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Sales
By the contract of sale one of the contracting parties obligates himself t
o transfer the ownership of and to deliver a determinate thing and the other to
pay therefore a price certain in money or its equivalent.
Requisites:
1. consent of the contracting parties;
2. object certain which is the subject matter of the contract; and
3. price certain in money.
Characteristics:
1. consensual:
2. bilateral and reciprocal;
3. principal;
4. onerous;
5. commutative; and
6. nominate.
Distinctions
Contract of Sale
Contract
1.
1.by
title
agreement,
to Sellownership
passes to vendee is
uponreserved
deliveryin vendor and will not pass until full pay
2.non-payment
ment
2.full paymentisisaanegative
positiveresolutory
suspensivecondition
condition
3. Vendor has lost and cannot recover ownership until and unless contract is res
olved
3. Title
or remains
rescinded.
in vendor and when he seeks to eject because of non-payment, he
is enforcing contract and not resolving the same.
2.uncertainly
Emptio
1.sale Resathing
Spei
of Speratae
(sale
mere
ishaving
hope
with
of(potential
hope)
hope
regard
potential
orthe
expancy
existence)
existenceand quality but not with regard to exi
quantity
stence of thingis with regard existence of thing
2.unceratinly
3.contract
4.sale produces
is subject
dealseffect
with
to the
future
present
even
condition
though
thing
thingthing
thathope
the
itself
orthing
expectancy
does
should
not come
exist.into existence.
Rules to Determine Whether Contract Is One of sale or For a Piece of Work:
a. ordered in ordinary course of business-Sale
b. manufactured special and not for the market-Piece Work.
Schools of Thought:
1. Massachusetts Rule - specially done at the order of the another, contract for
piece of work;
2. New York rule - if things already exists Sale
- if thing does not exist Piece of Work;
3. English Rule material more valuable Sale
- skill more valuable - Piece of Work.
General Rule: the vendee acquires no better title to the object than the vendor
hard.
Exceptions:
1. owner of the goods is by his conduct precluded from denying the seller s author
ity to sell;
2. The provision of any factors act, recording laws, or any other provision of l
aw enabling the apparent owner of goods to dispose of them as if he were the tru
e owner thereof;
3. The validity of any contract of sale under statutory power of sale or under t
he order of a court of competent jurisdiction;
4. Purchases made in a merchant s store, or in fairs or markets in accordance with
the code of commerce and special laws.
Price in Certain If:
1. specified in terms of money;
2. certain with reference to another thing certain;
3. if the determination of the price is left to the judgment of a specified pers
on or persons;
or
4. price of securities, grain, liquids, and other things is certain when the pri
ce fixed is that which the things sold would have on a definite day or in a part
icular exchange or market . Such price maybe considered as floor or ceiling pric
e provided it be certain.
If price cannot be determined, sale is void.
Earnest Money - part of the purchase price advanced by the vendee to the vendor
as a token of the perfection of the contract.
Who Bears the Loss of the Thing Sold:
1. Before delivery seller } Principle
2. After delivery - buyer } perit domino
3 after perfection but before delivery buyer, expect:
a. when object sold consists of fungible goods for a price fixed according to
weight, number or measure;
b. seller is guilty of fraud, negligence, default or violation of contractu
al terms; or
c. object sold is generic (genus nunguam perit).
Sale by Description seller sells things as being of a certain things as being
of a certain kind, buyer merely relying on the seller s representation or descrip
tions.
Sale by Samples - seller warrants that the bulk of the goods shall correspond
with the sample in kind, quality and character.
Sale by Description and Sample must satisfy the requirements of both.
Express Warranty any affirmation of fact or any promise by the seller relating t
o the thing if the natural tendency of such affirmation or promise is to induce
the buyer to purchase the same if the buyer purchases the thing relying thereon.
Implied Warranties In a Contract of Sale:
1. implied warranty against eviction; and
2. implied warranty against hidden defect.
Requisites of Lawful Eviction:
1. there is a final judgment;
2. purchaser has been deprived in whole or in part of the thing sold;
3. deprivation was by virtue of a right prior to the sale effected by the seller
; and
4. vendor has been previously notified of the compliant for eviction at the inst
ance of the purchaser.
