Civil Code
Civil Code
Civil Code
386
June 18, 1949
CHAPTER I
EFFECT AND APPLICATION OF LAWS
Art. 2. Laws shall take effect after fifteen days following the
completion of their publication in the Official Gazette, unless it is
otherwise provided. This Code shall take effect one year after such
publication. (1a)
1
Art. 8. Judicial decisions applying or interpreting the laws or the
Constitution shall form a part of the legal system of the Philippines.
(n)
Art. 11. Customs which are contrary to law, public order or public
policy shall not be countenanced. (n)
Art. 13. When the laws speak of years, months, days or nights, it
shall be understood that years are of three hundred sixty-five days
each; months, of thirty days; days, of twenty-four hours; and nights
from sunset to sunrise.
In computing a period, the first day shall be excluded, and the last
day included. (7a)
Art. 14. Penal laws and those of public security and safety shall be
obligatory upon all who live or sojourn in the Philippine territory,
subject to the principles of public international law and to treaty
stipulations. (8a)
Art. 15. Laws relating to family rights and duties, or to the status,
condition and legal capacity of persons are binding upon citizens of
the Philippines, even though living abroad. (9a)
2
under consideration, whatever may be the nature of the property
and regardless of the country wherein said property may be found.
(10a)
Art. 17. The forms and solemnities of contracts, wills, and other
public instruments shall be governed by the laws of the country in
which they are executed.
CHAPTER 2
HUMAN RELATIONS (n)
Art. 19. Every person must, in the exercise of his rights and in the
performance of his duties, act with justice, give everyone his due,
and observe honesty and good faith.
Art. 21. Any person who wilfully causes loss or injury to another in a
manner that is contrary to morals, good customs or public policy
shall compensate the latter for the damage.
3
Art. 23. Even when an act or event causing damage to another's
property was not due to the fault or negligence of the defendant, the
latter shall be liable for indemnity if through the act or event he was
benefited.
Art. 26. Every person shall respect the dignity, personality, privacy
and peace of mind of his neighbors and other persons. The following
and similar acts, though they may not constitute a criminal offense,
shall produce a cause of action for damages, prevention and other
relief:
Art. 27. Any person suffering material or moral loss because a public
servant or employee refuses or neglects, without just cause, to
perform his official duty may file an action for damages and other
relief against he latter, without prejudice to any disciplinary
administrative action that may be taken.
4
Art. 29. When the accused in a criminal prosecution is acquitted on
the ground that his guilt has not been proved beyond reasonable
doubt, a civil action for damages for the same act or omission may
be instituted. Such action requires only a preponderance of
evidence. Upon motion of the defendant, the court may require the
plaintiff to file a bond to answer for damages in case the complaint
should be found to be malicious.
Art. 31. When the civil action is based on an obligation not arising
from the act or omission complained of as a felony, such civil action
may proceed independently of the criminal proceedings and
regardless of the result of the latter.
5
(7) The right to a just compensation when private property is
taken for public use;
6
aggrieved party has a right to commence an entirely separate and
distinct civil action for damages, and for other relief. Such civil
action shall proceed independently of any criminal prosecution (if
the latter be instituted), and mat be proved by a preponderance of
evidence.
7
governed by rules of court which the Supreme Court shall
promulgate and which shall not be in conflict with the provisions of
this Code.
8
BOOK I
PERSONS
CHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
CHAPTER 2
NATURAL PERSONS
Art. 40. Birth determines personality; but the conceived child shall
be considered born for all purposes that are favorable to it, provided
it be born later with the conditions specified in the following article.
(29a)
Art. 41. For civil purposes, the fetus is considered born if it is alive at
the time it is completely delivered from the mother's womb.
However, if the fetus had an intra-uterine life of less than seven
months, it is not deemed born if it dies within twenty-four hours
after its complete delivery from the maternal womb. (30a)
9
Art. 42. Civil personality is extinguished by death.
The effect of death upon the rights and obligations of the deceased
is determined by law, by contract and by will. (32a)
Art. 43. If there is a doubt, as between two or more persons who are
called to succeed each other, as to which of them died first, whoever
alleges the death of one prior to the other, shall prove the same; in
the absence of proof, it is presumed that they died at the same time
and there shall be no transmission of rights from one to the other.
(33)
CHAPTER 3
JURIDICAL PERSONS
Art. 46. Juridical persons may acquire and possess property of all
kinds, as well as incur obligations and bring civil or criminal actions,
in conformity with the laws and regulations of their organization.
(38a)
10
44, their property and other assets shall be disposed of in pursuance
of law or the charter creating them. If nothing has been specified on
this point, the property and other assets shall be applied to similar
purposes for the benefit of the region, province, city or municipality
which during the existence of the institution derived the principal
benefits from the same. (39a)
Art. 50. For the exercise of civil rights and the fulfillment of civil
obligations, the domicile of natural persons is the place of their
habitual residence. (40a)
Art. 51. When the law creating or recognizing them, or any other
provision does not fix the domicile of juridical persons, the same
shall be understood to be the place where their legal representation
is established or where they exercise their principal functions. (41a)
CHAPTER 1
REQUISITES OF MARRIAGE
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Art. 52. Marriage is not a mere contract but an inviolable social
institution. Its nature, consequences and incidents are governed by
law and not subject to stipulation, except that the marriage
settlements may to a certain extent fix the property relations during
the marriage. (n)
Art. 54. Any male of the age of sixteen years or upwards, and any
female of the age of fourteen years or upwards, not under any of the
impediments mentioned in Articles 80 to 84, may contract marriage.
(2)
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(2) The Presiding Justice and the Justices of the Court of
Appeals;
Art. 57. The marriage shall be solemnized publicly in the office of the
judge in open court or of the mayor; or in the church, chapel or
temple, as the case may be, and not elsewhere, except in cases of
marriages contracted on the point of death or in remote places in
accordance with Article 72 of this Code, or in case of marriage
referred to in Article 76 or when one of the parents or the guardian
of the female or the latter herself if over eighteen years of age
request it in writing, in which cases the marriage may be solemnized
at a house or place designated by said parent or guardian of the
female or by the latter herself in a sworn statement to that effect.
(5a)
Art. 59. The local civil registrar shall issue the proper license if each
of the contracting parties swears separately before him or before
any public official authorized to administer oaths, to an application
in writing setting forth that such party has the necessary
qualifications for contracting marriage. The applicants, their parents
or guardians shall not be required to exhibit their residence
certificates in any formality in connection with the securing of the
marriage license. Such application shall insofar as possible contain
the following data:
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(1) Full name of the contracting party;
Art. 60. The local civil registrar, upon receiving such application,
shall require the exhibition of the original baptismal or birth
certificates of the contracting parties or copies of such documents
duly attested by the persons having custody of the originals. These
certificates or certified copies of the documents required by this
article need not to be sworn to and shall be exempt from the
documentary stamp tax. The signature and official title of the person
issuing the certificate shall be sufficient proof of its authenticity.
14
thereof his residence certificate for the current year or any previous
years, to show the age stated in his application or, in the absence
thereof, an instrument drawn up and sworn to before the local civil
registrar concerned or any public official authorized to solemnize
marriage. Such instrument shall contain the sworn declaration of
two witnesses, of lawful age, of either sex, setting forth the full
name, profession, and residence of such contracting party and of his
or her parents, if known, and the place and date of birth of such
party. The nearest of kin of the contracting parties shall be preferred
as witnesses, and in their default, persons well known in the
province or the locality for their honesty and good repute.
Art. 62. Males above twenty but under twenty-five years of age, or
females above eighteen but under twenty-three years of age, shall
be obliged to ask their parents or guardian for advice upon the
15
intended marriage. If they do not obtain such advice, or if it be
unfavorable, the marriage shall not take place till after three months
following the completion of the publication of the application for
marriage license. A sworn statement by the contracting parties to
the effect that such advice has been sought, together with the
written advice given, if any, shall accompany the application for
marriage license. Should the parents or guardian refuse to give any
advice, this fact shall be stated in the sworn declaration. (n)
Art. 63. The local civil registrar shall post during ten consecutive
days at the main door of the building where he has his office a
notice, the location of which shall not be changed once it has been
placed, setting forth the full names and domiciles of the applicants
for a marriage license and other information given in the application.
This notice shall request all persons having knowledge of any
impediment to the marriage to advise the local registrar thereof. The
license shall be issued after the completion of the publication, unless
the local civil registrar receives information upon any alleged
impediment to the marriage. (10a)
Art. 65. The local civil registrar shall demand the previous payment
of fees required by law or regulations for each license issued. No
other sum shall be collected, in the nature of a fee or tax of any kind,
for the issuance of a marriage license. Marriage licenses shall be
issued free of charge to indigent parties, when both male and female
do not each own assessed real property in excess of five hundred
pesos, a fact certified to, without cost, by the provincial treasurer, or
in the absence thereof, by a statement duly sworn to by the
contracting parties before the local civil registrar. The license shall
be valid in any part of the Philippines; but it shall be good for no
more than one hundred and twenty days from the date on which it is
issued and shall be deemed canceled at the expiration of said period
if the interested parties have not made use of it. (11a)
Art. 66. When either or both of the contracting parties are citizens or
subjects of a foreign country, it shall be necessary, before a
marriage license can be obtained, to provide themselves with a
16
certificate of legal capacity to contract marriage, to be issued by
their respective diplomatic or consular officials. (13a)
Art. 68. It shall be the duty of the person solemnizing the marriage
to furnish to either of the contracting parties one of the three copies
of the marriage contract referred to in Article 55, and to send
another copy of the document not later than fifteen days after the
marriage took place to the local civil registrar concerned, whose
duty it shall be to issue the proper receipt to any person sending a
marriage contract solemnized by him, including marriages of an
exceptional character. The official, priest, or minister solemnizing
the marriage shall retain the third copy of the marriage contract, the
marriage license and the affidavit of the interested party regarding
the solemnization of the marriage in a place other than those
mentioned in Article 57 if there be any such affidavit, in the files that
he must keep. (16a)
Art. 69. It shall be the duty of the local civil registrar to prepare the
documents required by this Title, and to administer oaths to all
interested parties without any charge in both cases.
17
Art. 70. The local civil registrar concerned shall enter all applications
for marriage licenses filed with him in a register book strictly in the
order in which the same shall be received. He shall enter in said
register the names of the applicants, the date on which the marriage
license was issued, and such other data as may be necessary. (18a)
CHAPTER 2
MARRIAGES OF EXCEPTIONAL CHARACTER
Art. 73. The original of the affidavit required in the last preceding
article, together with a copy of the marriage contract, shall be sent
by the person solemnizing the marriage to the local civil registrar of
the municipality where it was performed within the period of thirty
days, after the performance of the marriage. The local civil registrar
shall, however, before filing the papers, require the payment into
the municipal treasury of the legal fees required in Article 65. (21)
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during war. The duties mentioned in the two preceding articles shall
be complied with by the ship captain, airplane chief or commanding
officer. (n)
Art. 77. In case two persons married in accordance with law desire
to ratify their union in conformity with the regulations, rites, or
practices of any church, sect, or religion it shall no longer be
necessary to comply with the requirements of Chapter 1 of this Title
and any ratification made shall merely be considered as a purely
religious ceremony. (23)
19
Art. 79. Mixed marriages between a Christian male and a
Mohammedan or pagan female shall be governed by the general
provision of this Title and not by those of the last preceding article,
but mixed marriages between a Mohammedan or pagan male and a
Christian female may be performed under the provisions of the last
preceding article if so desired by the contracting parties, subject,
however, in the latter case to the provisions of the second paragraph
of said article. (26)
CHAPTER 3
VOID AND VOIDABLE MARRIAGES
Art. 80. The following marriages shall be void from the beginning:
(1) Those contracted under the ages of sixteen and fourteen
years by the male and female respectively, even with the
consent of the parents;
Art. 81. Marriages between the following are incestuous and void
from their performance, whether the relationship between the
parties be legitimate or illegitimate:
(1) Between ascendants and descendants of any degree;
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(3) Between collateral relatives by blood within the fourth civil
degree. (28a)
Art. 82. The following marriages shall also be void from the
beginning:
(1) Between stepfathers and stepdaughters, and stepmothers
and stepsons;
(2) The first spouse had been absent for seven consecutive
years at the time of the second marriage without the spouse
present having news of the absentee being alive, or if the
absentee, though he has been absent for less than seven years,
is generally considered as dead and believed to be so by the
spouse present at the time of contracting such subsequent
marriage, or if the absentee is presumed dead according to
Articles 390 and 391. The marriage so contracted shall be valid
in any of the three cases until declared null and void by a
competent court. (29a)
Art. 85. A marriage may be annulled for any of the following causes,
existing at the time of the marriage:
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the party, unless after attaining the ages of twenty or eighteen
years, as the case may be, such party freely cohabited with the
other and both lived together as husband and wife;
(3) That either party was of unsound mind, unless such party,
after coming to reason, freely cohabited with the other as
husband or wife;
(3) Concealment by the wife of the fact that at the time of the
marriage, she was pregnant by a man other than her husband.
22
Art. 87. The action for annulment of marriage must be commenced
by the parties and within the periods as follows:
Art. 89. Children conceived or born of marriages which are void from
the beginning shall have the same status, rights and obligations as
acknowledged natural children, and are called natural children by
legal fiction.
23
Art. 90. When a marriage is annulled, the court shall award the
custody of the children as it may deem best, and make provision for
their education and support. Attorney's fees and expenses incurred
in the litigation shall be charged to the conjugal partnership
property, unless the action fails. (33a)
Art. 91. Damages may be awarded in the following cases when the
marriage is judicially annulled or declared void from the beginning:
(6) If one party was insane and the other was aware thereof at
the time of the marriage. (n)
CHAPTER 4
AUTHORITY TO SOLEMNIZE MARRIAGES
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statement containing the information required, and being satisfied
that the denomination, church, sect, or region of the applicant
operates in the Philippines, shall record the name of such priest or
minister in a suitable register and issue to him an authorization to
solemnize marriage. Said priest or minister or rabbi shall be obliged
to exhibit his authorization to the contracting parties, to their
parents, grandparents, guardians, or persons in charge demanding
the same. No priest or minister not having the required
authorization may solemnize marriage. (34a)
Art. 96. The existing laws which punish acts or omissions concerning
the marriage license, solemnization of marriage, authority to
solemnize marriages, and other acts or omissions relative to the
celebration of marriage shall remain and continue to be in force. (n)
25
(2) An attempt by one spouse against the life of the other. (n)
Art. 98. In every case the court must take steps, before granting the
legal separation, toward the reconciliation of the spouses, and must
be fully satisfied that such reconciliation is highly improbable. (n)
Art. 99. No person shall be entitled to a legal separation who has not
resided in the Philippines for one year prior to the filing of the
petition, unless the cause for the legal separation has taken place
within the territory of this Republic. (Sec. 2a, Act No. 2710)
Art. 100. The legal separation may be claimed only by the innocent
spouse, provided there has been no condonation of or consent to the
adultery or concubinage. Where both spouses are offenders, a legal
separation cannot be claimed by either of them. Collusion between
the parties to obtain legal separation shall cause the dismissal of the
petition. (3a, Act No. 2710)
Art. 102. An action for legal separation cannot be filed except within
one year from and after the date on which the plaintiff became
cognizant of the cause and within five years from and after the date
when such cause occurred. (4a, Act 2710)
Art. 104. After the filing of the petition for legal separation, the
spouses shall be entitled to live separately from each other and
manage their respective property.
26
dispose of the income or of the capital except in accordance with the
orders of the court. (6, Act 2710)
Art. 106. The decree of legal separation shall have the following
effects:
Art. 107. The innocent spouse, after a decree of legal separation has
been granted, may revoke the donations by reason of marriage made
by him or by her to the offending spouse. Alienation and mortgages
made before the notation of the complaint for revocation in the
Registry of Property shall be valid.
This action lapses after four years following the date the decree
became final. (n)
27
Art. 108. Reconciliation stops the proceedings for legal separation
and rescinds the decree of legal separation already rendered.
Art. 109. The husband and wife are obliged to live together, observe
mutual respect and fidelity, and render mutual help and support. (56a)
Art. 110. The husband shall fix the residence of the family. But the
court may exempt the wife from living with the husband if he should
live abroad unless in the service of the Republic. (58a)
Art. 111. The husband is responsible for the support of the wife and
the rest of the family. These expenses shall be met first from the
conjugal property, then from the husband's capital, and lastly from
the wife's paraphernal property. In case there is a separation of
property, by stipulation in the marriage settlements, the husband
and wife shall contribute proportionately to the family expenses. (n)
Art. 113. The husband must be joined in all suits by or against the
wife, except:
(2) If they have in fact been separated for at least one year;
28
(5) When the litigation is between the husband and wife;
(7) When the action is upon the civil liability arising from a
criminal offense;
Art. 114. The wife cannot, without the husband's consent acquire
any property by gratuitous title, except from her ascendants,
descendants, parents-in-law, and collateral relatives within the
fourth degree. (n)
Art. 115. The wife manages the affairs of the household. She may
purchase things necessary for the support of the family, and the
conjugal partnership shall be bound thereby. She may borrow money
for this purpose, if the husband fails to deliver the proper sum. The
purchase of jewelry and precious objects is voidable, unless the
transaction has been expressly or tacitly approved by the husband,
or unless the price paid is from her paraphernal property. (62a)
Art. 116. When one of the spouses neglects his or her duties to the
conjugal union or brings danger, dishonor or material injury upon
the other, the injured party may apply to the court for relief.
The court may counsel the offender to comply with his or her duties,
and take such measures as may be proper. (n)
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(2) His opposition is founded on serious and valid grounds.
CHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 118. The property relations between husband and wife shall be
governed in the following order:
(1) By contract executed before the marriage;
Art. 119. The future spouses may in the marriage settlements agree
upon absolute or relative community of property, or upon complete
separation of property, or upon any other regime. In the absence of
marriage settlements, or when the same are void, the system of
relative community or conjugal partnership of gains as established
in this Code, shall govern the property relations between husband
and wife. (n)
Art. 120. A minor who according to law may contract marriage, may
also execute his or her marriage settlements; but they shall be valid
only if the persons designated by law to give consent to the
marriage of the minor take part in the ante-nuptial agreement. In
the absence of the parents or of a guardian, the consent to the
marriage settlements will be given by the family council. (1318a)
30
Art. 123. For the validity of marriage settlements executed by any
person upon whom a sentence of civil interdiction has been
pronounced, the presence and participation of the guardian shall be
indispensable, who for this purpose shall be designated by a
competent court, in accordance with the provisions of the Rules of
Court. (1323a)
CHAPTER 2
DONATIONS BY REASON OF MARRIAGE
Art. 128. Minors may make and receive donations in their ante-
nuptial contract, provided they are authorized by the persons who
are to give their consent to the marriage of said minors. (1329a)
31
Art. 130. The future spouses may give each other in their marriage
settlements as much as one-fifth of their present property, and with
respect to their future property, only in the event of death, to the
extent laid down by the provisions of this Code referring to
testamentary succession. (1331a)
Art. 131. The donor by reason of marriage shall release the property
donated from mortgages and all other encumbrances upon the same,
with the exception of easements, unless in the marriage settlements
or in the contracts the contrary has been stipulated. (1332a)
(3) When the marriage takes place without the consent of the
parents or guardian, as required by law;
(4) When the marriage is annulled, and the donee acted in bad
faith;
(5) Upon legal separation, the donee being the guilty spouse;
Art. 133. Every donation between the spouses during the marriage
shall be void. This prohibition does not apply when the donation
takes effect after the death of the donor.
