply with hisundertaking, theobligation can no longerbe fulfilled or performed.Thus action must beconverted into indemnityfor damages.
Plurality of Creditors: If one or some ofthe creditors demands the prestation,the debtor may legally refuse to deliverto them, he can insist that all thecreditors together receive the thing, andif any of them refuses to join the others,the debtor may deposit the thing in courtby way of consignation (Tolentino,1987).
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B. Solidary Obligation
An obligation where there is concurrence ofseveral creditors, or of several debtors, or ofseveral creditors and several debtors, by virtueof which, each of the creditors has the right todemand, and each of the debtors is bound torender, entire compliance with the prestationwhich constitutes the object of the obligation(Obligacion Solidaria).
Indivisibility SolidarityRefers to the prestationwhich constitutes theobject of the obligation
Refers to the legal tie orvinculum, andconsequently to thesubjects or parties ofthe obligation
Plurality of subjects is notrequired
Plurality of subjects isindispensable
In case of breach,obligation is converted intoindemnity for damagesbecause the indivisibility ofthe obligation is terminated
When there is liabilityon the part of thedebtors because of thebreach, the solidarityamong the debtorsremains
The indivisibility of an obligation does notnecessarily give rise to solidarity. Nor doessolidarity itself imply indivisibility. (Art. 1211)
Kinds of Solidary Obligations1. Active (solidarity among creditors): Each
creditor has the authority to claim andenforce the rights of all, with the resultingobligation of paying everyone of whatbelongs to him. Creation of a relationship of mutual
agency among co-creditors.
A solidary creditor cannot assign hisrights without the consent of the others.(Art. 1213)
Each debtor may pay to any solidarycreditor, but if any demand, judicial orextrajudicial, has been made by one ofthem, payment must be made to him.(Art. 1214)
2. Passive (solidarity among debtors): Eachdebtor can be made to answer for theothers, with the right on the part of thedebtor-payor to recover from the others theirrespective shares. Creation of a relationship of mutual
guaranty among co-debtors The total remission of the debt in favor
of a debtor releases all the debtors All the debtors are liable for the loss of
the thing due, even if such loss iscaused by the fault of only one of themand for delay, even if it is caused by justone of them
The interruption of prescription as toone debtor affects all the others; but therenunciation by one debtor ofprescription already had does notprejudice the others
3. Mixed: Solidarity among creditors anddebtors Solidarity is not destroyed by the fact
that the obligation of each debtor issubject to different conditions or periods.The creditor can commence an actionagainst anyone of the debtors for thecompliance with the entire obligationminus the portion or share whichcorresponds to the debtor affected bythe condition or period.
____________________________________________________________________________________
Effects of Modes of Extinguishment
Assignment ofRights in Solidary
ObligationsNovation
Compensation &Confusion
RemissionLoss or
Impossibility
The solidarycreditor cannotassign his rightbecause it ispredicated uponmutualconfidence,UNLESS, the (1)the assignment isto a co-creditor;(2) assignment iswith consent ofco-creditor
If prejudicial, thesolidary creditorwho effected thenovation shallreimburse theothers fordamages incurredby them;
If beneficial andsecured by one,he shall be liableto the others forthe share(obligation &benefits) which
If it is partial, therules regardingapplication ofpayment shallapply (w/o)prejudice to theright of othercreditors whohave not causedthe confusion orcompensation tobe reimbursed tothe extent thattheir rights arediminished or
If entireobligation,obligation is totallyextinguished.
If for the benefitof one of thedebtors coveringhis entire share,he is completelyreleased from thecreditor/s.
If for the benefitof one of thedebtors and itcovers only part
If not debtors’fault, theobligation isextinguished
If thru debtors’OR fortuitousevent after delay,the obligation isconverted intoindemnity fordamages but thesolidary characterof the obligationremains.
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corresponds tothem
If by substitutingthe debtor, thesolidary creditorwho effected thenovation is liablefor the acts of thenew debtor indeficiency ordamages
If by subrogatinga third person increditor’s rights,the obligation isnot in realityextinguished asthe relationbetween the othercreditors and thedebtor/s ismaintained.
affected If total, the
obligation isextinguished,what is left is theensuing liabilityfor reimbursement
of his share, hischaracter as asolidary debtor isnot affected.
Effects of Prejudicial and Beneficial Acts(Art.1212)
1. Each one of the solidary creditors may dowhatever may be useful or beneficial to theothers, but not anything which may beprejudicial to the latter.
2. As far as the debtors are concerned, aprejudicial act performed by a solidarycreditor is binding.
3. As between the solidary creditors, thecreditor who performed such act shall incurthe obligation of indemnifying the others fordamages.
Defenses Available to a Solidary Debtor (Art.1222)1. Those derived from the nature of the
obligation2. Those personal to him3. Those pertaining to his own share4. Those personally belonging to other co-
debtors but only as regards that part of thedebt for which the latter are responsible.
Effects
Demand Upon aSolidary Debtor
Payment by a Debtor
The demand madeagainst one of them shallnot be an obstacle tothose which maysubsequently be directedagainst the others solong as the debt has notbeen fully collected. (Art.1216)
Full payment made byone of the solidarydebtors extinguishes theobligation. (Art. 1217)
The creditor may proceedagainst any one of thesolidary debtors or allsimultaneously (Art.1216)
If two or more solidarydebtors offer to pay, thecreditor may choosewhich offer to accept.(Art. 1217)
A creditor’s right toproceed against thesurety existsindependently of his rightto proceed against theprincipal
The solidary debtor whomade the payment shallhave the right to claimfrom his co-debtors theshare which correspondsto them with interest,UNLESS barred byprescription or illegality.(Art. 1218)
When a solidary debtor pays the entireobligation, the resulting obligation of the co-debtors to reimburse him becomes joint.
If payment was made before the debtbecame due, no interest during theintervening period may be demanded. (Art.1217 par. 2)
When one of the solidary debtors cannotreimburse his share to the debtor paying theobligation due to insolvency, such shareshall be borne by all his co-debtors, inproportion to the debt of each. (Art. 1217,par. 2)
Inchausti v. Yulo, (1914): Debtors obligatedthemselves solidarily, so creditor can bring its actionagainst any of them. Remission of any part o fthedebt, made by the creditor in favor of one of thesolidary debtors, inures to the benefit of the rest ofthem.
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VI. Divisible and Indivisible Obligations
A. Divisible Obligations
One which is susceptible of partial performance;that is, the debtor can legally perform theobligation by parts and the creditor cannotdemand a single performance of the entireobligation (Tolentino, 1987).
B. Indivisible Obligations
One which cannot be validly performed in parts(Tolentino, 1987). Divisibility/indivisibility refers to the
performance of the prestation and not to thething which is the object thereof. The thingmay be divisible, yet the obligation may beindivisible.
When the obligation has for its object theexecution of a certain number of days ofwork, the accomplishment of work bymetrical units, or analogous things which bytheir nature are susceptible of partialperformance, it shall be divisible (Art.1225,par. 2).
When there is plurality of debtors andcreditors, the effect of divisibility/indivisibilityof the obligation depend upon whether theobligation is joint or solidary.
A joint indivisible obligation give rise toindemnity for damages from the time anyoneof the debtors does not comply with isundertaking.
(Art. 1224)
EffectCreditor cannot be compelled partially to receivethe prestation in which the obligation consists;neither may the debtor be required to make thepartial payment (Art. 1248), UNLESS: The obligation expressly stipulates the
contrary The different prestations constituting the
objects of the obligation are subject todifferent terms and conditions
The obligation is in part liquidated and in partunliquidated
VII.Oblligations with a Penal Clause
Penal Clause: An accessory undertaking toassume greater liability in case of breach (DeLeon, 2003). It is attached to an obligation inorder to ensure performance. The enforcementof the penalty can be demanded by the creditoronly when the non-performance is due to thefault or fraud of the debtor.
If the principal obligation is void, penalclause shall also be void. However, thenullity of the penal clause does not carrywith it the nullity of the principalobligation (Art.1230).
Purposes of Penalty1. Funcion coercitiva 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 incase of breach of the principal obligation(compensatory).
