BL 02 - Contracts Lecture Notes - Supplementary
BL 02 - Contracts Lecture Notes - Supplementary
Lecture Notes
CONTRACTS
CONTRACT
A contract is a meeting of minds between two persons whereby one binds himself,
with respect to the other, to give something or to render some service (Article 1305).
ELEMENTS
1. Essential – those without which there can be no contract.
a. Consent
b. Object or Subject Matter
c. Cause or Consideration
2. Natural – those derived from the nature of the contract and ordinarily accompany the
same.
3. Accidental – those which exist only when the parties expressly provide for them for the
purpose of limiting or modifying the normal effects of the contract.
Nominate contracts - Those which have their own distinctive individuality and are regulated
by special provisions of law.
Innominate contracts
Those which lack individuality and are not regulated by special provisions of law.
Regulated by the stipulations of the parties, by the general provisions of the Civil
Code on obligations and contracts, by rule governing the most analogous
nominate contracts and by the customs of the place.
Kinds:
a. Do ut des - I give that you give
b. Do ut facias - I give that you do
c. Facio ut des - I do that you give
d. Facio ut facias - I do that you do
Relativity
GENERAL RULE: Contracts take effect only between parties, their assigns and heirs.
EXCEPTIONS:
1. Stipulation pour atrui - stipulation in favor of a third person.
Requisites:
a. the stipulation must be a part, not the whole of the contract;
b. the contracting parties must have clearly and deliberately conferred a favor
upon a third person, not a mere incidental benefit or interest;
c. the third person must have communicated his acceptance to the obligor before
its revocation;
d. the favorable stipulation should not be conditioned or compensated by any kind
of obligation whatever; and
e. neither of the contracting parties bears the legal representative or
authorization of the third person.
3. Third persons who come into possession of the object of the contract creating real
rights
4. Contracts entered into in fraud of creditors
Mutuality
The contract must bind both parties; its validity or compliance must not be left to the
will of one of them. (ART 1308)
The contract cannot have any stipulation authorizing one of the contracting parties (a)
to determine whether or not the contract shall be valid, or (b) to determine whether
or not the contract shall be fulfilled.
Autonomy
The parties are free to stipulate anything they deem convenient provided that they
are not contrary to law, morals, good customs, public order and public policy. (ART
1306)
Consensuality
Contracts are perfected by mere consent and from that moment, the parties are
bound not only to the fulfillment of what has been expressly stipulated but also to all
consequences which, according to their nature may be in keeping with good faith,
usage and law.
CONSENT
Manifested by the concurrence of the offer and acceptance upon the thing and the cause
which are to constitute the contract
Requisites:
a. Legal capacity of the contracting parties
b. Manifestation of the conformity of the contracting parties
c. The parties’ conformity to the object, cause, the terms and conditions of the
contract must be intelligent, spontaneous and free from all vices of consent
d. The said conformity must be real and not simulated or fictitious
Offer
A proposal made by one party to another to enter into a contract.
It must be certain or definite,complete and intentional.
Acceptance
Manifestation by the offeree of his assent to the terms of the offer.
It must me absolute.
A qualified acceptance constitutes counter-offer.
NOTE: Acceptance may be revoked before it comes to the knowledge of the offeror.
1. Offers are interrelated – contract is perfected if all the offers are accepted.
2. Offers are not interrelated – single acceptance of each offer results in a perfected
contract unless the offeror has made it clear that one is dependent upon the other and
acceptance of both is necessary.
3. Mistake - should refer to the substance of the thing which is the object of the
contract, or to those conditions which have principally moved one or both parties to
enter into the contact.
Must be mistake of fact and not of law, except under Article 1334.
Requisites under Article 1334:
a. Mistake must be with respect to the legal effect of an agreement
b. Mistake must be mutual
c. Real purpose of the parties must have been frustrated.
5. Undue influence - when a person takes improper advantage of his power over the will
of another, depriving the latter of a reasonable freedom of choice.
1. Absolute – when the contracting parties do not intend to be bound by the contract at
all. Thus, an absolutely simulated contract is VOID.
2. Relative – when the contracting parties conceal their true agreement. A relatively
simulate contract binds the parties to their real agreement, when it does not
prejudice a 3rd person and is not intended for any purpose contrary to law, morals,
good customs, public order or public policy.
OBJECT
The thing, right or service which is the subject matter of the obligation arising from the
contract
Requisites:
a. It must be w/in the commerce of man
b. It must be licit or not contrary law, morals, good customs, public order or
public policy
c. It must be possible
d. It must be determinate as to its kind
CAUSE
The immediate, direct and most proximate reason which explains and justifies the creation of
obligation
Requisites
a. Cause should be in existence at the time of the celebration of the contract
b. Cause should be licit or lawful
c. Cause should be true
Rules:
1. In onerous contracts, the cause is understood to be, for each contracting party, the
prestation of promise of a thing or service by the other.
