Defective Contracts
Defective Contracts
Defective Contracts
LAW
Papers of the Private Law of the Philippines
and Spain International Scientific Congress
Coord.: José Manuel de Torres Perea
Universidad de Málaga
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Abstract:
In the Spanish Civil Code, contracts can be rescinded in certain cases and
certain contracts are considered defective for want of any of the three essential
requisites—consent, subject-matter, and cause. The Philippine Civil Code,
enacted in 1949, sought to refine this by providing a more finely tuned
classification of these defective contracts. Thus, in the Philippine Civil Code,
defective contracts are enumerated in a more or less meticulously graduated
order of irregularity: (1) the rescissible, (2) the voidable, (3) the unenforceable,
and (4) the void or inexistent.
In this paper, the author discusses the four kinds of defective contracts in the
Philippine legal system. Along with discussing the requisites for the applicability
of each defective contract, the author outlines the important Philippine
jurisprudential guidelines that evolved since the Philippine Civil Code’s
enactment about six-and-a-half decades ago.
Keywords:
A lack or vitiation of any of these three results in some kind of defect in the
contract. In addition, there is a special group of contracts which, though
possessed of all the essential requisites, cause a particular kind of economic
damage and are, for that reason, treated by law as defective. In the civil law
tradition, the concept of defective contracts goes back very far. It was already
known in the ancient Roman law. Contracts in the Roman law could be set aside
for total want of capacity (as in the case of children below seven), or if entered
into through force or fear (vis or metus) or fraud (dolus), or mistake (error), or
for an illegal object or purpose, and so forth.
The Civil Code of Spain—which was also our law until 1950—likewise already
regulated defective contracts. Thus, contracts could be rescinded in certain
cases (Art. 1291, Spanish Code), and certain contracts defective for want of
any of the three essential requisites were invalid. There was some ambiguity in
the old code, however, between contratos that were referred to as nulos and
those referred to as anulables.
When, in 1947 (just a year after the birth of the Philippine Republic, following
more than three centuries of Spanish rule and half-a-century of American
sovereignty), a Code Commission was created to draft a Civil Code for the
infant Republic, one of the features proposed by the codifiers was a clearer
distinction of the defective contracts. The result was the categorization of such
contracts into four: (1) the rescissible, (2) the voidable, (3) the unenforceable,
and (4) the void.
The classification has been done with a not inconsiderable amount of effort and
an attempt at thoroughness. Thus, each of these defective contracts has its own
requisites and consequences. Ideally, one would suppose, the distinctions
should serve as water-tight compartments. For the most part — but not always
— they have functioned well in the jurisprudence that has been laid down in the
six-and-a-half decades since the effectivity of the Code.
I. Rescissible Contracts
A rescissible contract has all the requisites required by law for valid
contracts (Art. 1380). What makes it rescissible is economic damage, not just
any economic damage, but those kinds of economic damage enumerated under
Arts. 1381 and 1382.
1. it must fall under either Art. 1381 or 1382 (Causapin v. CA, 233 SCRA
615 [1994]);
2. the party seeking rescission must have no other legal means to obtain
reparation for damages suffered by him (Art. 1383);
3. the party seeking rescission must be able to return whatever he may
have obtained by reason of the contract (Art. 1385, par. 1); and
4. the things object of the contract must not have passed legally to a third
person in good faith (Art. 1385, pars. 2 and 3).
(1) Those which are entered into by guardians whenever the wards whom
they represent suffer lesion by more than one-fourth of the value of the things
which are the object thereof;
(2) Those agreed upon in representation of absentees, if the latter suffer the
lesion stated in the preceding number;
(3) Those undertaken in fraud of creditors when the latter cannot in any other
manner collect the claims due them;
(4) Those which refer to things under litigation if they have been entered into
by the defendant without the knowledge and approval of the litigants or of
competent judicial authority;
(5) All other contracts specially declared by law to be subject to rescission.”
1. The first two contracts enumerated in Art. 1381 are entered into by
representatives (guardians on behalf of wards, and administrators
representing absentees) where the ward or absentee suffers lesion
exceeding 25% of the value of the property which he parts with.
Lesionhas been defined as the “injury which one of the parties suffers
by virtue of a contract which is disadvantageous to him” (IV Arturo M. Tolentino,
Commentaries and Jurisprudence on the Civil Code of the Philippines 574
(1987), citing 3 Camus 205-06). For the contract to be rescissible, the lesion
must exceed 25% of the value of the thing owned by the ward or absentee.