Seller Must Give In case of Eviction;
V 1. value;
I 2. income;
C 3. costs;
E 4. expenses; and
D 5. damages, if seller was in bad faith.
KEY: V I C E D
Requisites For Recovery In case Of hidden Defect:
1. defect must be hidden;
2. defect must exist at the same time of sale;
3. defect must ordinarily have been excluded from the contract;
4. defect must be important; and
5. action must be instituted within the statute of limitations.
Accion Redhibitoria - instituted by the vendee against the vendor to avoid a sa
le on account of some vice or defects in the things sold which renders it unfit
for the use intended or which will diminish its fitness for such use to such an
extent that had the vendee been aware thereof, he would not have acquired it.
Accion Quanti Minoris action to procure the return of a part of the purchase pri
ce paid by the vendee to the vendor by reason of such defect.
Vendee May Suspend Payment of Price, When:
1. should he be disturbed in his possession or ownership of thing sold; and
2. should he have reasonable grounds to fear such disturbance by a vindicatory a
ction or by foreclosure or mortgage.
Such right does not exist when:
1. there is stipulation to the effect;
2. 2. vendor gives security for return of price;
3. vendor have caused the disturbance or danger to cease; or
4. Disturbance consist only of a mere act of trespass.
When vendee Liable for interest on the Price:
1. Should it have been so stipulated;
2. Should the thing sold and delivered produce fruits or income; and
3. Should he be in default, from the time of judicial or extrajudicial demand fo
r the payment of the price.
Convention Redemption - takes place when vendor reserves thee right to repurchas
e the thing sold with the obligation to reimburse to the vendee the price of the
sale, expenses of the contract, other legitimate payments made by reason of sal
e as well as necessary and useful expenses made in the thing sold.
Conventional Redemption Presumed Equitable Mortgage, When:
1. price of sale is usually inadequate;
2. vendor remains in possession as lessee or other wise;
3. another instrument extending period of redemption or granting a new period is
executed;
4. purchaser retains part of purchase price;
5. vendor binds to pay taxes;
6. real intent is to secure the payment of a debt or performance of other obliga
tion; and
7. when there is doubt as to whether contract is contract of sale with right of
repurchase or an equitable mortgage.
Obligation of Vendor a retro;
1. To return to the vendee the price of the sale;
2. To pay the expenses of the contract and other legitimate payments made by rea
son of the sale; and
3. To pay all necessary and useful expenses made on the thing sold.
Legal Redemption right to be subrogated upon the terms and conditions stipulated
in the contract, in the place of one who acquires a thing by purchase or dation
in payment, or by any other transaction where by ownership is transmitted by on
erous title.
Trust De Son Tort a trust created by the purchase of redemption of property by o
ne other than the person lawfully entitled to do so and in fraud of the of the o
ther.
Distinctions
1. action
2.
3. arises
no
there
TheRedemption
rescission
action
before
after
can
here
Pre-here
beissale
emption
sale
because
rescission
directed
is directed
noagainst
saleagainst
of theasthe
original
yetbuyer.
prospective
exists
sale seller.
3. as to cause
a. onerous for a compensation; or
b. gratuitous not for a compensation.
4. as to extent
a. general comprises all business of principal; or
b. special comprises 1 or more specific transaction.
5. as to 3rd persons
a. agent de jure; or
b. agent by estoppel when a person, who is not really an agent, represents himse
lf or is represented as such.
Distinctions
2. third
1. true
not
Agent
really
agent
persons
by an
Implied
,Estoppel
awho
agent
de deal
jure
Agentwith
agent,thewith
implied
rightsagent
and can
duties
always
as such
hold the principal l
2. those who deal with an agent by estoppel cannot always hold the principal lia
iable
ble
Distinctions
Contact
Contract
1.
2.
3.