3. Function estrictamente penal - to punish theobligor in case of breach of the principalobligation (punitive).
Effects of Penalty1. The penalty shall substitute the indemnity for
damages and payment of interest in case ofnon-compliance (Art. 1226), UNLESS:a. There is a stipulation to the contraryb. The obligor refuses to pay the penaltyc. The obligor is guilty of fraud
2. Debtor cannot exempt himself from theperformance of the principal obligation bypaying the stipulated penalty unless thisright has been expressly reserved for him(Art. 1227).
3. Creditor cannot demand the fulfillment of theprincipal obligation and demanding thesatisfaction of the penalty at the same timeunless the right has been clearly granted tohim (Art. 1227). Tacit or implied grant isadmissible.a. If creditor has chosen fulfillment of the
principal obligation and performance thereofbecome impossible without his fault, he maystill demand the satisfaction of the penalty.
b. If there was fault on the part of the debtor,creditor may demand not only satisfaction ofpenalty but also the payment of damages.
c. If creditor chooses to demand thesatisfaction of the penalty, he cannotafterwards demand the fulfillment of theobligation.
Proof of Actual DamageArt. 1228: Proof of actual damages is notnecessary is applicable only to the general rulestated in Art. 1226 and not to the exceptions.The penalty is exactly identical with what isknown as “liquidated damages” in Art. 2226.
When Penalty may be ReducedArt. 1229:1. If the principal obligation has been partly
complied with.2. If the principal obligation has been irregularly
complied with.3. If the penalty is iniquitous or unsconscionable
even if there has been no performance.
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Chapter IV. Extinguishment ofObligations
I. PAYMENT OR PERFORMANCEII. LOSS OF THE THING DUE OR IMPOSSIBILITY
OF PERFORMANCEIII. CONDONATION OR REMISSION OF THE
DEBTIV. CONFUSION OR MERGER OF RIGHTSV. COMPENSATIONVI. NOVATION
I. Payment or Performance
Art. 1232, Civil Code. Payment means not onlydelivery of money but also performance, in anymanner, of the obligation.
See Diagrams of Prof. Labitag at the endsection of Obligations.
SPECIAL FORMS OF PAYMENT
A. Application of Payment (Art. 1252)
Designation of the debt to which should beapplied a payment made by a debtor who owesseveral debts to the same creditor
Rules on Application—1. Preferential right of debtor - debtor has the
right to select which of his debts he ispaying.
2. The debtor makes the designation at thetime he makes the payment
3. If not, the creditor makes the application, byso stating in the receipt that he issues,unless there is cause for invalidating thecontract.
4. If neither the creditor nor debtor exercisesthe right to apply, or if the application is notvalid, the application is made by operation oflaw.
5. If debt produces interest - payment notdeemed applied to the principal unlessinterests are covered.
6. When no application can be inferred fromthe circumstances of payment, it is appliedto: to the most onerous debt of the debtor; orif debts due are of the same nature andburden, to all the debts in proportion
7. Rules of application of payment may not beinvoked by a surety or solidary guarantor.
Reparations Commission vs. Universal Deep SeaFishing Corp. (1978): Rules on application of paymentcannot be made applicable to a person whoseobligation as a mere surety is both contingent and
singular. There must be full and faithful compliancewith the terms of the contract.
B. Payment by Cession (Art. 1255)
Act whereby a debtor abandons all his propertyto his creditors, so that the latter may apply theproceeds (of its sale) to their credits.
C. Dation in payment (Art. 1245)
Delivery and transmission of ownership of athing by the debtor to the creditor as anaccepted equivalent of the performance of theobligation (dacion en pago).
Dation in payment Payment by cession
In favor of only onecreditor
There are variouscreditors
Payment extinguishes theobligation to the extent ofthe value of the thingdelivered, unless theparties agree that theobligation be totallyextinguished
Extinguishes creditsonly up to the extent ofproceeds from sale ofassigned property,unless otherwiseagreed upon
Transfer of ownership ofthing alienated to creditor
Only possession andadministration withauthorization to convertproperty to cash withwhich the debts shallbe paid
Not necessarily in state offinancial difficulty
Assignmentpresupposesinsolvency of debtor.
Assignment of only somespecific thing
Assignment involves allthe property of thedebtor.
D. Tender of payment and consignation
1. Tender of payment: Manifestation made bydebtor to creditor of his desire to complywith his obligation, with offer of immediateperformance Preparatory act to consignation Extrajudicial in character
2. Consignation: Deposit of the object ofobligation in a competent court inaccordance to the rules prescribed by law,whenever the creditor unjustly refusespayment or because of some circumstanceswhich render direct payment to the creditorimpossible or inadvisable. Principal act which constitutes a form of
payment. Judicial in character.
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When Tender and Refusal Not Required (Art.1259)—1. Creditor is absent or unknown, or does not
appear at the place of payment2. Creditor is incapacitated to receive the thing
due at time of payment3. Without just cause, creditor refuses to give
receipt4. Two or more persons claim the same right to
collect5. Title of the obligation has been lost
Effects of Withdrawal by DebtorArts. 1260- 12611. Before approval of the court - Obligation
remains in force.
2. After approval of the court or acceptance bythe creditor, with the consent of the latter -Obligation remains in force, but guarantorsand co-debtors are liberated. Preference ofthe creditor over the thing is lost.
3. After approval of the court or acceptance bythe creditor, and without creditor’s consent -Obligation subsists, without change in theliability of guarantors and co-debtors, or thecreditor’s right of preference.
Art. 1259, Civil Code. Expenses of consignation,when properly made, shall be charged against thecreditor.
Requisites and Effects
Application ofPayment
Cession Dation Tender and Consignation
Requisites1. Plurality of
debts2. Debts are of
the same kind3. Debts are owed
to the samecreditor and bythe samedebtor
4. All debts mustbe due
5. Payment madeis not sufficientto cover alldebts
Requisites1. Plurality of debts2. Plurality of
creditors3. Partial insolvency
of the debtor4. Abandonment of
the totality of thedebtor’sproperties for thebenefit of thecreditors
5. Acceptance bythe creditors
Requisites1. Should not be
prejudicial toother creditors
2. Should notconstitute apactumcommissorium
Requisites1. There is a debt due2. consignation is made because
of some legal cause3. previous notice of consignation
was given to those personsinterested in the performanceof the obligation
4. amount or thing due wasplaced at the disposal of thecourt
5. after the consignation has beenmade, the persons interestedwere notified thereof
EffectsPayment of debtdesignated as tocorrespondingamount
EffectsAssignment liberatesdebtor up to theamount of the netproceeds of the saleof his assetsAssignment does notvets title to theproperty in thecreditors,who are onlyauthorized to sell it.
EffectsExtinguishment ofdebt from as anequivalent of theperformance of theobligation
EffectsIf accepted by the creditor ordeclared properly made by theCourt:1. Debtor is released in same
manner as if he had performedthe obligation at the time ofconsignation
2. Accrual of interest issuspended from the moment ofconsignation.
3. Deterioration or loss of thething or amount consigned,occurring without the fault ofdebtor, must be borne bycreditor from the moment ofdeposit
4. Any increment or increase inthe value of the thing afterconsignation inures to thebenefit of the creditor
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II. Loss or Impossibility
(Asked in ’83, ’84, ’85, and ’94)
A. Loss
A thing is lost when it perishes, goes out ofcommerce or disappears in such a way that itsexistence is unknown or it cannot be recovered(Art. 1189, par. 2)
Effects of Loss
Obligation to Deliver aSpecific Thing
Obligation to Deliver aGeneric Thing
Extinguishment of theobligation if the thing wasdestroyed w/o fault of thedebtor and before he hasincurred delay.
Loss of a generic thingdoes not extinguish anobligation, UNLESS,Delimited genericthings: kind or class islimited itself, and thewhole class perishes
Action against 3rd
persons - creditor shall haveall the rights of action the debtor may haveagainst 3
rdpersons by reason of the loss.
Presumption: The loss was due to the debtor’sfault, UNLESS:1. Law provides that the debtor shall be liable
even if the loss is due to fortuitous events(Arts. 1942, 1979, 2147, 2159)
2. Obligor is made liable by express stipulation3. Nature of the obligation requires an
assumption of risk4. Fault or negligence concurs with the
fortuitous event5. Loss occurs after delay6. Debtor has promised to deliver the same
thing to two or more different parties7. Obligation arises from a criminal act8. Borrower in commodatum: saves his own
things and not the thing of the creditorduring a fortuitous event
In Reciprocal ObligationsExtinguishment of the obligation due to loss ofthe thing or impossibility of performance affectsboth the creditor and debtor; the entire juridicalrelation is extinguished.
