Self-Made Reviewer On Obligation and Contracts
Self-Made Reviewer On Obligation and Contracts
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Self-Made Reviewer on Obligation and Contracts
If you are a law student or just an ordinary student who needs a reviewer, read this. This is my
personal reviewer for my subject in Law on Obligations and Contracts. Hope you learn from it and
enjoy reading! :)
DISCLAIMER: Not all grammars and punctuations are technically correct because I use "keywords",
"shortcuts" for easy understanding and memorization, as for myself.
CIVIL OBLIGATION
derived from positive law
enforceable by court action
NATURAL
OBLIGATION
derived from equity &
justice
not enforceable by court
action
5 SOURCES OF OBLIGATION
1. LAW
2. CONTRACTS
3. QUASI-CONTRACTS arise from lawful, voluntary acts; no one shall be unjustly enriched...
2Kinds
a. Solutio indebiti something received (delivered on a mistake), no right to demand it
b. Negotiorum gestio voluntary mgt of property/affairs of another w/o his knowledge/consent
4. QUASI-DELICT/TORTS/CULPA AQUILIANA arise from damage; fault/negligence
5. CRIMES/ACTS/OMISSIONS punished by law arise from civil liability that is a consequence of a
criminal offense
DILIGENCE OF A GOOD FATHER OF A FAMILY
- care need to be exercised by a debtor to deliver/give determinate thing
Exception: When law/stipulation of parties requires a differnt standard of care (slight/extraordinary
diligence).
When creditor is entitled to the fruits
Rule: The creditor has personal right (right to ask for delivery) from the time the obligation to deliver
arises.
But NO real right (right enforceable against the whole world) until it is delivered.
3 KINDS OF FRUITS
1. NATURAL w/o human intervention
2. INDUSTRIAL w/ human intervention
3. CIVIL derived by virtue of juridical relation
Creditors rights if debtor fails to comply w/ the obligation
1. Determinate
a. Performance
b. Damages
2. Generic
a. Performance
b. Damages
c. Obligation be complied at debtors expense
Creditors rights if debtor does in contravention
1. Damages
2. Ask it be UNDONE at debtors expense
FORTUITOUS EVENT cannot be foreseen, if foreseen, inevitable
General Rule: No person liable to fortuitous event.
Exceptions:
1. Law states
2. Stipulation/contract states
3. Assumption of risk
4. Delay
5. Debtor promises deliver to 2/more persons who do not have same interest (bad faith)
EFFECTS OF FORTUITOUS EVENT to thing to be delivered
- extinguish the obligation if determinate; generic does not extinguish the obligation
3 MISCELLANEOUS RULES ON PERFORMANCE OF OBLIGA-TION
1.
When
to
deliver determinate, accessions (additions/
improvements)
and accessories (joined/included with the principal) are INCLUDED even not mentioned.
2. If debtor fails to do, it shall be DONE AT HIS EXPENSE, same with doing the contravention; poorly
done be undone.
3. In obligation not to do, and obligor does what is forbidden, shall be UNDONE AT HIS EXPENSE.
4 GROUNDS; debtor liable for damages
1. Default/mora
2. Fraud/dolo
3. Negligence/culpa
4. Contrary to terms of obligation
1. DEFAULT/MORA delay
3kinds
a. Mora solvendi debtors delay to give (real ob.), to do (personal ob.)
b. Mora accipiende creditors delay to accept
c. Compensatio Morae delay of both in reciprocal obligation
CONCEPT OF DELAY
General Rule: No demand, No delay
Exceptions:
1. Law states
2. Obligation states
3. Time is the essence
4. Demand be useless if delay
5. Debtor guilty of delay
EFFECTS OF DELAY
1. Damages
2. When to deliver determinate thing, STILL LIABLE in fortuitous event.
2. FRAUD/DOLO conscious, deliberate, intentional evasion of fulfillment
2Kinds
a. Dolo causante/Causal fraud fraud in obtaining consent; consent is defective, contract is
voidable. Remedy: annulment
b. Dolo incidente/Incidental fraud fraud w/c vitiates consent. Remedy: damages
3. NEGLIGENCE/CULPA voluntary act/omission; no bad faith intended
3Kinds
a. Culpa aquiliana/Civil negligence quasi-delict/torts
b. Culpa contractual/Contractual negligence breach
c. Culpa criminal/Criminal negligence crime/delict
4. Contrary to the terms of obligation
2 RULES OF PRINCIPAL & INSTALLMENT
1. Receipt of principal w/o mention of interest, presumed interest is paid also.
2. Receipt of latter installment w/o mention of prior installment, presumed prior installment is paid
also.
4 SUCCESSIVE RIGHTS OF CREDITOR to satisfy claim against DEBTOR
1. Exact payment
2. Attach debtors properties
3. Accion subrogatoria exercise rights & actions except inherent in person
4. Accion pauliana cancel acts/contracts by debtor to defraud creditor
TRANSMISSIBILITY OF RIGHTS
General Rule: ALL RIGHTS are transmissible.
Exceptions:
1. Law states
2. Contract states
3. Obligation is purely personal
10 Kinds of Obligation
1. Pure
2. Conditional
3. Alternative
4. Facultative
5. Joint
6. Solidary
7. Divisible
8. Indivisible
9. Obligation w/ a period
10. Obligation w/ a penal clause
1. PURE OBLIGATION
- w/o condition, demandable at once (pure has resolutory condition/period)
2. CONDITIONAL OBLIGATION
- there is condition in performance; future & uncertain
2Kinds
a. Suspensive condition happening of condition gives RISE to obligation
b. Resolutory condition happening of condition EXTINGUISHES obligation
6 MISCELLANEOUS RULES ON CONDITIONAL OBLIGATION
1. Impossible conditions, contrary to law, shall ANNUL obligation.
2. The condition not to do an impossible thing is considered not agreed upon.
3. The condition that happens in determinate time, EXTINGUISHES obligation.
4. The condition that happens in INDETERMINATE time, obligation only effective at arrival.
5. The condition is fulfilled if DEBTOR prevents fulfillment.
6. The effect of conditional obligation, once fulfilled:
- to give: retroact to the day of constitution of obligation
- has reciprocal prestations: fruits & interests be mutually compensated
- has unilateral obligation: debtor shall give fruits & interests
RULES in case of Loss, Improvement, or Deterioration of thing during the pendency of condition
1. LOST
a. w/ debtors fault damages
b. w/o debtors fault extinguishes obligation
2. DETERIORATION
a. w/ debtors fault - (1) cancel obligation & damages; or (2) fulfill obligation w/ damages
b. w/o debtors fault creditor suffer impairment
3. IMPROVEMENT
a. By nature/time benefit to creditor
b. at expense of debtor debtor no right than that granted to usufructuary (debtor no right to
compensate amount for improvement)
EFFECTS OF FULFILLMENT OF SUSPENSIVE CONDITION
General Rule: The obligation becomes effective retroactively to the day obligation was constituted.
Exceptions:
1. In reciprocal obligation, fruits & interests during pendency of condition shall compensate each
other.
2. In unilateral obligation, debtor gets fruits & interests unless there is a contrary intent.
3 EFFECTS OF FULFILLMENT OF RESOLUTORY CONDITION
1. Extinguish obligation.
2. Both parties restore what they received plus fruits & interests.
3. The rule on L, D, or I will apply to person who has to return the thing.
When one of debtors in reciprocal obligation does not comply w/ his obligation
1. The right of injured party is (1) cancel contract & damages; or (2) fulfill obligation & damages
3 Kinds of Obligation (Accdng to PERSON OBLIGED)
1. UNILATERAL only 1 party obliged to comply
2. BILATERAL both parties; performance not same time
3. RECIPROCAL both parties; performance same time
3. OBLIGATION W/ A PERIOD
- demandability/extinguishment subject to the expiration of period
PERIOD interval of time; either suspends demandability or produces extinguishment
DAY CERTAIN must come, not known when
7 CASES CONSIDERED TO BE OBLIGATION W/ A PERIOD
1. Little by little
2. In partial payment
3. Payable ASAP
4. When I can afford it
5. When I have the money
6. When I am able to
7. When my means permit me to do so
PERIOD
certain
future only
(*influence upon
obligation) only upon its
demandability
CONDITION
uncertain
future/past but unknown
(*) on the very existence
of obligation itself
ALTERNATIVE
FACULTATIVE
OBLIGATION
OBLIGATION
several prestations due,
one prestation due, but can
giving one is sufficient
be subtituted
right to choose (debtor)
right to choose DEBTOR
unless granted to creditor
ONLY
If 1 of the prestation is
nullity of principal carries
illegal, others may be
w/ it nullity of accessory/
valid, obligation remains
substitute
loss/impossibility of ALL
loss/impossibility of
prestations due, w/o
presta-tion due, w/o
debtors fault, extinguishes debtors fault, extinguishes
obligation
obligation
(3) SUMMARY OF RULES, OBLIGATIONS, & RIGHTS OF DEBTOR IN ALTERNATIVE OBLIGATION
1. If 1 of prestations lost through fortuitous event, shall still be perform by choosing (creditor) from
the remainder.
