Balane in His Commentary Adds The Additional Elements of Causa Debendi and
Balane in His Commentary Adds The Additional Elements of Causa Debendi and
Balane in His Commentary Adds The Additional Elements of Causa Debendi and
Article 1156 defines the meaning of an obligation. According to this, an obligation is a juridical
necessity to give, to do, or not to do
o The term juridical necessity is an important term in this definition. The term “juridical
necessity,” that obligations may be enforced through the filing of an action in the court.
o However, the obligation contemplated in Article 1156 is rather limited. It merely
contemplates civil obligations which are to be distinguished from natural and moral
obligations.
o Obligation originates from the latin word “ligare.” Which means to tie or to bound. In
other words, an obligation is an act where one ties or bounds himself to another in
order to bequeath or perform something that is agreed upon.
o The law provides that a valid obligation must have 3 elements
Subject
Active Subject: It pertains to the creditor who has the right to enforce
the obligation via courts
Passive Subject: It pertains to the debtor who merely performs
Prestation: Pertains not to the “thing” but on the manner of how the obligation
is to be performed.
The “thing” is called the object of the prestation.
An additional qualifier to the element of prestation is that it must be
valid. To be valid, a prestation must be
o Licit;
o possible;
o determinable; and
o a pecuniary value so that in the case of non-performance, the
prestation may be converted to damages
Juridical Tie/ Vinculum Juris: The cause which compels the debtor to perform
Balane in his commentary adds the additional elements of causa debendi and
form
Article 1157 defines the sources of an obligation namely:
o Law:
According to Balane, the law is the ultimate and proximate source of obligations
Examples of obligations arising from law is the obligation to pay taxes as per the
National Internal Revenue Code
Under Article 1158, obligations arising from law must be explicit not presumed
o Contracts:
By stipulation of the parties
However, for a contract to be a valid source of obligation, it must be licit.
Otherwise, it is void.
Under Article 1159, obligations arising from contracts is the force of law
between the parties and must be complied with good faith.
There are two components under 1159 namely: the force of law (jus
civili) and that compliance is done in good faith (jus gentium)
o Quasi-contracts
Based on the legal maxim of “no man shall unjustly enrich himself over the
expense of the other.
There are two types of Quasi-contracts namely:
Solution Indebitii: Pertains to payment by mistake
Negotorium Gestio: Otherwise known as the case of the officious
manager where there was an obligation to preserve a property
unattended
Finder of property lost
o Acts and omissions punishable by law: Based on Article 100 of the RPC where a person
that is criminally liable is personally liable.
[QUESTION] Will an obligation still exist upon the death of the person held liable
under criminal law?
General rule: Obligation disappears upon the death of the person.
o Exception: if there is negligence present, Obligation will arise
from quasi-delict (LG Foods Corp. vs. Hon. Agraviador)
o Quasi-delicts: Arising from negligence
o Under jurisprudence, it must be noted that no other obligation may arise outside the 5
sources enumerated under Article 1157. (OSG vs. Ayala?)
Chapter 2
Articles 1163, 1164 and 1166 cover the accessory obligations associated with the prestation to
give. These accessory obligations are:
o Due Diligence
The preservation of the thing that is bound to be given based on a standard to
be stipulated by the parties.
Default standard to be followed: Diligence of a good father to his family.
o A lesser or more stringent standard of due diligence may be
provided by stipulation of contract or by law.
The default standard of diligence of a good father to his family is relative
based on the thing bound to be given. It will depend on
o Nature of the Obligation
o Nature of the Circumstance
Person
Time
Place
o Delivery of Fruits
Only applies to the fruits produces when the delivery of the principal arises.
According to Balane, the creditor has a personal right over the fruits
produced when the obligation arises but it only becomes a real one (i.e.
enforceable) when the delivery of the principal thing is perfected (i.e.
transfer of ownership).
o Delivery of Accessories and Accessions
There is a difference between accessions and accessories
Accessions are those that when removed shall damage the principal
(see DLSU bar lecture; Balane has a different take on it where there is
no much difference))
Accessories are merely attachments that are decorative that can be
removed without damaging the principal.