Partial lossArt. 1264: Partial loss due to a fortuitous eventdoes not extinguish the obligation; thing dueshall be delivered in its present condition,without any liability on the part of the debtor,UNLESS, the obligation is extinguished whenthe part lost was of such extent as to make thething useless.
Loss of the thing when in possession of thedebtor: Loss was due to the debtor’s fault.Burden of explaining the loss of the thing fallsupon him, UNLESS, due to a natural calamity:earthquake, flood, storm, etc.
Subjective impossibility: Where there is no physicalor legal loss, but the thing belongs to another, theperformance by the debtor becomes impossible. Thedebtor must indemnify the creditor for damages.
B. Impossibility of Performance (Arts. 1266-1267, CC)
When prestation becomes legally or physicallyimpossible (by fortuitous event or forcemajeure), the debtor is released.Impossibilitymust have occurred without fault of debtor, andafter the obligation has been constituted.
PARTIAL IMPOSSIBILITY1. Courts shall determine whether it is so
important as to extinguish the obligation.2. If debtor has performed part of the obligation
when impossibility occurred, creditor mustpay the part done as long as he benefitsfrom it.
3. If debtor received full payment from creditor,he must return excess amountcorresponding to part which was impossibleto perform.
Doctrine of Unforeseen EventsWhen the service has become so difficult as tobe manifestly beyond the contemplation of allthe parties, the obligor may be released in wholeor in part (De Leon, 2003).
Requisites:1. Event could not have been foreseen at the
time of the constitution of the contract.2. Event makes performance extremely difficult
but not impossible.3. Event not due to any act of the parties.4. Contract is for future prestation.
III. Condonation or Remission of theDebt
CONDONATION: An act of liberality, by virtue ofwhich, without receiving any equivalent, creditorrenounces the enforcement of the obligation.The obligation is extinguished either in whole orin such part of the same which to remissionrefers.
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Requisites1. Debt must be existing and demandable2. Renunciation must be gratuitous; without
any consideration3. Debtor must accept the remission
EffectArt. 1273: Renunciation of the principal debtshall extinguish the accessory obligations, butremission of the latter leaves the principalobligation in force.
PresumptionsArts. 1271, 1272, 1274: Whenever the private document in which the
debt is found in the possession of thedebtor, it shall be presumed that the creditordelivered it voluntarily, unless contrary isproved.
Delivery of a private document evidencingcredit, made voluntarily by the creditor to thedebtor, implies the renunciation of the actionof creditor against the latter.
Kinds1. As to form (Art. 1270)
Express: made formally; in accordancewith forms of ordinary donations
Implied: inferred from the act of theparties
2. As to extent Total: entire obligation Partial: may refer only to amount of
indebtedness, or to an accessoryobligation, or to some other aspect ofthe obligation
3. As to constitution Inter vivos: effective during the lifetime
of the creditor Mortis causa: effective upon death of the
creditor; must be contained in a will ortestament
IV. Confusion or Merger of Rights
CONFUSION: The meeting in one person of thequalities of creditor and debtor of the sameobligation.
Requisites1. It should take place between principal debtor
and creditor2. It must be complete and definite- Parties
must meet all the qualities of creditor anddebtor in the obligation/ in the part affected.
EffectsArts. 1275- 1277:1. The obligation is extinguished from the time
the characters of the debtor and creditor aremerged in the same person.
2. In joint obligations, confusion does notextinguish the obligation except as regardsthe corresponding share of the creditor ordebtor in whom the two characters concur.
3. In solidary obligations, confusion in one ofthe solidary debtors extinguishes the entireobligation.
4. Obligation is not extinguished whenconfusion takes place in the person ofsubsidiary debtor (e.g. guarantor), butmerger in the person of the principal debtorshall benefit the former.
V. Compensation
COMPENSATION: Offsetting of two obligationswhich are reciprocally extinguished if they are ofthe same value, or extinguished to theconcurrent amount if of different values. (Askedin ’80, ’81, ’98, and ’02)
Compensation Confusion
There must always be 2obligations
Involves only oneobligation
There are 2 persons who aremutually debtors andcreditors of each other in 2separate obligations, eacharising from the same cause.
There is only oneperson whom thecharacters of thecreditor and debtormeet
Kinds1. As to extent
Total: Debts are of the same amount Partial: Amounts are not equal
2. As to origin Legal: takes place by operation of law Conventional: parties agree to
compensate their mutual obligationseven when some requisite in Art. 1279 islacking (Art. 1282).
Judicial: decreed by court when there iscounterclaim; effective upon finaljudgment (Art. 1283).
Facultative: when it can be claimed byone of the parties who, however, has theright to object to it.
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Requisites Effects1. Each obligor is
bound principally,and at the same timea principal creditor ofthe other
2. Both debts mustconsist in a sum ofmoney, or if thethings due areFUNGIBLE, of thesame kind & quality
3. Both debts are due4. Debts are liquidated
and demandable5. There must be no
retention orcontroversy overeither of the debts,commenced by 3
rd
persons andcommunicated indue time to thedebtor
6. Compensation is notprohibited by law
1. Effects rise from themoment all therequisites concur.
2. Debtor claiming itsbenefits must provecompensation; onceproven, effectsretroact from themoment when therequisites concurred.
3. Both debts areextinguished to theconcurrent amount,eventhough thecreditors and debtorsare not aware of thecompensation.
4. Accessoryobligations are alsoextinguished.
Compensation is prohibited in:1. Contracts of depositum2. Contracts of commodatum3. Future support due by gratuitous title4. Civil liability arising from a penal offense5. Obligations due to the government6. Damage caused to the partnership by a
partner
ASSIGNMENT OF CREDIT (Art. 1285):No effect and does not bind the debtor unlessand until the latter is notified of the assignmentor learns of it.
With Debtor’sConsent
With Debtor’sKnowledge
WithoutDebtor’s
KnowlegeDebtor’sconsent toassignment ofcreditconstitutes awaiver ofcompensation,unless hereserved hisright tocompensation.
Debtor may setupcompensationof debts(maturing)before theassignment ofcredit but not ofsubsequentones
Debtor maysetupcompensationof all credits(maturing) priorto theassignment andalso latter onesuntil he hadknowledge ofthe assignment.
Facultative compensation: Compensation whichcan only be set up at the option of a creditor, whenlegal compensation cannot take place because somelegal requisites in favor of the creditor are lacking.Creditor may renounce his right to compensation, andhe himself may set it up.As opposed to conventionalcompensation, facultative compensation is unilateraland does not depend upon the agreement of theparties.
VI. Novation
NOVATION: Extinguishment of an obligation bythe substitution or change of the obligation by asubsequent one which extinguishes or modifiesthe first either by changing the object or principalconditions, or by substituting the person of thedebtor, or by subrogating a third person in therights of the creditor. A juridical act of dualfunction—it extinguishes an obligation, and atthe same time, it creates a new one in lieu of theold. (Asked in ’78, ’88, ’94 and ’01)
Requisites1. A previous valid obligation2. Agreement of all the parties to the new
obligation3. Extinguishment of the old obligation4. Validity of the new obligation
Novation is not presumed. Express novation: Parties must expressly
disclose their intent to extinguish the oldobligation by creating a new one.
Implied novation: No specific form isrequired. There must be incompatibilitybetween the old and new obligation orcontract.(Asked in ’79, ’82, ’88, and ’94)
California Bus Line v. State Investment (2003): In theabsence of an unequivocal declaration ofextinguishment of the pre-existing obligation, onlyproof of incompatibility between the old and newobligation would warrant a novation by implication.The restructuring agreement merely provided for anew schedule of payments and authority giving Deltato take over management and operations of CBLI incase it fails to pay installments. There was no changein the object of prior obligations.
Test of IncompatibilityWhether or not the old and new obligation canstand together, each one having an independentexistence. No incompatibility exists when theycan stand together. Hence, there is no novation.Incompatibility exists when they cannot standtogether. Hence, there is novation.