2. If 1 of prestations lost through debtors fault, creditor may claim any of remainders w/ damages.
3. If ALL prestations lost through debtors fault, creditor choose price w/ damages.
RULES on LOSS/DETERIORATION of the thing intended as SUBSTITUTE in FACULTATIVE OBLIGATION
1. If there is a loss/deterioration of thing intended as substitute, debtor is NOT liable if NOT HIS
FAULT.
But if substitution is already made, debtor is liable for loss of substitute when in DELAY, NEGLIGENCE,
or FRAUD.
6. JOINT OBLIGATION
- obligation is to be paid proportionately by debtors or to be demanded proportionately by creditors
7. SOLIDARY OBLIGATION
- each one of debtors has right to render or each one of creditors has right to demand the entire
compliance w/ prestation
MAXIMS & SYNONYMS
JOINT
Obligation
SOLIDARY
Obligation
MAXIMS
To each his
own
One for all, all
for one
SYNONYMS
proportionate
individually &
collectively
b. CESSION
- debtor abandons ALL his property for creditors benefit to obtain payment from proceeds of his
property
5 REQUISITES OF VALID CESSION
1. 1 debtor & 2 or more creditors
2. Debtor is in partial/total insolvency.
3. Debtor to deliver ALL his property to creditors
4. Debt is due & demandable.
5. Creditors must sell the properties & apply the proceeds to their respective credits proportionately.
c. DACION IN PAYMENT (dacion en pago)
- alienation of property to the creditor in satisfaction of debt
3 REQUISITES OF DACION IN PAYMENT
1. Consent of creditor
2. NOT prejudicial to another creditor
3. Debtor not insolvent declared by a judicial decree
CESSION
all properties
require more than 1
creditor
NOT act of novation
NOT transfer ownership
requires partial/total insolvency
DACION IN PAYMENT
NOT all properties
NOT require all creditors
act of novation
transfer ownership
may happen
during solvency of debtor
6. NOVATION
- substitution/change of obligation
- substitution of debtor
- subrogation of creditor
(3) OBLIGATIONS MAY BE MODIFIED BY:
1. Changing object/principal conditions. (REAL NOVATION)
2. Changing the person of debtor/creditor. (PERSONAL NOVATION)
a. Substitution change of debtor
b. Subrogation change of creditor
3. Changing person of the parties & the objects of principal condition. (MIXED NOVATION)
4 REQUISITES OF NOVATION
1. Old valid obligation.
2. Agreement of parties to new obligation.
3. Extinguishment of old obligation.
4. Validity of new obligation.
2 FORMS OF NOVATION BY SUBSTITUTION OF DEBTOR
1. EXPROMISION w/ consent of creditor, NO consent of old debtor
2REQUISITES
a. Initiative of 3rd person.
b. Consent of creditor.
2. DELEGACION all must agree (creditor, old debtor, new debtor)
3REQUISITES
a. Initiative from old debtor.
b. Consent of debtor.
c. Acceptance by creditor.
7. SUBROGATION
- change of creditor
2 KINDS OF SUBROGATION
1. CONVENTIONAL consent of original parties & 3rd person
2. LEGAL by law
a. creditor pays another preferred creditor even w/o debtors knowledge
b. 3rd person pays the express approval of debtor
c. 3rd person pays even w/o knowledge of debtor
DOLO CAUSANTE
DOLO INCIDENTE
Serious
Not serious
cause induces party to NOT the cause to enter
ENTER into contract
into contract
make contract voidable
contract is valid; liable
fordamages
7 RULES OF FRAUD
1. Failure to disclose facts when these needs to be revealed, is a fraud.
2. Fraud should be SERIOUS (dolo causante) & SHOULD NOT be done by BOTH parties to make
contractvoidable.
