ObliCon
ObliCon
(1093a)
CHAPTER 2
NATURE AND EFFECT OF OBLIGATIONS
Art. 1163. Every person obliged to give something
is also obliged to take care of it with the proper
diligence of a good father of a family, unless the
law or the stipulation of the parties requires another
standard of care. (1094a)
Art. 1164. The creditor has a right to the fruits of
the thing from the time the obligation to deliver it
arises. However, he shall acquire no real right over
it until the same has been delivered to him. (1095)
Art. 1165. When what is to be delivered is a
determinate thing, the creditor, in addition to the
right granted him by Article 1170, may compel the
debtor to make the delivery.
If the thing is indeterminate or generic, he may ask
that the obligation be complied with at the expense
of the debtor.
If the obligor delays, or has promised to deliver the
same thing to two or more persons who do not have
the same interest, he shall be responsible for any
fortuitous event until he has effected the delivery.
(1096)
Art. 1166. The obligation to give a determinate
thing includes that of delivering all its accessions
and accessories, even though they may not have
been mentioned. (1097a)
Art. 1167. If a person obliged to do something fails
to do it, the same shall be executed at his cost.
This same rule shall be observed if he does it in
contravention of the tenor of the obligation.
Furthermore, it may be decreed that what has been
poorly done be undone. (1098)
CHAPTER 3
DIFFERENT KINDS OF OBLIGATIONS
CHAPTER 4
EXTINGUISHMENT OF OBLIGATIONS
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 1231. Obligations are extinguished:
(1) By payment or performance:
(2) By the loss of the thing due:
(3) By the condonation or remission of the
debt;
(4) By the confusion or merger of the
rights of creditor and debtor;
(5) By compensation;
(6) By novation.
Other causes of extinguishment of obligations, such
as annulment, rescission, fulfillment of a resolutory
SECTION 5. - Compensation
SECTION 6. - Novation
Art. 1291. Obligations may be modified by:
CHAPTER 2
ESSENTIAL REQUISITES OF CONTRACTS
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 1318. There is no contract unless the following
requisites concur:
(1) Consent of the contracting parties;
(2) Object certain which is the subject
matter of the contract;
(3) Cause of the obligation which is
established. (1261)
SECTION 1. - Consent
Art. 1319. Consent is manifested by the meeting of
the offer and the acceptance upon the thing and the
cause which are to constitute the contract. The offer
must be certain and the acceptance absolute. A
qualified acceptance constitutes a counter-offer.
Acceptance made by letter or telegram does not
bind the offerer except from the time it came to his
knowledge. The contract, in such a case, is
presumed to have been entered into in the place
where the offer was made. (1262a)
Art. 1320. An acceptance may be express or
implied. (n)
Art. 1321. The person making the offer may fix the
time, place, and manner of acceptance, all of which
must be complied with. (n)
Art. 1322. An offer made through an agent is
accepted from the time acceptance is
communicated to him. (n)
Art. 1323. An offer becomes ineffective upon the
death, civil interdiction, insanity, or insolvency of
either party before acceptance is conveyed. (n)
Art. 1324. When the offerer has allowed the offeree
a certain period to accept, the offer may be
withdrawn at any time before acceptance by
communicating such withdrawal, except when the
option is founded upon a consideration, as
something paid or promised. (n)
Art. 1325. Unless it appears otherwise, business
advertisements of things for sale are not definite
offers, but mere invitations to make an offer. (n)
Art. 1326. Advertisements for bidders are simply
invitations to make proposals, and the advertiser is
not bound to accept the highest or lowest bidder,
unless the contrary appears. (n)
Art. 1327. The following cannot give consent to a
contract:
(1) Unemancipated minors;
(2) Insane or demented persons, and deafmutes who do not know how to write.
(1263a)
Art. 1328. Contracts entered into during a lucid
interval are valid. Contracts agreed to in a state of
drunkenness or during a hypnotic spell are
voidable. (n)
Art. 1329. The incapacity declared in Article 1327
is subject to the modifications determined by law,
and is understood to be without prejudice to special
disqualifications established in the laws. (1264)
Art. 1330. A contract where consent is given
through mistake, violence, intimidation, undue
influence, or fraud is voidable. (1265a)
Art. 1331. In order that mistake may invalidate
consent, it 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 contract.
CHAPTER 3
FORM OF CONTRACTS
CHAPTER 5
INTERPRETATION OF CONTRACTS
Art. 1370. If the terms of a contract are clear and
leave no doubt upon the intention of the contracting
parties, the literal meaning of its stipulations shall
control.
If the words appear to be contrary to the evident
intention of the parties, the latter shall prevail over
the former. (1281)
CHAPTER 6
RESCISSIBLE CONTRACTS
CHAPTER 7
VOIDABLE CONTRACTS
Art. 1390. The following contracts are voidable or
annullable, even though there may have been no
damage to the contracting parties:
(1) Those where one of the parties is
incapable of giving consent to a contract;
(2) Those where the consent is vitiated by
mistake, violence, intimidation, undue
influence or fraud.
These contracts are binding, unless they are
annulled by a proper action in court. They are
susceptible of ratification. (n)
Art. 1391. The action for annulment shall be
brought within four years.
This period shall begin:
In cases of intimidation, violence or undue
influence, from the time the defect of the
consent ceases.
In case of mistake or fraud, from the time
of the discovery of the same.
And when the action refers to contracts entered into
by minors or other incapacitated persons, from the
time the guardianship ceases. (1301a)
Art. 1392. Ratification extinguishes the action to
annul a voidable contract. (1309a)
Art. 1393. Ratification may be effected expressly or
tacitly. It is understood that there is a tacit
ratification if, with knowledge of the reason which
renders the contract voidable and such reason
having ceased, the person who has a right to invoke
CHAPTER 8
UNENFORCEABLE CONTRACTS (n)
CHAPTER 9
VOID AND INEXISTENT CONTRACTS
Art. 1409. The following contracts are inexistent
and void from the beginning: