Contracts Summary
Contracts Summary
Contracts Summary
CONTRACT
- A meeting of the minds between two persons whereby one binds
himself, with respect to the other, to give something or render some
service.
ESSENTIAL REQUISITES:
1) CONSENT
Must be free and voluntary consent; must be an intelligent
consent; must be given by a capacitated person
STAGES OF A CONTRACT
1) PREPARATION/CONCEPTION/NEGOTIATION
2) PERFECTION OR BIRTH
3) CONSUMMATION/DEATH/TERMINATION
4 TYPES
1) Do ut des/barter- I give that you give
2) Do ut facias- I give that you make
3) Facio ut des- I make that you give
4) Facio ut facias- I make that you make
Basic principle or Characteristics of a Contract:
1. Freedom (or liberty) to stipulate
2. Obligatory force and compliance in good faith
3. Perfection by mere consent/ Consensuality of Contract
4. Both parties are mutually bound/ Mutuality of Contracts
5. Relatively: binding between the parties only, their assigns and heirs.
VOID STIPULATIONS:
1. Pactum commissorium- Automatic appropriation by the creditor of the
thing pledged or mortgaged upon the failure of the debtor to pay the
principal obligation.
2. A stipulation in a mortgage contract providing for a specified price
(known as tipo or upset price) below which the mortgaged property is
not supposed to be sold at the foreclosure sale is void for being
contrary to law
3. An agreement to pay an unconscionable rate of interest is void for
being contrary to morals
- The central bank fixed the maximum nominal interest rate at 6
percent per month, or about 0.2 percent per day, and the effective
interest rate (EIR) at 15 percent per month, or about 0.5 percent per
day for covered loans which are unsecured, general purpose loans that
do not exceed the amount of P10,000 and with a loan tenor of up to
four months. SEC IMPLEMENTS INTEREST RATE CAP ON LOANS
OFFERED BY LENDING, FINANCING COMPANIES, THEIR ONLINE
LENDING PLATFORMS on 1 March 2022
4. An agreement by the debtor to work without pay until he could find
money to pay the debt is void for being contrary to morals as this
amounts to involuntary servitude
5. An agreement to hide a crime, to suppress evidence and to stifle the
prosecution of the offender is void for being contrary to public policy
4. Mutuality of Contracts
The contract must bind both parties; its validity or compliance should
not be left to the will of one of them.
5. Relativity of Contracts
As a rule, the following are bound by Contracts
a. Contracting parties;
b. Their assigns; and
c. Their Heirs.
Example:
D obtained a loan from C amounting to P100,000.00. The parties agreed
that the loan shall bear an interest of 1% per month to be paid by D to X
until the principal is paid in full. The stipulation for the payment of interest
to X who is not a party to the contract is a stipulation pour atrui. X can sue
on the contract although he is not a party if he does not receive the interest.
b. When the third person induces another to violate his contract (Art 1314)
c. In contract creating real rights, third persons who come into possession of
the object of the contract are bound thereby, subject to the provisions of the
Mortgage Law and the Land Registry Laws.
NOTES:
1) Contracts w/o cause, or with unlawful cause, produce no effect.
2) There is a disputable presumption of law that a contract is presumed
to have an existing and lawful consideration, the debtor has the
burden to prove that there is no consideration.
3) Lesion or inadequacy of cause shall not invalidate the contract, unless
there has been fraud and mistake or undue influence.
REQUISITES
1) The contracting parties have already a meeting of the minds as to:
a) The object
b) Consideration
c) Terms and conditions
2) True intention of the parties is not expressed in the contract as written
3) Failure to express the true intention due to mistake, fraud, inequitable
conduct, or accident
Reformation is also proper in the following cases:
1) When mutual mistake of the parties causes the failure of the
instrument to disclose their real agreement
2) Contract does not express true intent, one acted through mistake
made in good faith, while the other party
a) Acted fraudulently
b) Knowledgeable that the contract does not express true agreement
but concealed the same.
The party in good faith may ask for reformation.
RESCISSION
-remedy granted by law to contracting parties and even to 3rd persons, to
secure the reparation of damages caused to them by the contract, even if
the same should be valid, by the means of the restoration of things to the
condition prior to the celebration of the contract.
NOTES:
1) Requisites for rescissible payment
a) The debtor must be in a state of insolvency at the time of his
payment
b) The debt he paid is not yet due and demandable
2) The creditor must exhaust first all available legal remedies before he
can file action for rescission. Rescission is a subsidiary remedy only.
3) Rescission is the remedy to secure reparation of damages caused by
the contract by:
a) Restoring things to their former status or condition before the
contract, and
b) Returning to each other what each has received under the contract,
plus fruits and interest.
4) Prescriptive period
a) w/n 4 years from celebration of the contract
b) in guardianship, w/n 4 years from the time guardianship ceases
c) in absentee, w/n 4 years from the date the absentee re-appears or
when his domicile becomes known again.
The party whose consent is vitiated may have the following alternative
remedies
a) annulment, or
b) ratify
NOTES:
1) Prescriptive period for annulment
a) w/n 4 years, period shall begin:
i) Intimidation, undue influence, or violence- starts from the
time the defect ceases
ii) Mistake or fraud- time of discovery
iii) Unemancipated minors- from the time the minor reaches age
of majority(generally at the age of 18 but for contracting
marriage age of majority is 21, parents and guardians are
liable for quasi-delicts of persons who are already 18 until he
reaches 21)
iv) Incapacitated persons-when guardianship ceases
2) Ratification cleanses the contract of all of its defect, once ratified it
cannot be annulled anymore.
3) Ratification may be effected:
i) Expressly- written/oral
ii) Tacitly/implied-the person who has right to annul performs an
act w/c tends to imply that he has chosen to waive his right to
annul.
4) Ratification may be effected by the guardian of the incapacitated
person.
5) Ratification does not require the conformity of the contracting party
who has no right for annulment.
6) Who may file annulment?
a) Party whose consent is vitiated
b) Subsidiary party-parents, successors in interest or assigns
7) After annulment parties should return to each other what they have
received.
8) In case of incapacitated person whose consent is vitiated- he is
required to return only what has been beneficial to him.
9) What if after annulment the object cannot be returned because it was
lost through the fault of the person who should return the object? He
shall return:
a) Fruits of the things plus
b) Value of the thing at the time of loss, with interest.
10) If the person who has right for annulment lost the object
through his fault, he losses right for annulment. But if lost through
fortuitous event and incapacity of the other is the reason for voidability
then, the incapacitated person may still ask for annulment.
Lesson 7 Unenforceable Contracts
-cannot be enforced in court unless ratified
KINDS:
1) Contract entered into by one person for and on behalf of another, w/o
the latter’s consent and authority or the former acts beyond the scope
of the authority given to him. (Contract of Agency)
2) Contract which do not comply with Statute of Frauds
3) Contract entered into by 2 incapacitated persons
NOTES:
1) if the parent, or legal guardian of one of the incapacitated parties
ratifies, effect-voidable. If ratified by both parents/guardian, effect-
valid and enforceable.
2) Unenforceable contracts cannot be assailed or contested by 3rd persons
who are total strangers to the unenforceable contract.
3) Only applicable to Executory Contracts.
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