3. Incidental fraud (dolo incidente) ONLY obliges person to PAY DAMAGES.
4. Usual exaggerations in trade, when other party know the real facts, is NOT FRAUD.
5. A mere expression of opinion is NOT FRAUD UNLESS made by an expert & the other party relies
on his special knowledge.
6. Misrepresentation made in good faith is NOT FRAUD but may constitute an error.
7. Misrepresentation by 3rd person DOES NOT vitiate consent UNLESS it created substantial mistake.
3. VIOLENCE
VIOLENCE
External
Physical contact/coercion
INTIMIDATION
Internal
NO physical coercion;
ONLY
MENTAL/MORAL
coercion
5. UNDUE INFLUENCE
- a person takes improper advantage of his power over others will, depriving the other to
hisreasonable freedom of choice.
3 RULES ON UNDUE INFLUENCE
1. There is a person who takes improper advantage of his power over others will, depriving the other
to his reasonable freedom of choice.
2. Undue influence ANNULS obligation although it is DONE by 3 rd person not part of contract.
3. To constitute undue influence, ff circumstances must be considered: (1) confidential, family,
spiritual, & other relations of parties; or (2) the aggrieved party is suffering from mental weakness; or
(3) ignorant; or (4) in financial distress.
SIMULATION OF CONTRACT
- process of INTENTIONALLY deceiving others by producing a contract not really exist (absolute
simulation), or w/c is different from true agreement (relative simulation).
2 KINDS OF SIMULATED CONTRACT
1. ABSOLUTE SIMULATION (the parties DO NOT intend to be bound at all)
- completely fictitious/make-believe; VOID
2. RELATIVE SIMULATION (parties conceal their true/real agreement)
- parties are bound to real/true agreement, EXCEPT:
a. contract prejudice 3rd person
b. purpose is contrary to law, morals, good customs, public order, public policy
7 REQUISITES OF OBJECT OF CONTRACT
3. One party was mistaken & the other knew/believed that the instrument did not state their REAL
agreement.
4. Ignorance, lack of skill, negligence, or bad faith of person drafting the instrument DOES NOT state
the TRUE INTENTION of parties
5. Two parties agree on mortgage/pledge of personal/real property BUT the instrument states the
property is sold ABSOLUTELY, or w/ the right to repurchase.
(3) NO REFORMATION OF INSTRUMENT WHEN:
1. Simple donation inter vivos where NO CONDITION is imposed.
2. Will.
3. Real agreement is VOID.
4 KINDS OF DEFECTIVE CONTRACTS
1. RESCISSIBLE valid until rescinded; has ALL essential requisites but because of injury/damage to
one of the parties, the contract may be rescinded.
2. VOIDABLE valid until annulled; has ALL essential requisites but because of defect in consent,
contract may be annulled.
3. UNENFORCEABLE cannot be sued/enforced unless ratified; no effect NOW but may take effect
upon ratification.
4. VOID NO effect at all; cannot be ratified/validated.
5 RESCISSIBLE CONTRACTS
1. Those entered by guardians & suffered LESION by more than of value of the value that is the
OBJECT.
2. Those agreed upon in representation of absentees, if the absentees suffered LESION.
3. Those undertaken in FRAUD of creditors when the creditors cannot further claim.
4. If entered into contract w/o knowledge/approval of litigants under litigation.
5. Contracts subjected to rescission declared by law.
3 VOIDABLE CONTRACTS
1. One of the parties INCAPABLE of giving consent to a contract.
2. Those where consent vitiates by vices of consent. (MFVIU)
3. Those agreed in the state of drunkenness/hypnotic spell.
3 UNENFORCEABLE CONTRACTS
1. Those entered in name of other person, or who acted BEYOND his powers.
2. Those who do not comply w/ the Statute of Frauds.
3. Both parties are incapable of giving consent to a contract.
7 VOID/INEXISTENT CONTRACTS
1. Those w/c are ABSOLUTELY simulated/fictitious.
2. Those w/c contemplate an impossible service.
3. Those whose OBJECT is outside the commerce of man.
4. Those whose CAUSE/OBJECT did not exist at time of tran-saction.
5. Those whose CAUSE/OBJECT/PURPOSE is contrary to law, morals, good customs, public order, or
public policy.
6. Those where INTENTION of parties to principal object CANNOT be ascertained.
7. Those expressly prohibited/declared VOID by law.