Art. 134. Donations during the marriage by one of the spouses to the
children whom the other spouse had by another marriage, or to
persons of whom the other spouse is a presumptive heir at the time
of the donation are voidable, at the instance of the donor's heirs
after his death. (1335a)
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CHAPTER 3
PARAPHERNAL PROPERTY
Art. 135. All property brought by the wife to the marriage, as well as
all property she acquires during the marriage, in accordance with
article 148, is paraphernal. (1381a)
Art. 137. The wife shall have the administration of the paraphernal
property, unless she delivers the same to the husband by means of a
public instrument empowering him to administer it.
Art. 138. The fruits of the paraphernal property form part of the
assets of the conjugal partnership, and shall be subject to the
payment of the expenses of the marriage.
The property itself shall also be subject to the daily expenses of the
family, if the property of the conjugal partnership and the husband's
capital are not sufficient therefor. (1385a)
CHAPTER 4
CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP OF GAINS
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SECTION 1. - General Provisions
Art. 144. When a man and a woman live together as husband and
wife, but they are not married, or their marriage is void from the
beginning, the property acquired by either or both of them through
their work or industry or their wages and salaries shall be governed
by the rules on co-ownership. (n)
34
(3) That which is acquired by right of redemption or by
exchange with other property belonging to only one of the
spouses;
Art. 149. Whoever gives or promises capital to the husband shall not
be subject to warranty against eviction, except in case of fraud. (1937)
Art. 150. Property donated or left by will to the spouses, jointly and
with designation of determinate shares, shall pertain to the wife as
paraphernal property, and to the husband as capital, in the
proportion specified by the donor or testator, and in the absence of
designation, share and share alike, without prejudice to what is
provided in Article 753. (1398a)
Art. 151. If the donations are onerous, the amount of the charges
shall be deducted from the paraphernal property or from the
husband's capital, whenever they have been borne by the conjugal
partnership. (1399a)
35
Art. 154. That share of the hidden treasure which the law awards to
the finder or the proprietor belongs to the conjugal partnership. (n)
The usufruct which the spouses have over the property of their
children, though of another marriage, shall be included in this
provision. (1403a)
36
of the Conjugal Partnership
37
spouse who is bound should have no exclusive property or if it
should be insufficient; but at the time of the liquidation of the
partnership such spouse shall be charged for what has been paid for
the purpose above-mentioned. (1410)
Art. 164. Whatever may be lost during the marriage in any kind of
gambling, betting or game, whether permitted or prohibited by law,
shall be borne by the loser, and shall not be charged to the conjugal
partnership. (1411a)
Art. 166. Unless the wife has been declared a non compos mentis or
a spendthrift, or is under civil interdiction or is confined in a
leprosarium, the husband cannot alienate or encumber any real
property of the conjugal partnership without the wife's consent. If
she refuses unreasonably to give her consent, the court may compel
her to grant the same.
Art. 169. The wife may also by express authority of the husband
appearing in a public instrument, administer the latter's estate. (n)
Art. 170. The husband or the wife may dispose by will of his or her
half of the conjugal partnership profits. (1414a)
38
Art. 172. The wife cannot bind the conjugal partnership without the
husband's consent except in cases provided by law. (1416a)
Art. 173. The wife may, during the marriage, and within ten years
from the transaction questioned, ask the courts for the annulment of
any contract of the husband entered into without her consent, when
such consent is required, or any act or contract of the husband
which tends to defraud her or impair her interest in the conjugal
partnership property. Should the wife fail to exercise this right, she
or her heirs, after the dissolution of the marriage, may demand the
value of property fraudulently alienated by the husband. (n)
Art. 176. In case of legal separation, the guilty spouse shall forfeit
his or her share of the conjugal partnership profits, which shall be
awarded to the children of both, and the children of the guilty
spouse had by a prior marriage. However, if the conjugal partnership
property came mostly or entirely from the work or industry, or from
the wages and salaries, or from the fruits of the separate property of
the guilty spouse, this forfeiture shall not apply.
39
Art. 178. The separation in fact between husband and wife without
judicial approval, shall not affect the conjugal partnership, except
that:
(1) The spouse who leaves the conjugal home or refuses to live
therein, without just cause, shall not have a right to be
supported;
(3) If the husband has abandoned the wife without just cause
for at least one year, she may petition the court for a
receivership, or administration by her of the conjugal
partnership property, or separation of property. (n)
Art. 180. The bed and bedding which the spouses ordinarily use shall
not be included in the inventory. These effects, as well as the
clothing for their ordinary use, shall be delivered to the surviving
spouse. (1420)
Art. 183. The deductions from the inventoried property having been
made as provided in the two preceding articles, the remainder of
40
said property shall constitute the credit of the conjugal partnership.
(1424)
Art. 186. The mourning apparel of the widow shall be paid for out of
the estate of the deceased husband. (1427a)
Art. 187. With regard to the formation of the inventory, rules for
appraisal and sale of property of the conjugal partnership, and other
matters which are not expressly determined in the present Chapter,
the Rules of Court on the administration of estates of deceased
persons shall be observed. (1428a)
Art. 188. From the common mass of property support shall be given
to the surviving spouse and to the children during the liquidation of
the inventoried property and until what belongs to them is delivered;
but from this shall be deducted that amount received for support
which exceeds the fruits or rents pertaining to them. (1430)
CHAPTER 5
SEPARATION OF PROPERTY OF THE SPOUSES
AND ADMINISTRATION OF PROPERTY
41
BY THE WIFE DURING THE MARRIAGE
Art. 191. The husband or the wife may ask for the separation of
property, and it shall be decreed when the spouse of the petitioner
has been sentenced to a penalty which carries with it civil
interdiction, or has been declared absent, or when legal separation
has been granted.
In all these cases, it is sufficient to present the final judgment which has been entered against the
guilty or absent spouse. (1433a)
The husband and the wife may agree upon the dissolution of the
conjugal partnership during the marriage, subject to judicial
approval. All the creditors of the husband and of the wife, as well as
of the conjugal partnership shall be notified of any petition for
judicial approval or the voluntary dissolution of the conjugal
partnership, so that any such creditors may appear at the hearing to
safeguard his interests. Upon approval of the petition for dissolution
of the conjugal partnership, the court shall take such measures as
may protect the creditors and other third persons.
Art. 192. Once the separation of property has been ordered, the
conjugal partnership shall be dissolved, and its liquidation shall be
made in conformity with what has been established by this Code.
42
The share of the spouse who is under civil interdiction or absent
shall be administered in accordance with the Rules of Court. (1434a)
Art. 193. The complaint for separation and the final judgment
declaring the same, shall be noted and recorded in the proper
registers of property, if the judgment should refer to immovable
property. (1437)
Art. 194. The separation of property shall not prejudice the rights
previously acquired by creditors. (1438)
(4) When the court, at the instance of the wife, authorizes the
husband to resume the administration of the conjugal
partnership, the court being satisfied that the husband will not
again abuse his powers as an administrator;
(5) When the husband, who has abandoned the wife, rejoins
her.
In the above cases, the property relations between the spouses shall
be governed by the same rules as before the separation, without
prejudice to the acts and contracts legally executed during the
separation.
The spouses shall state, in a public document, all the property which
they return to the marriage and which shall constitute the separate
property of each.
43
Art. 196. With the conjugal partnership subsisting, the
administration of all classes of property in the marriage may be
transferred by the courts to the wife:
The courts may also confer the administration to the wife, with such
limitation as they may deem advisable, if the husband should
become a fugitive from justice or be in hiding as a defendant in a
criminal case, or if, being absolutely unable to administer, he should
have failed to provide for administration. (1441a)
Art. 197. The wife to whom the administration of all the property of
the marriage is transferred shall have, with respect to said property,
the same powers and responsibility which the husband has when he
is the administrator, but always subject to the provisions of the last
paragraph of the preceding article. (1442a)
CHAPTER 6
SYSTEM OF ABSOLUTE COMMUNITY (n)
Art. 200. Neither spouse may renounce any inheritance without the
consent of the other. In case of conflict, the court shall decide the
question, after consulting the family council, if there is any.
44
(2) Property inherited by either husband or wife through the
death of a child by a former marriage, there being brothers or
sisters of the full blood of the deceased child;
Art. 202. Ante-nuptial debts of either spouse shall not be paid from
the community, unless the same have redounded to the benefit of
the family.
45
Art. 209. When there is a separation in fact between husband and
wife, without judicial approval, the provisions of Article 178 shall
apply.
Art. 210. Upon the dissolution and liquidation of the community, the
net assets shall be divided equally between the husband and the
wife or their heirs. In case of legal separation or annulment of
marriage, the provisions of Articles 176 and 177 shall apply to the
net profits acquired during the marriage.
CHAPTER 7
SYSTEM OF COMPLETE SEPARATION OF PROPERTY (n)
Art. 214. Each spouse shall own, dispose of, possess, administer and
enjoy his or her own separate estate, without the consent of the
other. All earnings from any profession, business or industry shall
likewise belong to each spouse.
CHAPTER 1
THE FAMILY AS AN INSTITUTION
Art. 216. The family is a basic social institution which public policy
cherishes and protects.
46
Art. 217. Family relations shall include those:
Art. 219. Mutual aid, both moral and material, shall be rendered
among members of the same family. Judicial and administrative
officials shall foster this mutual assistance.
47
subject to the limitations in Article 2035.
CHAPTER 2
THE FAMILY HOME (n)
Art. 223. The family home is the dwelling house where a person and
his family reside, and the land on which it is situated. If constituted
as herein provided, the family home shall be exempt from execution,
forced sale or attachment, except as provided in Articles 232 and
243.
48
(2) An estimate of its actual value;
Art. 230. Creditors, mortgagees and all other persons who have an
interest in the estate shall be notified of the petition, and given an
opportunity to present their objections thereto. The petition shall,
moreover, be published once a week for three consecutive weeks in
a newspaper of general circulation.
Art. 231. If the court finds that the actual value of the proposed
family home does not exceed twenty thousand pesos, or thirty
thousand pesos in chartered cities, and that no third person is
prejudiced, the petition shall be approved. Should any creditor
whose claim is unsecured, oppose the establishment of the family
home, the court shall grant the petition if the debtor gives sufficient
security for the debt.
Art. 232. The family home, after its creation by virtue of judicial
approval, shall be exempt from execution, forced sale, or
attachment, except:
Art. 233. The order of the court approving the establishment of the
family home shall be recorded in the Registry of Property.
49
Art. 234. When there is danger that a person obliged to give support
may lose his or her fortune because of grave mismanagement or on
account of riotous living, his or her spouse, if any, and a majority of
those entitled to be supported by him or by her may petition the
Court of First Instance for the creation of the family home.
Art. 236. The family home may be dissolved upon the petition of the
person who has constituted the same, with the written consent of
his or her spouse and of at least one half of all the other
beneficiaries who are eighteen years of age or over. The court may
grant the petition if it is satisfactorily shown that the best interest of
the family requires the dissolution of the family home.
Art. 238. Upon the death of the person who has set up the family
home, the same shall continue, unless he desired otherwise in his
will. The heirs cannot ask for its partition during the first ten years
following the death of the person constituting the same, unless the
court finds powerful reasons therefor.
Art. 239. The family home shall not be subject to payment of the
debts of the deceased, unless in his will the contrary is stated.
However, the claims mentioned in Article 232 shall not be adversely
affected by the death of the person who has established the family
home.
50
recording in the Registry of Property a public instrument wherein a
person declares that he thereby establishes a family home out of a
dwelling place with the land on which it is situated.
Art. 241. The declaration setting up the family home shall be under
oath and shall contain:
Art. 244. The provisions of Articles 226 to 228 and 235 to 238 are
likewise applicable to family homes extrajudicially established.
Art. 245. Upon the death of the person who has extrajudicially
constituted the family home, the property shall not be liable for his
debts other than those mentioned in Article 243. However, he may
provide in his will that the family home shall be subject to payment
of debts not specified in Article 243.
51
Art. 246. No declaration for the extrajudicial establishment of the
family home shall be recorded in the Registry of Property if the
estimated actual value of the building and the land exceeds the
amount stated in Article 231.
Art. 248. The hearing on the petition, appraisal of the value of the
family home, the sale under execution and other matters relative to
the proceedings shall be governed by such provisions in the Rules of
Court as the Supreme Court shall promulgate on the subject,
provided they are not inconsistent with this Code.
Art. 250. The amount mentioned in Article 231 thus received by the
person who has established the family home, or as much thereof as
the court may determine, shall be invested in constitution of a new
family home. The court shall take measures to enforce this provision.
52
CHAPTER 3
THE FAMILY COUNCIL (n)
Art. 252. The Court of First Instance may, upon application of any
member of the family, a relative, or a friend, appoint a family
council, whose duty it shall be to advise the court, the spouses, the
parents, guardians and the family on important family questions.
Art. 253. The family council shall be composed of five members, who
shall be relatives of the parties concerned. But the court may
appoint one or two friends of the family.
Art. 254. The family council shall elect its chairman, and shall meet
at the call of the latter or upon order of the court.
CHAPTER 1
LEGITIMATE CHILDREN
Art. 255. Children born after one hundred and eighty days following
the celebration of the marriage, and before three hundred days
following its dissolution or the separation of the spouses shall be
presumed to be legitimate.
(2) By the fact that the husband and wife were living
separately, in such a way that access was not possible;
53
Art. 257. Should the wife commit adultery at or about the time of the
conception of the child, but there was no physical impossibility of
access between her and her husband as set forth in Article 255, the
child is prima facie presumed to be illegitimate if it appears highly
improbable, for ethnic reasons, that the child is that of the husband.
For the purposes of this article, the wife's adultery need not be
proved in a criminal case. (n)
Art. 258. A child born within one hundred eighty days following the
celebration of the marriage is prima facie presumed to be legitimate.
Such a child is conclusively presumed to be legitimate in any of
these cases:
(2) A child born after one hundred eighty days following the
celebration of the subsequent marriage is prima facie
presumed to have been conceived during such marriage, even
though it be born within the three hundred days after the death
of the former husband. (n)
54
The same obligation shall devolve upon a widow who believes
herself to have been left pregnant by the deceased husband, or upon
the wife who believes herself to be pregnant by her husband from
whom she has been legally separated. (n)
Art. 262. The heirs of the husband may impugn the legitimacy of the
child only in the following cases:
(3) If the child was born after the death of the husband. (112)
Art. 263. The action to impugn the legitimacy of the child shall be
brought within one year from the recording of the birth in the Civil
Register, if the husband should be in the same place, or in a proper
case, any of his heirs.
55
CHAPTER 2
PROOF OF FILIATION OF LEGITIMATE CHILDREN
Art. 268. The action to claim his legitimacy may be brought by the
child during all his lifetime, and shall be transmitted to his heirs if he
should die during his minority or in a state of insanity. In these
cases the heirs shall have a period of five years within which to
institute the action.
CHAPTER 3
LEGITIMATED CHILDREN
Art. 271. Only natural children who have been recognized by the
parents before or after the celebration of the marriage, or have been
declared natural children by final judgment, may be considered
legitimated by subsequent marriage.
56
sisters of the full blood: Provided, That the consent of the latter shall
be implied if they do not impugn the recognition within four years
from the time of such recognition, or in case they are minors, within
four years following the attainment of majority. (121a)
Art. 273. Legitimation shall take effect from the time of the child's
birth. (123a)
CHAPTER 4
ILLEGITIMATE CHILDREN
Art. 276. A natural child may be recognized by the father and mother
jointly, or by only one of them. (129)
Art. 277. In case the recognition is made by only one of the parents,
it shall be presumed that the child is natural, if the parent
recognizing it had legal capacity to contract marriage at the time of
the conception. (130)
Art. 279. A minor who may not contract marriage without parental
consent cannot acknowledge a natural child, unless the parent or
guardian approves the acknowledgment or unless the recognition is
made in a will. (n)
Art. 280. When the father or the mother makes the recognition
separately, he or she shall not reveal the name of the person with
57
whom he or she had the child; neither shall he or she state any
circumstance whereby the other parent may be identified. (132a)
A minor can in any case impugn the recognition within four years
following the attainment of his majority. (133a)
(3) When the child was conceived during the time when the
mother cohabited with the supposed father;
(4) When the child has in his favor any evidence or proof that
the defendant is his father. (n)
(2) When the birth and the identity of the child are clearly
proved. (136a)
58
Art. 285. The action for the recognition of natural children may be
brought only during the lifetime of the presumed parents, except in
the following cases:
(1) If the father or mother died during the minority of the
child, in which case the latter may file the action before the
expiration of four years from the attainment of his majority;
In this case, the action must be commenced within four years from
the finding of the document. (137a)
Art. 286. The recognition made in favor of a child who does not
possess all the conditions stated in Article 269, or in which the
requirements of the law have not been fulfilled, may be impugned by
those who are prejudiced by such recognition. (137)
Art. 288. Minor children mentioned in the preceding article are under
the parental authority of the mother. (n)
59
Art. 291. The following are obliged to support each other to the
whole extent set forth in the preceding article:
Brothers and sisters owe their legitimate and natural brothers and
sisters, although they are only of the half-blood, the necessaries for
life, when by a physical or mental defect, or any other cause not
imputable to the recipients, the latter cannot secure their
subsistence. This assistance includes, in a proper case, expenses
necessary for elementary education and for professional or
vocational training. (143a)
Art. 294. The claim for support, when proper and two or more
persons are obliged to give it, shall be made in the following order:
60
(4) From the brothers and sisters.
Art. 295. When the obligation to give support falls upon two or more
persons, the payment of the same shall be divided between them in
proportion to the resources of each.