Effects
In General If OriginalObligation isVoid
If NewObligation isVoid
1. Oldobligation isextinguishedand replacedby the newonestipulated.
Novation is void ifthe originalobligation wasvoid, exceptwhen annulmentmay be claimedonly by the
New obligation isvoid, the oldobligationsubsists, unlessthe partiesintended that theformer realations
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debtor, or whenratificationvalidates actsthat are voidable.(Art. 1298)1. Originalobligation is void:No novation2. Originalobligationvoidable:Effective ifcontract is ratifiedbefore novation
shall beextinguished inany event. (Art.1297)1. New obligationvoid: No novation2. New obligationvoidable:Novation iseffective
Accessory obligations are also extinguished,but may subsist only insofar as they maybenefit 3
rdpersons who did not give their
consent to the novation OR may not beaffected upon agreement between theparties.
Original or new obligation with suspensive orresolutory conditionArt. 1299: If original obligation was subject to asuspensive or resolutory condition, the newobligation shall be under the same condition,unless it is otherwise stipulated.
Compatible Conditions IncompatibleConditions
Fulfillment of bothconditions: newobligation becomesdemandable
Fulfillment ofcondition concerningthe originalobligation: oldobligation is revived;new obligation losesforce
Fulfillment ofcondition concerningthe new obligation:no novation;requisite of aprevious valid andeffective obligationlacking
Original obligation isextinguished, whilenew obligation exists
Demandability shallbe subject tofulfillment/nonfulfillment of thecondition affecting it
OBJECTIVE NOVATION1. Change of the subject matter2. Change of causa or consideration3. Change of the principal conditions or terms
SUBJECTIVE NOVATION1. Substitution of the Debtor: Consent of
creditor is an indispensable requirementboth in expromision and delegacion.
Expromision DelegacionInitiative for change doesnot emanate from thedebtor, and mayEven be made withouthis knowledge.
Debtor (delegante) offersor initiates the change,and the creditor(delegatorio) accepts 3
rd
person (delegado) asconsenting to thesubstitution
Requisites1. Consent of the
creditor and the newdebtor
2. Knowledge orconsent of the olddebtor is notrequired
Requisites1. Consent of old
debtor, new debtor,and creditor
Effects1. Old debtor is
released2. Insolvency of the
new debtor does notrevive the oldobligation in case theold debtor did notagree to expromision
3. If with knowledgeand consent of olddebtor, new debtorcan demandreimbursement theentire amount paidand w/ subrogationof creditor’s rights
4. If without knowledgeof the old debtor,new debtor candemandreimbursement onlyup to the extent thatthe latter has beenbenefited w/osubrogation ofcreditor’s rights
Effects1. Insolvency of the
new debtor revivesthe obligation of theold debtor if it wasanterior and public,and known to the olddebtor.
2. New debtor candemandreimbursement ofthe entire amount hehas paid, from theoriginal debtor. Hemay compel creditorto subrogate him toall of his rights.
2. Subrogation of a 3rd
person in the rightsof the creditora. Conventional subrogation: by
agreement of the parties;
Requisites: the consent of the 3rd
person, and of the original parties (Art.1301).
Conventionalsubrogation
Assignment of credit
Debtor’s consent isnecessary
Debtor’s consent is notrequired
Extinguishes anobligation and givesrise to a new one
Refers to the same rightwhich passes from oneperson to another, withoutmodifying or extinguishingthe obligation
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Defects/ vices in theold obligation arecured
Defects/ vices in the oldobligation are not cured
b. Legal subrogation: by operation of law
Legal subrogation is not presumed,except in the following circumstances:1. When creditor pays another creditor
who is preferred, even without thedebtor’s knowledge
2. When a 3rd
person not interested inthe obligation pays with the expressor tacit approval of the debtor
3. When, even without the knowledgeof the debtor, a person interested inthe fulfillment of the obligationwithout prejudice to the effects ofconfusion as to the latter’s shareeffects of confusion as to the latter’sshare
Effects
Total Partial1. Transfers to the
person subrogatedthe credit with all therights theretoappertaining, eitheragainst the debtor or3
rdpersons.
2. Obligation is notextinguished, even ifthe intention is topay it.
3. Defenses against theold creditor areretained, unlesswaived by the debtor
1. A creditor, to whompartial payment hasbeen made, mayexercise his right forthe remainder, andshall be preferred tothe personsubrogated in hisplace in virtue of thepartial payment.
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Charts: Payment & Performance
by Professor Eduardo A. LabitagUP College of Law(Asked in ’75, ’84, ’88, ’95, and ’98)
114
WHO CAN PAY?
In GENERAL1. Debtor or his:2. Authorized Agent3. Heir4. Successor-in- interest
3rd PERSON
Interested in obligation(creditor cannot refuse
to accept valid payment)
Payment w/ orw/o debtor’sknowledge
Effects:1. Valid payment;obligation extinguished2. Debtor to reimbursefully 3rd person interestedin obligation3. 3rd person subrogatedto rights of creditor
Not interested in obligation(creditor may refuse to accept
payment [1236])
Payment withdebtor’s consent(express/tacit)
Payment withoutdebtor’s knowledge
or against the will of D
Effects:1. 3rd person is entitledto full reimbursement2. Legal subrogation(novation) – 3rd personis subrogated/step intothe shoes of creditor
Effects:3rd person can only bereimbursed only insofar aspayment has been beneficial todebtor(1236, 2nd. par.)burden of proof on 3rd personcannot compel C to subrogatehim (1237)
3rd person (whether or notinterested in obligation) does notintend to be reimbursed (1238)
Debtor must giveconsent
Effects:1. Payment is deemedas a donation/offer ofdonation2. Donation must be inproper form (if aboveP5Th must be inwriting
In Obligation to Give, ifPAYOR has
No free disposal & nocapacity to alienate
Minor who enteredcontract w/o consent ofparent or guardian
Effects: Payment is invalid w/o prejudice tonatural obligations
Effects: No right to recover fungiblething delivered to creditor who spentor consumed it in good faith
Legend:G = General Rule = ExceptionC = CreditorD = Debtor
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TO WHOM PAYMENT MAY BE MADE
In GENERAL
• Creditor /person in whose favor obligation wasconstituted, or
• His successor in interest, or
• Any person authorized to received payment (1240)
Payment to IncapacitatedCreditor (1241)
G – NOT valid
1) If C has kept the thing delivered2) Insofar as payment benefited C
Payment to 3rd
PERSON (1241,2nd par.)
G VALID if 3rd
person provesthat itredounded toC’s benefit
Exception to proof of benefit:.3rd person acquires C’s rights after payment.C ratifies payment.C’s conduct leads D to believe that 3rd
person had authority to receive payment.Assignment of credit without notice to D
In Case ofACTIVE
SOLIDARITY
If no demand is made, D may pay to ANY ofsolidary creditors
If any judicial/extrajudicial demand is made by anyone of the creditors who made the demand (1214)
If payment is madeto a WRONGPARTY
Effect:No extinguishment
Extinguishment if fault ornegligence can be imputedto creditor
Payment in good faith to person inpossession of credit = debtor released(1242)
If debtor pays creditor after beingjudicially ordered to retain debt =payment not valid (1243)
Payment made in good faith to anyperson in possession of creditEffect: D released (1242)
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WHAT IS TO BE PAID? IDENTITY
In GENERALThe very prestation (thing or service
Obligation to give aSPECIFIC thing
Give:1. Specific thing itself2. Accessions & accessories3. If with loss, improvements,
deterioration Apply Art.1189
Debtor cannot compel Cto receive a differentspecific thing even latterhas same value or morevaluable than that due(1244)
Obligation to give aGENERIC thing
G:C cannot demand a thing of superior quality;can demand inferiorD cannot deliver a thing of inferior quality
Unless quality & circumstances have beenstated (1246) purpose and other circumstancesof obligation considered
Obligation to pay sum of money, if D alienatesproperty to C = DACION EN PAGO governed bylaw on SALES (1245)
Obligation to DO orNOT to DO
Identity: The very same act promised to be doneor not to be done Substitution cannot be done against C’s will(1244, 2nd par.)