Remedies in the case of non-performance (Articles 1165, 1167 & 1168)
o Under the prestation of the delivery of a determinate thing:
Specific performance + damages or;
Rescission + damages
Equivalent performance may Also be resorted upon agreement by parties
o Under the prestation of delivering a generic thing:
Specific performance + damages;
Rescission + damages
Substitution + damages
o Under the prestation of doing
Substituted performance + expense to the debtor
Rescission + damages
Specific performance (unless it is a personal obligation)
o Under the prestation of not to do
Undoing of the act performed + damages
If irreversible payment of damages
Articles 1169-1174: Irregularities in Obligation
o 2 types
Attributable to the debtor
Fraud
Negligence
Delay
Non-Attributable to the debtor
Caso Fortuito
Fuerza Mayor
NOTE: Both are commonly bunched together as fortuitous events
o Article 1169 discusses delay. General rule under delay is that it is not incurred unless the
creditor demands except for the following conditions:
When provided by law
When stipulated by contracts
If the controlling factor of the obligation is the time
If demand is useless, when the obligor has rendered it beyond his power to
perform.
o In reciprocal obligations, Article 1169 provides that delay begins when one of the parties
fulfill his part of the obligation.
Rationale: because reciprocal obligations generally require simultaneous
fulfilment
Unless stipulated by the parties. If there is a lapse agreed upon on the
fulfillment of reciprocal obligations, then demand is required for the
other party to incur delay.
o Unless there is a stipulation providing that a demand is not
necessary.
o Article 1170 states that those who in the performance of their obligation are guilty of
fraud, negligence or delay, and those who in any manner contravene the tenor thereof,
are liable for damages
General rule is failure on the fulfillment of obligations results to a liability for
damages.
Term “in any manner which contravenes the tenor thereof “ is a catch-all phrase
that describes any illicit task w/c impairs the strict and faithful fulfillment of the
obligation, or every kind of defective performance that is covered under fraud,
negligence or delay.
o Fraud under the contemplation of Article 1170 is different from Fraud described in
Article 1380. To which fraud in the former refers to a willful voidance of the fulfillment
of obligations while the latter describes vitiated consent between the parties which
render an obligation void.
Responsibility arising from fraud are demandable in all obligations. Any waiver
on fraud shall be void. (1171)
o Remedies for fraud as contemplated under Article 1170 are
Specific/Substituted performance (Article 1233)
Rescission or Resolution
Damages in either cases
o Negligence in its simplest term is the lack of due diligence (1173)
Like fraud, responsibility arising from negligence is demandable in every
obligation. However, the extent of liability shall be determined by the courts
(Art 1172).
The added element of bad faith in negligence would turn the negligence to
fraud under Art. 1171
There are two types of negligence
Simple: If a person fails to take the reasonable precautions that any
prudent person would take and their actions cause someone else harm,
their actions could be considered negligent.
Gross: extreme indifference to or reckless disregard for the safety of
others. Gross negligence is more than simple carelessness or failure to
act.
Remedy for negligence include
Specific or substituted performance
Rescission or resolution
Damages in both cases
o Delay/Mora: pertains to the non-fulfillment of obligation with regards to time.
Requisites of Delay:
Obligation is demandable and liquidated
Delay is through fault or negligence
Creditor requires performance either judicially or extrajudicially
The law provides 3 types of Mora:
Mora accepiendi: Delay on the creditor
o Mainly related to payment
o Requisites:
An offer of performance by the debtor
Offer must comply with the prestation as it should be
performed
Creditor refuses performance without just cause
o EFFECT of Mora Accepiendi
Responsibility of debtor for the thing is limited to fraud
and gross negligence
Debtor is exempted to the risk of loss which is already
passed to the creditor
Expenses made by the debtor to preserve the thing
after the delay shall be chargeable to the debtor
If obligation has interest, the debtor is not obliged to
pay such from the start of the delay
Creditor becomes liable for damages
Debtor may relieve himself by consignation of the thing.
Mora Solviendi: Delay on the debtor
o Requisites:
Obligation is demandable and liquidated
Delay is by fraud or negligence
There is a judicial or extrajudicial demand to perform
o GENERAL RULE: No demand, no delay (unless the obligation falls
under the exceptions listed in 1169)
o EFFECT of Mora Solviendi:
Specific performance
Resolution/Rescission
Damages in both cases despite the existence of the
fortuitous event
Compensatio Morae: Delay on both parties
o Effect: No liability, cancels each other out.