When two or more recipients at the same time claim support from
one and the same person legally obliged to give it, and the latter
should not have sufficient means to satisfy all, the order established
in the preceding article shall be followed, unless the concurrent
obligees should be the spouse and a child subject to parental
authority, in which case the latter shall be preferred. (145)
Art. 296. The amount of support, in the cases referred to in the five
numbers of article 291, shall be in proportion to the resources or
means of the giver and to the necessities of the recipient. (146a)
Art. 299. The person obliged to give support may, at his option, fulfill
his obligation either by paying the allowance fixed, or by receiving
and maintaining in his house the person who has a right to receive
61
support. The latter alternative cannot be availed of in case there is a
moral or legal obstacle thereto. (149a)
Art. 300. The obligation to furnish support ceases upon the death of
the obligor, even if he may be bound to give it in compliance with a
final judgment. (150)
Art. 301. The right to receive support cannot be renounced; nor can
it be transmitted to a third person. Neither can it be compensated
with what the recipient owes the obligor.
Art. 302. Neither the right to receive legal support nor any money or
property obtained as such support or any pension or gratuity from
the government is subject to attachment or execution. (n)
(2) When the resources of the obligor have been reduced to the
point where he cannot give the support without neglecting his
own needs and those of his family;
62
case. (153a)
Art. 305. The duty and the right to make arrangements for the
funeral of a relative shall be in accordance with the order
established for support, under Article 294. In case of descendants of
the same degree, or of brothers and sisters, the oldest shall be
preferred. In case of ascendants, the paternal shall have a better
right.
Art. 306. Every funeral shall be in keeping with the social position of
the deceased.
CHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 311. The father and mother jointly exercise parental authority
over their legitimate children who are not emancipated. In case of
disagreement, the father's decision shall prevail, unless there is a
judicial order to the contrary.
63
Children are obliged to obey their parents so long as they are under
parental power, and to observe respect and reverence toward them
always.
Recognized natural and adopted children who are under the age of
majority are under the parental authority of the father or mother
recognizing or adopting them, and are under the same obligation
stated in the preceding paragraph.
Natural children by legal fiction are under the joint authority of the
father and mother, as provided in the first paragraph of this article.
(154a)
CHAPTER 2
EFFECT OF PARENTAL AUTHORITY
UPON THE PERSONS OF THE CHILDREN
Art. 316. The father and the mother have, with respect to their
unemancipated children:
(1) The duty to support them, to have them in their company,
educate and instruct them in keeping with their means and to
represent them in all actions which may redound to their
benefit;
64
Art. 317. The courts may appoint a guardian of the child' s property,
or a guardian ad litem when the best interest of the child so
requires. (n)
Art. 318. Upon cause being shown by the parents, the local mayor
may aid them in the exercise of their authority over the child. If the
child is to be kept in a children's home or similar institution for not
more than one month, an order of the justice of the peace or
municipal judge shall be necessary, after due hearing, where the
child shall be heard. For his purpose, the court may appoint a
guardian ad litem. (156a)
Art. 319. The father and the mother shall satisfy the support for the
detained child; but they shall not have any intervention in the
regime of the institution where the child is detained. They may lift
the detention when they deem it opportune, with the approval of the
court. (158a)
CHAPTER 3
EFFECT OF PARENTAL AUTHORITY
ON THE PROPERTY OF THE CHILDREN
Art. 320. The father, or in his absence the mother, is the legal
administrator of the property pertaining to the child under parental
authority. If the property is worth more than two thousand pesos,
the father or mother shall give a bond subject to the approval of the
Court of First Instance. (159a)
Art. 321. The property which the unemancipated child has acquired
or may acquire with his work or industry, or by any lucrative title,
belongs to the child in ownership, and in usufruct to the father or
mother under whom he is under parental authority and in whose
company he lives; but if the child, with the parent's consent, should
live independently from them, he shall be considered as
emancipated for all purposes relative to said property, and he shall
have over it dominion, usufruct and administration. (160)
Art. 322. A child who earns money or acquires property with his own
work or industry shall be entitled to a reasonable allowance from the
earnings, in addition to the expenses made by the parents for his
support and education. (n)
65
Art. 323. The fruits and interest of the child's property referred to in
article 321 shall be applied first to the expenses for the support and
education of the child. After they have been fully met, the debts of
the conjugal partnership which have redounded to the benefit of the
family may be paid from said fruits and interest. (n)
Art. 324. Whatever the child may acquire with the capital or property
of the parents belongs to the latter in ownership and in usufruct. But
if the parents should expressly grant him all or part of the profits
that he may obtain, such profits shall not be charged against his
legitime. (161)
Art. 326. When the property of the child is worth more than two
thousand pesos, the father or mother shall be considered a guardian
of the child's property, subject to the duties and obligations of
guardians under the Rules of Court. (n)
CHAPTER 4
EXTINGUISHMENT OF PARENTAL AUTHORITY
Art. 328. The mother who contracts a subsequent marriage loses the
parental authority over her children, unless the deceased husband,
father of the latter, has expressly provided in his will that his widow
might marry again, and has ordered that in such case she should
keep and exercise parental authority over their children.
The court may also appoint a guardian of the child's property in case
the father should contract a subsequent marriage. (168a)
66
Art. 329. When the mother of an illegitimate child marries a man
other than its father, the court may appoint a guardian for the child.
(n)
Art. 330. The father and in a proper case the mother, shall lose
authority over their children:
Art. 332. The courts may deprive the parents of their authority or
suspend the exercise of the same if they should treat their children
with excessive harshness or should give them corrupting orders,
counsels, or examples, or should make them beg or abandon them.
In these cases, the courts may also deprive the parents in whole or
in part, of the usufruct over the child's property, or adopt such
measures as they may deem advisable in the interest of the child.
(171a)
CHAPTER 5
ADOPTION
Art. 334. Every person of age, who is in full possession of his civil
rights, may adopt. (173a)
(2) The guardian, with respect to the ward, before the final
approval of his accounts;
67
(3) A married person, without the consent of the other spouse;
Art. 336. The husband and wife may jointly adopt. Parental authority
shall, in such case, be exercised as if the child were their own by
nature. (n)
Art. 337. Any person, even if of age, may be adopted, provided the
adopter is sixteen years older. (173a)
Art. 340. The written consent of the following to the adoption shall
be necessary:
(1) The person to be adopted, if fourteen years of age or over;
68
(1) Give to the adopted person the same rights and duties as if
he were a legitimate child of the adopter:
(4) Entitle the adopted person to use the adopter's surname. (n)
Art. 342. The adopter shall not be a legal heir of the adopted person,
whose parents by nature shall inherit from him. (177a)
Art. 344. The adopter may donate property, by an act inter vivos or
by will, to the adopted person, who shall acquire ownership thereof.
(n)
Art. 346. The adoption shall be recorded in the local civil register.
(179a)
Art. 348. The adopter may petition the court for revocation of the
adoption in any of these cases:
(1) If the adopted person has attempted against the life of the
adopter;
(2) When the adopted minor has abandoned the home of the
adopter for more than three years;
CHAPTER 6
SUBSTITUTE PARENTAL AUTHORITY (n)
69
Art. 349. The following persons shall exercise substitute parental
authority:
(1) Guardians;
(5) Grandparents;
Art. 350. The persons named in the preceding article shall exercise
reasonable supervision over the conduct of the child.
Art. 352. The relations between teacher and pupil, professor and
student, are fixed by government regulations and those of each
school or institution. In no case shall corporal punishment be
countenanced. The teacher or professor shall cultivate the best
potentialities of the heart and mind of the pupil or student.
70
(2) Maternal grandparents.
(4) Cooperate with the family in all matters that make for the
good of the same.
Art. 358. Every parent and every person holding substitute parental
authority shall see to it that the rights of the child are respected and
his duties complied with, and shall particularly, by precept and
example, imbue the child with highmindedness, love of country,
veneration for the national heroes, fidelity to democracy as a way of
life, and attachment to the ideal of permanent world peace.
Art. 359. The government promotes the full growth of the faculties
of every child. For this purpose, the government will establish,
whenever possible:
71
(4) Juvenile courts.
Art. 360. The Council for the Protection of Children shall look after
the welfare of children in the municipality. It shall, among other
functions:
(1) Foster the education of every child in the municipality;
Art. 365. An adopted child shall bear the surname of the adopter.
72
of the parents, a natural child shall employ the surname of the
recognizing parent.
Art. 367. Natural children by legal fiction shall principally employ the
surname of the father.
(1) Her maiden first name and surname and add her husband's
surname, or
Art. 371. In case of annulment of marriage, and the wife is the guilty
party, she shall resume her maiden name and surname. If she is the
innocent spouse, she may resume her maiden name and surname.
However, she may choose to continue employing her former
husband's surname, unless:
(1) The court decrees otherwise, or
Art. 372. When legal separation has been granted, the wife shall
continue using her name and surname employed before the legal
separation.
73
Art. 375. In case of identity of names and surnames between
ascendants and descendants, the word "Junior" can be used only by
a son. Grandsons and other direct male descendants shall either:
CHAPTER 1
PROVISIONAL MEASURES IN CASE OF ABSENCE
74
regulating them, according to the circumstances, by the rules
concerning guardians. (182)
CHAPTER 2
DECLARATION OF ABSENCE
Art. 384. Two years having elapsed without any news about the
absentee or since the receipt of the last news, and five years in case
the absentee has left a person in charge of the administration of his
property, his absence may be declared. (184)
Art. 385. The following may ask for the declaration of absence:
(4) Those who may have over the property of the absentee
some right subordinated to the condition of his death. (185)
Art. 386. The judicial declaration of absence shall not take effect
until six months after its publication in a newspaper of general
circulation. (186a)
CHAPTER 3
ADMINISTRATION OF THE PROPERTY OF THE ABSENTEE
75
Art. 389. The administration shall cease in any of the following
cases:
(2) When the death of the absentee is proved and his testate or
intestate heirs appear;
CHAPTER 4
PRESUMPTION OF DEATH
The absentee shall not be presumed dead for the purpose of opening
his succession till after an absence of ten years. If he disappeared
after the age of seventy-five years, an absence of five years shall be
sufficient in order that his succession may be opened. (n)
Art. 391. The following shall be presumed dead for all purposes,
including the division of the estate among the heirs:
(2) A person in the armed forces who has taken part in war,
and has been missing for four years;
76
Art. 392. If the absentee appears, or without appearing his existence
is proved, he shall recover his property in the condition in which it
may be found, and the price of any property that may have been
alienated or the property acquired therewith; but he cannot claim
either fruits or rents. (194)
CHAPTER 5
EFFECT OF ABSENCE UPON THE
CONTINGENT RIGHTS OF THE ABSENTEE
Art. 396. Those who may have entered upon the inheritance shall
appropriate the fruits received in good faith so long as the absentee
does not appear, or while his representatives or successors in
interest do not bring the proper actions. (198)
CHAPTER 1
EMANCIPATION
77
(3) By the concession of the father or of the mother who
exercise parental authority. (314)
CHAPTER 2
AGE OF MAJORITY
The person who has reached majority is qualified for all acts of civil
life, save the exceptions established by this Code in special cases.
(320a)
Art. 404. An orphan who is minor may, at the instance of any relative
or other person, obtain emancipation by concession upon an order of
the Court of First Instance. (322a)
78
Art. 405. For the concession and approval referred to in the
preceding article it is necessary:
Art. 407. Acts, events and judicial decrees concerning the civil
status of persons shall be recorded in the civil register. (325a)
(1) Births;
(2) marriages;
(3) deaths;
(4) legal separations;
(5) annulments of marriage;
(6) judgments declaring marriages void from the beginning;
(7) legitimations;
(8) adoptions;
(9) acknowledgments of natural children;
(10) naturalization;
(11) loss, or (12) recovery of citizenship;
(13) civil interdiction;
(14) judicial determination of filiation;
(15) voluntary emancipation of a minor; and
(16) changes of name. (326a)
Art. 409. In cases of legal separation, adoption, naturalization and
other judicial orders mentioned in the preceding article, it shall be
the duty of the clerk of the court which issued the decree to
ascertain whether the same has been registered, and if this has not
79
been done, to send a copy of said decree to the civil registry of the
city or municipality where the court is functioning. (n)
Art. 410. The books making up the civil register and all documents
relating thereto shall be considered public documents and shall be
prima facie evidence of the facts therein contained. (n)
Art. 411. Every civil registrar shall be civilly responsible for any
unauthorized alteration made in any civil register, to any person
suffering damage thereby. However, the civil registrar may exempt
himself from such liability if he proves that he has taken every
reasonable precaution to prevent the unlawful alteration. (n)
80
BOOK II
PRELIMINARY PROVISIONS
Art. 414. All things which are or may be the object of appropriation
are considered either:
(1) Immovable or real property; or
CHAPTER 1
IMMOVABLE PROPERTY
(2) Trees, plants, and growing fruits, while they are attached to
the land or form an integral part of an immovable;
81
permanently attached to the land, and forming a permanent
part of it; the animals in these places are included;
(8) Mines, quarries, and slag dumps, while the matter thereof
forms part of the bed, and waters either running or stagnant;
(10) Contracts for public works, and servitudes and other real
rights over immovable property. (334a)
CHAPTER 2
MOVABLE PROPERTY
82
the second class belong all the others. (337)
CHAPTER 3
PROPERTY IN RELATION TO THE PERSON TO WHOM IT BELONGS
(1) Those intended for public use, such as roads, canals, rivers,
torrents, ports and bridges constructed by the State, banks,
shores, roadsteads, and others of similar character;
(2) Those which belong to the State, without being for public
use, and are intended for some public service or for the
development of the national wealth. (339a)
Art. 421. All other property of the State, which is not of the
character stated in the preceding article, is patrimonial property.
(340a)
Art. 424. Property for public use, in the provinces, cities, and
municipalities, consist of the provincial roads, city streets, municipal
streets, the squares, fountains, public waters, promenades, and
public works for public service paid for by said provinces, cities, or
municipalities.
83
PROVISIONS COMMON TO THE THREE PRECEDING CHAPTERS
CHAPTER 1
OWNERSHIP IN GENERAL
Art. 428. The owner has the right to enjoy and dispose of a thing,
without other limitations than those established by law.
The owner has also a right of action against the holder and
possessor of the thing in order to recover it. (348a)
Art. 429. The owner or lawful possessor of a thing has the right to
exclude any person from the enjoyment and disposal thereof. For
this purpose, he may use such force as may be reasonably necessary
to repel or prevent an actual or threatened unlawful physical
invasion or usurpation of his property. (n)
Art. 430. Every owner may enclose or fence his land or tenements by
means of walls, ditches, live or dead hedges, or by any other means
without detriment to servitudes constituted thereon. (388)
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Art. 431. The owner of a thing cannot make use thereof in such
manner as to injure the rights of a third person. (n)
Should this requirement be not first complied with, the courts shall
protect and, in a proper case, restore the owner in his possession.
(349a)
Art. 437. The owner of a parcel of land is the owner of its surface
and of everything under it, and he can construct thereon any works
or make any plantations and excavations which he may deem
proper, without detriment to servitudes and subject to special laws
and ordinances. He cannot complain of the reasonable requirements
of aerial navigation. (350a)
Art. 438. Hidden treasure belongs to the owner of the land, building,
or other property on which it is found.
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one-half thereof shall be allowed to the finder. If the finder is a
trespasser, he shall not be entitled to any share of the treasure.
CHAPTER 3
RIGHT OF ACCESSION
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 442. Natural fruits are the spontaneous products of the soil, and
the young and other products of animals.
Civil fruits are the rents of buildings, the price of leases of lands and
other property and the amount of perpetual or life annuities or other
similar income. (355a)
Art. 443. He who receives the fruits has the obligation to pay the
expenses made by a third person in their production, gathering, and
preservation. (356)
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Art. 444. Only such as are manifest or born are considered as natural
or industrial fruits.
Art. 446. All works, sowing, and planting are presumed made by the
owner and at his expense, unless the contrary is proved. (359)
Art. 447. The owner of the land who makes thereon, personally or
through another, plantings, constructions or works with the
materials of another, shall pay their value; and, if he acted in bad
faith, he shall also be obliged to the reparation of damages. The
owner of the materials shall have the right to remove them only in
case he can do so without injury to the work constructed, or without
the plantings, constructions or works being destroyed. However, if
the landowner acted in bad faith, the owner of the materials may
remove them in any event, with a right to be indemnified for
damages. (360a)
Art. 448. The owner of the land on which anything has been built,
sown or planted in good faith, shall have the right to appropriate as
his own the works, sowing or planting, after payment of the
indemnity provided for in Articles 546 and 548, or to oblige the one
who built or planted to pay the price of the land, and the one who
sowed, the proper rent. However, the builder or planter cannot be
obliged to buy the land if its value is considerably more than that of
the building or trees. In such case, he shall pay reasonable rent, if
the owner of the land does not choose to appropriate the building or
trees after proper indemnity. The parties shall agree upon the terms
of the lease and in case of disagreement, the court shall fix the
terms thereof. (361a)
Art. 449. He who builds, plants or sows in bad faith on the land of
another, loses what is built, planted or sown without right to
indemnity. (362)
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Art. 450. The owner of the land on which anything has been built,
planted or sown in bad faith may demand the demolition of the
work, or that the planting or sowing be removed, in order to replace
things in their former condition at the expense of the person who
built, planted or sowed; or he may compel the builder or planter to
pay the price of the land, and the sower the proper rent. (363a)
Art. 451. In the cases of the two preceding articles, the landowner is
entitled to damages from the builder, planter or sower. (n)
Art. 453. If there was bad faith, not only on the part of the person
who built, planted or sowed on the land of another, but also on the
part of the owner of such land, the rights of one and the other shall
be the same as though both had acted in good faith.
Art. 454. When the landowner acted in bad faith and the builder,
planter or sower proceeded in good faith, the provisions of article
447 shall apply. (n)
This provision shall not apply if the owner makes use of the right
granted by article 450. If the owner of the materials, plants or seeds
has been paid by the builder, planter or sower, the latter may
demand from the landowner the value of the materials and labor.
(365a)
Art. 456. In the cases regulated in the preceding articles, good faith
does not necessarily exclude negligence, which gives right to
damages under article 2176. (n)
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Art. 457. To the owners of lands adjoining the banks of rivers belong
the accretion which they gradually receive from the effects of the
current of the waters. (336)
Art. 460. Trees uprooted and carried away by the current of the
waters belong to the owner of the land upon which they may be
cast, if the owners do not claim them within six months. If such
owners claim them, they shall pay the expenses incurred in
gathering them or putting them in a safe place. (369a)
Art. 461. River beds which are abandoned through the natural
change in the course of the waters ipso facto belong to the owners
whose lands are occupied by the new course in proportion to the
area lost. However, the owners of the lands adjoining the old bed
shall have the right to acquire the same by paying the value thereof,
which value shall not exceed the value of the area occupied by the
new bed. (370a)
Art. 463. Whenever the current of a river divides itself into branches,
leaving a piece of land or part thereof isolated, the owner of the land
retains his ownership. He also retains it if a portion of land is
separated from the estate by the current. (374)
Art. 464. Islands which may be formed on the seas within the
jurisdiction of the Philippines, on lakes, and on navigable or
floatable rivers belong to the State. (371a)
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them, or to the owners of both margins if the island is in the middle
of the river, in which case it shall be divided longitudinally in halves.