4. principle
extinguished
concurrence
agent
employee
preparatory
principal
ofexercises
ofAgency
Lease
exercises
ofcontract
contract
ofat
representation
employment
ofdiscretion
parties
will
Services
ministerial
principal
necessary
applied
ary
is functions
appliedto attain
power only end for which he was appointed
Special Power of Attorney is Necessary in the Following Cases:
1. to make payments not usually considered as acts of administration;
2. to effect novations which put an end to obligations already in existence at t
ime agency was constituted;
3. to compromise to submit questions to arbitration, to renounce right to appeal
from judgment, to wave objections to venue of an action or to abandon a prescri
ption already acquired;
4. to waive any obligation gratuitously;
5. to enter into any contract by which ownership over an immovable is transmitte
d or acquired, either gratuitously or for consideration;
6. to make gifts, except customary ones for charity or those made to employees i
n the business managed by the agent;
7. to loan or borrow money, unless it be urgent and indispensable for the preser
vation of the things under administration ;
8. to lease any real property to another person for more than one year;
9. to bind principal to render some service without compensation;
10. to bind principal in a contract of partnership;
11. to obligate principal as guarantor or surty;
12. to create or convey real rights over immovable property;
13. to accept or repudiate an inheritance;
14. to ratify or recognize obligation contracted before the agency; and
15. any other act of strict dominion.
Principles of Agency;
1. agent must act within the scope of his authority; and
2. agent must act in behalf of his principal.
Effects of Agent s Acts:
1. with authority
a. in principal s behalf valid
b. Agent s behalf not binding on principal; agent and stranger are the only partie
s, except regarding things belonging to principal.
2. without authority
a. in principal s behalf unauthorized and unenforceable but may be ratified, in wh
ich case, may be validated retroactively from beginning;
b. in agent s behalf valid.
Authority right of an agent to effect the legal relations of his principal by th
e performance of acts effectuated in accordance with the principal s manifestation
of consent.
Kinds:
1. express clearly defined
2. implied includes necessary acts to accomplish purpose;
3. general agent s discretion is complete;
4. special particular instructions are given; and
5. Apparent- agent or 3rd person was led by principal s conduct or word to believe
that the agent was indeed authorized, when in fact he was not.
Authority of Agent by Necessity by virtue of the existence of an emergency, the
authority of an agent is corresponding enlarged in order to cope with exigencies
for the moment.
Requisites:
E 1. Existence of an emergency;
C 2. Inability of the agent to communicate with the principal;
A 3. Exercise of additional authority for principal s own protection;
L 4. The adoption of fairly legal means, premises duly considered; and
C 5. Ceasing of authority the moment emergency no longer demands the same.
KEY: L A C2 E
General Rule: agent may appoint a substitute.
Exception: when he has been prohibited by the principal.
Agent Shall Be Responsible for the Acts of the Substitute If:
1. when he was given the power to point one;
2. When he was given such power, but without designating the person, the person
appointed was notoriously incompetent or insolvent.
Commission Agent one engaged in the purchase and sale for a principal of persona
l property , which for this purpose, has to be placed in his possession and at h
is disposal (Commercial Commission)
Factor age compensation of a factor or commission agent.
Efficient and Procuring Cause principle of law in agency whereby the broker, to
be entitled to compensation, must be the efficient agent or procuring cause of
the sale.
Ready-Willing and-Able Rule to entitled a broker to compensation, he must produce
a person who is ready, willing and able both to accept and live up to the terms
offered by his principal.
Guaranty Commission or Del Credere - fee that is given in return for the risk t
he agent has to bear in the collection of credits.
Agency coupled with an Interest an agency wherein the agent has acquired some in
terest of his own in the execution of the authority granted to him, in addition
to his mere interest in the contract of employment with the resulting gains.
Revocation of Agency:
. May be revoked expressly or impliedly.
Implied Revocation:
1. By the act of the principal in appointing another agent for the same business
or transaction;
2. By the act of the principal in directly managing the business entrusted to th
e agent; or
3. By the acc of the principal in subsequently granting a special power of attor
ney as regards the same business to another agent, where he had previously grant
ed a general power of attorney to one agent.
General Rule: agency is revocable by the principal at will.
Exceptions:
1. if a bilateral contract depends upon it;
2. If it is the means of fulfilling an obligation already contracted;
3. if partner is appointed manager of the partnership in the contract of partner
ship and his removal from the management is unjustifiable; and
4. If has been constituted in the common interest of the principal and of the ag
ent or in the interest of a third person who has accepted the stipulation in his
favor.