Article 1174: Fortuitous events
o GENERAL: RULE: When there is a fortuitous event, debtor is exempted from liability
EXCEPTION:
When debtor is in delay
When there is a stipulation to the contrary
When there is an express provision of law to the contrary
When there is an assumption of risk
o REQUISITES:
Cause of the failure to comply with the obligation is independent of the human
will
It must be impossible to foresee the event which constitute the fortuitous
event, or if it is foreseeable, it is impossible to avoid
Occurrence of such event renders the obligation impossible to fulfill the
obligation in a normal manner
Obligor must be free from any participation in the aggravation of injury resulting
to the creditor
Article 1175:
o Usurious transactions shall be governed by special laws
o Usurious transactions: Transactions with exceedingly high interests
o This law is considered as a dead law. BP circular no. 905 removes ceilings on interests
rendering usury not punishable by law
o However, any interest entered by contracts should not be unconscionable or exorbitant
(Liam Law vs. Olympic Sawmill)
Article 1176:
o Under this article, there are two presumptions:
Interest bearing debt: receipt of the principal shall raise the presumption that
the interests has been paid
Payment by installments: Payment of a latter installment shall give rise to the
presumption that older installments has been paid.
o Being mere presumption, they are rebuttable. The mistake must be proven.
Article 1177: Remedy of Creditors to satisfy payment of debts
o Under the abovementioned provision there are three regular remedies
Levy and Execution
Encumbrance of debtor’s nonexempt properties (examples: implement
for practice of livelihood, family home, Necessary clothing, Benefits
from life insurance, pension, properties exempted by law, etc)
Accion Subrogatoria (Accion Directa for Art. 1652 and 1729 only)
The debtor of my debtor is my debtor
Requisites:
o A debt due is not intuitu personae
o Willful refusal of the suing creditor’s debtor to collect
o Insufficiency of the debtor’s assets to satisfy debt
In a Suburgatory action, the creditor will sue his debtor’s debtor for
collection on behalf of the creditor’s debtor.
o Recovery will be full but that which is in excess of the debt shall
be returned to the creditor’s debtor.
Accion Pauliana
The setting aside of transfers of property by their debtors which
defrauds them by preventing them from obtaining full satisfaction for
their credits.
Requisites:
o There is a credit in favor of the plaintiff
o The debtor has performed an act subsequent to the contract,
giving advantage to other persons.
o The creditor has no other legal remedy.
o The debtor’s acts are fraudulent.
o Third person who has received the property if onerous has been
an accomplice in the fraud.
Explanation of requisites:
o On the first: Credit prior to alienation is necessary unless credit
is subject to the condition to which it must comply with the
provisions under Article 1187
There is a retroactive effect to the date when the credit
is constituted
o On the second: The conveyance of property decreases the
patrimony of the debtor and increases that of the third party.
o On the third: Accion pauliana is the last recourse for the
creditor (first being levy and execution, second being accion
subrogatoria and last being accion pauliana. Connect with Art.
1383
o On the fourth: Fraud is always presumed both in the instances
of gratuitous and onerous ones.
If presumption has been overcome, prosecution may
rely on the badges of fraud
Fictitious transfers
Transfer while the suit is pending
Sale upon credit by an insolvent debtor
Evidence of large indebtedness
Transfer of nearly all of his property when he is
insolvent
Transfers between father and son where other
of the above circumstances are present
Failure of the vendee to take exclusive
possession of property.
o On the fifth: because a third party in good faith in an onerous
transaction should not be condemned.
If gratuitous transfer, third party shall be compelled to
return property regardless of good or bad faith.
Accion pauliana’s extent covers what is necessary to cover the damage
(1384)
Article 1178: All rights acquired in virtue of an obligation are transmissible if there has been no
stipulation to the contrary
o EXCEPTIONS:
Personal obligations
Obligations with stipulations to the contrary
Kinds of Obligations:
Classification:
o Section 1: According to time, certainty, and demandability (1179-1198)
Pure
Conditional
With a term of period
o Section 2: According to the manner of choosing prestations (1199-1206)
Alternative
Facultative
o Section 3: According to the plurality of subjects (1207-1222)
Joint
Solidary
o Section 4: According to the manner of performance (1223-1225)
Divisible
Indivisible
o Section 5: According to sanction for breach (12226-1230)
With a penal clause
Without a penal clause
Section 1: Pure and conditional Obligations
o Article 1179: What is a Conditional Obligation?
A conditional obligation is that whose performance is dependent on a future
and uncertain event
Otherwise, it is demandable at once thus being a pure obligation
If the performance of an obligation is that which is dependent on a
future or certain event, it is on with a period
An obligation which is not future and uncertain is an impossibility
o However, an obligation whose existence is dependent on a
future learning of an uncertain event that is in the past is valid.
