Sales: San Beda College of Law
Sales: San Beda College of Law
Sales: San Beda College of Law
MEMORY AID
IN
CIVIL LAW
SALES
SALE
A nominate contract whereby one of
the contracting parties obligates
himself to transfer the ownership of
and to deliver a determinate thing
and the other to pay therefor a price
certain in money or its equivalent.
Characteristics:
1. Principal
2. Consensual;
3. Bilateral;
4. Nominate;
Contract to
Sell
1. Ownership is
reserved in the
seller and is not to
pass
until
full
payment of the
MEMORY AID
2. Non-payment of
the
price
is
a
negative
resolutory
condition and the
remedy of the seller
is to exact fulfilment
or to rescind the
contract
Conditional Sale
CIVIL LAW
purchase price
2. Full payment is a
positive suspensive
condition,
the
1.
Constructive
/actual knowledge on
the part of the 2nd
buyer of the defect in
the
sellers
title
renders him not a
registrant in good
faith.
Such second
buyer cannot defeat
the first buyers title.
Ratio: Fulfilment of
the
suspensive
conditions affects the
sellers title to the
property and previous
delivery
of
the
property
automatically
transfers
ownership/title to the
buyer.
failure of which is
not a breach
casual or serious
but
simply
prevents
the
obligation of the
vendor to convey
title from having
binding force
3. Title remains in
the vendor if the
vendee does not
comply with the
condition
precedent
of
making payment
at
the
time
specified in the
contract
Contract to
Sell
IN
1. Third person
buying
the
property despite
fulfilment of the
suspensive
condition cannot
be deemed a
buyer in bad
faith
and
prospective
buyer
cannot
seek the relief of
reconveyance of
property.
Exception:
If
There was no
previous sale of
the property.
OBJECTS OF SALE
Requisites:
1. THINGS:
a) determinate or determinable
(Arts. 1458, 1460)
b) lawful (Arts 1347, 1409 [1,4]
c) should not be impossible (Art.
1348) e.g. must be within the
commerce of man
2. RIGHTS must be transmissible
Exceptions:
-future inheritance
- service
2.
Emptio rei
speratae
Emptio spei
1. Sale of an expected
thing
1. Sale of a mere
hope
or
expectancy
that
the thing will come
to existence; Sale
of the hope itself
2. Sale produces
effect even if the
thing does not
come
into
existence, unless it
is a vain hope
3. The uncertainty
is with regard to
the existence of
the thing
4. Object is a
present
thing
which is the hope
MEMORY AID
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CIVIL LAW
or expectancy
Sale
Agency to sell
1. Buyer receives
the goods as owner
1. Agent receives
the goods as goods
of the principal who
retains
his
ownership
over
them
2. Agent delivers
the price which in
turn he got from
his buyer
3. Agent can return
the goods in case he
is unable to sell the
same to a third
person
4. Agent makes no
warranty for which
he assumes personal
liability as long as
he acts within his
authority and in the
name of the seller
5. Agent in dealing
with
the
thing
received, must act
and
is
bound
according to the
instructions of the
principal
Contract for
Piece of Work
1.
The
thing
transferred is one
not in existence and
which never would
have existed but for
the order of the
party desiring to
acquire it
2.
The
services
dominate
the
contract
even
though there is a
sale
of
goods
involved
Sale
1.
The
thing
transferred is one
which would have
existed and would
have
been
the
subject of sale to
some other person,
even if the order
had not been given
2.
The
primary
objective of the
contract is a sale of
the manufactured
item; it is a sale of
goods even though
the
item
is
manufactured
by
labor furnished by
the seller and upon
previous order of
the customer
3.
Within
the
Statute of Frauds
MEMORY AID
Rules to determine if the contract is
one of Sale or Piece of work:
a. If ordered in the ordinary course of
business sale
a. If manufactured specially for the
customer and upon his special order,
and not for the market piece of
work
SCHOOLS OF THOUGHT:
a) Massachusetts
rule:
If
specifically done at the order of
another, this is a contract for a
piece of work. (Philippine
application)
b) New York rule: If thing already
exists-SALE; if not-WORK
c) English rule: If material is more
valuable-SALE; if skill is more
valuable-WORK
BARTER
contract whereby one of the parties
binds himself to give one thing in
consideration of the other's promise
to give another thing.
NOTE:
The only point difference
between contract of sale and barter is in
the element which is present in sale but
not in barter, namely: price certain in
money or its equivalent
NOTE: If the consideration is partly in
money and partly in another thing,
determine:
a. The manifest intention of the
parties
b. If the intent is not clear, apply
the following rules:
1. If the thing is more valuable
than money barter
2. If the money and the thing
are of equal value sale
3. If the thing is less valuable
than money sale
Sale
Dation in Payment
No pre-existing
credit
2. Obligations are
created
3. Consideration on
the part of the seller
is the price; on the
part of the buyer is
1. Pre-existing credit
1.
2. Obligations are
extinguished
3. Consideration of
the debtor is the
extinguishment
of
the debt; on the
the acquisition
the object
4.
5.
of
Greater
freedom
in
determining the
price
Buyer still has
to pay the price
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CIVIL LAW
The payment is
received by the
debtor
before
the contract is
perfected.
PRICE
The sum stipulated as the equivalent
of the thing sold and also every
incident taken into consideration for
the fixing of the price, put to the
debit of the vendee and agreed to by
him.
Requisites:
1. Certainty or ascertainable at the
time of perfection
2. Real, not fictitious
3. In some cases, must not be
grossly inferior to the value of
the thing sold.
4. Paid in money or its equivalent
Certainty
It is not necessary that the certainty
of the price be actual or determined
at the time of the execution of the
contract. The price is certain in the
following cases:
1. If the parties have fixed or
agreed upon a definite amount;
NOTE: The fixing of the price can
never be left to the discretion of one
of the contracting parties. However
if the price fixed by one of the
parties is accepted by the other, the
sale is perfected.
