Visual Arts
Visual Arts
Visual Arts
1. Obligation meaning
2. Elements of obligation
3. Prestation
4. Efficient Cause
5. Contract
6. Quasi-contract
7. Delict
8. Quasi-delict
OBLIGATIONS & CONTRACTS
CLASSROOM RULES
1. READ. READ. READ.
2. No gadgets during class recitations or discussions
3. Don’t take photos of the slides. WRITE.
4. Don’t be late.
5. You are only given 3 allowable absences.
REFERENCES:
CREDIT:
DEBT:
An obligation is a juridical necessity to
ART 1156 give, to do or not to do.
NOT TO DO: consists in abstaining from some act, such as the duty of a
person not to create a nuisance on his property.
EFFICIENT CAUSE (the vinculum)
1. Law
2. Bilateral acts
3. Unilateral acts
IDENTIFY THE ELEMENTS OF OBLIGATION PRESENT IN THE SITUATION.
(a) A promises to paint B’s picture for B as a result of an agreement
(b) B agrees to pay X the amount of P500.00 as payment for the service
rendered by X to the former.
(c) John agrees to do the assignment of Phoebe in exchange of a box of
pizza from Phoebe.
IDENTIFY THE ELEMENTS OF OBLIGATION PRESENT IN THE SITUATION.
"Mike, the manager of an electric company offered to buy a one-square meter lot
from Scarlette for P15,000. Mike showed Scarlette his power of attorney
executed by the electric company and duly signed by the board of directors.
Mike informed Scarlette that the lot would be the site of an electric post which
the electric company would build. Scarlette agreed to Mike. Mike agreed to
come back the following day to give the company check for the purchase price
as well as the written contract. When Mike returned to the place of Scarlette,
Scarlette refused to sign the contract and accept the check. Scarlette told Mike
that at any rate, Mike or the electric company could not enforce the contract
since it was not in writing.
(b) Issue:
Who should pay the doctor: the husband or the parents?
(a) Facts:
A wife was about to deliver a child. Her parents-in-law called the
doctor.
(b) Issue:
Who should pay the doctor: the husband or the parents?
(c) Held:
The husband should pay, even if he was not the one who called t
the doctor. It is his duty to support the wife,
A contract is a meeting of minds between two persons
ART 1305 whereby one binds himself, with respect to the other, to
give something or to render some service.
A contract is a meeting of minds between two persons
ART 1305 whereby one binds himself, with respect to the other, to
give something or to render some service.
CULPA AQUILINA
REQUISITES OF QUASI-DELICT
1. There must be an act or omission;
2. There must be a fault or negligence;
3. There must be damage caused;
4. There must be a direct relation or connection of cause and effect between
the act or omission and the damage; and
5. There is no pre-existing contractual relation between the parties.
EXAMPLES (a) While driving a car recklessly, I
injured a pedestrian.
3 not to do
or (2) to an indeterminate or
generic thing.
GENERIC THING DETERMINATE THING
A generic thing is one that is indicated only by A determinate or specific thing is one that is
its kinds, without being designated and individualized and can be identified or
distinguished from others of the same kind. distinguished from others of its kind.
Facts: Herein plaintiff was a passenger of the public utility jeepney on course
from Danao City to Cebu City. The jeepney was driven by driven by defendant
Berfol Camoro and registered under the franchise of Clemente Fontanar. When
the jeepney reached Mandaue City, the right rear tire exploded causing the
vehicle to turn turtle. In the process, the plaintiff who was sitting at the front seat
was thrown out of the vehicle. Plaintiff suffered a lacerated wound on his right
palm aside from the injuries he suffered on his left arm, right thigh, and on his
back.
Plaintiff filed a case for breach of contract with damages before the City Court of
Cebu City. Defendants, in their answer, alleged that the tire blow out was beyond
their control, taking into account that the tire that exploded was newly bought
and was only slightly used at the time it blew up.
The creditor has a right to the fruits of the thing from the
ART 1164 time the obligation to deliver it arises. However, he shall
acquire no real right over it until the same has been
delivered to him
1 actual
2 constructive
BREACH OF OBLIGATIONS
What are the remedies of the creditor
when the debtor fails to comply with his
obligation?
1. demand specific performance (or compliance) of the
obligation. (This is true whether the obligation be generic
or specific)
2. demand rescission or cancellation (in some cases)
3. demand damages either with or without either of the first
two, (a) or (b).
If a person obliged to do something fails to do it, the same shall be
executed at his cost.
ART 1167 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.
(a) The court has not discretion to merely award damages to the
creditor when the act can be done in spite of the refusal or
failure of the debtor to do so.
(b) This only applies when the act can be done by other people.
Can the defendant be held liable for damages?
FACTS: A typewriter owner delivered the same to a repairman for repairs agreed
upon orally. Despite repeated demands, no work was done thereon. Eventually
the repairman returned the machine, unrepaired and worse, several parts were
missing, thus the description “cannibalized and unrepaired.” The owner was
then constrained to have the typewriter repaired in another shop. Owner now
claims damages from the first repairman (for the cost of the repairs and the cost
of the missing parts). Defendant repairman, however, alleges that owner should
have first filed a petition for the court to fix the period within which the job of
repairing was to be finished.
When the obligation consists in not doing, and the
ART 1168 obligor does what has been forbidden him, it shall
also be undone at his expense.
GENERAL RULE
However, the demand by the creditor shall not
be necessary in order that delay may exist:
IS THIS VALID?
CHARACTERISTICS
OF CONTRACTS:
1. Obligatory Force
2. Mutuality
3. Relativity
Sample cases for relativity
FACTS: A was a stockholder in a mutual building and loan association.
Her shares matured in 1940, and from that time, she ceased to be a
stockholder, and instead became its creditor for the value of her shares.
At this point, the officers and members of the Board of Directors entered
into an agreement with the Central Bank concerning the revaluation of
the shares.
May be denied by the court when there Such reason does not affect the right to
is sufficient reason to justify exrension ask for rescission of contracts
of time to the defendant in which to
perform
Rescission will not take place when the things which are the object
of the contract are legally in the possession of third persons who
did not act in bad faith.