There are two types of conditional obligations
Resolutory: Obligation becomes demandable at once upon the
constitution of the obligation. However, upon the happening of the
condition, what is given to the creditor shall be returned or the act
performed be ceased.
Suspensive: An obligation where the performance of the prestation will
only arise upon the happening of the condition.
o Article 1180: An obligation where the debtor binds himself to pay a debt when his
means permits him to do so shall be deemed one with a period, subject to the
provisions of Article 1197.
Under 1197, the period shall be fixed by the courts based on what was intended
or what has been contemplated by the parties.
This article is an exception to the prohibition against potestative obligations
based on the will of the debtor under art 1182.
Balane also states that his provision should be in the section on obligations with
a period instead of being in this section.
o Article 1181: In conditional obligations, the acquisition and extinguishment of rights
shall depend on the happening of a condition
o Article 1182: Potestative suspensive obligations where the fulfillment of the condition is
dependent of the will of the debtor shall be void.
REASONING: Because the obligation does not have vinculum juris or a binding
force. It renders the obligation illusory.
Under this article, there are three classifications of a conditional obligation
based on who is the condition’s fulfillment dependent upon:
Potestative: Based on the will of one of the parties
o Based on the will of the debtor: VOID
Exception is if the obligation has a resolutory condition
Casual: Based on the will of a third person
Mixed: Based partly on the will of one of the parties and partly the will
of the third person.
o Article 1183: Impossible suspensive conditional obligations
Impossible conditions are those contrary to
Good customs
Public policy
Law
EFFECT: Obligation dependent upon the impossible condition shall be annulled
If the obligation is divisible, that part thereof that is not affected by the
impossible obligation shall remain valid
Conditions not to do an impossible thing shall be considered as not
having been agreed upon.
o Unless it is a condition not to do an impossible illegal thing
Provision talks about original impossibility, where the conditions was deemed
impossible to fulfill upon the creation of the obligation
If impossibility is supervening, Article 1262 and 1266 shall apply
(obligation is extinguished if impossibility happened prior to the
incurrence of a delay)
A gratuitous donation coupled with an impossible condition will not render the
obligation void. It converts the donation to a pure obligation instead. (Arts. 727
and 873)
o Art. 1184 & 1185: suspensive condition based on the happening or not happening of an
event at a determinate time.
Effect (1184): obligation is annulled instead of extinguished (because obligation
is not extinguished. Obligation is merely prevented from arising)
If no time has been fixed, par. 2 of 1185 shall apply where condition
should be fulfilled at the time that may have been contemplated
bearing in mind the nature of the obligation.
If condition is resolutory, it will simply make the right arising from the
obligation to be absolute.
Effect (1185): Obligation becomes effective upon the moment that a condition
does not happen in a determinate time or if it has become evident that the
event cannot occur
If resolutory: the non-happening of the condition shall extinguish the
obligation.
o Article 1186: Constructive fulfillment
The condition shall be deemed fulfilled when the obligor voluntarily prevents its
fulfillment.
Requisites:
Condition must either be potestative or mixed (though it may be argued
that casual conditions may apply as well)
Intent on the part of the obligor is to prevent compliance. Malice is not
necessary so long as it is voluntary
Actual Prevention of compliance.
Not applicable on conditions dependent upon chance
o Article 1187: Retroactive effect of suspensive conditions on obligations to give:
Once the condition has been fulfilled, obligation shall retroact to the day of the
constitution of the obligation.
When the obligation involves reciprocal prestation, fruits and interests shall be
deemed mutually compensated.
If obligation is unilateral, the debtor shall appropriate the fruits and interests
received unless the nature of the obligation should infer the contrary.
On obligations to do, retroactive effect shall be determined by the courts.
In Philippine laws, retroactivity in conditional obligations is implied. In other
laws however, i.e. Germany, retroactivity must be stipulated.
o Article 1188: Rights of Creditor and Debtor in conditional obligations
Creditor: may bring the appropriate actions for the preservation of his right
before the fulfillment of the obligation
Bring the appropriate action is misleading as it implies that the
creditor’s remedy is limited to judicial actions only. However, this is not
the case. Creditor has both judicial and extrajudicial (i.e. annotation)
remedies to preserve his right. “Take the appropriate action” is more
accurate in this sense.