2. If it be certain with reference to
another thing certain
3. If the determination of the price
is left to the judgment of a
specified person or persons even
before such determination
4. In the cases provided under Art.
1472 NCC
MEMORY AID
Effect when the price is fixed by the
third person designated:
GENERAL RULE: Price fixed by a third
person designated by the parties is
binding upon them.
EXCEPTIONS:
1. When the third person acts in
bad faith or by mistake
2. When the third person disregards
the specific instructions or the
procedure marked out by the
parties
Effect when the price is not fixed by
the third person designated:
1. If the third person refuses or
cannot fix the price, the
contract
shall
become
ineffective, unless the parties
subsequently agree upon the
price
2. If the third person is prevented
from fixing the price by the fault
of the seller or buyer, the party
not in fault may obtain redress
against the party in fault
Effect of Gross Inadequacy of Price:
1. Voluntary sales
GENERAL RULE: Mere inadequacy of
the price does not affect validity of the
sale.
A valuable consideration, however
small or nominal, if given or
stipulated in good faith is, in the
absence
of
fraud,
sufficient.
(Rodriguez vs. CA, 207 SCRA 553)
Future inheritance cannot be sold.
EXCEPTIONS:
a. Where low price indicates vice of
consent, sale may be annulled;
or contract is presumed to be an
equitable mortgage
a. Where the price is so low as to
be shocking to conscience,
sale may be set aside.
2. Involuntary or Forced sales
GENERAL RULE: Mere inadequacy of
the price is not a sufficient ground for
the cancellation of the sale if property is
real.
EXCEPTIONS:
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CIVIL LAW
MEMORY AID
where the partied themselves stipulate
that in addition to the subject-matter
and the price, they are essential or
material to the contract.
Requirements for perfection
a. When parties are face to face
When an offer is accepted without
conditions or qualifications
NOTES:
A conditional acceptance is a
counter-offer
when negotiated thru phone it is
as if it is negotiated face to face
b. When
contract
is
thru
correspondence or thru telegram
When the offeror receives or has
knowledge of the acceptance by the
offeree
NOTE: If the buyer has already
accepted but the seller does not
know yet of the acceptance, the
seller may still withdraw
c. When a sale is subject to a
suspensive condition
From the moment the condition is
fulfilled
TRANSFER OF OWNERSHIP
GENERAL RULE: While a contract of
sale is consensual, ownership of the
thing sold is acquired only upon its
delivery, actual or constructive, to the
buyer. (Daus vs. Sps. De Leon, 16 June
2003)
This is true even if the purchase
has been made on credit.
Payment of the purchase price is
not essential to the transfer of
ownership, as long as the
property
sold
has
been
delivered. (Sampaguita Pictures,
Inc vs. Jalwindor Manufacturers,
Inc. 93 SCRA 420)
Nonpayment only creates a right
to demand payment or to rescind
the contract, or to criminal
prosecution in the case of
bouncing
checks.
(EDCA
Publishing
and
Distributing
Corp. vs. Santos, 184 SCRA 614)
EXCEPTIONS:
1. Contrary stipulation
reservati
dominii
or Pactum
(contractual
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MEMORY AID
from the price (option money), its
acceptance will give rise to a
perfected contract.
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CIVIL LAW
MEMORY AID
a)
Option money
1. Title passes to
the buyer upon
delivery of the
thing sold
1.
Ownership
is
reserved
to
the
seller and is not to
pass
until
full
payment
2.
In case of
non-payment, there
can be action for
specific
performance
2.
In case of
non-payment, an
action for specific
performance
or
for rescission can
be filed by the
injured party
3. Part of the
purchase price
4. When given,
the buyer is bound
to pay the balance
5. Given when
there is already a
sale
3. Money given as a
distinct
consideration for an
option contract
4. The would-be
buyer
is
not
required to buy
5. Applies to a sale
not yet perfected
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2.
MEMORY AID
is no opportunity to inspect or
examine.
NOTE: The mere exhibition of the
sample does not necessarily make it
a sale by sample. This exhibition
must have been the sole basis or
inducement of the sale.
There is warranty that the bulk of
the commodity will correspond in
kind, quality, and character with the
sample exhibited.
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CIVIL LAW
specially
MEMORY AID
Examples of persons especially
disqualified by law:
a. Aliens who are disqualified to
purchase agricultural lands
b. An unpaid seller having a right
of lien or having stopped the
goods in transitu, who is
prohibited from buying the goods
either directly or indirectly in
the resale of the same, at public
or private sale which he may
make
c. The officer holding the
execution, or his deputy.
NOTE: While those disqualified
under Arts. 1490 and 1491 may
not become lessees (Art. 1646),
still aliens may become lessees
even if they cannot buy lands.
Effect of violation:
a) With respect to nos. 1 to 3: the
sale is VOIDABLE.
Reason: only private rights,
which are subject to ratification
are violated
NOTE: In the case of Lao vs.
Genato, 137 SCRA 77, the
Supreme Court found that the
sale by the administrator of
certain properties of the estate
in order to settle the existing
obligations of the estate was
made to the administrators son
for a grossly low price.
Furthermore, the said sale was
not submitted to the probate
court for approval as mandated
by the order authorizing the
administrator to sell. The sale
was indubitably illegal, irregular
and fictitious, and the courts
approval
of
the
assailed
compromise agreement violated
Article 1491 and cannot work to
ratify a fictitious contract which
is non-existent and void from
the very beginning
b) With respect to nos. 4 to 6: the
sale is NULL AND VOID.
Reason: violation of public
policy cannot be subject to
ratification
OBLIGATIONS OF THE VENDOR: (WPDTT)
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CIVIL LAW
MEMORY AID
c. traditio longa manu seller
pointing out to the buyer the
things which are transferred,
which at the time must be in
sight.
d. traditio brevi manu buyer
simply continues in possession of
the thing but under title of
ownership.
e. traditio
constitutum
possessorium seller continues
in possession but under a
different
title
other
than
ownership.
3. Quasi-tradition delivery of rights,
credits or incorporeal property,
made by:
a. placing titles of ownership in the
hands of buyer
b. allowing buyer to make use of
rights
4. Tradition by operation of law
Constructive delivery requires three
things before ownership may be
transferred:
1. The seller must have control over
the thing
2. The buyer must be put under control
3. There must be the intention to
deliver the thing for purposes of
ownership
When is the vendor not bound to
deliver the thing sold:
1. If the vendee has not paid him the
price
2. If no period for payment has been
fixed in the contract
3. Even if a period for payment has
been fixed in the contract, if the
vendee has lost the right to make
use of the same.
Sale or return
Property is sold, but the buyer, who
becomes the owner of the property
on delivery, has the option to return
the same to the seller instead of
paying the price.
NOTES:
It is a kind of sale with a condition
subsequent.
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CIVIL LAW
with the
conditions
privilege;
becomes
bears the
Sale on Trial
1. Subject to a
resolutory
condition
2. Depends entirely
on the will of the
buyer
1.
Subject
to
a
suspensive condition
3.
Ownership
passes to the buyer
on delivery and
subsequent return
reverts ownership
in the seller
3. Ownership remains
in the seller until
buyer
signifies
his
approval
or
acceptance to the
seller
4. Risk of loss or
injury rests upon
the buyer
2. Depends on the
character or quality of
the goods
MEMORY AID
2. Contrary intention appears by the
term of the contract;
3. Implied reservation of ownership
(Article 1503)
a. If under the bill of lading, the
goods are deliverable to seller or
agent or their order;
a. If the bill of lading, although
stating that the goods are to be
delivered to the buyer or his
agent, is kept by the seller or his
agent;
a. When the buyer, although the
goods are deliverable to order of
buyer, and although the bill of
lading is given to him, does not
honor the bill of exchange sent
along with it.
Transfer of ownership where goods sold
delivered to carrier
General Rule: Delivery to the carrier is
deemed to be delivery to the buyer
Exception:
Where the right of
possession or ownership of specific goods
sold is reserved
SALE OF GOODS BY A NON-OWNER
GENERAL RULE: Buyer acquires no title
even if in good faith and for value under
the maxim Nemo dat quid non habet
(You cannot give what you do not
have).
EXCEPTIONS: (SMERVS)
1. Owner is estopped or precluded
by his conduct
2. When sale is made by the
registered owner or apparent
owner in accordance with
recording or registration laws
3. Sales sanctioned by judicial or
statutory authority
4. Purchases in a merchant's store,
fairs or markets
5. When a person who is not the
owner sells and delivers a thing,
subsequently
acquires
title
thereto (Art. 1434)
6. When the seller has a voidable
title which has not been avoided
at the time of the sale (Art.
1506)
* Unlawful deprivation is no longer
limited to a criminal act. There is
Unlawful Deprivation where there is no
valid transmission of ownership.
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CIVIL LAW
MEMORY AID
* If the holder of a negotiable document
of title (deliverable to bearer) entrusts
the document to a friend for deposit,
but the friend betrays the trust and
negotiates the document by delivering it
to another who is in good faith, the said
owner cannot impugn the validity of the
negotiation. As between two innocent
persons, he who made the loss possible
shall bear the loss, without prejudice to
his right to recover from the wrongdoer.
RIGHTS
OF
PERSON
TO WHOM
DOCUMENT HAS BEEN NEGOTIATED:
1) The title of the person negotiating the
document, over the goods covered by
the document;
2) The title of the person (depositor or
owner) to whose order by the terms of
the document the goods were to be
delivered, over such goods;
3) The direct obligation of the bailee to
hold possession of the goods for him, as
if the bailee had contracted to him
directly
NOTE; Mere transferee does not acquire
directly the obligation of the bailee (in
Art. 1513). To acquire it, he must notify
the bailee.
WHO
CAN
DEFEAT RIGHTS
TRANSFEREE:
1. Creditor of transferor
2. Transferor
3. Subsequent purchaser
OF
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CIVIL LAW
MEMORY AID
GENERAL RULE: The seller is not bound
to deliver the thing sold unless the
purchase price has been paid.
EXCEPTION: The seller is bound to
deliver even if the price has not been
paid, if a period of payment has been
fixed.
Sale of Real Property by Unit
Entire area stated in the contract
must be delivered
When entire area could not be
delivered, vendee may:
1. Enforce the contract with the
corresponding decrease in price
2. Rescind the sale:
a. If the lack in area is at least
1/10 than that stated or
stipulated
b. If the deficiency in quality
specified in the contract
exceeds 1/10 of the price
agreed upon
c. If the vendee would not have
bought the immovable had
he known of its smaller area
of
inferior
quality
irrespective of the extent of
lack of area or quality
Sale for a Lump Sum (A Cuerpo Cierto)
Vendor is obligated to deliver all the
land included within the boundaries,
regardless of whether the real area
should be greater or smaller
Ordinarily, there can be no rescission
or reduction or increase whether the
area be greater or lesser, unless
there is gross mistake.
NOTE: The Civil Code presumes that the
purchaser had in mind a particular piece
of land and that he ascertained its area
and quality before the contract of sale
was perfected. If he did not do so, or if
having done so he made no objection
and consented to the transaction, he can
blame no one but himself (Teran vs.
Villanueva Viuda de Riosa 56 Phil 677).
What is important is the delivery
of all the land included in the
boundaries.
DOUBLE SALE (Art. 1544)
Requisites: VOCS
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CIVIL LAW
MEMORY AID
required to go behind the registry to
determine the conditions of the
property. Exception: Where the
purchaser had knowledge, prior to or
at the time of the levy, of such
previous lien or encumbrance, his
knowledge
is
equivalent
to
registration.
CONDITION
Effect of Non-fulfillment of
Condition
1. If the obligation of either party
is subject to any condition and
such condition is not fulfilled,
such party may either:
a. refuse to proceed with the
contract
b. proceed with the contract ,
waiving the performance of
the condition.
2. If the condition is in the nature
of a promise that it should
happen, the non-performance of
such condition may be treated
by the other party as breach of
warranty.
NOTE: A distinction must be made
between a condition imposed on the
perfection of a contract and a condition
imposed merely on the performance of
an obligation. The failure to comply with
the first condition would prevent the
juridical relation itself from coming into
existence, while failure to comply with
the second merely gives the option
either to refuse or proceed with the sale
or to waive the condition.
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MEMORY AID
sold as a second-hand article. But such
articles might be sold under such
circumstances as to raise an implied
warranty.
* A certification issued by a vendor that a
second-hand machine was in A-1
condition is an express warranty binding
on the vendor. (Moles vs. IAC [1989])
A. Warranty against eviction
Warranty in which the seller
guarantees that he has the right to
sell the thing sold and to transfer
ownership to the buyer who shall not
be disturbed in his legal and
peaceful possession thereof.
Elements:
1. vendee is deprived, in whole or
in part, of the thing purchased;
2. the deprivation is by virtue of a
final judgment;
3. the judgment is based on a prior
right to the sale or an act
imputable to the vendor;
4. the vendor was summoned in the
suit for eviction at the instance
of the vendee; AND
5. no waiver of warranty by the
vendee.
Vendor's liability shall consist of:
1. Total eviction: (VICED)
a. Value of the thing at the time of
eviction;
b. Income or fruits if he has been
ordered to deliver them to the
party who won the suit;
c. Costs of the suit;
d. Expenses of the contract; AND
e. Damages and interests if the sale
was in bad faith.
2. Partial eviction:
a. to enforce vendors liability
for eviction (VICED); OR
b. to demand rescission of
contract.
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b) if the non-apparent burden or
servitude is registered
c) if vendee had knowledge of the
encumbrance, whether it is registered
or not
3. When action must be brought
- within ONE YEAR from the
execution of the deed of sale
B. Warranty against hidden defects
Warranty in which the seller
guarantees that the thing sold is free
from any hidden faults or defects or
any charge or encumbrance not
declared or known to the buyer.
Elements: (SHENPW)
1. defect must be Serious or
important;
2. it must be Hidden;
3. it must Exist at the time of the
sale;
4. vendee must give Notice of the
defect to the vendor within a
reasonable time;
5. action for rescission or reduction
of price must be brought within
the proper Period (within 6 mos.
from delivery of the thing or 40
days from date of delivery in
case of animals); and
6. no Waiver of the warranty.
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b. interest thereon
c. expenses of the contract if paid
by the vendee
Effect if the cause of loss was not the
hidden defect
MEMORY AID
latter is of such quality to have some
value
Instances where implied warranties are
inapplicable:
1. As is and where is sale - vendor
makes no warranty as to the quality
or workable condition of the goods,
and that the vendee takes them in
the condition in which they are
found and from the place where they
are located.
2. Sale of second-hand articles
3. Sale by virtue of authority in fact or
law
Caveat Venditor (Let the seller
beware): the vendor is liable to the
vendee for any hidden faults or defects
in the thing sold, even though he was
not aware thereof.
Caveat Emptor (Let the buyer
beware): requires the purchaser to be
aware of the supposed title of the
vendor and one who buys without
checking the vendors title takes all the
risks and losses consequent to such
failure.
RULES IN CASE OF SALE OF ANIMALS
1. When two or more animals have been
sold at the same time and the
redhibitory defect is in one, or some of
them but not in all, the general rule is
that the redhibition will not affect the
others without it.
It is immaterial
whether the price has been fixed for a
lump sum for all the animals or for a
separate price for each.
2. No warranty against hidden defects
of animals sold at fairs or at public
auctions, or of livestock sold as
condemned.
This is based on the
assumption that the defects must have
been clearly known to the buyer.
3. Sale of animals shall be void when:
a) animals sold are suffering from
contagious disease
b) if the use or service for which
they are acquired has been stated in the
contract, and they are found to be unfit
therefor
4. Limitation of the action: 40 days
from the date of their delivery to the
vendee
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MEMORY AID
Pertinent Rules:
1. The vendor is not required to deliver
the thing sold until the price is paid
nor the vendee to pay the price
before the thing is delivered in the
absence of an agreement to the
contrary (Article 1524).
2. If stipulated, the vendee is bound to
accept delivery and to pay the price
at the time and place designated;
3. If there is no stipulation as to the
time and place of payment and
delivery, the vendee is bound to pay
at the time and place of delivery
4. In the absence of stipulation as to
the place of delivery, it shall be
made wherever the thing might be
at the moment the contract was
perfected (Article 1251)
5. If only the time for delivery has been
fixed in the contract, the vendee is
required to pay even before the
thing is delivered to him; if only the
time for payment has been fixed,
the vendee is entitled to delivery
even before the price is paid by him
(Article 1524)
Ways of accepting goods:
1. Express acceptance
2. Implied acceptance
a. When buyer does an act which
only an owner can do,
b. Failure to return goods after
reasonable lapse of time
NOTES:
The retention of goods is strong
evidence that the buyer has
accepted ownership of the goods.
Delivery and acceptance are two
separate and distinct acts of
different parties
Delivery is an act of the vendor
and one of the vendors
obligations; vendee has nothing
to do with the act of delivery by
the vendor
Acceptance is an obligation of
the vendee; acceptance cannot
be regarded as a condition to
complete delivery;
seller must comply with the
obligation to deliver although
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2. if it has been stipulated that
notwithstanding
any
such
contingency, the vendee must make
payment (see Article 1548 par.3)
3. if the vendor has caused the
disturbance or danger to cease
4. if the disturbance is a mere act of
trespass
5. if the vendee has fully paid the price
REMEDIES FOR BREACH OF CONTRACT
A. Remedies of the seller
1. Action for payment of the price (Art.
1595)
2. Action for damages for nonacceptance of the goods (Art. 1596)
3. Action for rescission (Art. 1597)
B. Remedies of the buyer
1. Action for specific performance (Art.
1598)
2. Action for rescission or damages for
breach of warranty (Art 1599)
A. REMEDIES OF THE SELLER FOR
BREACH OF CONTRACT
IN CASE OF MOVABLES
1. Ordinary Remedies
a. Movables in General Failure of
the vendee to appear to receive
delivery or, having appeared,
failure to tender the price at the
same time, unless, a longer
period for its payment has been
stipulated
action to rescind the sale
(Art. 1593)
b. Sale of Goods
action for the price (Art.