The theory of lesion is simple enough but its application has been
strongly criticized. Foremost among the critics is Justice JBL Reyes, perhaps
the Philippines’ greatest civilist, who, in his comments on the Civil Code,
observed: “Modern doctrine does not regard favorably the rule of economic
prejudice (lesion) being a ground of rescission, considering that goods do not
have a fixed true value because value is always variable and fluctuating, being
a function of supply and demand. The modern codes tend to view lesion of
certain proportions (1/4, etc.) as merely raising a presumption of undue
influence, that vitiates consent and renders the contract voidable…whenever
the lesion is coupled with exploitation of one party by the other. (cf. German
Civ. C., Art. 138; Mexico, Art. 17).” (JBL Reyes, Observations on the New Civil
Code, Fifth Installment, Lawyers J., Jan. 31, 1951; [c.f. Ruben F. Balane, JBL
Ipse Loquitur 239 (2002)]).
This provision on lesion had been hotly debated by the framers of the
French Code, the reason for its final inclusion being the personal intervention
of Napoleon Bonaparte. Manresa criticizes its adoption in the Spanish Code in
no uncertain terms. He calls lesion “un absurdo económico evidente” (a patent
economic absurdity).
“Art. 1386. Rescission referred to in Nos. 1 and 2 of article 1381 shall not take
place with respect to contracts approved by the courts.”
The requisites for actio pauliana are given in Siguan v. Lim (318 SCRA 725
[1999]):
1. the plaintiff asking for rescission has a credit prior to the alienation,
although demandable later;
2. the debtor has made a subsequent contract conveying a patrimonial
benefit to a third person;
3. the creditor has no other legal remedy to satisfy his claim;
4. the act being impugned is fraudulent; and
5. the third person who received the property conveyed, if it is by onerous
title, has been an accomplice in the fraud.
1. The fourth paragraph has essentially the same purpose as the third,
i.e. to prevent injury to a third person (in this case the party who has
lodged a claim over the property).
B. The party seeking rescission must have no other legal means to obtain
reparation for damages suffered by him.
“Art. 1383. The action for rescission is subsidiary; it cannot be instituted except
when the party suffering damage has no other legal means to obtain reparation
for the same.”
“The injured party may choose between the fulfillment and the rescission of the
obligation, with the payment of damages, in either case. He may also seek
rescission, even after he has chosen fulfillment, if the latter should become
impossible.”
“The court shall decree the rescission claimed, unless there be just cause
authorizing the fixing of a period.”
“This is understood to be without prejudice to the rights of third persons who
have acquired the thing, in accordance with articles 1385 and 1388 and the
Mortgage Law.”
Again, Justice JBL Reyes steps in to clear up the mess, in his concurring
opinion in UFC v. CA (33 SCRA 1 [1970]). The relevant portion of that
concurring opinion is:
“Art. 1385. Rescission creates the obligation to return the things which were
the object of the contract, together with their fruits, and the price with its interest;
consequently, it can be carried out only when he who demands rescission can
return whatever he may be obliged to restore.”
The basis for this requirement is found in Art. 1385, Paragraphs 2 and
3:
“Neither shall rescission take place when the things which are the object of the
contract are legally in the possession of third persons who did not act in bad
faith.”
“In this case, indemnity for damages may be demanded from the person
causing the loss.”
The age of emancipation, previously 21 under both the Civil Code and the
Family Code, has been reduced by RA 6089 to 18.
Philippine law does not ex professo make any distinction among minors, as far
as contracts entered into by them are concerned. No gradations of incapacity
are recognized. On purely codal (statutory) criteria, consent of a minor of
seventeen is just as defective as that of a minor of ten.
The mistake must be caused by facts of which the party demanding annulment
did not know. As held in Alcasid v. CA (237 SCRA 419 [1994]):
“To invalidate consent, the error must be real and not one that could have been
avoided by the party alleging it. The error must arise from facts unknown to him.
He cannot allege an error which refers to a fact known to him or which he should
have known by ordinary diligent examination of the facts. An error so patent
and obvious that nobody could have made it, or one which could have been
avoided by ordinary prudence, cannot be invoked by the one who made it in
order to annul his contract.
“In contracts, the kind of fraud that will vitiate consent is one where, through
insidious words or machinations of one of the contracting parties, the other is
induced to enter into a contract which, without them, he would not have agreed
to. This is known as dolo causante or causal fraud which is basically a
deception employed by one party prior to or simultaneous to the contract in
order to secure the consent of the other.”
“In order that intimidation may vitiate consent and render the contract invalid,
the following requisites must concur: (1) that the intimidation must be the
determining cause of the contract, or must have caused the consent to be given;
(2) that the threatened act be unjust or unlawful; 2 (3) that the threat be real and
serious, there being an evident disproportion between the evil and the
resistance which all men can offer, leading to the choice of the contract as the
lesser evil; and (4) that it produces a reasonable and well-grounded fear from
the fact that the person from whom it comes has the necessary means or ability
to inflict the threatened injury.”