2. In remuneratory contracts, the service or benefit w/c is remunerated.
3. In contracts of pure beneficence, the mere liberality of the donor or benefactor.
4. In accessory contracts (mortgage or pledge), the cause is identical with the cause of
the principal contract, that is, the loan from which it derives its life and existence.
CAUSE EFFECT
1. Absence of Cause The contract confers no right and produces no legal
effect
2. Failure of Cause Does not render the contract void
3. Illegality of Cause The contract is null and void
4. Falsity of Cause The contract is void, unless the parties show that
there is another cause which is true and lawful
5. Lesion Does not invalidate the contract, unless
(a) there is fraud, mistake or undue influence; or
(b) when the parties intended a donation or some
other contract.
FORM OF CONTRACTS
GENERAL RULE: Contracts shall be obligatory, in whatever form they may have been entered
into, provided all the essential requisites for their validity are present.
REFORMATION OF INSTRUMENTS
Requisites:
a. meeting of the minds to the contract
b. true intention is not expressed in the instrument by reason of mistake, accident,
relative simulation, fraud, or inequitable conduct
c. clear and convincing proof of mistake, accident, relative simulation, fraud, or
inequitable conduct
When one of the parties has brought an action to enforce the instrument, no subsequent
reformation can be asked.
Requisites:
a. the contract must be rescissible
b. the party asking for rescission must have no other legal means
c. to obtain reparation for the damages suffered by him
d. the person demanding rescission must be able to return whatever he may be
obliged to restore if rescission is granted
e. the things w/c are the object of the contract must not have passed legally
to the possession of a 3rd person acting in good faith
f. the action for rescission must be brought w/in the prescriptive period of 4
years
BADGES OF FRAUD:
1. Consideration of the conveyance is inadequate or fictitious;
2. Transfer was made by a debtor after a suit has been begun and while it is pending
against him;
3. Sale upon credit by an insolvent debtor;
4. Evidence of indebtedness or complete insolvency
5. Transfer of all his property by a debtor when he is financially embarrassed or
insolvent;
6. Transfer made between father & son, where there is present any of the above
circumstances
7. Failure of the vendee to take exclusive possession of all the property
VOIDABLE CONTRACTS
Those in which all of the essential elements for validity are present, although the element of
consent is vitiated either by lack of capacity of one of the contracting parties or by VIMFU.
NOTE: If the object is lost through fortuitous event, the contract can still be annulled, but
the person obliged to return the same can be held liable only for the value of the thing at the
time of the loss, but without interest thereon.
UNENFORCEABLE CONTRACTS
Those which cannot be enforced by proper action in court unless they are ratified
1. Agreements not to be performed within one year from the making thereof;
2. Special promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another;
3. Agreement in consideration of marriage other than a mutual promise to marry;
4. Agreement for the sale of goods, etc. at a price not less than P500.00;
5. Contracts of lease for a period longer than one year;
6. Agreements for the sale of real property or interest therein; and
7. Representation as to the credit of a third person.
NOTES:
The contracts/agreements under the Statute of Frauds require that the same be
evidenced by some note, memorandum or writing, subscribed by the party charged or
by his agent, otherwise, the said contracts shall be unenforceable.
The statute of frauds applies only to executory contracts, not to those that are
partially or completely fulfilled.
VOID CONTRACTS
Those where all of the requisites of a contract are present but the cause, object or purpose is
contrary to law, morals, good customs, public order or public policy, or contract itself is
prohibited or declared void by law.
INEXISTENT CONTRACTS
Those where one or some or all of the requisites essential for the validity of a contract are
absolutely lacking
NOTE: The principle of In Pari Delicto is applicable only to void contracts and not as to
inexistent contracts.
EXCEPTIONS:
1. Payment of usurious interest
2. Payment of money or delivery of property for an illegal purpose, where the party who
paid or delivered repudiates the contract before the purpose has been accomplished,
or before any damage has been caused to a 3rd person.
3. Payment of money or delivery of property made by an incapacitated person
4. Agreement or contract which in not illegal per se and the prohibition is designed for
the protection of the plaintiff
5. Payment of any amount in excess of the maximum price of any article or commodity
fixed by law or regulation by competent authority.
6. Contract whereby a laborer undertakes to work longer than the maximum # of hours
fixed by law.
7. Contract whereby a laborer accepts a wage lower than the minimum wage fixed by
law.
8. One who lost in gambling because of fraudulent schemes practiced on him is allowed
to recover his losses even if gambling is a prohibited one.
NATURAL OBLIGATIONS
They are real obligations to which the law denies an action, but which the debtor may
perform voluntarily.
It is patrimonial, and presupposes a prestation.
The binding tie of these obligations is in the conscience of man, for under the
law, they do not have the necessary efficacy to give rise to an action.
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