1595)
action for damages (Art.
1596)
2. Unpaid Seller
Types:
a. The seller of the goods who has
not been paid or to whom the
price has not been tendered
b. The seller of the goods, in case a
bill of exchange or other
negotiable instrument has been
received as conditional payment,
AND the condition on which it
was received has been broken by
reason of the dishonor of the
instrument, insolvency of the
buyer or otherwise.
IN
CIVIL LAW
Remedies:
1. Possessory lien over the goods
2. Right of stoppage in transitu
after he has parted with the
possession of the goods and the
buyer becomes insolvent
3. Special Right of resale
4. Special Right to rescind the sale
5. Action for the price
6. Action for damages
3. Article 1484 or Recto Law
Remedies of vendor in sale of
personal property by installments
Requisites:
1. Contract of sale
2. Personal property
3. Payable in installments
4. In the case of the second and
third remedies, that there has
been a failure to pay two or
more installments
NOTE: Apply likewise to contracts
purporting to be leases of personal
property with option to buy
Art. 1484 does not apply to a sale:
1. Payable on straight terms (partly
in cash and partly in one term)
2. Of Real property
Remedies:
1. Specific
performance
upon
vendees failure to pay
NOTE: Does not bar full recovery for
judgment secured may be executed
on all personal and real properties of
the buyer which are not exempt
from execution (Palma v. CA.)
2. Rescission of the sale if vendee
shall have failed to pay two or
more installments
NOTES:
Nature of the remedy which
requires mutual restitution bars
further action on the purchase
price (Nonato vs. IAC.)
GENERAL RULE: cancellation
of
sale
requires
mutual
restitution, that is all partial
payments of price or rents must
be returned
EXCEPTIONS: a stipulation that
the installments or rents paid
shall not be returned to the
vendee or lessee shall be valid
insofar as the same may not be
MEMORY AID
unconscionable
under
the
circumstan-ces (Article 1486).
3. Foreclosure of the chattel
mortgage on the thing sold if
vendee shall have failed to pay
two or more installments. In this
case, there shall be no further
action against the purchaser to
recover unpaid balance of the
price.
NOTES:
Further recovery barred only from the
time of actual sale at public auction
conducted pursuant to foreclosure
(Macondray vs. Tan.)
Other chattels given as security cannot
be foreclosed if they are not subject of
the installment sale (Ridad vs. Filipinas
investment and Finance Corp. GR 39806,
Jan. 28, 1983)
If the vendor assigns his right to a
financing company, the latter may be
regarded as a collecting agency of the
vendor and cannot therefore recover any
deficiency from the vendee (Zayas vs.
Luneta Motors Co.)
When the vendor assigns his credit to
another person, the latter is likewise
bound by the same law. Accordingly,
when the assignee forecloses on the
mortgage, there can be no further
recovery of the deficiency and the
vendor-mortgagee is deemed to have
renounced any right thereto (Borbon II
vs.
Servicewide
Specialist,
Inc.
258SCRA658)
NOTE: However, Article 1484(3) does
NOT bar one to whom the vendor has
assigned on with a recourse basis his
credit against the vendee from
recovering from the vendor the
assigned credit in full although the
vendor may have no right of recovery
against the vendee for the deficiency
(Filipinas Invest. & Finance Corp. vs.
Vitug, Jr. 28SCRA658)
NOTE: Remedies are alternative and
exclusive
IN CASE OF IMMOVABLES
1. Ordinary Remedies
a. In case of anticipatory breach
rescission (Article 1591)
IN
CIVIL LAW
MEMORY AID
rescission by a notarial act AND
upon full payment of the cash
surrender value to the buyer
(Olympia Housing vs. Panasiatic,
16 January 2003.)
NOTE: The seller shall refund to
the buyer the cash surrender
value of the payments on the
property equivalent to 50% of
the total payments made. After
five (5) years of installments,
there shall be an additional 5%
every year but not to exceed 90%
of the total payments made
3. The buyer shall have the right to
sell his rights or assign the same
to another person OR to
reinstate
the
contract
by
updating the account during the
grace period and before actual
cancellation of the contract
4. The buyer shall have the right to
pay in advance any installment
or the full unpaid balance of the
purchase price any time without
interest and to have such full
payment of the purchase price
annotated in the certificate of
title covering the property.
B. If Buyer has paid less than 2
years of installments
1. The seller shall give the buyer a
grace period of NOT less than 60
days from the date the
installment became due. If the
buyer
fails
to
pay
the
installments
due
at
the
expiration of the grace period,
the seller may cancel the
contract after 30 days from
receipt by the buyer of the
notice of cancellation or the
demand
for
rescission
of
contract by a notarial act.
2. Same No. 3 and 4 paragraph A
above
NOTE:
Down payments, deposits or
options on the contract shall be included
in the computation of the total number
of installment payments made
Remedies of Unpaid Seller
i. Possessory Lien
When may be exercised:
IN
CIVIL LAW
MEMORY AID
1. after delivery to a carrier or other
bailee and before the buyer or his agent
takes delivery of them; and
2. If the goods are rejected by the
buyer, and the carrier or other bailee
continues in possession of them
GOODS ARE NO LONGER CONSIDERED IN
TRANSITU:
1. after delivery to the buyer or his
agent in that behalf;
2. if the buyer or his agent obtains
possession of the goods at a point before
the destination originally fixed;
3.
if the carrier or the bailee
acknowledges to hold the goods on
behalf of the buyer; and
4. if the carrier or bailee wrongfully
refuses to deliver the goods to the buyer
Effects of the exercise of the right
1. The goods are no longer in transit.
2. The contract of carriage ends;
instead the carrier now becomes a
mere bailee, and will be liable as
such.