The right is granted to him in order for the obligation not to be rendered
illusory
Debtor: May recover what during the same time was made by mistake
Requisites for recovery
o Payment was made by mistake
o Demand is made before the happening of the condition
If creditor acted in good faith upon the receipt of the mistaken payment
o His liability is limited to the extent he has benefited
o Still applies even if the debtor is aware that he made the
payment by mistake
If creditor acted in bad faith upon receipt of the mistaken payment
o Liable for interests and damages
o This connotes that the debtor is unaware that he gave
payments before the fulfillment of the obligation and the
creditor is aware of the mistake.
If both parties are aware of the payment being made before the
fulfillment of the condition
o Remedy of the debtor is deemed waived
If demand was made before the happening of the condition and the
condition happened before the creditor can act upon the debtor’s
demand:
o Fruits in interests that was produced prior to the happening of
the obligation shall be returned in virtue of Art. 1187
o Article 1189: In conditions suspending the efficacy of the obligation to give, the
following rules shall be applied in case of improvement, loss or deterioration:
If the thing is lost without the fault of the debtor obligation is extinguished
If the thing is lost thorough the fault of the debtor Debtor is obliged to pay
for damages
What is loss in the realm of obligations: not merely physical loss. Loss
contemplated in obligations include
o The perishing of the thing
o The thing going out of commerce
o Thing disappears in a way where its existence is unknown or the
thing cannot be recovered
In both the first and second situation, if there is partial loss, Article
1264 shall apply where the courts shall determine if the partial loss is so
important to the obligation as to merit extinguishment.
Under 1265, loss of the thing lays the presumption of negligence or fault
on the part of the debtor. Unless in the case of fortuitous events (i.e.,
earthquake, flood, storm, or other natural calamities
When the thing deteriorates without the fault of the debtor impairment is to
be borne by the creditor
When the thing deteriorates with the fault of the debtor
Two options
o Rescission
For resolution or rescission to be valid, deterioration
must be substantial. A slight deterioration shall not be a
reasonable ground for rescission.
o Fulfillment
o With liability to damages on the part of the debtor in either case
If the thing is improved
By nature: improvement is redounded to the benefit of the creditor
o Contemplates improvements that does not constitute as fruits.
If they are fruits, Art. 1187 shall apply
By the debtor: rule on usufructuary shall apply (removal of the
improvement provided that it does not damage the property)
o If removal of the improvement becomes impossible, value of
improvement may be set off with damages (Art. 580)
o Article 1190: Extinguishment of an obligation under resolutory conditions.
Effect of the happening of the condition:
The parties have to return what each has received
In the case of loss, deterioration, or improvement of the thing, Article 1189 shall
apply.
As for obligations to do or not to do 2nd paragraph of 1187 shall apply as to the
regards of the extinguishment of the obligation
Courts shall determine the effect of the happening of the resolutory
condition on the obligation
On fruits,
According to Manresa, as the extinguishment is an absolute one, and
upon the happening of the condition is deems the obligation to have
been non-existent, fruits must also be returned as well.
o But that begs the question: what happens if the fruits are
perishable?
o I guess if that is the case, the parties must have intended that
the fruits not be returned. As they cannot expect that such
fruits which are perishable in nature can be given back upon the
happening of the obligation.
o Article 1191: Power to rescind in reciprocal obligations is an implied in reciprocal ones in
case one of the obligors should not comply with what is incumbent upon him.
The injured party may choose between rescission and fulfillment with the
payment for damages in either case
He may also seek rescission, even after he has chosen fulfillment, if the
latter becomes impossible
The court shall decree rescission claimed unless there be just cause authorizing
the fixing of a period
This is understood to be without prejudice to third persons who have acquired
the thing.
Ratio behind the article: A breach in a reciprocal obligation serves as a tacit
resolutory condition.
This article talks about the right to “resolve” not to “rescind”
Difference: Resolution is predicated on a breach of contract. Rescission
in Article 1380-`389b is based on economic damage or injury
o Resolution id s principal and retaliatory remedy. While
rescission is subsidiary in character.
To resolve, breach must be substantial and not a casual one
The breach must be so substantial and fundamental as to defeat the
object of the parties entering the agreement.
Resolution nay be done extrajudicially but the party who resorted to
such remedy must proceed at his own risk
o Article 1192: Bilateral Breach
In case both parties have committed a breach in their obligation
The liability of the first infractor shall be tempered by the courts/ If it
cannot be determined which of the parties violated the contract, the
same shall be extinguished and each shall bear his own damage.
Extinguishment of Obligations