Modes for Extinguishment of Agency:
R 1. Revocation;
W 2. Withdrawal of the agent;
D 3. Death, civil interdiction, insanity or insolvency of the principal or of t
he agent;
D 4. Dissolution of the firm or corporation which entrusted or accepted the age
ncy;
A 5. Accomplishment of the object or purpose of the agency; and
E 6. Expiration of the period.
KEY: EDWARD
Loan
Commodatum contract where one of the contracting parties delivers to another
non- consumable things so that the other may use the same for a certain time an
d return it.
Mutuum or simple loan contract where one of the contracting delivers the other m
oney or any other consumable thing subject to the condition that the same amount
of the same kind and quality be paid and returned.
Distinctions
2.thing
1.
1.use
2.nature
purpose:
ofmust
Depositum
the
of
Commodatum
safekeeping
class
thing
be non-
of consumable
the object of the contract is immaterial
3.cause:
3.
4.may
4.constituted
always
be constituted
may
gratuitous
orextra-
may not
judicially
be gratuitous
or extra judicially
only
In Commodatum, Bailee Liable for Loss Even If Caused by For tuitous Event, When:
1. devoted thing to any purpose different from that for which it has been loaned
;
2. keeps it longer than period stipulated, or after accomplishment of use;
3. thing loaned has been delivered with appraisal of its value;
4. if he lends or leases it to 3rd persons who are not members of his household;
or
5. if being able to save either of the thing borrowed or his own, he chose to sa
ve the latter.
Contract of Precarium commodatum where bailor has right to demand the return of
their thing which is the object of the contract at will.
Deposit
. Constituted form the moment of a person receives a thing belongings to another
with the obligation of safely keeping it and of returning the same.
Kinds:
1. judicial constituted by court order for attachment or seizure of property in
litigation; or
2. extra- judicial
a. voluntary- effected by will of depositor;
b. necessary effected in compliance with legal obligation or on occasion of any
calamity or by travelers in hotels or inns with regard to their effects or passe
ngers in common carriers.
Distinctions
1.
2.must
32.
3.
4.
5.
Judicial
Extra
porpose:
constituted
maybe
protection
as abegen.
always
depositary
delivered
judicial
movable
Deposit
movable
onerous
safekeeping
rule,
only
to
obliged
byowner
orDeposit
will
court
property
upon
gratuitous
immovable
to
of
order
sorder
return
right
contracting
of
property
thingcourt.
the parties
upon demand by depositor.
Liability of Depositary for the Loss of the Thing Deposited Through Fortuitous E
vent:
1. If it is stipulated;
2. If he uses the thing without the depositors permission;
3. If he delays its return; and
4. If he allows others to use the same.
Aleatory Contracts
. one of the parties or both reciprocally bind themselves to give or to do some
thing in consideration of what the other shall give or to do upon the happening
of an event which is uncertain, or which is to occur at an indeterminate time.
Leonine Contract a contract in which one party gets the loin s share to determent
of another.
Contract of Insurance one undertakes for a consideration to indemnify another ag
ainst loss, damage or liability arising from an unknown or contingent event.
Game of Chance that which depends more on chance or hazard than on skill or abil
ity.
Contract of Life Annuity binds the debtor to pay an annual pension or income du
ring the life one or more determinate persons in consideration of a capital cons
isting money or other property, whose ownership is transferred to him once with
the burden of the income.
Guaranty
Contract of Guaranty contract where a person called a guarantor, binds himself t
o a creditor to fulfill the obligation of the principal debtor in case the latte
r should fail to do so.
Contract of Suretyship contract where a person binds himself solidarily with the
principal debtor to fulfill the obligation.
Distinctions
2.Surety
1.
1.primary
Guarantyliability
subsidiary
guarantor assumes liability by virtue of an independent agreement to pay the
obligation
2.
3.
4.