“Undue influence, therefore, is any means employed upon a party which, under
the circumstances, he could not well resist and which controlled his volition and
induced him to give his consent to the contract, which otherwise he would not
have entered into. It must in some measure destroy the free agency of a party
and interfere with the exercise of that independent discretion which is necessary
for determining the advantages or disadvantages of a proposed contract.”
1. they are binding unless and until set aside; (Art. 1390);
“(1) Those entered into in the name of another person by one who has been
given no authority or legal representation, or who has acted beyond his
powers.”
“A contract entered into in the name of another by one who has no authority or
legal representation, or who has acted beyond his powers, shall be
unenforceable, unless it is ratified, expressly or impliedly, by the person on
whose behalf it has been executed, before it is revoked by the other contracting
party.”
“As for any obligation wherein the agent has exceeded his power, the principal
is not bound except when he ratifies it expressly or tacitly.”
The contract is unenforceable whether the authority is only exceeded or
absolutely absent. The two cases mentioned supra (Heirs of
Sevilla and Gochan) in which it was held that the contract is void if authority is
totally wanting have no basis in statutory provision.
The confirmation by one of the incapacitated parties does not convalidate the
contract; it merely raises the contract one rung higher—to the level of a voidable
contract.
x x x x x x x x x
“(2) Those that do not comply with the Statute of Frauds as
set forth in this number. In the following cases an agreement hereafter made
shall be unenforceable by action, unless the same, or some note or
memorandum thereof, be in writing, and subscribed by the party charged, or by
his agent; evidence, therefore, of the agreement cannot be received without the
writing, or a secondary evidence of its contents:
(a) An agreement that by its terms is not to be performed
within a year from the making thereof;
(b) A special promise to answer for the debt, default, or
miscarriage of another;
(c) An agreement made in consideration of marriage, other
than a mutual promise to marry;
(d) An agreement for the sale of goods, chattels or things in
action, at a price not less than five hundred pesos, unless the buyer accept and
receive part of such goods and chattels, or the evidences, or some of them, of
such things in action, or pay at the time some part of the purchase money; but
when a sale is made by auction and entry is made by the auctioneer in his sales
book, at the time of the sale, of the amount and kind of property sold, terms of
sale, price, names of the purchasers and person on whose account the sale is
made, it is a sufficient memorandum;
(e) An agreement for the leasing for a longer period than
one year, or for the sale of real property or of an interest therein;
“For obvious reasons, it is not enough for a party to allege partial performance
in order to hold that there has been such performance and to render a
decision declaring that the Statute of Frauds is inapplicable. But neither is such
party required to establish such partial performance
by documentary proof before he could have the opportunity to
introduce oral testimony on the transaction. Indeed, such oral testimony would
usually be unnecessary if there were documents proving partial performance.
Thus, the rejection of any and all testimonial evidence on partial performance,
would nullify the rule that the Statute of Frauds is inapplicable to contracts which
have been partly executed, and lead to the very evils that the statute seeks to
prevent.”
“When the party concerned has pleaded partial performance, such party
is entitled to a reasonable chance to establish by parol evidence the truth of this
allegation, as well as the contract itself. ‘The recognition of the exceptional
effect of part performance in taking an oral contract out of the statute of frauds
involves the principle that oral evidence is admissible in such cases to prove
both the contract and the part performance of the contract.’ (49 Am. Jur., 927.)”
Now, then, let us look at the contracts falling under the Statute of Frauds:
1. Art. 1403 -
“(2) x x x x x x x x x
(a) An agreement that by its terms is not to be performed within a year from
the making thereof;”
2. Art. 1403(2)(b) -
“(2) x x x x x x x x x
(b) A special promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of
another;”
3. Art. 1403(2)(c) -
“(2) x x x x x x x x x
(c) An agreement made in consideration of marriage, other than a mutual
promise to marry.”
The law has very wisely, and very compassionately, excluded from the rule of
writing a mutual promise to marry, because the universal experience of mankind
attests that mutual promises to marry are made in circumstances where neither
the promissor nor the promissee is in a position, or a mood, to write. Of course,
we are all aware that a mutual promise to marry—whether oral or in writing—is
not enforceable by specific performance, since that would be involuntary
servitude in its cruellest form. Damages, however, may, in certain cases, be
recoverable.