3. The carrier should not deliver
anymore to the buyer or the latters
agent; otherwise he will clearly be
liable for damages.
4. The carrier must redeliver to, or
according to the directions of the
seller.
WAYS OF EXERCISING THE RIGHT TO
STOP:
1. By taking actual possession of the
goods
2. By giving notice of his claim to the
carrier or bailee
iii. Special Right of Resale
May be exercised only when the
unpaid seller has either a right of
lien OR has stopped the goods in
transitu AND under ANY of the
following conditions:
1. Where the goods are perishable
in nature
2. Where the right to resell is
expressly reserved in case the
buyer should make a default
3. Where the buyer delays in the
payment of the price for an
unreasonable time
IN
CIVIL LAW
iv. Rescission
Types:
1. Special Right to Rescind Under
Art. 1534 If the seller has
either the right of lien OR a right
to stop the goods in transitu AND
under either of 2 situations:
a. Where the right to rescind
on
default
has
been
expressly reserved
b. Where the buyer has been in
default for an unreasonable
time
2. Under Art. 1597 (technical
rescission)
v. Action for the price
When may be exercised:
1. Where the ownership has passed
to the buyer AND he wrongfully
neglects OR refuses to pay for
the price
2. Where the price is payable on a
day certain AND he wrongfully
neglects OR refuses to pay for
the price, irrespective of the
delivery or transfer of title
3. Where the goods cannot readily
be resold for a reasonable price
AND the buyer wrongfully refuses
to accept them even before the
ownership of the goods has
passed, if Article 1596 is
inapplicable.
vi. Action for damages
When may be exercised:
1. In case of wrongful neglect or
refusal by the buyer to accept or
pay for the thing sold (Art. 1596
par.1)
2. In an executory contract, where
the ownership in the goods has
not passed, and the seller cannot
maintain an action to recover
the price (Art 1595)
3. If the goods are not yet
identified at the time of the
contract or subsequently
B. REMEDIES OF THE BUYER FOR
BREACH OF CONTRACT
1. Action for specific performance
(Art. 1598)
MEMORY AID
other
CONVENTIONAL REDEMPTION
The right which the vendor reserves
to himself, to reacquire the property
sold provided he returns to the
vendee:
b. the price of the sale;
c. expenses of the contract;
d. any other legitimate payments
made therefore and;
e. the
necessary
and
useful
expenses made on the thing
sold; and
f.
IN
CIVIL LAW
MEMORY AID
a. if there is an agreement: period
agreed upon cannot exceed 10 years
b. if no agreement as to the period: 4
years from the date of the contract
c. the vendor who fails to repurchase
the property within the period
agreed upon may, however, exercise
the right to repurchase within 30
days FROM the time final judgment
was rendered in a civil action on the
basis that the contract was a true
sale with right of repurchase
This refers to cases involving a
transaction where one of the
parties contests or denies that
the true agreement is one of sale
with right to repurchase; not to
cases where the transaction is
conclusively a pacto de retro
sale. Example: Where a buyer a
retro honestly believed that he
entered merely into an Equitable
Mortgage, not a pacto de retro
transaction, and because of such
belief he had not redeemed
within the proper period.
NOTE: Tender of payment is
sufficient to compel redemption, but
is not in itself a payment that
relieves the vendor from his liability
to pay the redemption price (Paez
vs. Magno.)
LEGAL REDEMPTION
The right to be subrogated, upon the
same
terms
and
conditions
stipulated in the contract, in the
place of one who acquires a thing by
(1) purchase or (2) dation in
payment, or (3) by any other
transaction whereby ownership is
transferred by onerous title.
May be effected against movables or
immovables.
It must be exercised within thirty
(30) days from the notice in writing
by the vendor.\
NOTE: Written notice under Article 1623
is mandatory for the right of redemption
to commence (PSC vs. Sps. Valencia 19
August 2003.)
IN
CIVIL LAW
REDEMPTION
1. arises after sale
2. there can be
rescission of the
original sale
3. action is directed
against the buyer
MEMORY AID
consideration of a price certain in
money or its equivalent
NOTE: Transfer of rights by assignment
takes place by the perfection of the
contract of assignment without the
necessity of delivering the document
evidencing the credit.
this rule does not apply to
negotiable
documents
and
documents of title which are
governed by special laws.
Effects of Assignment:
1. transfers the right to collect the full
value of the credit, even if he paid a
price less than such value
2. transfers all the accessory rights
3. debtor can set up against the
assignee all the defenses he could
have set up against the assignor
Effect of payment by the debtor after
assignment of credit
1. Before Notice of the assignment
Payment to the original creditor
is valid and debtor shall be
released from his obligation
2. After Notice
Payment to the original creditor
is not valid as against the
assignee
He can be made to pay again by
the assignee
Warranties of the assignor of credit:
a. He warrants the existence of the
credit
a. He warrants the legality of the
credit at the perfection of the
contract
NOTE: There is no warranty as to the
solvency of the debtor unless it is
expressly stipulated OR unless the
insolvency was already existing and of
public knowledge at the time of the
assignment
IN
CIVIL LAW
BARTER
BARTER
contract whereby one of the parties
binds himself to give one thing in
consideration of the other's promise
to give another thing (Article 1638)
MEMORY AID
NOTES:
Where the giver of the thing
bartered is not the lawful owner
thereof, the aggrieved party cannot
be compelled to deliver the thing
which he has promised and is also
entitled to damages.
Where a party is evicted of the thing
exchanged, the injured party is given
the option, either to recover the
property he has given in exchange
with damages or only claim an
indemnity for damages.