If a single island thus formed be more distant from one margin than
from the other, the owner of the nearer margin shall be the sole
owner thereof. (373a)
Art. 470. Whenever the owner of the accessory thing has made the
incorporation in bad faith, he shall lose the thing incorporated and
shall have the obligation to indemnify the owner of the principal
thing for the damages he may have suffered.
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If the one who has acted in bad faith is the owner of the principal
thing, the owner of the accessory thing shall have a right to choose
between the former paying him its value or that the thing belonging
to him be separated, even though for this purpose it be necessary to
destroy the principal thing; and in both cases, furthermore, there
shall be indemnity for damages.
If either one of the owners has made the incorporation with the
knowledge and without the objection of the other, their respective
rights shall be determined as though both acted in good faith. (379a)
Art. 471. Whenever the owner of the material employed without his
consent has a right to an indemnity, he may demand that this
consist in the delivery of a thing equal in kind and value, and in all
other respects, to that employed, or else in the price thereof,
according to expert appraisal. (380)
Art. 472. If by the will of their owners two things of the same or
different kinds are mixed, or if the mixture occurs by chance, and in
the latter case the things are not separable without injury, each
owner shall acquire a right proportional to the part belonging to him,
bearing in mind the value of the things mixed or confused. (381)
Art. 473. If by the will of only one owner, but in good faith, two
things of the same or different kinds are mixed or confused, the
rights of the owners shall be determined by the provisions of the
preceding article.
If the one who caused the mixture or confusion acted in bad faith,
he shall lose the thing belonging to him thus mixed or confused,
besides being obliged to pay indemnity for the damages caused to
the owner of the other thing with which his own was mixed. (382)
Art. 474. One who in good faith employs the material of another in
whole or in part in order to make a thing of a different kind, shall
appropriate the thing thus transformed as his own, indemnifying the
owner of the material for its value.
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If in the making of the thing bad faith intervened, the owner of the
material shall have the right to appropriate the work to himself
without paying anything to the maker, or to demand of the latter
that he indemnify him for the value of the material and the damages
he may have suffered. However, the owner of the material cannot
appropriate the work in case the value of the latter, for artistic or
scientific reasons, is considerably more than that of the material.
(383a)
CHAPTER 3
QUIETING OF TITLE (n)
Art. 477. The plaintiff must have legal or equitable title to, or
interest in the real property which is the subject matter of the
action. He need not be in possession of said property.
Art. 478. There may also be an action to quiet title or remove a cloud
therefrom when the contract, instrument or other obligation has
been extinguished or has terminated, or has been barred by
extinctive prescription.
Art. 479. The plaintiff must return to the defendant all benefits he
may have received from the latter, or reimburse him for expenses
that may have redounded to the plaintiff's benefit.
Art. 480. The principles of the general law on the quieting of title are
hereby adopted insofar as they are not in conflict with this Code.
Art. 481. The procedure for the quieting of title or the removal of a
cloud therefrom shall be governed by such rules of court as the
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Supreme Court shall promulgated.
CHAPTER 4
RUINOUS BUILDINGS AND TREES IN DANGER OF FALLING
Art. 485. The share of the co-owners, in the benefits as well as in the
charges, shall be proportional to their respective interests. Any
stipulation in a contract to the contrary shall be void.
Art. 486. Each co-owner may use the thing owned in common,
provided he does so in accordance with the purpose for which it is
intended and in such a way as not to injure the interest of the co-
ownership or prevent the other co-owners from using it according to
their rights. The purpose of the co-ownership may be changed by
agreement, express or implied. (394a)
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Art. 487. Any one of the co-owners may bring an action in ejectment.
(n)
Art. 488. Each co-owner shall have a right to compel the other co-
owners to contribute to the expenses of preservation of the thing or
right owned in common and to the taxes. Any one of the latter may
exempt himself from this obligation by renouncing so much of his
undivided interest as may be equivalent to his share of the expenses
and taxes. No such waiver shall be made if it is prejudicial to the co-
ownership. (395a)
Art. 489. Repairs for preservation may be made at the will of one of
the co-owners, but he must, if practicable, first notify his co-owners
of the necessity for such repairs. Expenses to improve or embellish
the thing shall be decided upon by a majority as determined in
Article 492. (n)
(1) The main and party walls, the roof and the other things
used in common, shall be preserved at the expense of all the
owners in proportion to the value of the story belonging to
each;
(2) Each owner shall bear the cost of maintaining the floor of
his story; the floor of the entrance, front door, common yard
and sanitary works common to all, shall be maintained at the
expense of all the owners pro rata;
(3) The stairs from the entrance to the first story shall be
maintained at the expense of all the owners pro rata, with the
exception of the owner of the ground floor; the stairs from the
first to the second story shall be preserved at the expense of
all, except the owner of the ground floor and the owner of the
first story; and so on successively. (396)
Art. 491. None of the co-owners shall, without the consent of the
others, make alterations in the thing owned in common, even though
benefits for all would result therefrom. However, if the withholding
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of the consent by one or more of the co-owners is clearly prejudicial
to the common interest, the courts may afford adequate relief. (397a)
Art. 492. For the administration and better enjoyment of the thing
owned in common, the resolutions of the majority of the co-owners
shall be binding.
Art. 493. Each co-owner shall have the full ownership of his part and
of the fruits and benefits pertaining thereto, and he may therefore
alienate, assign or mortgage it, and even substitute another person
in its enjoyment, except when personal rights are involved. But the
effect of the alienation or the mortgage, with respect to the co-
owners, shall be limited to the portion which may be alloted to him
in the division upon the termination of the co-ownership. (399)
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No prescription shall run in favor of a co-owner or co-heir against his
co-owners or co-heirs so long as he expressly or impliedly
recognizes the co-ownership. (400a)
Art. 497. The creditors or assignees of the co-owners may take part
in the division of the thing owned in common and object to its being
effected without their concurrence. But they cannot impugn any
partition already executed, unless there has been fraud, or in case it
was made notwithstanding a formal opposition presented to prevent
it, without prejudice to the right of the debtor or assignor to
maintain its validity. (403)
Art. 498. Whenever the thing is essentially indivisible and the co-
owners cannot agree that it be allotted to one of them who shall
indemnify the others, it shall be sold and its proceeds distributed.
(404)
Art. 501. Every co-owner shall, after partition, be liable for defects of
title and quality of the portion assigned to each of the other co-
owners. (n)
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Title IV. - SOME SPECIAL PROPERTIES
CHAPTER I
WATERS
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(4) Rain waters falling on said lands, as long as they remain
within the boundaries;
The extent of the rights and obligations of the use shall be that
established, in the first case, by the terms of the concession, and, in
the second case, by the manner and form in which the waters have
been used. (409a)
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Art. 508. The private ownership of the beds of rain waters does not
give a right to make works or constructions which may change their
course to the damage of third persons, or whose destruction, by the
force of floods, may cause such damage. (413)
Art. 510. The ownership which the proprietor of a piece of land has
over the waters rising thereon does not prejudice the rights which
the owners of lower estates may have legally acquired to the use
thereof. (415)
Art. 511. Every owner of a piece of land has the right to construct
within his property, reservoirs for rain waters, provided he causes
no damage to the public or to third persons. (416)
Art. 512. Only the owner of a piece of land, or another person with
his permission, may make explorations thereon for subterranean
waters, except as provided by the Mining Law.
Art. 515. The owner of a piece of land on which there are defensive
works to check waters, or on which, due to a change of their course,
it may be necessary to reconstruct such works, shall be obliged, at
his election, either to make the necessary repairs or construction
99
himself, or to permit them to be done, without damage to him, by
the owners of the lands which suffer or are clearly exposed to suffer
injury. (420)
Art. 516. The provisions of the preceding article are applicable to the
case in which it may be necessary to clear a piece of land of matter,
whose accumulation or fall may obstruct the course of the waters, to
the damage or peril of third persons. (421)
Art. 517. All the owners who participate in the benefits arising from
the works referred to in the two preceding articles, shall be obliged
to contribute to the expenses of construction in proportion to their
respective interests. Those who by their fault may have caused the
damage shall be liable for the expenses. (422)
CHAPTER 2
MINERALS
Art. 519. Mining claims and rights and other matters concerning
minerals and mineral lands are governed by special laws. (427a)
CHAPTER 3
TRADE-MARKS AND TRADE-NAMES
Title V. - POSSESSION
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CHAPTER 1
POSSESSION AND THE KINDS THEREOF
Art. 525. The possession of things or rights may be had in one of two
concepts: either in the concept of owner, or in that of the holder of
the thing or right to keep or enjoy it, the ownership pertaining to
another person. (432)
Art. 527. Good faith is always presumed, and upon him who alleges
bad faith on the part of a possessor rests the burden of proof. (434)
Art. 528. Possession acquired in good faith does not lose this
character except in the case and from the moment facts exist which
show that the possessor is not unaware that he possesses the thing
improperly or wrongfully. (435a)
Art. 530. Only things and rights which are susceptible of being
appropriated may be the object of possession. (437)
CHAPTER 2
ACQUISITION OF POSSESSION
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thing or the exercise of a right, or by the fact that it is subject to the
action of our will, or by the proper acts and legal formalities
established for acquiring such right. (438a)
Art. 534. On who succeeds by hereditary title shall not suffer the
consequences of the wrongful possession of the decedent, if it is not
shown that he was aware of the flaws affecting it; but the effects of
possession in good faith shall not benefit him except from the date
of the death of the decedent. (442)
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longer in possession; if the dates of the possession are the same, the
one who presents a title; and if all these conditions are equal, the
thing shall be placed in judicial deposit pending determination of its
possession or ownership through proper proceedings. (445)
CHAPTER 3
EFFECTS OF POSSESSION
Art. 540. Only the possession acquired and enjoyed in the concept of
owner can serve as a title for acquiring dominion. (447)
Art. 541. A possessor in the concept of owner has in his favor the
legal presumption that he possesses with a just title and he cannot
be obliged to show or prove it. (448a)
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Natural and industrial fruits are considered received from the time
they are gathered or severed.
Civil fruits are deemed to accrue daily and belong to the possessor in
good faith in that proportion. (451)
Art. 545. If at the time the good faith ceases, there should be any
natural or industrial fruits, the possessor shall have a right to a part
of the expenses of cultivation, and to a part of the net harvest, both
in proportion to the time of the possession.
The owner of the thing may, should he so desire, give the possessor
in good faith the right to finish the cultivation and gathering of the
growing fruits, as an indemnity for his part of the expenses of
cultivation and the net proceeds; the possessor in good faith who for
any reason whatever should refuse to accept this concession, shall
lose the right to be indemnified in any other manner. (452a)
Art. 548. Expenses for pure luxury or mere pleasure shall not be
refunded to the possessor in good faith; but he may remove the
ornaments with which he has embellished the principal thing if it
suffers no injury thereby, and if his successor in the possession does
not prefer to refund the amount expended. (454)
Art. 549. The possessor in bad faith shall reimburse the fruits
received and those which the legitimate possessor could have
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received, and shall have a right only to the expenses mentioned in
paragraph 1 of Article 546 and in Article 443. The expenses incurred
in improvements for pure luxury or mere pleasure shall not be
refunded to the possessor in bad faith, but he may remove the
objects for which such expenses have been incurred, provided that
the thing suffers no injury thereby, and that the lawful possessor
does not prefer to retain them by paying the value they may have at
the time he enters into possession. (445a)
Art. 550. The costs of litigation over the property shall be borne by
every possessor. (n)
Art. 552. A possessor in good faith shall not be liable for the
deterioration or loss of the thing possessed, except in cases in which
it is proved that he has acted with fraudulent intent or negligence,
after the judicial summons.
Art. 553. One who recovers possession shall not be obliged to pay
for improvements which have ceased to exist at the time he takes
possession of the thing. (458)
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year. But the real right of possession is not lost till after the
lapse of ten years. (460a)
Art. 560. Wild animals are possessed only while they are under one's
control; domesticated or tamed animals are considered domestic or
tame if they retain the habit of returning to the premises of the
possessor. (465)
CHAPTER 1
USUFRUCT IN GENERAL
Art. 562. Usufruct gives a right to enjoy the property of another with
106
the obligation of preserving its form and substance, unless the title
constituting it or the law otherwise provides. (467)
CHAPTER 2
RIGHTS OF THE USUFRUCTUARY
Art. 567. Natural or industrial fruits growing at the time the usufruct
begins, belong to the usufructuary.
The provisions of this article shall not prejudice the rights of third
persons, acquired either at the beginning or at the termination of the
usufruct. (472)
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Art. 568. If the usufructuary has leased the lands or tenements
given in usufruct, and the usufruct should expire before the
termination of the lease, he or his heirs and successors shall receive
only the proportionate share of the rent that must be paid by the
lessee. (473)
Art. 569. Civil fruits are deemed to accrue daily, and belong to the
usufructuary in proportion to the time the usufruct may last. (474)
Art. 571. The usufructuary shall have the right to enjoy any increase
which the thing in usufruct may acquire through accession, the
servitudes established in its favor, and, in general, all the benefits
inherent therein. (479)
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Art. 574. Whenever the usufruct includes things which cannot be
used without being consumed, the usufructuary shall have the right
to make use of them under the obligation of paying their appraised
value at the termination of the usufruct, if they were appraised when
delivered. In case they were not appraised, he shall have the right to
return at the same quantity and quality, or pay their current price at
the time the usufruct ceases. (482)
Art. 577. The usufructuary of woodland may enjoy all the benefits
which it may produce according to its nature.
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consequence of the enforcement of the action he acquires the thing
claimed, the usufruct shall be limited to the fruits, the dominion
remaining with the owner. (486)
Art. 580. The usufructuary may set off the improvements he may
have made on the property against any damage to the same. (488)
CHAPTER 3
OBLIGATIONS OF THE USUFRUCTUARY
Art. 584. The provisions of No. 2 of the preceding article shall not
apply to the donor who has reserved the usufruct of the property
donated, or to the parents who are usufructuaries of their children's
property, except when the parents contract a second marriage. (492a)
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Art. 585. The usufructuary, whatever may be the title of the
usufruct, may be excused from the obligation of making an inventory
or of giving security, when no one will be injured thereby. (493)
Art. 586. Should the usufructuary fail to give security in the cases in
which he is bound to give it, the owner may demand that the
immovables be placed under administration, that the movables be
sold, that the public bonds, instruments of credit payable to order or
to bearer be converted into registered certificates or deposited in a
bank or public institution, and that the capital or sums in cash and
the proceeds of the sale of the movable property be invested in safe
securities.
The interest on the proceeds of the sale of the movables and that on
public securities and bonds, and the proceeds of the property placed
under administration, shall belong to the usufructuary.
Art. 587. If the usufructuary who has not given security claims, by
virtue of a promise under oath, the delivery of the furniture
necessary for his use, and that he and his family be allowed to live in
a house included in the usufruct, the court may grant this petition,
after due consideration of the facts of the case.
If the owner does not wish that certain articles be sold because of
their artistic worth or because they have a sentimental value, he
may demand their delivery to him upon his giving security for the
payment of the legal interest on their appraised value. (495)
Art. 588. After the security has been given by the usufructuary, he
shall have a right to all the proceeds and benefits from the day on
which, in accordance with the title constituting the usufruct, he
should have commenced to receive them. (496)
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Art. 589. The usufructuary shall take care of the things given in
usufruct as a good father of a family. (497)
Should the herd or flock perish in part, also by accident and without
the fault of the usufructuary, the usufruct shall continue on the part
saved.
112
Should he not make them when they are indispensable for the
preservation of the thing, the usufructuary may make them; but he
shall have a right to demand of the owner, at the termination of the
usufruct, the increase in value which the immovable may have
acquired by reason of the repairs. (502a)
Art. 595. The owner may construct any works and make any
improvements of which the immovable in usufruct is susceptible, or
make new plantings thereon if it be rural, provided that such acts do
not cause a diminution in the value of the usufruct or prejudice the
right of the usufructuary. (503)
Art. 596. The payment of annual charges and taxes and of those
considered as a lien on the fruits, shall be at the expense of the
usufructuary for all the time that the usufruct lasts. (504)
Art. 597. The taxes which, during the usufruct, may be imposed
directly on the capital, shall be at the expense of the owner.
If the latter has paid them, the usufructuary shall pay him the
proper interest on the sums which may have been paid in that
character; and, if the said sums have been advanced by the
usufructuary, he shall recover the amount thereof at the termination
of the usufruct. (505)
The same rule shall be applied in case the owner is obliged, at the
time the usufruct is constituted, to make periodical payments, even
if there should be no known capital. (506)
Art. 599. The usufructuary may claim any matured credits which
form a part of the usufruct if he has given or gives the proper
security. If he has been excused from giving security or has been
able to give it, or if that given is not sufficient, he shall need the
authorization of the owner, or of the court in default thereof, to
collect such credits.
The usufructuary who has given security may use the capital he has
collected in any manner he may deem proper. The usufructuary who
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has not given security shall invest the said capital at interest upon
agreement with the owner; in default of such agreement, with
judicial authorization; and, in every case, with security sufficient to
preserve the integrity of the capital in usufruct. (507)
Art. 602. The expenses, costs and liabilities in suits brought with
regard to the usufruct shall be borne by the usufructuary. (512)
CHAPTER 4
EXTINGUISHMENT OF USUFRUCT
114
(7) By prescription. (513a)
Art. 604. If the thing given in usufruct should be lost only in part,
the right shall continue on the remaining part. (514)
Art. 606. A usufruct granted for the time that may elapse before a
third person attains a certain age, shall subsist for the number of
years specified, even if the third person should die before the period
expires, unless such usufruct has been expressly granted only in
consideration of the existence of such person. (516)
Art. 608. If the usufructuary shares with the owner the insurance of
the tenement given in usufruct, the former shall, in case of loss,
continue in the enjoyment of the new building, should one be
constructed, or shall receive the interest on the insurance indemnity
if the owner does not wish to rebuild.
Art. 609. Should the thing in usufruct be expropriated for public use,
the owner shall be obliged either to replace it with another thing of
the same value and of similar conditions, or to pay the usufructuary
115
the legal interest on the amount of the indemnity for the whole
period of the usufruct. If the owner chooses the latter alternative, he
shall give security for the payment of the interest. (519)
Art. 612. Upon the termination of the usufruct, the thing in usufruct
shall be delivered to the owner, without prejudice to the right of
retention pertaining to the usufructuary or his heirs for taxes and
extraordinary expenses which should be reimbursed. After the
delivery has been made, the security or mortgage shall be cancelled.