Payment ofMONEY
1. Payment of domestic obligations in Phil.Currency
Exceptions under R.A. 4100; R.A. 8183 –Foreign currency if agreed to by parties
2. In case of extraordinary inflation/deflation,basis
of payment is value of currency at the time ofobligation was established (1250)
Payment ofINTEREST
No interest (i.e., for the use of someone’s money)shall be due unless expressly stipulated in writing
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In Case of SUBSTANTIALPERFORMANCE INGOOD FAITH (1234)
D may recover as if there hadbeen complete fulfillment- Less damages suffered by C
PRESUMPTIONSin payment ofINTERESTS &
INSTALLMENTS
INTEREST – If principal amount isreceived w/o reservation as tointerest interest is presumed tohave been paid (1176; 1253)
INSTALLMENTS If a latterinstallment of a debt is receivedw/o reservation to priorinstallments Prior installments arepresumed paid (1176, 2nd par.)
HOW IS PAYMENT TO BE MADE INTEGRITY
In GENERAL1233 – Complete delivery or rendering1248 – C cannot be compelled toreceived partial prestations; D cannotbe compelled to give partial payments
Exceptions:1. Contrary stipulation2. When debt is in part liquidated & in partunliquidated3. When there are several subjects/partiesare bound under different terms/conditions
Effect if C accepts incompleteperformance (1235): WAIVER
- May be express or impliedIf C knows the incompleteness/irregularity of the payment, and hestill accepts it w/o objection, thenobligation is deemed extinguished(estoppel)* There must be intent to waive Except if C has no knowledge ofthe incompleteness
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WHERE PAYMENT IS TO BE MADE (ART. 1251)
In GENERALIn the place designated in the obligation
If no place is designated
If obligation is to deliver aSPECIFIC thing Place of performance iswherever the thing was atthe moment obligation wasconstituted Unless there is acontrary expressstipulation
In any other case Domicile of debtor
If D changes his domicilein bad faith or after he hasincurred in delay Additional expensesshall be borne by D
Expenses of MakingPayment
In GENERALExtrajudicial expensesrequired by the paymentshall be borne by DEBTOR
Unless otherwisestipulated
As to JUDICIAL expenses Rules of Court shallgovern
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WHEN PAYMENT IS TO BE MADE?
When obligation is due anddemandable but D may pay beforedue date if period is for benefit of D
In GENERALPayment to be made when the creditormakes a demand(judicially/extrajudicially)
Exceptions wherein demand of creditor is notnecessary for delay to exist:1. When obligation/law expressly declares2. Nature & circumstances of the obligationdesignation of time is controlling motive orestablishment of contract3. When demand would be useless
WHY SHOULD PAYMENT BE MADE?
Because C may compel D to pay, andfailure to pay will allow C to satisfy creditfrom properties of D that are not exemptfrom execution
- end of Obligations -
CIVIL LAW REVIEWER TABLE of CONTENTS
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CONTRACTSTable of Contents
Chapter I. General Provisions.....................122I. Classification of Contracts.................122II. Elements of Contracts.......................123III. Stages of Contracts...........................123IV. Charactertics of Contracts (MARCO)123
Chapter II. Essential Requisites .................125I. Consent .............................................125II. Object ................................................127III. Cause................................................127
Chapter III. Forms of Contracts ..................129I. Rules .................................................129II. Kinds of Formalities...........................129
Chapter IV. Reformation of Contracts........130
Chapter V. Interpretation of Contracts.......130
Chapter VI. Defective Contracts .................131I. Rescissible Contracts (Arts. 1380-1389)
131II. Voidable Contracts (Arts. 1390-1402)
132III. Unenforceable Contracts (Arts. 1403-1408)..........................................................133IV. Void or Inexistent Contracts (Arts. 1409-1422)..........................................................134
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Chapter I. General Provisions
I. CLASSIFICATIONII. ELEMENTSIII. STAGESIV. CHARACTERISTICS
Article 1305, Civil Code. A contract is a meeting ofminds, between two persons whereby one bindshimself, with respect to the other, to give somethingor to render some service.
I. Classification of Contracts
A. To formation:1. Consensual: consent is enough; e.g.
sale2. Real: consent and delivery is required;
e.g. deposit, pledge3. Solemn or formal: special formalities are
required for perfection e.g. donation ofrealty
B. To relation to other contracts:1. Principal: may exist alone; e.g. lease2. Accessory: depends on another contract
for its existence; e.g. guaranty3. Preparatory: a preliminary step towards
the celebration of a subsequentcontract; e.g. agency
C. To nature of vinculum1. Unilateral: only one party is bound by
the prestation; e.g. commodatum2. Bilateral (synallagmatic): where both
parties are bound by reciprocalprestations; e.g. sale
D. To fulfillment of prestations1. Commutative: fulfillment is determined in
advance2. Aleatory: fulfillment is determined by
chance
E. By equivalence of prestations1. Gratuitous: no correlative prestation is
received by a party2. Onerous: there is an exchange of
correlative prestations3. Remuneratory: the prestation is based
on services or benefits already received
F. By the time of fulfillment1. Executed: obligation is fulfilled at the
time contract is entered into2. Executory: fulfillment does not take
place at the time the contract is made
G. To their purpose
OBLIG
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&CO
NTRACTS
OBLIGATIONS & CONTRACTS TEAM
Prof. Solomon LumbaFaculty Editor
Leo LedesmaLead Writer
Krizel MalabananIvy VelascoTin Reyes
Frances DomingoHazel Abenoja
Writers
CIVIL LAW
Kristine BongcaronPatricia TobiasSubject Editors
ACADEMICS COMMITTEE
Kristine BongcaronMichelle Dy
Patrich LeccioEditors-in-Chief
PRINTING & DISTRIBUTION
Kae Guerrero
DESIGN & LAYOUT
Pat HernandezViktor FontanillaRusell Aragones
Romualdo Menzon Jr.Rania Joya
LECTURES COMMITTEE
Michelle AriasCamille MarananAngela Sandalo
Heads
Katz ManzanoSam Nuñez
Arianne Cerezo
Mary Rose BeleyKrizel MalabananMarcrese Banaag
Volunteers
MOCK BAR COMMITTEE
Lilibeth Perez
BAR CANDIDATES WELFARE
Dahlia Salamat
LOGISTICS
Charisse Mendoza
SECRETARIAT COMMITTEE
Jill HernandezHead
Loraine MendozaMary Mendoza
Faye CelsoJoie Bajo
Members
CIVIL LAW REVIEWER Chapter I. GENERAL PROVISIONS
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1. Transfer of ownership, e.g. sale2. Conveyance of Use, e.g. Commodatum3. Rendition of Service, e.g. agency
H. To their subject matter1. Things, e.g. sale, deposit2. Services, e.g. agency
I. To their designation1. Nominate: the law gives the contract a
special designation or particular namee.g. deposit
2. Innominate: the contract has no specialname
Article 1305, Civil Code. INNOMINATECONTRACTS shall be regulated by the stipulationsof the parties, by the general provisions of Titles Iand II of [the Civil Code], by the rules governing themost analogous nominate contracts, and by thecustoms of the place.
Classes of Innominate Contracts1. Do ut des: I give so that you may give2. Do ut facias: I give so that you may do3. Facio ut facias: I do so that you may do4. Facio ut des: I do so that you may give
II. Elements of Contracts
A. Essential: Those without which the contractwould not exist (consent, object, causa).
B. Natural: Those which are derived from thenature of the contract and ordinarilyaccompany the same-they are presumed toexist unless the contrary is stipulated e.g.warranty in sales
C. Accidental: Those which exist only ifstipulated
Solemn Real ConsensualCommonElements
Consent, subject matter, causa
SpecialElements
Formality Delivery None
Example Donationof personalpropertymore thanP5K
Loan,pledge
Others
III. Stages of Contracts
A. Preparation, conception or generation:period of negotiation and bargaining, endingat the moment of agreement
B. Perfection or birth: the moment when theparties come to agree on the terms of thecontract
C. Consummation or death: the fulfillment orperformance of the terms agreed upon
IV. Charactertics of Contracts (MARCO)
A. MUTUALITYThe contract must bind both contracting parties;its validity or compliance cannot be left to the willof one of them (Art.1308).