As to matters not provided for by the
provisions on barter, the provisions
on sales will apply suppletorily
BULK SALES LAW (Act No. 3952)
When Sale or Transfer in Bulk:
Any sale, transfer, mortgage, or
assignment:
1. Of a stock of goods, wares,
merchandise,
provisions,
or
materials otherwise than in the
ordinary course of trade and the
regular prosecution of business; or
2. Of all or substantially all, of the
business or trade; or
3. Of all or substantially all, of the
fixtures and equipment used in the
business of the vendor, mortgagor,
transferor or assignor (section 2)
When sale or transfer in bulk not
covered by Bulk Sales Law:
1. If the sale or transfer is in the
ordinary course of trade and the
regular prosecution of business of
the vendor;
2. If it is made by one who produces
and delivers a written waiver of the
provisions of the Bulk Sales Act from
his creditors
3. If it is made by an executor,
administrator, receiver, assignee in
insolvency, or public officer, acting
IN
CIVIL LAW
MEMORY AID
An innocent purchaser for value
from the original purchaser is
protected
However if the circumstances
are such as to bind the
subsequent
purchaser
with
constructive notice that the sale
to
the
vendor
(original
purchaser) was fraudulent, the
property will be liable in his
hands to creditors of the original
vendor
Effect of violation of law on Transfer:
1. As between the parties
The Bulk Sales Law does not in
any way affect the validity of
the transfer as between the
intermediate parties thereto
A sale not in compliance with the
Bulk Sales Law is valid against all
persons other than the creditors.
2. As against creditors
A purchaser in violation of the
law acquires no right in the
property purchased as against
the creditors of the seller
His status is that of a trustee or
receiver for the benefit of the
creditors of the seller; as such,
he is responsible for the
disposition of the property
IN
CIVIL LAW
MEMORY AID
1.
2.
3.
4.
NOTES:
Foreign investor shall be required to
maintain in the Philippines the FULL
amount of the prescribed minimum
capital, UNLESS the foreign investor
has notified the SEC and the DTI of
its intention to repatriate its capital
and cease operations in the
Philippines
IN
CIVIL LAW
MEMORY AID
HOUSING
AND
LAND-USE
REGULATORY BOARD, which shall act
upon and approve the same, upon a
finding that the plan complies with
the Subdivision Standards' and
Regulations enforceable at the time
the plan is submitted. The same
procedure shall be followed in the
case of a plan for a condominium
project except that, in addition, said
Authority shall act upon and approve
the plan with respect to the building
or buildings included in the
condominium project in accordance
with the National Building Code
(R.A. No. 6541).
The subdivision plan, as so approved,
shall then be submitted to the
Director of Lands for approval in
accordance with the procedure
prescribed in Section 44 of the Land
Registration Act (Act No. 496, as
amended by R.A. No. 440): Provided,
that it case of complex subdivision
plans, court approval shall no longer
be required. The condominium plan
as likewise so approved, shall be
submitted to the Register of Deeds
of the province or city in which the
property lies and the same shall be
acted upon subject to the conditions
and in accordance with the
procedure prescribed in Section 4 of
the Condominium Act (R.A. No.
4726).
National Housing authority (now
Housing and Land Use Regulatory
Board) has the exclusive jurisdiction
to regulate the real estate trade and
business.
License to sell
Such owner or dealer to whom has
been issued a registration certificate
shall not, however, be authorized to
sell
any
subdivision
lot
or
condominium unit in the registered
project unless he shall have first
obtained a license to sell the project
within two weeks from the
registration of such project.
Exempt transactions
IN
CIVIL LAW
LEASE
LEASE
consensual, bilateral, onerous, and
commutative contract by virtue of
which one person binds himself to
grant temporarily the use of the
thing or to render some service to
another who undertakes to pay some
rent.
Kinds of Leases (From the view point
of the subject matter
1. Lease of things
2. Lease of service
3. Lease of work
NOTE: Since lease is consensual and is
not imposed by law, only the lessor has
MEMORY AID
the right to fix the rents. However, the
increasing of the rent is not an absolute
right on the part of the lessor.
Characteristics or Requisites for Lease
of Things
1. Consensual
2. Principal
3. Nominate
4. Purpose is to allow enjoyment or
use of a thing (the person to
enjoy is the lessee; the person
allowing the enjoyment by
another is the lessor
5. Subject matter must be within
the commerce of man
6. Purpose to which the thing will
be devoted should not be
immoral
7. Onerous (there must rent or
price certain)
8. Period
is
Temporary
(not
perpetual, hence, the longest
period is 99 years)
9. Period is either definite or
indefinite
NOTES:
When a student boards and lodges in
a dormitory, there is no contract of
lease.
The contract is not
designated specifically in the Civil
Code. It is an innominate contract.
It is however, believed that the
contract can be denominated as the
contract of board and lodging.
CIVIL LAW
1.
2.
NOTE:
A usufructuary may thus
lease the premises in favor of a
stranger, such lease to end at the
time that the usufruct itself ends
Rent
IN
SALES
1. ownership
transferred
is
2.
transfer
is
permanent
3. seller must be
the owner at the
time the property
is delivered
4. usually, the
selling price is
mentioned
Lease of
Things
Lease of Services
object
of1.
contract is a
thing
lessor has to
2.
deliver the thing
leased
3. in case of
breach,
there
can be an action
for
specific
performance
Lease of
Services
(locatio
operatum)
Contract for a
Piece of Work
(locatio operas)
1.
the
important
1.
object
is
the
labor performed
by the lessor
the
important
object is the work
done
2.
the result 2.
is
generally
not
important,
hence
the
laborer
is
entitled to be
paid
even
if
there
is
destruction
of
the
work
through
the
result
is
generally
important;
generally, the price
is not payable until
the
work
is
completed,
and
said price cannot
be
lawfully
demanded if the
work is destroyed
MEMORY AID
fortuitous event
Lease of
Services
It is based on
employment
the lessor of
services
does
not represent his
employer
nor
does he execute
juridical acts.
