ECELAWS Lec Obligations&Contracts
ECELAWS Lec Obligations&Contracts
ECELAWS Lec Obligations&Contracts
RA 386
June 18 1949
Civil Code of the Philippines
Book IV
OBLIGATIONS AND CONTRACTS
Obligations
Art. 1156: An obligation is a juridical necessity
to give, to do or not to do.
Elements of an Obligation
1. Active Subject (Obligee/Creditor) one
whose favour the obligation is constituted.
2. Passive Subject (Obligor/Debtor) one who
has the duty of giving, doing or not doing
3. Object the conduct which has to be
observed by the debtor/obligor
Requisites
1. It must be licit (otherwise it is void)
2. It must be possible, physically and
juridically (otherwise it is void)
3. It must be determinate or determinable
(otherwise it is void)
4. It must have pecuniary value
Binds the parties to the obligation
Why obligation exists
Sources of Obligations
Art. 1157: Obligations arise from:
1. Law;
2. Contracts;
3. Quasi-contracts;
4. Acts or omissions punished by law; and
5. Quasi-delicts.
Law set of rules made by the government
Example: Obligation to pay taxes
Contracts arise from stipulation of the
parties
Example: Obligation to repay a loan or
indebtedness by virtue of an agreement
perfected
by
delivery
(commodatum, pledge, deposit)
c. Formal/Solemn
perfected
by
conformity to essential formalities
2. As to cause
a. Onerous with valuable consideration
b. Gratuitous founded on liberality
c. Remunerative prestation in given for
service previously rendered not as
obligation
3. As to importance or dependence of one
upon another
a. Principal contract may stand alone
b. Accessory depends on another
contract for its existence; may not exist
on its own
c. Preparatory not an end by itself; a
means through which future contracts
may be made
4. As to parties obliged
a. Unilateral only one of the parties has
an obligations
b. Bilateral both parties are required to
render reciprocal prestations
5. As to name or designation
a. Nominate
b. Innominate