Taylor v. Uy Teng Piao, 1922: [BUT] a contract mayexpressly confer upon one party the right to cancelthe contract because the exercise of that right is afulfillment of the provisions of the contract itself
The release must be binding on both parties. The determination of the performance may
be left to a 3rd
person, whose decision shallNOT be binding if: It is evidently inequitable (the courts will
decide) The decision had not been made known
to both parties (Art.1309)
B. AUTONOMYThe contracting parties may establish suchstipulations, clauses, terms and conditions asthey may deem convenient, provided they arenot contrary to law, morals, good customs,public order, or public policy (Art. 1306).
C. RELATIVITYContracts take effect only between parties, theirassigns and heirs UNLESS, obligations arisingfrom the contract are not transmissible by their(1) nature, (2) by stipulation or (3) by provision oflaw. The heir is not liable beyond the value ofthe property he received from the decedent. (Art.1311)
Exception: Strangers may enforce the contractin their favor in the ff. cases:1. Stipulations Pour Autrui—
If a contract should contain some stipulationin favor of a third person, he may demand itsfulfilment provided he communicated his
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acceptance to the obligor before itsrevocation. A mere incidental benefit orinterest of a person is not sufficient. Thecontracting parties must have clearly anddeliberately conferred a favour upon a thirdperson (Art.1311).
Requisites:a. There must be a stipulation in favor of a
third personb. The stipulation must be part, not the
whole of the contractc. The contracting parties must have
clearly and deliberately conferred afavor upon a third person, NOT a mereincidental benefit or interest.
d. The third person must havecommunicated his acceptance to theobligor before its revocation
e. No relation of agency exists betweenany of the parties and the third personfavored
Florentino v. Encarnacion, 1977:a. Contracts to perform personal acts
which cannot be as well performed byothers are discharged by the death ofthe promissor. Conversely, where theservice or act is of such a character thatit may as well be performed by another,or where the contract, by its terms,shows that performance by otherswas contemplated, death does notterminate the contract or excusenonperformance.
b. In this case the stipulation is astipulation pour atrui because the trueintent of the parties is to confer a directand material benefit upon a third party.
Accion Directa: Where the statuteauthorizes the creditor to sue on hisdebtor’s contract, e.g. lessor v. sub-lessee (Art. 1651,1652) (J.B.L. Reyes)
2. Third Person In Possession—When the third person comes intopossession of the object of a contractcreating real rights (Art 1312)
3. Fraud—Where the contract is entered into in order todefraud a person (Art. 1313)
4. Tortuous Interference—Where the third person induces acontracting party to violate his contract(Art.1314).
Requisites:a. Existence of a valid contractb. Knowledge of the third person of the
existence of the contract; andc. Interference by third person without
legal justification or excuse
D. CONSENSUALITYContracts are perfected by mere consent andfrom that moment, the parties are bound not onlyto the fulfillment of what has been expresslystipulated but also to all consequences which,according to their nature, may be in keeping withgood faith, usage and law, (Art.1315) EXCEPTreal contracts, such as deposit, pledge andcommodatum, are not perfected until thedelivery of the object of the obligation.(Tolentino)
E. OBLIGATORY FORCE
Art. 1159, Civil Code. Obligations arising fromcontracts have the force of law between thecontracting parties and should be complied with ingood faith.
Art. 1308, Civil Code. The contract must bind bothcontracting parties; its validity or compliance cannotbe left to the will of one of them.
Art. 1315, Civil Code. Contracts are perfected bymere consent, and from that moment the parties arebound not only to the fulfillment of what has beenexpressly stipulated but also to all the consequenceswhich, according to their nature, may be in keepingwith good faith, usage and law.
Art. 1356, Civil Code. Contracts shall be obligatory,in whatever form they may have been entered into,provided all the essential requisites for their validityare present. However, when the law requires that acontract be in some form in order that it may be validor enforceable, or that a contract be proved in acertain way, that requirement is absolute andindispensable. In such cases, the right of the partiesstated in the following article cannot be exercised.
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Chapter II. Essential Requisites
I. CONSENTII. OBJECTIII. CAUSE
I. Consent
Conformity of the parties to the terms of thecontract; the acceptance by one of the offermade by the other. (Manresa)
Requisites:1. It must be manifested by the concurrence of
the offer and acceptance (Arts. 1319-1326)2. The contracting parties must possess the
necessary legal capacity (Arts. 1327-1329)3. It must be intelligent, free, spontaneous, and
real (not vitiated) (Arts. 1330-1346)
A. Concurrence1. Offer: a unilateral proposition which one
party makes to the other for the celebrationof the contract. (Tolentino)
Requisites:a. Definiteb. Intentionalc. Complete
Invitations to make offers(advertisements) Business advertisements of things for
sale, are NOT definite offers, justinvitations to make an offer, UNLESSthe contrary appears (Art. 1325)
Advertisements for bidders areinvitations to make proposals, advertiseris NOT bound to accept lowest orhighest bid, UNLESS contrary appears;the bidder is the offeror (Art. 1326).
Statements of intention: no contractresults even if accepted
Rosenstock v. Burke, 1924:FACTS: Elser, in a letter, informed Burke that he was‘in a position and is willing to entertain’ the purchaseof the yacht under some terms.HELD: The word “entertain” applied to an act does notmean the resolution to perform said act, but simply aposition to deliberate for deciding to perform or not toperform said act. It was merely a position to deliberatewhether or not he would purchase the yacht andinvitation to a proposal being made to him, whichmight be accepted by him or not.
OFFER TERMINATES upon:a. Rejection by the offereeb. Incapacity (death, civil interdiction,
insanity, or insolvency) of the offeror orofferee before acceptance is conveyed
c. Counter-offerd. Lapse of the time stated in the offer
without acceptance being conveyede. Revocation of the offer before learning
of acceptancef. Supervening illegality before acceptance
(J.B.L. Reyes)
2. AcceptanceRequisites:a. Unqualified and Unconditional, i.e. it
must conform with all the terms of theoffer, otherwise it is a counter-offer (Art.1319)
b. Communicated to the offeror andlearned by him (Arts. 1319, 1322). Ifmade through an agent, the offer isaccepted from the time the acceptanceis communicated to such agent.
c. Express/Implied, but is not presumed
OPTION CONTRACT: A preparatorycontract in which one party grants to theother, for a fixed period, the option to decidewhether or not to enter into a principalcontract. (Art. 1324)
With consideration Without considerationOfferor cannotunilaterally withdraw hisoffer
Offeror may withdraw bycommunicating withdrawalto the offeree beforeacceptance
B. Capacity1. Incapacitated to Give Consent
a. Minors, UNLESS, the minor’s consentis operative in contracts: For necessaries (Art.1427) Where the minor actively
misrepresents his age (estoppel)
Mercado v. Espiritu, 1917:Minors held in estoppel throughactive misrepresentation
Bambalan v. Maramba, 1928:There is no estoppel if the minoritywas known.
b. Insane or demented persons,UNLESS, they contract during a lucidinterval
c. Deaf-mutes who do not know how toread and write.
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2. Disqualified to Contract (Art. 1329):a. Those under Civil interdiction for
transactions inter vivos (RPC Art. 34)b. Undischarged insolvents (Insolvency
Law, Sec.24)c. Husband and wife: cannot donate (Art.
123 FC) to each other, nor sell if themarriage is under ACP (Art.1490)
d. The ff. cannot purchase (Art. 1491): The guardian: his ward’s property The agent: the principal’s property Executors and administrators:
property under administration Public officers-state property under
their administration Justices, judges, prosecutors, clerks
of court, lawyers-property attachedin litigation.
e. Members of Ethnic Minorities: theircontracts (excluding sale of personalproperty or personal service contracts)must be approved by the Governor orhis representative. (Public Land Act)
Incapacity to GiveConsent (Art. 1327)
Disqualification toContract (Art.1329)
Restrains the exercise ofthe right to contract
Restrains the very rightitself
Based on subjectivecircumstances of certainpersons
Based on public policyand morality
Voidable Void
C. Vices of Consent (Art. 1330, CC) (MIVUF)1. Mistake
Inadvertent and excusable disregard of acircumstance material to the contract. (J.B.L.Reyes) In order that mistake may invalidate
consent, it should refer to thesubstance of the thing which is theobject of the contract, or to thoseconditions which have principally movedone or both parties to enter into thecontract (Art.1331)
Mistake of Fact Mistake of Law Mutual Mistake
When one orboth contractingparties believethat a fact existswhen in reality itdoes not, or viceversa
When one orboth partiesarrive at anerroneousconclusion ontheinterpretation ofa question oflaw or the legaleffects
Must be asto the legaleffect of anagreement
Must bemutual
Real purposeof the partiesmust havebeenfrustrated
2. IntimidationWhen one of the contracting parties iscompelled by a reasonable and well-grounded fear of an imminent and grave evilupon his person or property, or upon theperson or property of his spouse,descendants or ascendants, to give hisconsent (Art. 1335).