5. surety assumes
liability
insurer
guarantorifcan
of isthe
principal
solvency
collateral
original
avail
liability
debt ofdebtor
debtor
benefit
as afails
regular
of excussion
to doparty
so. and
to the
division
undertaking
in caseorcreditor
contractpro
ceeds
5. surety
against
cannothim.
Benefit of Excussion right by which guarantor cannot be compelled to pay the cre
ditor unless the latter has exhausted all the property of the principal debtor,
and has exhausted all of the legal remedies against such debtor.
Benefit of Division in Favor of Guarantors should there be several guarantors of
only one debtor and for the same debt, the obligation to answer for the same is
divided among all. The creditor cannot claim from the guarantors except the sha
res which they are respectively bound to pay, unless solidarity has been express
ly stipulated.
Benefit of Excussion Shall Not Apply If:
R 1. guarantor expressly renounced it:
S 2. he has bound himself solidarily with the debtor;
I 3. debtor is insolvent ;
A 4. debtor absconded or cannot be sued in the Philippines
E 5. execution upon property of principal debtor would not result in satisfac
tion of the obligation:
J 6. in the case of a judicial bondsman; or
P 7. when the guarantor has constituted in favor of the creditor a pledge or
mortgage as additional security.
KEY: J P R A I S E
Rights of Guarantor Who Pays Creditor
1. Reimbursement
T a. total amount of debit;
I b. legal interest thereof;
E c. expenses incurred by guarantor;
D d. damages, if any.
2. Subrogation.
Guarantor May Proceed Against Principal Debtor Even Before Payment, When:
1. sued for payment;
2. debtor is insolvent;
3. guaranty with a period and period has expired;
4. debt is already demandable;
5. after the lapse of ten years;
6. there is reasonable ground to fear principal debtor will abscond; and
7. there is imminent danger of debtor becoming in solvent.
Extinguishment of Guaranty:
1. same grounds for extinguishment of obligations; and
2. creditor accepts immovable or other property in payment of the debt;
3. release of one of the guarantors by creditor without consent of the others sh
all benefit the remaining ones to the extent of the share of the guarantor relea
sed;
4. extension granted to debtor by creditor; and
5. when by any act of the creditor, the guarantors cannot be subrogated to the r
ights, mortgages and preference one of the latter.
Pledge
. Accessory, real and unilateral contract where the debtor or a third perso
n movable property as security for the performance of the principal obligation,
upon fulfillment of which the thing delivered, shall be returned to the debtor o
r to the third person.
Requisites;
S 1. constituted to secure principal obligation;
O 2. pledgor must be the absolute owner of the thing pledged;
F 3. pledgor must have free disposal of the thing pledged or legally authorized
therefore;
A 4. when the principal obligation becomes due, thing pledged may be alienated
to satisfy payment of such obligation; and
P 5. thing pledged must be placed in the possession of the pledge.
K E Y: S O A P F
Pactum Commissorium pact or agreement in a contract of pledge, mortgage, or anti
chresis where when debtor cannot fulfill the obligation, creditor can appropriat
e or dispose of the thing given by way of pledge, mortgage or antichresis.
Effect of Sale of the Thing Pledged:
. shall estinguish the principal obligation, whether or not the proceeds of the
sale are equal to the amount of the principal obligation, interests and expenses
in a proper case. If the price of the sale is more than said amount, the debtor
shall not be entitled to the excess, unless other wise agreed upon. If the pric
e of the sale is less, neither shall the creditor be entitled to recover the def
iciency not withstanding any stipulation to the countrary.
Real Estate Mortgage
. Accessory contract whereby debtor guarantees the performance of the principal
obligation by subjecting real property or real right as security in case of non
fulfillment of such obligation within the period agreed upon.
S 1. constituted to secure fulfillment of an obligation;
A 2. mortgagor must be the absolute owner of property mortgaged;
F 3. mortgagor must have free disposal of the property mortgaged, or legally
authorized to do so;
A 4. when the principal obligation becomes due, property mortgaged may be alie
nated to satisfy payment of such obligation; and
I 5. subject matter of the contract must be an immovable property or alienab
le real rights upon immovable.
K E Y: S A F A I
Source: Pre Week Memory Aid in All Bar Subjects by Garcia and Garcia