4. Art. 1403(2)(d) -
“(2) x x x x x x x x x
(d) An agreement for the sale of goods, chattels or things in action, at a price
not less than five hundred pesos, unless the buyer accept and receive part of
such goods and chattels, or the evidences, or some of them, of such things in
action, or pay at the time some part of the purchase money; but when a sale is
made by auction and entry is made by the auctioneer in his sales book, at the
time of the sale, of the amount and kind of property sold, terms of sale, price,
names of the purchasers and person on whose account the sale is made, it is
a sufficient memorandum;”
5. Art. 1403(2)(e) -
“(2) x x x x x x x x x
(e) An agreement for the leasing for a longer period than one year, or for the
sale of real property or of an interest therein;”
The amount involved in the sale of the realty is immaterial for the transaction to
fall under the Statute of Frauds.
The writing that is required for the sale of the real property, so that the
requirement of the Statute of Frauds is fulfilled, is, ordinarily, the written contract
of sale itself. But the sense of the statute is broad enough to include some note
or memorandum of the agreement. Thus, in City of Cebu v. Heirs of Rubi (306
SCRA 408[1999]), the requirement of writing was deemed met by the fact that,
although no deed of sale was ever formalized, there was an exchange of
correspondence between the parties in which the object and the price had been
agreed upon.
Not all agreements affecting realty fall under the Statute of Frauds. The statute
refers only to “sales of real property or of an interest therein.” Thus,
in Hernandez v. CA (160 SCRA 821 [1988]), the Court held:
1. Art. 1403(2)(f) –
“(2) x x x x x x x x x
(f) A representation as to the credit of a third person.”
Instead of par. (f), Art. 1443 should have been included in the enumeration:
“Art. 1409. The following contracts are inexistent and void from the beginning:
(1) Those whose cause, object or purpose is a contrary to law, morals, good
customs, public order or public policy;
(2) Those which are absolutely simulated or fictitious;
(3) Those whose cause or object did not exist at the time of the transaction;
(4) Those whose object is outside the commerce of men;
(5) Those which contemplate an impossible service;
(6) Those where the intention of the parties relative to the principal object of
the contract cannot be ascertained;
(7) Those expressly prohibited or declared void by law.
These contracts cannot be ratified. Neither can the right to set up the defense
of illegality be waived.”
A word on the pari delicto rule. The old maxim says: In pari delicto non
oritur actio,or Ex dolo malo, non oritur actio, or In pari delicto potior est condicio
defendentis. Basically the pari delicto rule mandates that in a void contract, if
both parties are at fault, neither can maintain an action for performance nor
recover what he has delivered. The law, in short, will leave the parties exactly
where they are.
The rationale of the pari delicto rule has been expressed as follows
“The principle of pari delicto is grounded on two premises — first that courts
should not lend their good offices to mediating disputes among wrongdoers;
second, that denying relief to an admitted wrongdoer is an effective means of
deterring illegality. This principle of ancient vintage is not a principle of justice
but one of policy as articulated in 1775 by Lord Mansfield…” (Acabal v. Acabal,
454 SCRA 555 [2005]).
Thus provide Arts. 1411, par. 1 and the first two paragraphs of 1412:
“Art. 1411. When the nullity proceeds from the illegality of the cause or object
of the contract, and the act constitutes a criminal offense, both parties being
in pari delicto, they shall have no action against each other, and both shall be
prosecuted. Moreover, the provisions of the Penal Code relative to the disposal
of effects or instruments of a crime shall be applicable to the things or the price
of the contract.”
“Art 1412. If the act in which the unlawful or forbidden cause consists does not
constitute a criminal offense, the following rules shall be observed:
(1) When the fault is on the part of both contracting parties, neither may
recover what he has given by virtue of the contract, or demand the performance
of the other’s undertaking;”
In Yu Bun Guan v. Ong (367 SCRA 559 [2001]), the Supreme Court
reiterated the settled doctrine that the pari delictorule applies to cases where
the nullity of the contract arises from the illegality of the object or cause
(Vide Modina v. CA, 317 SCRA 696 [1999]; Castro v. Escutin, 90 SCRA 349
[1979]). The statement in these cases that the pari delictorule does not apply to
void or inexistent contracts is, to put it kindly, less than accurate. There are
some void contracts to which it applies and others to which it does not. The
correct formulation of the rule is contained in Vasquez v. Porta (98 Phil. 490
[1956]):
Conclusion
The foregoing paper, almost purely expository in nature, is meant to give a basic
presentation of an aspect of Philippine contract law.
It may also provide a little window on how the private law of the
Philippines has acquired the blended character that it possesses:
predominantly civil (Roman) law, but marked by features of the common (Anglo-
American) law tradition.