Martinez v. HSBC, 1910: The conveyance of severalproperties by to her husband’s creditors, thoughreluctant is still consent. She assented to therequirements of the defendants, the civil and criminalactions against them would be dropped. A contract isvalid even though one of the parties entered into itagainst his wishes and desires, or even against hisbetter judgment. Contracts are also valid even thoughthey are entered into by one of the parties withouthope of advantage or profit.
3. ViolenceIrresistible force used to extort consent(J.B.L. Reyes)
4. Undue InfluenceWhen a person takes improper advantage ofhis power over the will of another, deprivingthe latter of a reasonable freedom of choice(Art. 1337).
Circumstances:a. Relationship of the parties (family,
spiritual, confidential etc.)b. That the person unduly influenced was
suffering from infirmity (mentalweakness, ignorance etc.) (Art.1337)
5. FraudWhen through insidious words ormachinations of one of the contractingparties, the other is induced to enter into acontract which, without them, he would nothave agreed to (Art. 1338).
Art. 1339, Civil Code. Failure to disclose facts, whenthere is a duty to reveal them, as when the parties arebound by confidential relations, constitutes fraud.
Art. 1340, Civil Code. The usual exaggerations intrade, when the other party had an opportunity toknow the facts, are not in themselves fraudulent.
Art. 1341, Civil Code. A mere expression of anopinion does not signify fraud, unless made by anexpert and the other party has relied on the former'sspecial knowledge.
Art. 1342, Civil Code. Misrepresentation by a thirdperson does not vitiate consent, unless, suchmisrepresentation has created substantial mistake
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and the same is mutual.
Art. 1343, Civil Code. Misrepresentation made ingood faith is not fraudulent but may constitute error.
SIMULATION OF CONTRACTS (Art. 1345-1346): Declaration of a non-existent will madedeliberately for the purpose of producing theappearance of a transaction that does not exist,or which is different from the one which actuallyarose. (J.B.L. Reyes)
Absolute RelativeNo real transaction isintended
Real transaction is hidden
Fictitious contract Disguised contractVoid Bound as to hidden
agreement, so long as itdoes not prejudice a thirdperson and is not contraryto law, morals, goodcustoms, public order orpublic policy
II. Object
The thing right or service which is the subjectmatter of the obligation arising from the contract.
Requisites:a. Lawful: Not contrary to law, morals, good
customs, public order or public policy.b. Actual or possiblec. Transmissible: Within the commerce of mand. Determinate or determinable
All things or services may be the object ofcontracts, EXCEPT: Things which are outside the commerce of
men Intransmissible rights Future inheritance except in cases
authorized by law Impossible things or services Objects which are indeterminable as to their
kind, the genus should be expressed
In order that a thing, right or service may be theobject of a contract, it should be in existence atthe moment of the celebration of the contract, orat least, it can exist subsequently or in thefuture.
A FUTURE THING may be the object of acontract, such contract may be interpreted as a: Conditional contract: where its efficacy
should depend upon the future existence ofthe thing
Aleatory contract: where one of the contractingparties assumes the risk that the thing will nevercome into existence, e.g. insurance
III. Cause
It is the impelling reason for which a partyassumes an obligation under a contract.
Requisites:a. Existingb. Licit or Lawfulc. True
Cause in:
OnerousContracts
RenumeratoryContracts
PureBeneficence
As to each ofthe contractingparties isunderstood tobe theundertaking orthe promise ofthe thing orservice by theother party
The service orbenefit which isremunerated
Mereliberality ofthebenefactor
In Villaroel v. Estrada (1940), where a moralobligation is based upon a previous civil obligation,which has already been barred by the statute oflimitations at the time the contract is entered into, itconstitutes a sufficient cause or consideration tosupport a contract (Natural Obligation).
BUT,In Fisher v. Robb (1939), if the moral obligation ariseswholly from ethical consideration, it cannot constitutea sufficient cause to support an onerous contract, aswhen the promise is made on the erroneous beliefthat one was morally responsible for the failure of anenterprise (Moral Obligation).
Cause Defined EffectLack ofCause
Absence or totallack of cause
The contractconfers no rightand has no legaleffect
Illegality ofCause
Contrary to law,morals, goodcustoms, publicpolicy andpublic order
Null and Void
Falsity ofcause
Cause is statedbut is untrue
Void if it shouldnot be proved thatit was foundedupon anothercause which wastrue and lawful
Lesion orinadequacyof cause
Cause is notproportionate toobject
Shall not invalidatethe contractexcept when
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a)there is fraud,mistake, undueinfluenceb)when partiesintended adonation
Liguez v. CA (1957): In making the donation inquestion, Lopez was not moved exclusively by thedesire to benefit Liguez, but also to secure hercohabiting with him, so that he could gratify his sexualimpulses. The donation was an onerous transactionand clearly predicated upon an illicit causa.
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Chapter III. Forms of Contracts
I. RULESII. KINDS OF FORMALITIES
I. Rules
Contracts shall be obligatory, in whatever formthey may have been entered into, provided allthe essential requisites for their validity arepresent. (Art. 1356)
Spiritual System of the Spanish Code: The law looksmore on the spirit rather than the form of contracts.
Exceptions: When the law requires that a contract be in
some form for validity (Arts. 1357-1358) When the law requires that contract be in
some form to be enforceable (Statute ofFrauds)
II. Kinds of Formalities
A. Contracts Which Must Appear in Writing:1. Donation of personal property whose
value exceeds five hundred pesos (Art748)
2. Sale of a piece of land or any interesttherein through an agent (Art 1874)
3. Antichresis (Art 2134)4. Agreements regarding payment of
interests in contracts of loans (Art. 2314)
B. Contracts Which Must Appear in a PublicDocument1. Art. 1358:
a. Acts and contracts which have fortheir object the creation,transmission, modification orextinguishment of real rights overimmovable property; sales of realproperty or of an interest therein agoverned by Articles 1403, No. 2,and 1405;
b. The cession, repudiation orrenunciation of hereditary rights orof those of the conjugal partnershipof gains;
c. The power to administer property, orany other power which has for itsobject an act appearing or whichshould appear in a public document,or should prejudice a third person;
d. The cession of actions or rightsproceeding from an act appearing ina public document.
e. All other contracts where theamount involved exceeds fivehundred pesos must appear inwriting, even a private one. Butsales of goods, chattels or things inaction are governed by Articles,1403, No. 2 and 1405.
2. Donation of immovable properties (Art.749)
3. Partnership where immovable propertyor real rights are contributed to thecommon fund (Arts.1771 and 1773)
BF Corporation v. CA, 1998: A contract may beencompassed in several instruments even thoughevery instrument is not signed by the parties since it issufficient if the unsigned instruments are clearlyidentified or referred to and made part of the signedinstruments.
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Chapter IV. Reformation of Contracts
Reformation of Contracts (Art 1359-1369)REFORMATION: is that remedy in equity bymeans of which a written instrument is made orconstrued so as to express or conform to thereal intention of the parties when some error ormistake has been committed. (J.B.L. Reyes)
Requisites (Art 1359):1. There must be a meeting of the minds of the
contracting parties;2. Their true intention is not expressed in the
instrument;3. Such failure to express their true intention is
due to mistake, fraud, inequitable conduct,or accident; and
4. There is clear and convincing proof ofmistake, fraud, inequitable conduct, oraccident.
If the mistake, fraud, inequitable conduct, or accidenthas prevented the meeting of the minds of the parties,the proper remedy is not reformation but annulment ofthe contract. (See also Art 1390)
Who May Ask for Reformation (Art. 1368):1. Either party or his successors in interest, if
the mistake was mutual; otherwise,2. Upon petition of the injured party, or his
heirs and assigns.
NO REFORMATION in (Art. 1366):1. Simple donations inter vivos wherein no
condition is imposed;2. Wills;3. When the real agreement is void.
Implied Ratification (Art. 1367): The action toenforce the instrument bars subsequent actionto reform.
Chapter V. Interpretation of Contracts
RULES ON DOUBTS (Art. 1378)
PrincipalObjects
GratuitousContracts
OnerousContracts
Doubts whereit cannot beknown whatmay havebeen theintention orwill of theparties, thecontract shallbe null andvoid.
Absolutelyimpossible tosettle doubts bythe rules andonly refer toincidentalcircumstancesthe leasttransmissionof rights andinterests shallprevail.
Absolutelyimpossible tosettle doubts bythe rules andonly refer toincidentalcircumstancesthe doubt shallbe settled infavor of thegreatestreciprocity ofinterests.
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Chapter VI. Defective Contracts
I. RESCISSIBLEII. VOIDABLEIII. UNENFORCEABLEIV. VOID OR INEXISTENT
I. Rescissible Contracts (Arts. 1380-1389)
What are therescissiblecontracts? (Art1381; see also Art1382)
Contracts ofguardians
Contracts inrepresentationof absentees
Contracts areentered into to
defraud existingcreditors
Contracts referto things in
litigation
What makes itdefective?
When the acts ofadministrationcause LESION ordamage to theWARD theyrepresent by morethan 25% of thevalue of the thing
When the actsof administrationcause LESIONor damage tothe ABSENTEEthey representby more than25% of the valueof the thin
When the creditorscannot in any othermanner collect theclaims due them
If entered into bythe defendantwithout theknowledge &approval of thelitigants orcompetent judicialauthority
Effect on theContract
Valid until rescinded (Art 1380)
How to rescind? Direct Action (different from action forrescission under Art 1191)
NO rescission if:1. Injured party has other legal
means to obtain reparation (Art1383).
2. Plaintiff cannot return his part ofthe obligation (Art 1385 par 1)
3. Object of the contract is in thehands of third person, onerouslyacquired by him in good faith (Art1385 par 2)
4. If the court approves thecontracts under Art 1381 par 1and 2 (Art 1386)
Accion Pauliana for Contracts in Fraud ofCreditors
NO rescission if:1. Injured party has other legal means to
obtain reparation (Art 1383)2. Plaintiff cannot return his part of the
obligation (Art 1385 par 1)3. Object of the contract is in the hands of
third person, onerously acquired byhim in good faith (Art 1385 par 2)
Who can rescind? In general, byinjured party
By ward, or byguardian ad litemof ward duringincapacity of wardin an actionagainst theoriginal guardian
By absentee By creditor(s) By party litigant
When to rescind(Art 1389)
Within four yearsfrom [re-] gainingcapacity
Within 4 yearsfrom knowledgeof domicile ofabsentee
Within 4 years fromknowledge offraudulent contract
Within 4 yearsfrom knowledge offraudulent contract
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II. Voidable Contracts (Arts. 1390-1402)
What makes itdefective? (Art1390)
Incapacity of one party to thecontract
Consent vitiated by mistake, violence,intimidation, undue influence or fraud
Effect on theContract
Valid until annulled by competent court (Art 1390 last par)
How to annul? 1. Directly, by an action for annulment2. Indirectly, by counterclaim asking for positive action of the court to set aside the
contract
Annulment cannot proceed when:1. the object of the contract is lost through fraud or deceit of the person with right to
institute proceedings (art 1401 par 1);2. the right of action is based upon the incapacity of any one of the contracting
parties and the thing is lost through the fault or fraud of the plaintiff (Art 1401 par2)
Who can/cannotannul?(Art 1397)
1. Parties who are obliged principally or subsidiarily2. Persons who are capable cannot allege the incapacity of those with whom they
contracted3. Persons who exerted intimidation, violence, or undue intimidation, or employed
fraud, or caused mistake, cannot base their action upon these flaws of thecontract
When? (Art 1391) Within four years after guardianship ofminors or incapacitated personsceases
Within four years1. After intimidation, violence or undue
influence ceases2. From the time of discovery of mistake
or fraudEffect ofAnnulment
1. Mutual restitution of the things delivered, along with fruits and price paid withinterest (Art 1398)
2. Damages to be paid by party who caused defect of the contract, by virtue ofArticle 20 and 21 of the Civil Code
How to CureDefect? (Arts1392 - 1396)
1. Express (written or oral manifestation) or tacit ratification (acts or conduct) byinjured party, or guardian of incapacitated person.
- Ratification does not require the conformity of the contracting partywho has no right to bring the action for annulment (Art 1395)
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III. Unenforceable Contracts (Arts. 1403-1408)
What are theunenforceablecontracts? (Art1403)
Contract entered intowithout authority of, orin excess of authoritygiven by owner
Contracts covered byStatute of Frauds whichdid not comply with thewritten memorandumrequirement(See Art 1403 par 2)
Contract where bothparties are incapableof giving consent tocontract
Effect on theContract
No effect unless ratified. Cannot be enforced by a proper action in court.
How to assail? Not by direct action.1. As a defense, by
motion to dismiss thecomplaint on theground that the contractis unenforceable
Not by direct action.1. As a defense, by motion
to dismiss the complainton the ground that thecontract is unenforceable;
2. Objection to thepresentation of oralevidence to prove an oralcontract (See Art 1405)
Not by direct action.1. As a defense, by
motion to dismiss thecomplaint on theground that thecontract isunenforceable
Who can assail?*anunenforceablecontract cannotbe assailed bythird persons (Art1408)
By person whose namethe contract was enteredinto; By owner of property.
By party against whom thecontract is being enforced;or his privies.
By party against whomthe contract is beingenforced; or his privies;or parents or guardianspersons, as it is apersonal defense
When? When a party asks the court to enforce the contract
How to CureDefect? (Art1403)
1. Ratification by personwhose name thecontract was enteredinto
1. Ratification by partyagainst whom thecontract is beingenforced
2. By failure to object to thepresentation of oralevidence to prove an oralcontract or by theacceptance of benefitsunder the contract (Art1405)
1. By ratification ofparty against whomthe contract is beingenforced; or hisprivies; or parents orguardians
The ratification byone party convertsthe contract into avoidable contract (Art1407)
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IV. Void or Inexistent Contracts (Arts. 1409-1422)
What makes itdefective?
Contract’s Cause, Objectof Purpose is contrary tomorals, good customs,public order or publicpolicy(Art 1409 par 1)
Inexistent contracts, orcontracts whose essentialelements are absent(Art Art 1409 par 2, 3, 4,5)
Contracts expresslyprohibited or declaredvoid by law (Art 1409par 7); contractswhich are directresults of a previousillegal contract (art1422)
Contracts whichare inconsistentand void from thebeginning (Art1409)
1.Those whose Cause, Object of Purpose is contrary to morals, good customs,public order or public policy
2.Those which are absolutely simulated or fictitious3.Those whose cause or object did not exist at the time of the transaction4.Those whose object is outside the commerce of men5.Those which contemplate an impossible service6.Those where the intention of the parties relative to the principal object of the
contract cannot be ascertained7.Those expressly prohibited or declared void by law
How to assail? 1. File for action for declaration of inexistence or nullity of contract2.As a defense during trial (Art 1409 last par). Such defense not available to third
persons not directly affected by contract (Art 1421)3.In pari delicto applies when cause or object of contract constitutes a criminal
offense (Art 1411)Who can assail? 1. Innocent party Art
1411 par 2; Art 1412par2)
2. Less-guilty party, uponcourt discretion
3. Incapacitated personwho is a party to anillegal contract, uponcourt discretion (Art1415)
4. Any person whoseinterests are directlyaffected by thecontract (Art 1421)
1. Any of the parties2. Any person whose
interests are directlyaffected by the contract(Art 1421)
1. Any person whoseinterests aredirectly affected bythe contract Art(1421)
2. By party for whoseprotection theprohibition of thelaw is designed (Art1416)
When? The action or defense does not prescribe (Art 1410)
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