Principal
contract
before it is finished
and accepted
Agency
It is based on
representation
Preparatory
contract
IN
CIVIL LAW
ASSIGNMENT OF
LEASE
MEMORY AID
RIGHTS OF LESSOR IF SUBLEASE
PROHIBITED BUT ENTERED INTO BY
LESSEE:
1) Rescission and damages, or
2) Damages only (Contract will be
allowed to remain in force)
3) Ejectment
Instances when sublessee is liable to
the lessor:
a. All acts which refer to the use
and preservation of the thing
leased in the manner stipulated
between the lessor and the
lessee
a. The sublessee is subsidiarily
liable to the lessor for any rent
due from the lessee.
NOTE: The sublessee shall not be
responsible beyond the amount of rent
due from him.
Accion Directa: direct action which the
lessor may bring against a sublessee who
misuses the subleased property.
OBLIGATIONS OF THE LESSOR (DnM)
a. Delivery of the object (cannot
be waived)
a. Making of necessary repairs
a. Maintenance in peaceful and
adequate possession
OBLIGATIONS OF THE LESSEE (R2EN2U)
a. to pay rent
a. to use thing leased as a diligent
father of a family, devoting it to
the use stipulated
a. to pay expenses for the deed of
lease
a. to notify the lessor of usurpation
or untoward acts
a. to notify the lessor of need for
repairs
a. to return the property leased
upon termination of the lease
Effect of Destruction of the Thing
Leased:
1. Total destruction by a fortuitous
event
Lease is extinguished
IN
CIVIL LAW
2. Partial destruction
a. Proportional reduction of the
rent, or
b. Rescission of the lease
When lessee may suspend payment of
rent:
1. lessor fails to undertake necessary
repairs
2. lessor fails to maintain the lessee in
peaceful and adequate enjoyment of
the property leased
NOTE: Suspend- for the intervening
period, the lessee does not have to pay
the rent.
EFFECTIVITY OF THE SUSPENSION:
The right begins:
a) In the case of repairs, from the time
he made the demand for said repairs,
and the demand went unheeded.
b) In the case of eviction, from the time
the final judgment for eviction becomes
effective.
Alternative remedies of Aggrieved
party (Lessor/Lessee) in case of Nonfulfillment of duties:
1. Rescission and damages
2. Damages only, allowing the contract
to remain in force Specific
Performance
NOTE:
Damages Recoverable in
ejectment cases are the rents or the fair
rental value of the premises.
The
following
cannot
be
successfully
claimed:
1. Profits plaintiff could have
earned were it not for the
possible entry or unlawful
detainer
2. Material injury to the premises
3. Actual, moral, or exemplary
damages
Immediate termination of lease under
Art. 1660 applies:
1. only to dwelling place or any other
building
intended
for
human
habitation
2. even if at the time the contract was
perfected, the lessee knew of the
dangerous condition or waived the
right to rescind on account of this
condition
MEMORY AID
Rules on Alteration of the Form of the
Lease
The Lessor can alter provided there
is no impairment of the use to which
the thing is devoted under the terms
of the lease
Alteration can also be made by the
Lessee so long as the value of the
property
is
not
substantially
impaired
Rules in case of Urgent Repairs
The lessee is obliged to tolerate the
work although it may be very
annoying to him and although during
the same time he may be deprived
of a part of the premises
1. If repairs last for more than 40 days:
Lessee cannot act for reduction of
rent or rescission
2. If 40 days or more: lessee can ask
for proportionate reduction
NOTE: In either case, rescission may be
availed of if the main purpose is to
provide a dwelling place and the
property becomes uninhabitable.
Effects if Lessor fails to make Urgent
Repairs
1. Lessee may order repairs at the
lessors cost
2. Lessee may sue for damages
3. Lessee may suspend the payment of
the rent
4. Lessee may ask for rescission, in
case of substantial damage to him
TRESPASS IN LEASE:
1. Trespass in fact (perturbacion de
mere hecho):
physical enjoyment is reduced
Lessor will not be held liable.
2. Trespass in law (perturbacion de
derecho):
A third person claims legal right
to enjoy the premises
Lessor will be held liable
NOTE: While the Japanese Occupation
was a fortuitous event, the lessor is still
not excused from his obligation to
warrant peaceful legal possession. Lease
is a contract that calls for prestations
both reciprocal and repetitive; and the
obligations of either party are not
IN
CIVIL LAW
MEMORY AID
Rule if Lessor Objects to the Lessees
continued Possession:
Requisites:
1. Contract has expired
2. Lessee continued enjoying the thing
3. Lessor Objected to this enjoyment
If the three requisites are present,
the lessee shall be considered a
possessor in bad faith
IMPLIED
NEW
LEASE
(Tacita
Reconducion)
lease which arises if at the end of
the contract the lessee should
continue enjoying the thing leased
for 15 days with the acquiescence of
the lessor, unless a notice to the
contrary had previously been given
by either party.
Requisites:
a. the term of the original contract
has expired
a. the lessor has not given the
lessee a notice to vacate
a. the lessee continued enjoying
the thing leased for at least 15
days with the acquiescence of
the lessor
Effects:
a. The period of the new lease is
not that stated in the original
contract but the time in Articles
1682 and 1687.
a. Other terms of the original
contract are revived.
IN
CIVIL LAW
MEMORY AID
Effectivity: January 1, 2002.
Coverage:
a. All residential units of NCR and other
highly urbanized cities, the total
monthly rental for each of which
does not exceed P7,500;
a. All residential units in other areas
the total monthly rental for each of
which does not exceed P4,000 as of
1/1/02, without prejudice to preexisting contracts.
1.
2.
3.
a.
b.
c.
d.
4.
5.
6.
NOTE:
IN
CIVIL LAW
Lease duration:
MEMORY AID
1. If there is a fixed period, lease will be
for said period.
2. If no fixed period, apply the following
rules:
a. If rent is paid daily: day to day
a. If rent is paid weekly: week to
week
IN
CIVIL LAW