(522a)
CHAPTER 1
EASEMENTS IN GENERAL
116
Continuous easements are those the use of which is or may be
incessant, without the intervention of any act of man.
Apparent easements are those which are made known and are
continually kept in view by external signs that reveal the use and
enjoyment of the same.
Art. 617. Easements are inseparable from the estate to which they
actively or passively belong. (534)
117
Art. 621. In order to acquire by prescription the easements referred
to in the preceding article, the time of possession shall be computed
thus: in positive easements, from the day on which the owner of the
dominant estate, or the person who may have made use of the
easement, commenced to exercise it upon the servient estate; and in
negative easements, from the day on which the owner of the
dominant estate forbade, by an instrument acknowledged before a
notary public, the owner of the servient estate, from executing an
act which would be lawful without the easement. (538a)
Art. 626. The owner of the dominant estate cannot use the easement
except for the benefit of the immovable originally contemplated.
Neither can he exercise the easement in any other manner than that
previously established. (n)
Art. 627. The owner of the dominant estate may make, at his own
expense, on the servient state any works necessary for the use and
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preservation of the servitude, but without altering it or rendering it
more burdensome.
For this purpose he shall notify the owner of the servient estate, and
shall choose the most convenient time and manner so as to cause
the least inconvenience to the owner of the servient estate. (543a)
Art. 628. Should there be several dominant estates, the owners of all
of them shall be obliged to contribute to the expenses referred to in
the preceding article, in proportion to the benefits which each may
derive from the work. Any one who does not wish to contribute may
exempt himself by renouncing the easement for the benefit of the
others.
If the owner of the servient estate should make use of the easement
in any manner whatsoever, he shall also be obliged to contribute to
the expenses in the proportion stated, saving an agreement to the
contrary. (544)
Art. 629. The owner of the servient estate cannot impair, in any
manner whatsoever, the use of the servitude.
Art. 630. The owner of the servient estate retains the ownership of
the portion on which the easement is established, and may use the
same in such a manner as not to affect the exercise of the easement.
(n)
119
(2) By nonuser for ten years; with respect to discontinuous
easements, this period shall be computed from the day on
which they ceased to be used; and, with respect to continuous
easements, from the day on which an act contrary to the same
took place;
(3) When either or both of the estates fall into such condition
that the easement cannot be used; but it shall revive if the
subsequent condition of the estates or either of them should
again permit its use, unless when the use becomes possible,
sufficient time for prescription has elapsed, in accordance with
the provisions of the preceding number;
Art. 632. The form or manner of using the easement may prescribe
as the easement itself, and in the same way. (547a)
CHAPTER 2
LEGAL EASEMENTS
Art. 634. Easements imposed by law have for their object either
public use or the interest of private persons. (549)
120
Title, without prejudice to the provisions of general or local laws and
ordinances for the general welfare.
Art. 637. Lower estates are obliged to receive the waters which
naturally and without the intervention of man descend from the
higher estates, as well as the stones or earth which they carry with
them.
The owner of the lower estate cannot construct works which will
impede this easement; neither can the owner of the higher estate
make works which will increase the burden. (552)
Art. 638. The banks of rivers and streams, even in case they are of
private ownership, are subject throughout their entire length and
within a zone of three meters along their margins, to the easement
of public use in the general interest of navigation, floatage, fishing
and salvage.
Art. 639. Whenever for the diversion or taking of water from a river
or brook, or for the use of any other continuous or discontinuous
stream, it should be necessary to build a dam, and the person who is
to construct it is not the owner of the banks, or lands which must
support it, he may establish the easement of abutment of a dam,
after payment of the proper indemnity. (554)
121
Art. 641. Easements for drawing water and for watering animals
carry with them the obligation of the owners of the servient estates
to allow passage to persons and animals to the place where such
easements are to be used, and the indemnity shall include this
service. (556)
Art. 642. Any person who may wish to use upon his own estate any
water of which he can dispose shall have the right to make it flow
through the intervening estates, with the obligation to indemnify
their owners, as well as the owners of the lower estates upon which
the waters may filter or descend. (557)
Art. 643. One desiring to make use of the right granted in the
preceding article is obliged:
Art. 645. The easement of aqueduct does not prevent the owner of
the servient estate from closing or fencing it, or from building over
the aqueduct in such manner as not to cause the latter any damage,
or render necessary repairs and cleanings impossible. (560)
Art. 647. One who for the purpose of irrigating or improving his
estate, has to construct a stop lock or sluice gate in the bed of the
stream from which the water is to be taken, may demand that the
owners of the banks permit its construction, after payment of
122
damages, including those caused by the new easement to such
owners and to the other irrigators. (562)
Art. 649. The owner, or any person who by virtue of a real right may
cultivate or use any immovable, which is surrounded by other
immovables pertaining to other persons and without adequate outlet
to a public highway, is entitled to demand a right of way through the
neighboring estates, after payment of the proper indemnity.
In case the right of way is limited to the necessary passage for the
cultivation of the estate surrounded by others and for the gathering
of its crops through the servient estate without a permanent way,
the indemnity shall consist in the payment of the damage caused by
such encumbrance.
Art. 651. The width of the easement of right of way shall be that
which is sufficient for the needs of the dominant estate, and may
accordingly be changed from time to time. (566a)
123
or co-owner, he shall be obliged to grant a right of way without
indemnity.
Art. 653. In the case of the preceding article, if it is the land of the
grantor that becomes isolated, he may demand a right of way after
paying a indemnity. However, the donor shall not be liable for
indemnity. (n)
The same rule shall be applied in case a new road is opened giving
access to the isolated estate.
In both cases, the public highway must substantially meet the needs
of the dominant estate in order that the easement may be
extinguished. (568a)
Art. 657. Easements of the right of way for the passage of livestock
known as animal path, animal trail or any other, and those for
watering places, resting places and animal folds, shall be governed
by the ordinances and regulations relating thereto, and, in the
absence thereof, by the usages and customs of the place.
124
Without prejudice to rights legally acquired, the animal path shall
not exceed in any case the width of 75 meters, and the animal trail
that of 37 meters and 50 centimeters.
(3) In fences, walls and live hedges dividing rural lands. (572)
(2) Whenever the dividing wall is, on one side, straight and
plumb on all its facement, and on the other, it has similar
conditions on the upper part, but the lower part slants or
projects outward;
(4) Whenever the dividing wall bears the burden of the binding
beams, floors and roof frame of one of the buildings, but not
those of the others;
125
(5) Whenever the dividing wall between courtyards, gardens,
and tenements is constructed in such a way that the coping
sheds the water upon only one of the estates;
In all these cases, the ownership of the walls, fences or hedges shall
be deemed to belong exclusively to the owner of the property or
tenement which has in its favor the presumption based on any one
of these signs. (573)
Art. 661. Ditches or drains opened between two estates are also
presumed as common to both, if there is no title or sign showing the
contrary.
Art. 662. The cost of repairs and construction of party walls and the
maintenance of fences, live hedges, ditches, and drains owned in
common, shall be borne by all the owners of the lands or tenements
having the party wall in their favor, in proportion to the right of
each.
126
Art. 664. Every owner may increase the height of the party wall,
doing at his own expense and paying for any damage which may be
caused by the work, even though such damage be temporary.
If the party wall cannot bear the increased height, the owner
desiring to raise it shall be obliged to reconstruct it at his own
expense and, if for this purpose it be necessary to make it thicker,
he shall give the space required from his own land. (577)
Art. 665. The other owners who have not contributed in giving
increased height, depth or thickness to the wall may, nevertheless,
acquire the right of part-ownership therein, by paying proportionally
the value of the work at the time of the acquisition and of the land
used for its increased thickness. (578a)
(2) From the time of the formal prohibition upon the proprietor
of the adjoining land or tenement, if the window is through a
wall on the dominant estate. (n)
Art. 669. When the distances in Article 670 are not observed, the
owner of a wall which is not party wall, adjoining a tenement or
piece of land belonging to another, can make in it openings to admit
127
light at the height of the ceiling joints or immediately under the
ceiling, and of the size of thirty centimeters square, and, in every
case, with an iron grating imbedded in the wall and with a wire
screen.
Art. 672. The provisions of Article 670 are not applicable to buildings
separated by a public way or alley, which is not less than three
meters wide, subject to special regulations and local ordinances.
(584a)
Art. 673. Whenever by any title a right has been acquired to have
direct views, balconies or belvederes overlooking an adjoining
property, the owner of the servient estate cannot build thereon at
less than a distance of three meters to be measured in the manner
provided in Article 671. Any stipulation permitting distances less
128
than those prescribed in Article 670 is void. (585a)
Art. 678. No person shall build any aqueduct, well, sewer, furnace,
forge, chimney, stable, depository of corrosive substances,
machinery, or factory which by reason of its nature or products is
dangerous or noxious, without observing the distances prescribed by
the regulations and customs of the place, and without making the
129
necessary protective works, subject, in regard to the manner
thereof, to the conditions prescribed by such regulations. These
prohibitions cannot be altered or renounced by stipulation on the
part of the adjoining proprietors.
Every landowner shall have the right to demand that trees hereafter
planted at a shorter distance from his land or tenement be uprooted.
The provisions of this article also apply to trees which have grown
spontaneously. (591a)
Art. 681. Fruits naturally falling upon adjacent land belong to the
owner of said land. (n)
Art. 683. Subject to zoning, health, police and other laws and
regulations, factories and shops may be maintained provided the
least possible annoyance is caused to the neighborhood.
130
SECTION 9. - Lateral and Subjacent Support (n)
Sec. 684. No proprietor shall make such excavations upon his land as
to deprive any adjacent land or building of sufficient lateral or
subjacent support.
Art. 686. The legal easement of lateral and subjacent support is not
only for buildings standing at the time the excavations are made but
also for constructions that may be erected.
CHAPTER 3
VOLUNTARY EASEMENTS
The consent given by some only, must be held in abeyance until the
last one of all the co-owners shall have expressed his conformity.
131
But the consent given by one of the co-owners separately from the
others shall bind the grantor and his successors not to prevent the
exercise of the right granted. (597a)
Art. 693. If the owner of the servient estate should have bound
himself, upon the establishment of the easement, to bear the cost of
the work required for the use and preservation thereof, he may free
himself from this obligation by renouncing his property to the owner
of the dominant estate. (599)
132
Art. 697. The abatement of a nuisance does not preclude the right of
any person injured to recover damages for its past existence.
Art. 698. Lapse of time cannot legalize any nuisance, whether public
or private.
Art. 700. The district health officer shall take care that one or all of
the remedies against a public nuisance are availed of.
Art. 702. The district health officer shall determine whether or not
abatement, without judicial proceedings, is the best remedy against
a public nuisance.
Art. 704. Any private person may abate a public nuisance which is
specially injurious to him by removing, or if necessary, by destroying
the thing which constitutes the same, without committing a breach
of the peace, or doing unnecessary injury. But it is necessary:
(4) That the value of the destruction does not exceed three
thousand pesos.
133
Art. 705. The remedies against a private nuisance are:
(1) A civil action; or
Art. 708. The Registry of Property has for its object the inscription or
annotation of acts and contracts relating to the ownership and other
rights over immovable property. (605)
Art. 710. The books in the Registry of Property shall be public for
those who have a known interest in ascertaining the status of the
immovables or real rights annotated or inscribed therein. (607)
134
BOOK III
PRELIMINARY PROVISION
Ownership and other real rights over property are acquired and
transmitted by law, by donation, by estate and intestate succession,
and in consequence of certain contracts, by tradition.
Title I. - OCCUPATION
Art. 715. The right to hunt and to fish is regulated by special laws.
(611)
Art. 716. The owner of a swarm of bees shall have a right to pursue
them to another's land, indemnifying the possessor of the latter for
the damage. If the owner has not pursued the swarm, or ceases to
do so within two consecutive days, the possessor of the land may
occupy or retain the same. The owner of domesticated animals may
also claim them within twenty days to be counted from their
occupation by another person. This period having expired, they shall
pertain to him who has caught and kept them. (612a)
Art. 717. Pigeons and fish which from their respective breeding
places pass to another pertaining to a different owner shall belong
to the latter, provided they have not been enticed by some article of
fraud. (613a)
135
Art. 719. Whoever finds a movable, which is not treasure, must
return it to its previous possessor. If the latter is unknown, the
finder shall immediately deposit it with the mayor of the city or
municipality where the finding has taken place.
Six months from the publication having elapsed without the owner
having appeared, the thing found, or its value, shall be awarded to
the finder. The finder and the owner shall be obliged, as the case
may be, to reimburse the expenses. (615a)
Art. 722. The author and the composer, mentioned in Nos. 1 and 2 of
the preceding article, shall have the ownership of their creations
even before the publication of the same. Once their works are
published, their rights are governed by the Copyright laws.
The painter, sculptor or other artist shall have dominion over the
product of his art even before it is copyrighted.
136
The scientist or technologist has the ownership of his discovery or
invention even before it is patented. (n)
CHAPTER 1
NATURE OF DONATIONS
Art. 728. Donations which are to take effect upon the death of the
donor partake of the nature of testamentary provisions, and shall be
governed by the rules established in the Title on Succession. (620)
Art. 729. When the donor intends that the donation shall take effect
during the lifetime of the donor, though the property shall not be
delivered till after the donor's death, this shall be a donation inter
vivos. The fruits of the property from the time of the acceptance of
the donation, shall pertain to the donee, unless the donor provides
otherwise. (n)
137
life of the donor, does not destroy the nature of the act as a donation
inter vivos, unless a contrary intention appears. (n)
Art. 732. Donations which are to take effect inter vivos shall be
governed by the general provisions on contracts and obligations in
all that is not determined in this Title. (621)
Art. 734. The donation is perfected from the moment the donor
knows of the acceptance by the donee. (623)
CHAPTER 2
PERSONS WHO MAY GIVE OR RECEIVE A DONATION
Art. 735. All persons who may contract and dispose of their property
may make a donation. (624)
Art. 738. Al those who are not specially disqualified by law therefor
may accept donations. (625)
138
(3) Those made to a public officer or his wife, descedants and
ascendants, by reason of his office.
Art. 741. Minors and others who cannot enter into a contract may
become donees but acceptance shall be done through their parents
or legal representatives. (626a)
Art. 745. The donee must accept the donation personally, or through
an authorized person with a special power for the purpose, or with a
general and sufficient power; otherwise, the donation shall be void.
(630)
Art. 746. Acceptance must be made during the lifetime of the donor
and of the donee. (n)
139
If the value of the personal property donated exceeds five thousand
pesos, the donation and the acceptance shall be made in writing,
otherwise, the donation shall be void. (632a)
CHAPTER 3
EFFECT OF DONATIONS AND LIMITATIONS THEREON
Art. 750. The donations may comprehend all the present property of
the donor, or part thereof, provided he reserves, in full ownership or
in usufruct, sufficient means for the support of himself, and of all
relatives who, at the time of the acceptance of the donation, are by
law entitled to be supported by the donor. Without such reservation,
the donation shall be reduced in petition of any person affected. (634a)
140
The preceding paragraph shall not be applicable to donations made
to the husband and wife jointly, between whom there shall be a right
of accretion, if the contrary has not been provided by the donor. (637)
Art. 754. The donee is subrogated to all the rights and actions which
in case of eviction would pertain to the donor. The latter, on the
other hand, is not obliged to warrant the things donated, save when
the donation is onerous, in which case the donor shall be liable for
eviction to the concurrence of the burden.
The donor shall also be liable for eviction or hidden defects in case of
bad faith on his part. (638a)
Art. 758. When the donation imposes upon the donee the obligation
to pay the debts of the donor, if the clause does not contain any
declaration to the contrary, the former is understood to be liable to
pay only the debts which appear to have been previously contracted.
In no case shall the donee be responsible for the debts exceeding
the value of the property donated, unless a contrary intention clearly
appears. (642a)
141
his debts prior to the donation. (643)
CHAPTER 4
REVOCATION AND REDUCTION OF DONATIONS
Art. 763. The action for revocation or reduction on the grounds set
forth in article 760 shall prescribe after four years from the birth of
the first child, or from his legitimation, recognition or adoption, or
from the judicial declaration of filiation, or from the time information
was received regarding the existence of the child believed dead.
142
This action cannot be renounced, and is transmitted, upon the death
of the donor, to his legitimate and illegitimate children and
descendants. (646a)
Art. 764. The donation shall be revoked at the instance of the donor,
when the donee fails to comply with any of the conditions which the
former imposed upon the latter.
In this case, the property donated shall be returned to the donor, the
alienations made by the donee and the mortgages imposed thereon
by him being void, with the limitations established, with regard to
third persons, by the Mortgage Law and the Land Registration Laws.
This action shall prescribe after four years from the noncompliance
with the condition, may be transmitted to the heirs of the donor, and
may be exercised against the donee's heirs. (647a)
Art. 765. The donation may also be revoked at the instance of the
donor, by reason of ingratitude in the following cases:
143
The value of said property shall be fixed as of the time of the
donation. (650)
Art. 768. When the donation is revoked for any of the causes stated
in Article 760, or by reason of ingratitude, or when it is reduced
because it is inofficious, the donee shall not return the fruits except
from the filing of the complaint.
Art. 770. This action shall not be transmitted to the heirs of the
donor, if the latter did not institute the same, although he could
have done so, and even if he should die before the expiration of one
year.
Neither can this action be brought against the heir of the donee,
unless upon the latter's death the complaint has been filed. (653)
Art. 772. Only those who at the time of the donor's death have a
right to the legitime and their heirs and successors in interest may
ask for the reduction or inofficious donations.
144
The donees, devisees and legatees, who are not entitled to the
legitime and the creditors of the deceased can neither ask for the
reduction nor avail themselves thereof. (655a)
Art. 773. If, there being two or more donations, the disposable
portion is not sufficient to cover all of them, those of the more
recent date shall be suppressed or reduced with regard to the
excess. (656)
CHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 775. In this Title, "decedent" is the general term applied to the
person whose property is transmitted through succession, whether
or not he left a will. If he left a will, he is also called the testator. (n)
Art. 776. The inheritance includes all the property, rights and
obligations of a person which are not extinguished by his death. (659)
Art. 777. The rights to the succession are transmitted from the
moment of the death of the decedent. (657a)
(1) Testamentary;
Art. 780. Mixed succession is that effected partly by will and partly
by operation of law. (n)
145
Art. 781. The inheritance of a person includes not only the property
and the transmissible rights and obligations existing at the time of
his death, but also those which have accrued thereto since the
opening of the succession. (n)
CHAPTER 2
TESTAMENTARY SUCCESSION
SECTION 1. - Wills
Art. 786. The testator may entrust to a third person the distribution
of specific property or sums of money that he may leave in general
to specified classes or causes, and also the designation of the
persons, institutions or establishments to which such property or
sums are to be given or applied. (671a)
146
Art. 788. If a testamentary disposition admits of different
interpretations, in case of doubt, that interpretation by which the
disposition is to be operative shall be preferred. (n)
Art. 790. The words of a will are to be taken in their ordinary and
grammatical sense, unless a clear intention to use them in another
sense can be gathered, and that other can be ascertained.
Art. 793. Property acquired after the making of a will shall only pass
thereby, as if the testator had possessed it at the time of making the
will, should it expressly appear by the will that such was his
intention. (n)
Art. 794. Every devise or legacy shall cover all the interest which the
testator could device or bequeath in the property disposed of, unless
it clearly appears from the will that he intended to convey a less
interest. (n)
147
Art. 795. The validity of a will as to its form depends upon the
observance of the law in force at the time it is made. (n)
Art. 796. All persons who are not expressly prohibited by law may
make a will. (662)
Art. 797. Persons of either sex under eighteen years of age cannot
make a will. (n)
Art. 800. The law presumes that every person is of sound mind, in
the absence of proof to the contrary.
The burden of proof that the testator was not of sound mind at the
time of making his dispositions is on the person who opposes the
probate of the will; but if the testator, one month, or less, before
making his will was publicly known to be insane, the person who
maintains the validity of the will must prove that the testator made
it during a lucid interval. (n)
Art. 802. A married woman may make a will without the consent of
her husband, and without the authority of the court. (n)
Art. 803. A married woman may dispose by will of all her separate
property as well as her share of the conjugal partnership or absolute
148
community property. (n)
The testator or the person requested by him to write his name and
the instrumental witnesses of the will, shall also sign, as aforesaid,
each and every page thereof, except the last, on the left margin, and
all the pages shall be numbered correlatively in letters placed on the
upper part of each page.
The attestation shall state the number of pages used upon which the
will is written, and the fact that the testator signed the will and
every page thereof, or caused some other person to write his name,
under his express direction, in the presence of the instrumental
witnesses, and that the latter witnessed and signed the will and all
the pages thereof in the presence of the testator and of one another.
Art. 808. If the testator is blind, the will shall be read to him twice;
once, by one of the subscribing witnesses, and again, by the notary
public before whom the will is acknowledged. (n)
149
Art. 809. In the absence of bad faith, forgery, or fraud, or undue and
improper pressure and influence, defects and imperfections in the
form of attestation or in the language used therein shall not render
the will invalid if it is proved that the will was in fact executed and
attested in substantial compliance with all the requirements of
Article 805. (n)
Art. 816. The will of an alien who is abroad produces effect in the
Philippines if made with the formalities prescribed by the law of the
place in which he resides, or according to the formalities observed in
his country, or in conformity with those which this Code prescribes.
(n)
150
Art. 817. A will made in the Philippines by a citizen or subject of
another country, which is executed in accordance with the law of the
country of which he is a citizen or subject, and which might be
proved and allowed by the law of his own country, shall have the
same effect as if executed according to the laws of the Philippines.
(n)
Art. 818. Two or more persons cannot make a will jointly, or in the
same instrument, either for their reciprocal benefit or for the benefit
of a third person. (669)
Art. 820. Any person of sound mind and of the age of eighteen years
or more, and not bind, deaf or dumb, and able to read and write,
may be a witness to the execution of a will mentioned in Article 805
of this Code. (n)
151
Art. 824. A mere charge on the estate of the testator for the
payment of debts due at the time of the testator's death does not
prevent his creditors from being competent witnesses to his will. (n)
(2) The will must clearly describe and identify the same,
stating among other things the number of pages thereof;
Art. 828. A will may be revoked by the testator at any time before
his death. Any waiver or restriction of this right is void. (737a)
152
Art. 830. No will shall be revoked except in the following cases:
Art. 831. Subsequent wills which do not revoke the previous ones in
an express manner, annul only such dispositions in the prior wills as
are inconsistent with or contrary to those contained in the latter
wills. (n)
Art. 834. The recognition of an illegitimate child does not lose its
legal effect, even though the will wherein it was made should be
revoked. (714)
153
Art. 837. If after making a will, the testator makes a second will
expressly revoking the first, the revocation of the second will does
not revive the first will, which can be revived only by another will or
codicil. (739a)
Art. 838. No will shall pass either real or personal property unless it
is proved and allowed in accordance with the Rules of Court.
The testator himself may, during his lifetime, petition the court
having jurisdiction for the allowance of his will. In such case, the
pertinent provisions of the Rules of Court for the allowance of wills
after the testator's a death shall govern.
Art. 839. The will shall be disallowed in any of the following cases:
(6) If the testator acted by mistake or did not intend that the
instrument he signed should be his will at the time of affixing
his signature thereto. (n)
154
SECTION 2. - Institution of Heir
Art. 841. A will shall be valid even though it should not contain an
institution of an heir, or such institution should not comprise the
entire estate, and even though the person so instituted should not
accept the inheritance or should be incapacitated to succeed.
Art. 842. One who has no compulsory heirs may dispose by will of all
his estate or any part of it in favor of any person having capacity to
succeed.
One who has compulsory heirs may dispose of his estate provided he
does not contravene the provisions of this Code with regard to the
legitime of said heirs. (763a)
Art. 843. The testator shall designate the heir by his name and
surname, and when there are two persons having the same names,
he shall indicate some circumstance by which the instituted heir may
be known.
Even though the testator may have omitted the name of the heir,
should he designate him in such manner that there can be no doubt
as to who has been instituted, the institution shall be valid. (772)
155
certain. However, a disposition in favor of a definite class or group of
persons shall be valid. (750a)
Art. 847. When the testator institutes some heirs individually and
others collectively as when he says, "I designate as my heirs A and
B, and the children of C," those collectively designated shall be
considered as individually instituted, unless it clearly appears that
the intention of the testator was otherwise. (769a)
Art. 848. If the testator should institute his brothers and sisters, and
he has some of full blood and others of half blood, the inheritance
shall be distributed equally unless a different intention appears. (770a)
Art. 849. When the testator calls to the succession a person and his
children they are all deemed to have been instituted simultaneously
and not successively. (771)
Art. 850. The statement of a false cause for the institution of an heir
shall be considered as not written, unless it appears from the will
that the testator would not have made such institution if he had
known the falsity of such cause. (767a)
Art. 851. If the testator has instituted only one heir, and the
institution is limited to an aliquot part of the inheritance, legal
succession takes place with respect to the remainder of the estate.
The same rule applies if the testator has instituted several heirs,
each being limited to an aliquot part, and all the parts do not cover
the whole inheritance. (n)
Art. 852. If it was the intention of the testator that the instituted
heirs should become sole heirs to the whole estate, or the whole free
portion, as the case may be, and each of them has been instituted to
an aliquot part of the inheritance and their aliquot parts together do
not cover the whole inheritance, or the whole free portion, each part
shall be increased proportionally. (n)
Art. 853. If each of the instituted heirs has been given an aliquot
part of the inheritance, and the parts together exceed the whole
inheritance, or the whole free portion, as the case may be, each part
shall be reduced proportionally. (n)
156
Art. 854. The preterition or omission of one, some, or all of the
compulsory heirs in the direct line, whether living at the time of the
execution of the will or born after the death of the testator, shall
annul the institution of heir; but the devises and legacies shall be
valid insofar as they are not inofficious.
If the omitted compulsory heirs should die before the testator, the
institution shall be effectual, without prejudice to the right of
representation. (814a)
Art. 856. A voluntary heir who dies before the testator transmits
nothing to his heirs.
(3) Reciprocal; or
157
should die before him, or should not wish, or should be incapacitated
to accept the inheritance.
Art. 860. Two or more persons may be substituted for one; and one
person for two or more heirs. (778)
Art. 862. The substitute shall be subject to the same charges and
conditions imposed upon the instituted heir, unless and testator has
expressly provided the contrary, or the charges or conditions are
personally applicable only to the heir instituted. (780)
158
Art. 866. The second heir shall acquire a right to the succession from
the time of the testator's death, even though he should die before
the fiduciary. The right of the second heir shall pass to his heirs. (784)
(3) Those which impose upon the heir the charge of paying to
various persons successively, beyond the limit prescribed in
article 863, a certain income or pension;
Art. 870. The dispositions of the testator declaring all or part of the
estate inalienable for more than twenty years are void. (n)
159
Art. 872. The testator cannot impose any charge, condition, or
substitution whatsoever upon the legitimes prescribed in this Code.
Should he do so, the same shall be considered as not imposed. (813a)
Art. 875. Any disposition made upon the condition that the heir shall
make some provision in his will in favor of the testator or of any
other person shall be void. (794a)
This rule shall not apply when the condition, already complied with,
cannot be fulfilled again. (795a)
Should it have existed or should it have been fulfilled at the time the
will was executed and the testator was unaware thereof, it shall be
deemed as complied with.
Art. 878. A disposition with a suspensive term does not prevent the
instituted heir from acquiring his rights and transmitting them to his
heirs even before the arrival of the term. (799a)
160
Art. 879. If the potestative condition imposed upon the heir is
negative, or consists in not doing or not giving something, he shall
comply by giving a security that he will not do or give that which has
been prohibited by the testator, and that in case of contravention he
will return whatever he may have received, together with its fruits
and interests. (800a)
The same shall be done if the heir does not give the security
required in the preceding article. (801a)
That which has been left in this manner may be claimed at once
provided that the instituted heir or his heirs give security for
compliance with the wishes of the testator and for the return of
anything he or they may receive, together with its fruits and
interests, if he or they should disregard this obligation. (797a)
Art. 883. When without the fault of the heir, an institution referred
to in the preceding article cannot take effect in the exact manner
stated by the testator, it shall be complied with in a manner most
analogous to and in conformity with his wishes.
Art. 884. Conditions imposed by the testator upon the heirs shall be
governed by the rules established for conditional obligations in all
matters not provided for by this Section. (791a)
161
Art. 885. The designation of the day or time when the effects of the
institution of an heir shall commence or cease shall be valid.
SECTION 5. - Legitime
162
Art. 888. The legitime of legitimate children and descendants
consists of one-half of the hereditary estate of the father and of the
mother.
The latter may freely dispose of the remaining half, subject to the
rights of illegitimate children and of the surviving spouse as
hereinafter provided. (808a)
Art. 890. The legitime reserved for the legitimate parents shall be
divided between them equally; if one of the parents should have
died, the whole shall pass to the survivor.
Art. 891. The ascendant who inherits from his descendant any
property which the latter may have acquired by gratuitous title from
another ascendant, or a brother or sister, is obliged to reserve such
property as he may have acquired by operation of law for the benefit
of relatives who are within the third degree and who belong to the
line from which said property came. (871)
163
Art. 893. If the testator leaves no legitimate descendants, but leaves
legitimate ascendants, the surviving spouse shall have a right to
one-fourth of the hereditary estate.
This fourth shall be taken from the free portion of the estate. (836a)
164
Art. 899. When the widow or widower survives with legitimate
parents or ascendants and with illegitimate children, such surviving
spouse shall be entitled to one-eighth of the hereditary estate of the
deceased which must be taken from the free portion, and the
illegitimate children shall be entitled to one-fourth of the estate
which shall be taken also from the disposable portion. The testator
may freely dispose of the remaining one-eighth of the estate. (n)
If the marriage between the surviving spouse and the testator was
solemnized in articulo mortis, and the testator died within three
months from the time of the marriage, the legitime of the surviving
spouse as the sole heir shall be one-third of the hereditary estate,
except when they have been living as husband and wife for more
than five years. In the latter case, the legitime of the surviving
spouse shall be that specified in the preceding paragraph. (n)
Art. 901. When the testator dies leaving illegitimate children and no
other compulsory heirs, such illegitimate children shall have a right
to one-half of the hereditary estate of the deceased.
The other half shall be at the free disposal of the testator. (842a)
Art. 902. The rights of illegitimate children set forth in the preceding
articles are transmitted upon their death to their descendants,
whether legitimate or illegitimate. (843a)
Art. 903. The legitime of the parents who have an illegitimate child,
when such child leaves neither legitimate descendants, nor a
surviving spouse, nor illegitimate children, is one-half of the
hereditary estate of such illegitimate child. If only legitimate or
illegitimate children are left, the parents are not entitled to any
legitime whatsoever. If only the widow or widower survives with
parents of the illegitimate child, the legitime of the parents is one-
fourth of the hereditary estate of the child, and that of the surviving
spouse also one-fourth of the estate. (n)
Art. 904. The testator cannot deprive his compulsory heirs of their
legitime, except in cases expressly specified by law.
165
Neither can he impose upon the same any burden, encumbrance,
condition, or substitution of any kind whatsoever. (813a)
Art. 906. Any compulsory heir to whom the testator has left by any
title less than the legitime belonging to him may demand that the
same be fully satisfied. (815)
Art. 908. To determine the legitime, the value of the property left at
the death of the testator shall be considered, deducting all debts and
charges, which shall not include those imposed in the will.
To the net value of the hereditary estate, shall be added the value of
all donations by the testator that are subject to collation, at the time
he made them. (818a)
Should they exceed the portion that can be freely disposed of, they
shall be reduced in the manner prescribed by this Code. (847a)
Art. 911. After the legitime has been determined in accordance with
the three preceding articles, the reduction shall be made as follows:
166
(1) Donations shall be respected as long as the legitime can be
covered, reducing or annulling, if necessary, the devises or
legacies made in the will;
Art. 914. The testator may devise and bequeath the free portion as
he may deem fit. (n)
SECTION 6. - Disinheritance
167
Art. 916. Disinheritance can be effected only through a will wherein
the legal cause therefor shall be specified. (849)
Art. 917. The burden of proving the truth of the cause for
disinheritance shall rest upon the other heirs of the testator, if the
disinherited heir should deny it. (850)
168
Art. 920. The following shall be sufficient causes for the
disinheritance of parents or ascendants, whether legitimate or
illegitimate:
(1) When the parents have abandoned their children or induced
their daughters to live a corrupt or immoral life, or attempted
against their virtue;
(2) When the spouse has accused the testator of a crime for
which the law prescribes imprisonment of six years or more,
and the accusation has been found to be false;
169
(4) When the spouse has given cause for legal separation;
(5) When the spouse has given grounds for the loss of parental
authority;
Art. 924. All things and rights which are within the commerce of man
be bequeathed or devised. (865a)
Art. 925. A testator may charge with legacies and devises not only
his compulsory heirs but also the legatees and devisees.
The latter shall be liable for the charge only to the extent of the
value of the legacy or the devise received by them. The compulsory
heirs shall not be liable for the charge beyond the amount of the free
portion given them. (858a)
Art. 926. When the testator charges one of the heirs with a legacy or
devise, he alone shall be bound.
Art. 927. If two or more heirs take possession of the estate, they
shall be solidarily liable for the loss or destruction of a thing devised
or bequeathed, even though only one of them should have been
negligent. (n)
170
Art. 928. The heir who is bound to deliver the legacy or devise shall
be liable in case of eviction, if the thing is indeterminate and is
indicated only by its kind. (860)
Art. 929. If the testator, heir, or legatee owns only a part of, or an
interest in the thing bequeathed, the legacy or devise shall be
understood limited to such part or interest, unless the testator
expressly declares that he gives the thing in its entirety. (864a)
Art. 932. The legacy or devise of a thing which at the time of the
execution of the will already belonged to the legatee or devisee shall
be ineffective, even though another person may have some interest
therein.
If the testator expressly orders that the thing be freed from such
interest or encumbrance, the legacy or devise shall be valid to that
extent. (866a)
171
execution of the will, the estate is obliged to pay the debt, unless the
contrary intention appears.
The same rule applies when the thing is pledged or mortgaged after
the execution of the will.
In the first case, the estate shall comply with the legacy by
assigning to the legatee all rights of action it may have against the
debtor. In the second case, by giving the legatee an acquittance,
should he request one.
In both cases, the legacy shall comprise all interests on the credit or
debt which may be due the testator at the time of his death. (870a)
Art. 936. The legacy referred to in the preceding article shall lapse if
the testator, after having made it, should bring an action against the
debtor for the payment of his debt, even if such payment should not
have been effected at the time of his death.
In the latter case, the creditor shall have the right to collect the
excess, if any, of the credit or of the legacy or devise. (837a)
172
thereof is ordered paid, the excess is not due, unless a contrary
intention appears.
If the heir, legatee or devisee, who may have been given the choice,
dies before making it, this right shall pass to the respective heirs.
Art. 942. Whenever the testator expressly leaves the right of choice
to the heir, or to the legatee or devisee, the former may give or the
latter may choose whichever he may prefer. (876a)
Art. 943. If the heir, legatee or devisee cannot make the choice, in
case it has been granted him, his right shall pass to his heirs; but a
choice once made shall be irrevocable. (877a)
Art. 944. A legacy for education lasts until the legatee is of age, or
beyond the age of majority in order that the legatee may finish some
professional, vocational or general course, provided he pursues his
course diligently.
173
A legacy for support lasts during the lifetime of the legatee, if the
testator has not otherwise provided.
If the testator has not fixed the amount of such legacies, it shall be
fixed in accordance with the social standing and the circumstances
of the legatee and the value of the estate.
Art. 947. The legatee or devisee acquires a right to the pure and
simple legacies or devises from the death of the testator, and
transmits it to his heirs. (881a)
From the moment of the testator's death, the thing bequeathed shall
be at the risk of the legatee or devisee, who shall, therefore, bear its
loss or deterioration, and shall be benefited by its increase or
improvement, without prejudice to the responsibility of the executor
or administrator. (882a)
174
Art. 950. If the estate should not be sufficient to cover all the
legacies or devises, their payment shall be made in the following
order:
Art. 951. The thing bequeathed shall be delivered with all its
accessories and accessories and in the condition in which it may be
upon the death of the testator. (883a)
Art. 952. The heir, charged with a legacy or devise, or the executor
or administrator of the estate, must deliver the very thing
bequeathed if he is able to do so and cannot discharge this
obligation by paying its value.
Legacies of money must be paid in cash, even though the heir or the
estate may not have any.
Art. 953. The legatee or devisee cannot take possession of the thing
bequeathed upon his own authority, but shall request its delivery
and possession of the heir charged with the legacy or devise, or of
the executor or administrator of the estate should he be authorized
by the court to deliver it. (885a)
Art. 954. The legatee or devisee cannot accept a part of the legacy or
devise and repudiate the other, if the latter be onerous.
175
Should he die before having accepted the legacy or devise, leaving
several heirs, some of the latter may accept and the others may
repudiate the share respectively belonging to them in the legacy or
devise. (889a)
(2) If the testator by any title or for any cause alienates the
thing bequeathed or any part thereof, it being understood that
in the latter case the legacy or devise shall be without effect
only with respect to the part thus alienated. If after the
alienation the thing should again belong to the testator, even if
it be by reason of nullity of the contract, the legacy or devise
shall not thereafter be valid, unless the reacquisition shall have
been effected by virtue of the exercise of the right of
repurchase;
176
Art. 958. A mistake as to the name of the thing bequeathed or
devised, is of no consequence, if it is possible to identify the thing
which the testator intended to bequeath or devise. (n)
CHAPTER 3
LEGAL OR INTESTATE SUCCESSION
(2) When the will does not institute an heir to, or dispose of all
the property belonging to the testator. In such case, legal
succession shall take place only with respect to the property of
which the testator has not disposed;
177
between the paternal and maternal lines. (912a)
SUBSECTION 1. - Relationship
Art. 964. A series of degrees forms a line, which may be either direct
or collateral.
The former unites the head of the family with those who descend
from him.
The latter binds a person with those from whom he descends. (917)
Art. 966. In the line, as many degrees are counted as there are
generations or persons, excluding the progenitor.
In the direct line, ascent is made to the common ancestor. Thus, the
child is one degree removed from the parent, two from the
grandfather, and three from the great-grandparent.
178
Art. 968. If there are several relatives of the same degree, and one
or some of them are unwilling or incapacitated to succeed, his
portion shall accrue to the others of the same degree, save the right
of representation when it should take place. (922)
179
Art. 976. A person may represent him whose inheritance he has
renounced. (928a)
Art. 977. Heirs who repudiate their share may not be represented.
(929a)
Art. 980. The children of the deceased shall always inherit from him
in their own right, dividing the inheritance in equal shares. (932)
180
Art. 985. In default of legitimate children and descendants of the
deceased, his parents and ascendants shall inherit from him, to the
exclusion of collateral relatives. (935a)
Art. 986. The father and mother, if living, shall inherit in equal
shares.
Art. 987. In default of the father and mother, the ascendants nearest
in degree shall inherit.
Art. 989. If, together with illegitimate children, there should survive
descendants of another illegitimate child who is dead, the former
shall succeed in their own right and the latter by right of
representation. (940a)
Art. 990. The hereditary rights granted by the two preceding articles
to illegitimate children shall be transmitted upon their death to their
descendants, who shall inherit by right of representation from their
deceased grandparent. (941a)
181
nor shall such children or relatives inherit in the same manner from
the illegitimate child. (943a)
182
widower shall be entitled to the same share as that of a legitimate
child. (n)
Art. 1001. Should brothers and sisters or their children survive with
the widow or widower, the latter shall be entitled to one-half of the
inheritance and the brothers and sisters or their children to the
other half. (953, 837a)
Art. 1004. Should the only survivors be brothers and sisters of the
full blood, they shall inherit in equal shares. (947)
Art. 1006. Should brother and sisters of the full blood survive
together with brothers and sisters of the half blood, the former shall
be entitled to a share double that of the latter. (949)
Art. 1007. In case brothers and sisters of the half blood, some on the
father's and some on the mother's side, are the only survivors, all
shall inherit in equal shares without distinction as to the origin of
the property. (950)
183
Art. 1008. Children of brothers and sisters of the half blood shall
succeed per capita or per stirpes, in accordance with the rules laid
down for the brothers and sisters of the full blood. (915)
Art. 1009. Should there be neither brothers nor sisters nor children
of brothers or sisters, the other collateral relatives shall succeed to
the estate.
Art. 1010. The right to inherit ab intestato shall not extend beyond
the fifth degree of relationship in the collateral line. (955a)
Art. 1012. In order that the State may take possession of the
property mentioned in the preceding article, the pertinent provisions
of the Rules of Court must be observed. (958a)
Art. 1013. After the payment of debts and charges, the personal
property shall be assigned to the municipality or city where the
deceased last resided in the Philippines, and the real estate to the
municipalities or cities, respectively, in which the same is situated.
Such estate shall be for the benefit of public schools, and public
charitable institutions and centers, in such municipalities or cities.
The court shall distribute the estate as the respective needs of each
beneficiary may warrant.
184
Art. 1014. If a person legally entitled to the estate of the deceased
appears and files a claim thereto with the court within five years
from the date the property was delivered to the State, such person
shall be entitled to the possession of the same, or if sold the
municipality or city shall be accountable to him for such part of the
proceeds as may not have been lawfully spent. (n)
CHAPTER 4
PROVISIONS COMMON TO TESTATE AND INTESTATE SUCCESSIONS
Art. 1016. In order that the right of accretion may take place in a
testamentary succession, it shall be necessary:
(2) That one of the persons thus called die before the testator,
or renounce the inheritance, or be incapacitated to receive it.
(928a)
Art. 1017. The words "one-half for each" or "in equal shares" or any
others which, though designating an aliquot part, do not identify it
by such description as shall make each heir the exclusive owner of
determinate property, shall not exclude the right of accretion.
Art. 1019. The heirs to whom the portion goes by the right of
accretion take it in the same proportion that they inherit. (n)
185
Art. 1020. The heirs to whom the inheritance accrues shall succeed
to all the rights and obligations which the heir who renounced or
could not receive it would have had. (984)
Art. 1021. Among the compulsory heirs the right of accretion shall
take place only when the free portion is left to two or more of them,
or to any one of them and to a stranger.
Should the part repudiated be the legitime, the other co-heirs shall
succeed to it in their own right, and not by the right of accretion. (985)
Art. 1023. Accretion shall also take place among devisees, legatees
and usufructuaries under the same conditions established for heirs.
(987a)
186
All other corporations or entities may succeed under a will, unless
there is a provision to the contrary in their charter or the laws of
their creation, and always subject to the same. (746a)
(1) The priest who heard the confession of the testator during
his last illness, or the minister of the gospel who extended
spiritual aid to him during the same period;
Art. 1029. Should the testator dispose of the whole or part of his
property for prayers and pious works for the benefit of his soul, in
general terms and without specifying its application, the executor,
with the court's approval shall deliver one-half thereof or its
proceeds to the church or denomination to which the testator may
belong, to be used for such prayers and pious works, and the other
half to the State, for the purposes mentioned in Article 1013. (747a)
187
Art. 1030. Testamentary provisions in favor of the poor in general,
without designation of particular persons or of any community, shall
be deemed limited to the poor living in the domicile of the testator at
the time of his death, unless it should clearly appear that his
intention was otherwise.
The preceding paragraph shall apply when the testator has disposed
of his property in favor of the poor of a definite locality. (749a)
(3) Any person who has accused the testator of a crime for
which the law prescribes imprisonment for six years or more, if
the accusation has been found groundless;
(4) Any heir of full age who, having knowledge of the violent
death of the testator, should fail to report it to an officer of the
law within a month, unless the authorities have already taken
action; this prohibition shall not apply to cases wherein,
according to law, there is no obligation to make an accusation;
188
(6) Any person who by fraud, violence, intimidation, or undue
influence should cause the testator to make a will or to change
one already made;
(7) Any person who by the same means prevents another from
making a will, or from revoking one already made, or who
supplants, conceals, or alters the latter's will;
Art. 1037. The unworthy heir who is excluded from the succession
has a right to demand indemnity or any expenses incurred in the
189
preservation of the hereditary property, and to enforce such credits
as he may have against the estate. (n)
He shall be liable for all the fruits and rents he may have received, or
could have received through the exercise of due diligence. (760a)
Art. 1040. The action for a declaration of incapacity and for the
recovery of the inheritance, devise or legacy shall be brought within
five years from the time the disqualified person took possession
thereof. It may be brought by any one who may have an interest in
the succession. (762a)
Art. 1044. Any person having the free disposal of his property may
accept or repudiate an inheritance.
The right to accept an inheritance left to the poor shall belong to the
persons designated by the testator to determine the beneficiaries
190
and distribute the property, or in their default, to those mentioned in
Article 1030. (992a)
Art. 1048. Deaf-mutes who can read and write may accept or
repudiate the inheritance personally or through an agent. Should
they not be able to read and write, the inheritance shall be accepted
by their guardians. These guardians may repudiate the same with
judicial approval. (996a)
191
and the co-heirs in whose favor it is made are those upon
whom the portion renounced should devolve by virtue of
accretion, the inheritance shall not be deemed as accepted.
(1000)
Art. 1057. Within thirty days after the court has issued an order for
the distribution of the estate in accordance with the Rules of Court,
the heirs, devisees and legatees shall signify to the court having
jurisdiction whether they accept or repudiate the inheritance.
192
If they do not do so within that time, they are deemed to have
accepted the inheritance. (n)
SECTION 5. - Collation
Art. 1062. Collation shall not take place among compulsory heirs if
the donor should have so expressly provided, or if the donee should
repudiate the inheritance, unless the donation should be reduced as
inofficious. (1036)
193
Art. 1064. When the grandchildren, who survive with their uncles,
aunts, or cousins, inherit from their grandparents in representation
of their father or mother, they shall bring to collation all that their
parents, if alive, would have been obliged to bring, even though such
grandchildren have not inherited the property.
They shall also bring to collation all that they may have received
from the decedent during his lifetime, unless the testator has
provided otherwise, in which case his wishes must be respected, if
the legitime of the co-heirs is not prejudiced. (1038)
194
Their subsequent increase or deterioration and even their total loss
or destruction, be it accidental or culpable, shall be for the benefit or
account and risk of the donee. (1045a)
If the property donated was movable, the co-heirs shall only have a
right to select an equivalent of other personal property of the
inheritance at its just price. (1048)
Art. 1075. The fruits and interest of the property subject to collation
shall not pertain to the estate except from the day on which the
succession is opened.
For the purpose of ascertaining their amount, the fruits and interest
of the property of the estate of the same kind and quality as that
subject to collation shall be made the standard of assessment. (1049)
Art. 1076. The co-heirs are bound to reimburse to the donee the
necessary expenses which he has incurred for the preservation of
the property donated to him, though they may not have augmented
its value.
The donee who collates in kind an immovable which has been given
to him must be reimbursed by his co-heirs for the improvements
which have increased the value of the property, and which exist at
the time the partition if effected.
195
As to works made on the estate for the mere pleasure of the donee,
no reimbursement is due him for them; he has, however, the right to
remove them, if he can do so without injuring the estate. (n)
Art. 1077. Should any question arise among the co-heirs upon the
obligation to bring to collation or as to the things which are subject
to collation, the distribution of the estate shall not be interrupted for
this reason, provided adequate security is given. (1050)
SUBSECTION 1. - Partition
Art. 1078. Where there are two or more heirs, the whole estate of
the decedent is, before its partition, owned in common by such heirs,
subject to the payment of debts of the deceased. (n)
A parent who, in the interest of his or her family, desires to keep any
agricultural, industrial, or manufacturing enterprise intact, may avail
himself of the right granted him in this article, by ordering that the
legitime of the other children to whom the property is not assigned,
be paid in cash. (1056a)
196
although it should purport to be a sale, and exchange, a
compromise, or any other transaction. (n)
Art. 1083. Every co-heir has a right to demand the division of the
estate unless the testator should have expressly forbidden its
partition, in which case the period of indivision shall not exceed
twenty years as provided in article 494. This power of the testator to
prohibit division applies to the legitime.
Art. 1084. Voluntary heirs upon whom some condition has been
imposed cannot demand a partition until the condition has been
fulfilled; but the other co-heirs may demand it by giving sufficient
security for the rights which the former may have in case the
condition should be complied with, and until it is known that the
condition has not been fulfilled or can never be complied with, the
partition shall be understood to be provisional. (1054a)
Art. 1087. In the partition the co-heirs shall reimburse one another
for the income and fruits which each one of them may have received
from any property of the estate, for any useful and necessary
expenses made upon such property, and for any damage thereto
through malice or neglect. (1063)
Art. 1088. Should any of the heirs sell his hereditary rights to a
stranger before the partition, any or all of the co-heirs may be
subrogated to the rights of the purchaser by reimbursing him for the
197
price of the sale, provided they do so within the period of one month
from the time they were notified in writing of the sale by the vendor.
(1067a)
Art. 1090. When the title comprises two or more pieces of land
which have been assigned to two or more co-heirs, or when it covers
one piece of land which has been divided between two or more co-
heirs, the title shall be delivered to the one having the largest
interest, and authentic copies of the title shall be furnished to the
other co-heirs at the expense of the estate. If the interest of each
co-heir should be the same, the oldest shall have the title. (1066a)
Art. 1091. A partition legally made confers upon each heir the
exclusive ownership of the property adjudicated to him. (1068)
Art. 1092. After the partition has been made, the co-heirs shall be
reciprocally bound to warrant the title to, and the quality of, each
property adjudicated. (1069a)
Those who pay for the insolvent heir shall have a right of action
against him for reimbursement, should his financial condition
improve. (1071)
198
The warranty of the solvency of the debtor can only be enforced
during the five years following the partition.
Co-heirs do not warrant bad debts, if so known to, and accepted by,
the distributee. But if such debts are not assigned to a co-heir, and
should be collected, in whole or in part, the amount collected shall
be distributed proportionately among the heirs. (1072a)
(1) When the testator himself has made the partition, unless it
appears, or it may be reasonably presumed, that his intention
was otherwise, but the legitime shall always remain
unimpaired;
199
Art. 1101. The heir who is sued shall have the option of indemnifying
the plaintiff for the loss, or consenting to a new partition.
If a new partition is made, it shall affect neither those who have not
been prejudiced nor those have not received more than their just
share. (1077a)
Title V. - PRESCRIPTION
CHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
200
Art. 1107. Persons who are capable of acquiring property or rights
by the other legal modes may acquire the same by means of
prescription.
Art. 1109. Prescription does not run between husband and wife,
even though there be a separation of property agreed upon in the
marriage settlements or by judicial decree.
201
Prescription is deemed to have been tacitly renounced when the
renunciation results from acts which imply the abandonment of the
right acquired. (1935)
Art. 1113. All things which are within the commerce of men are
susceptible of prescription, unless otherwise provided. Property of
the State or any of its subdivisions not patrimonial in character shall
not be the object of prescription. (1936a)
Art. 1114. Creditors and all other persons interested in making the
prescription effective may avail themselves thereof notwithstanding
the express or tacit renunciation by the debtor or proprietor. (1937)
CHAPTER 2
PRESCRIPTION OF OWNERSHIP AND OTHER REAL RIGHTS
202
Art. 1121. Possession is naturally interrupted when through any
cause it should cease for more than one year.
Art. 1122. If the natural interruption is for only one year or less, the
time elapsed shall be counted in favor of the prescription. (n)
Art. 1125. Any express or tacit recognition which the possessor may
make of the owner's right also interrupts possession. (1948)
Art. 1127. The good faith of the possessor consists in the reasonable
belief that the person from whom he received the thing was the
owner thereof, and could transmit his ownership. (1950a)
203
for the determination of good faith in the prescription of ownership
and other real rights. (1951)
Art. 1129. For the purposes of prescription, there is just title when
the adverse claimant came into possession of the property through
one of the modes recognized by law for the acquisition of ownership
or other real rights, but the grantor was not the owner or could not
transmit any right. (n)
Art. 1130. The title for prescription must be true and valid. (1953)
Art. 1134. Ownership and other real rights over immovable property
are acquired by ordinary prescription through possession of ten
years. (1957a)
Art. 1136. Possession in wartime, when the civil courts are not open,
shall not be counted in favor of the adverse claimant.
Art. 1137. Ownership and other real rights over immovables also
prescribe through uninterrupted adverse possession thereof for
thirty years, without need of title or of good faith. (1959a)
204
Art. 1138. In the computation of time necessary for prescription the
following rules shall be observed:
(2) It is presumed that the present possessor who was also the
possessor at a previous time, has continued to be in possession
during the intervening time, unless there is proof to the
contrary;
(3) The first day shall be excluded and the last day included.
(1960a)
CHAPTER 3
PRESCRIPTION OF ACTIONS
Art. 1139. Actions prescribe by the mere lapse of time fixed by law.
(1961)
Art. 1141. Real actions over immovables prescribe after thirty years.
Art. 1144. The following actions must be brought within ten years
from the time the right of action accrues:
(1) Upon a written contract;
205
(2) Upon an obligation created by law;
Art. 1146. The following actions must be instituted within four years:
(1) Upon an injury to the rights of the plaintiff;
However, when the action arises from or out of any act, activity, or
conduct of any public officer involving the exercise of powers or
authority arising from Martial Law including the arrest, detention
and/or trial of the plaintiff, the same must be brought within one (1)
year. (As amended by PD No. 1755, Dec. 24, 1980.)
Art. 1147. The following actions must be filed within one year:
Art. 1149. All other actions whose periods are not fixed in this Code
or in other laws must be brought within five years from the time the
right of action accrues. (n)
Art. 1150. The time for prescription for all kinds of actions, when
there is no special provision which ordains otherwise, shall be
counted from the day they may be brought. (1969)
Art. 1151. The time for the prescription of actions which have for
their object the enforcement of obligations to pay principal with
interest or annuity runs from the last payment of the annuity or of
the interest. (1970a)
206
Art. 1152. The period for prescription of actions to demand the
fulfillment of obligation declared by a judgment commences from the
time the judgment became final. (1971)
The period for the action arising from the result of the accounting
runs from the date when said result was recognized by agreement of
the interested parties. (1972)
Art. 1154. The period during which the obligee was prevented by a
fortuitous event from enforcing his right is not reckoned against
him. (n)
207
BOOK IV
Title. I. - OBLIGATIONS
CHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
(1) Law;
(2) Contracts;
(3) Quasi-contracts;
Art. 1158. Obligations derived from law are not presumed. Only
those expressly determined in this Code or in special laws are
demandable, and shall be regulated by the precepts of the law which
establishes them; and as to what has not been foreseen, by the
provisions of this Book. (1090)
Art. 1159. Obligations arising from contracts have the force of law
between the contracting parties and should be complied with in good
faith. (1091a)
208
Art. 1162. Obligations derived from quasi-delicts shall be governed
by the provisions of Chapter 2, Title XVII of this Book, and by special
laws. (1093a)
CHAPTER 2
NATURE AND EFFECT OF OBLIGATIONS
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. 1168. When the obligation consists in not doing, and the obligor
does what has been forbidden him, it shall also be undone at his
expense. (1099a)
209
Art. 1169. Those obliged to deliver or to do something incur in delay
from the time the obligee judicially or extrajudicially demands from
them the fulfillment of their obligation.
210
Art. 1174. Except in cases expressly specified by the law, or when it
is otherwise declared by stipulation, or when the nature of the
obligation requires the assumption of risk, no person shall be
responsible for those events which could not be foreseen, or which,
though foreseen, were inevitable. (1105a)
CHAPTER 3
DIFFERENT KINDS OF OBLIGATIONS
Art. 1180. When the debtor binds himself to pay when his means
permit him to do so, the obligation shall be deemed to be one with a
period, subject to the provisions of Article 1197. (n)
211
Art. 1181. In conditional obligations, the acquisition of rights, as
well as the extinguishment or loss of those already acquired, shall
depend upon the happening of the event which constitutes the
condition. (1114)
Art. 1182. When the fulfillment of the condition depends upon the
sole will of the debtor, the conditional obligation shall be void. If it
depends upon chance or upon the will of a third person, the
obligation shall take effect in conformity with the provisions of this
Code. (1115)
Art. 1185. The condition that some event will not happen at a
determinate time shall render the obligation effective from the
moment the time indicated has elapsed, or if it has become evident
that the event cannot occur.
Art. 1186. The condition shall be deemed fulfilled when the obligor
voluntarily prevents its fulfillment. (1119)
212
inferred that the intention of the person constituting the same was
different.
Art. 1188. The creditor may, before the fulfillment of the condition,
bring the appropriate actions for the preservation of his right.
The debtor may recover what during the same time he has paid by
mistake in case of a suspensive condition. (1121a)
Art. 1189. When the conditions have been imposed with the
intention of suspending the efficacy of an obligation to give, the
following rules shall be observed in case of the improvement, loss or
deterioration of the thing during the pendency of the condition:
(1) If the thing is lost without the fault of the debtor, the
obligation shall be extinguished;
(2) If the thing is lost through the fault of the debtor, he shall
be obliged to pay damages; it is understood that the thing is
lost when it perishes, or goes out of commerce, or disappears
in such a way that its existence is unknown or it cannot be
recovered;
(3) When the thing deteriorates without the fault of the debtor,
the impairment is to be borne by the creditor;
Art. 1190. When the conditions have for their purpose the
extinguishment of an obligation to give, the parties, upon the
fulfillment of said conditions, shall return to each other what they
have received.
213
In case of the loss, deterioration or improvement of the thing, the
provisions which, with respect to the debtor, are laid down in the
preceding article shall be applied to the party who is bound to
return.
The injured party may choose between the fulfillment and the
rescission of the obligation, with the payment of damages in either
case. He may also seek rescission, even after he has chosen
fulfillment, if the latter should become impossible.
The court shall decree the rescission claimed, unless there be just
cause authorizing the fixing of a period.
Art. 1193. Obligations for whose fulfillment a day certain has been
fixed, shall be demandable only when that day comes.
214
If the uncertainty consists in whether the day will come or not, the
obligation is conditional, and it shall be regulated by the rules of the
preceding Section. (1125a)
Art. 1195. Anything paid or delivered before the arrival of the period,
the obligor being unaware of the period or believing that the
obligation has become due and demandable, may be recovered, with
the fruits and interests. (1126a)
Art. 1197. If the obligation does not fix a period, but from its nature
and the circumstances it can be inferred that a period was intended,
the courts may fix the duration thereof.
The courts shall also fix the duration of the period when it depends
upon the will of the debtor.
In every case, the courts shall determine such period as may under
the circumstances have been probably contemplated by the parties.
Once fixed by the courts, the period cannot be changed by them.
(1128a)
Art. 1198. The debtor shall lose every right to make use of the
period:
215
(4) When the debtor violates any undertaking, in consideration of
which the creditor agreed to the period;
Art. 1200. The right of choice belongs to the debtor, unless it has
been expressly granted to the creditor.
The debtor shall have no right to choose those prestations which are
impossible, unlawful or which could not have been the object of the
obligation. (1132)
Art. 1201. The choice shall produce no effect except from the time it
has been communicated. (1133)
Art. 1202. The debtor shall lose the right of choice when among the
prestations whereby he is alternatively bound, only one is
practicable. (1134)
Art. 1203. If through the creditor's acts the debtor cannot make a
choice according to the terms of the obligation, the latter may
rescind the contract with damages. (n)
Art. 1204. The creditor shall have a right to indemnity for damages
when, through the fault of the debtor, all the things which are
alternatively the object of the obligation have been lost, or the
compliance of the obligation has become impossible.
The indemnity shall be fixed taking as a basis the value of the last
thing which disappeared, or that of the service which last became
impossible.
Damages other than the value of the last thing or service may also
be awarded. (1135a)
216
Art. 1205. When the choice has been expressly given to the creditor,
the obligation shall cease to be alternative from the day when the
selection has been communicated to the debtor.
(2) If the loss of one of the things occurs through the fault of
the debtor, the creditor may claim any of those subsisting, or
the price of that which, through the fault of the former, has
disappeared, with a right to damages;
(3) If all the things are lost through the fault of the debtor, the
choice by the creditor shall fall upon the price of any one of
them, also with indemnity for damages.
Art. 1206. When only one prestation has been agreed upon, but the
obligor may render another in substitution, the obligation is called
facultative.
217
states, or when the law or the nature of the obligation requires
solidarity. (1137a)
Art. 1208. If from the law, or the nature or the wording of the
obligations to which the preceding article refers the contrary does
not appear, the credit or debt shall be presumed to be divided into
as many shares as there are creditors or debtors, the credits or
debts being considered distinct from one another, subject to the
Rules of Court governing the multiplicity of suits. (1138a)
Art. 1209. If the division is impossible, the right of the creditors may
be prejudiced only by their collective acts, and the debt can be
enforced only by proceeding against all the debtors. If one of the
latter should be insolvent, the others shall not be liable for his share.
(1139)
Art. 1211. Solidarity may exist although the creditors and the
debtors may not be bound in the same manner and by the same
periods and conditions. (1140)
Art. 1212. Each one of the solidary creditors may do whatever may
be useful to the others, but not anything which may be prejudicial to
the latter. (1141a)
Art. 1213. A solidary creditor cannot assign his rights without the
consent of the others. (n)
Art. 1214. The debtor may pay any one of the solidary creditors; but
if any demand, judicial or extrajudicial, has been made by one of
them, payment should be made to him. (1142a)
The creditor who may have executed any of these acts, as well as he
who collects the debt, shall be liable to the others for the share in
the obligation corresponding to them. (1143)
218
Art. 1216. The creditor may proceed against any one of the solidary
debtors or some or all of them simultaneously. The demand made
against one of them shall not be an obstacle to those which may
subsequently be directed against the others, so long as the debt has
not been fully collected. (1144a)
He who made the payment may claim from his co-debtors only the
share which corresponds to each, with the interest for the payment
already made. If the payment is made before the debt is due, no
interest for the intervening period may be demanded.
Art. 1219. The remission made by the creditor of the share which
affects one of the solidary debtors does not release the latter from
his responsibility towards the co-debtors, in case the debt had been
totally paid by anyone of them before the remission was effected.
(1146a)
Art. 1221. If the thing has been lost or if the prestation has become
impossible without the fault of the solidary debtors, the obligation
shall be extinguished.
If there was fault on the part of any one of them, all shall be
responsible to the creditor, for the price and the payment of
damages and interest, without prejudice to their action against the
guilty or negligent debtor.
219
If through a fortuitous event, the thing is lost or the performance
has become impossible after one of the solidary debtors has incurred
in delay through the judicial or extrajudicial demand upon him by
the creditor, the provisions of the preceding paragraph shall apply.
(1147a)
Art. 1223. The divisibility or indivisibility of the things that are the
object of obligations in which there is only one debtor and only one
creditor does not alter or modify the provisions of Chapter 2 of this
Title. (1149)
When the obligation has for its object the execution of a certain
number of days of work, the accomplishment of work by metrical
units, or analogous things which by their nature are susceptible of
partial performance, it shall be divisible.
220
case. (1151a)
Art. 1227. The debtor cannot exempt himself from the performance
of the obligation by paying the penalty, save in the case where this
right has been expressly reserved for him. Neither can the creditor
demand the fulfillment of the obligation and the satisfaction of the
penalty at the same time, unless this right has been clearly granted
him. However, if after the creditor has decided to require the
fulfillment of the obligation, the performance thereof should become
impossible without his fault, the penalty may be enforced. (1153a)
Art. 1229. The judge shall equitably reduce the penalty when the
principal obligation has been partly or irregularly complied with by
the debtor. Even if there has been no performance, the penalty may
also be reduced by the courts if it is iniquitous or unconscionable.
(1154a)
Art. 1230. The nullity of the penal clause does not carry with it that
of the principal obligation.
The nullity of the principal obligation carries with it that of the penal
clause. (1155)
CHAPTER 4
EXTINGUISHMENT OF OBLIGATIONS
GENERAL PROVISIONS
221
Art. 1231. Obligations are extinguished:
(1) By payment or performance:
(5) By compensation;
(6) By novation.
Art. 1232. Payment means not only the delivery of money but also
the performance, in any other manner, of an obligation. (n)
Art. 1233. A debt shall not be understood to have been paid unless
the thing or service in which the obligation consists has been
completely delivered or rendered, as the case may be. (1157)
Art. 1235. When the obligee accepts the performance, knowing its
incompleteness or irregularity, and without expressing any protest
or objection, the obligation is deemed fully complied with. (n)
Whoever pays for another may demand from the debtor what he has
paid, except that if he paid without the knowledge or against the will
of the debtor, he can recover only insofar as the payment has been
beneficial to the debtor. (1158a)
222
Art. 1237. Whoever pays on behalf of the debtor without the
knowledge or against the will of the latter, cannot compel the
creditor to subrogate him in his rights, such as those arising from a
mortgage, guaranty, or penalty. (1159a)
Art. 1238. Payment made by a third person who does not intend to
be reimbursed by the debtor is deemed to be a donation, which
requires the debtor's consent. But the payment is in any case valid
as to the creditor who has accepted it. (n)
Art. 1240. Payment shall be made to the person in whose favor the
obligation has been constituted, or his successor in interest, or any
person authorized to receive it. (1162a)
Art. 1243. Payment made to the creditor by the debtor after the
latter has been judicially ordered to retain the debt shall not be
valid. (1165)
223
Art. 1244. The debtor of a thing cannot compel the creditor to
receive a different one, although the latter may be of the same value
as, or more valuable than that which is due.
224
In the meantime, the action derived from the original obligation
shall be held in the abeyance. (1170)
In any other case the place of payment shall be the domicile of the
debtor.
Art. 1252. He who has various debts of the same kind in favor of one
and the same creditor, may declare at the time of making the
payment, to which of them the same must be applied. Unless the
parties so stipulate, or when the application of payment is made by
the party for whose benefit the term has been constituted,
application shall not be made as to debts which are not yet due.
225
Art. 1254. When the payment cannot be applied in accordance with
the preceding rules, or if application can not be inferred from other
circumstances, the debt which is most onerous to the debtor, among
those due, shall be deemed to have been satisfied.
If the debts due are of the same nature and burden, the payment
shall be applied to all of them proportionately. (1174a)
Art. 1255. The debtor may cede or assign his property to his
creditors in payment of his debts. This cession, unless there is
stipulation to the contrary, shall only release the debtor from
responsibility for the net proceeds of the thing assigned. The
agreements which, on the effect of the cession, are made between
the debtor and his creditors shall be governed by special laws.
(1175a)
Art. 1256. If the creditor to whom tender of payment has been made
refuses without just cause to accept it, the debtor shall be released
from responsibility by the consignation of the thing or sum due.
(4) When two or more persons claim the same right to collect;
(5) When the title of the obligation has been lost. (1176a)
Art. 1257. In order that the consignation of the thing due may
release the obligor, it must first be announced to the persons
interested in the fulfillment of the obligation.
226
The consignation shall be ineffectual if it is not made strictly in
consonance with the provisions which regulate payment. (1177)
The consignation having been made, the interested parties shall also
be notified thereof. (1178)
Art. 1260. Once the consignation has been duly made, the debtor
may ask the judge to order the cancellation of the obligation.
Art. 1261. If, the consignation having been made, the creditor
should authorize the debtor to withdraw the same, he shall lose
every preference which he may have over the thing. The co-debtors,
guarantors and sureties shall be released. (1181a)
227
Art. 1264. The courts shall determine whether, under the
circumstances, the partial loss of the object of the obligation is so
important as to extinguish the obligation. (n)
Art. 1265. Whenever the thing is lost in the possession of the debtor,
it shall be presumed that the loss was due to his fault, unless there
is proof to the contrary, and without prejudice to the provisions of
article 1165. This presumption does not apply in case of earthquake,
flood, storm, or other natural calamity. (1183a)
Art. 1269. The obligation having been extinguished by the loss of the
thing, the creditor shall have all the rights of action which the debtor
may have against third persons by reason of the loss. (1186)
One and the other kind shall be subject to the rules which govern
inofficious donations. Express condonation shall, furthermore,
comply with the forms of donation. (1187)
228
If in order to nullify this waiver it should be claimed to be
inofficious, the debtor and his heirs may uphold it by proving that
the delivery of the document was made in virtue of payment of the
debt. (1188)
Art. 1273. The renunciation of the principal debt shall extinguish the
accessory obligations; but the waiver of the latter shall leave the
former in force. (1190)
Art. 1276. Merger which takes place in the person of the principal
debtor or creditor benefits the guarantors. Confusion which takes
place in the person of any of the latter does not extinguish the
obligation. (1193)
SECTION 5. - Compensation
Art. 1278. Compensation shall take place when two persons, in their
own right, are creditors and debtors of each other. (1195)
229
(1) That each one of the obligors be bound principally, and that
he be at the same time a principal creditor of the other;
Art. 1281. Compensation may be total or partial. When the two debts
are of the same amount, there is a total compensation. (n)
Art. 1282. The parties may agree upon the compensation of debts
which are not yet due. (n)
Art. 1284. When one or both debts are rescissible or voidable, they
may be compensated against each other before they are judicially
rescinded or avoided. (n)
Art. 1285. The debtor who has consented to the assignment of rights
made by a creditor in favor of a third person, cannot set up against
the assignee the compensation which would pertain to him against
the assignor, unless the assignor was notified by the debtor at the
time he gave his consent, that he reserved his right to the
compensation.
If the creditor communicated the cession to him but the debtor did
not consent thereto, the latter may set up the compensation of debts
previous to the cession, but not of subsequent ones.
230
If the assignment is made without the knowledge of the debtor, he
may set up the compensation of all credits prior to the same and also
later ones until he had knowledge of the assignment. (1198a)
Art. 1287. Compensation shall not be proper when one of the debts
arises from a depositum or from the obligations of a depositary or of
a bailee in commodatum.
Art. 1289. If a person should have against him several debts which
are susceptible of compensation, the rules on the application of
payments shall apply to the order of the compensation. (1201)
Art. 1290. When all the requisites mentioned in Article 1279 are
present, compensation takes effect by operation of law, and
extinguishes both debts to the concurrent amount, even though the
creditors and debtors are not aware of the compensation. (1202a)
SECTION 6. - Novation
231
Art. 1293. Novation which consists in substituting a new debtor in
the place of the original one, may be made even without the
knowledge or against the will of the latter, but not without the
consent of the creditor. Payment by the new debtor gives him the
rights mentioned in Articles 1236 and 1237. (1205a)
Art. 1295. The insolvency of the new debtor, who has been proposed
by the original debtor and accepted by the creditor, shall not revive
the action of the latter against the original obligor, except when said
insolvency was already existing and of public knowledge, or known
to the debtor, when the delegated his debt. (1206a)
Art. 1297. If the new obligation is void, the original one shall
subsist, unless the parties intended that the former relation should
be extinguished in any event. (n)
Art. 1298. The novation is void if the original obligation was void,
except when annulment may be claimed only by the debtor or when
ratification validates acts which are voidable. (1208a)
232
(1) When a creditor pays another creditor who is preferred,
even without the debtor's knowledge;
Art. 1304. A creditor, to whom partial payment has been made, may
exercise his right for the remainder, and he shall be preferred to the
person who has been subrogated in his place in virtue of the partial
payment of the same credit. (1213)
CHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
233
Art. 1308. The contract must bind both contracting parties; its
validity or compliance cannot be left to the will of one of them.
(1256a)
Art. 1311. Contracts take effect only between the parties, their
assigns and heirs, except in case where the rights and obligations
arising from the contract are not transmissible by their nature, or by
stipulation or by provision of law. The heir is not liable beyond the
value of the property he received from the decedent.
Art. 1312. In contracts creating real rights, third persons who come
into possession of the object of the contract are bound thereby,
subject to the provisions of the Mortgage Law and the Land
Registration Laws. (n)
Art. 1314. Any third person who induces another to violate his
contract shall be liable for damages to the other contracting party.
(n)
Art. 1315. Contracts are perfected by mere consent, and from that
moment the parties are bound not only to the fulfillment of what has
been expressly stipulated but also to all the consequences which,
according to their nature, may be in keeping with good faith, usage
and law. (1258)
234
Art. 1316. Real contracts, such as deposit, pledge and Commodatum,
are not perfected until the delivery of the object of the obligation.
(n)
Art. 1317. No one may contract in the name of another without being
authorized by the latter, or unless he has by law a right to represent
him.
CHAPTER 2
ESSENTIAL REQUISITES OF CONTRACTS
GENERAL PROVISIONS
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.
Art. 1321. The person making the offer may fix the time, place, and
manner of acceptance, all of which must be complied with. (n)
235
Art. 1322. An offer made through an agent is accepted from the time
acceptance is communicated to him. (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. 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)
236
Mistake as to the identity or qualifications of one of the parties will
vitiate consent only when such identity or qualifications have been
the principal cause of the contract.
237
Art. 1338. There is fraud when, through insidious words or
machinations of one of the contracting parties, the other is induced
to enter into a contract which, without them, he would not have
agreed to. (1269)
Art. 1340. The usual exaggerations in trade, when the other party
had an opportunity to know the facts, are not in themselves
fraudulent. (n)
238
Art. 1347. All things which are not outside the commerce of men,
including future things, may be the object of a contract. All rights
which are not intransmissible may also be the object of contracts.
All services which are not contrary to law, morals, good customs,
public order or public policy may likewise be the object of a contract.
(1271a)
239
Art. 1355. Except in cases specified by law, lesion or inadequacy of
cause shall not invalidate a contract, unless there has been fraud,
mistake or undue influence. (n)
CHAPTER 3
FORM OF CONTRACTS
(1) Acts and contracts which have for their object the creation,
transmission, modification or extinguishment of real rights
over immovable property; sales of real property or of an
interest therein a governed by Articles 1403, No. 2, and 1405;
All other contracts where the amount involved exceeds five hundred
pesos must appear in writing, even a private one. But sales of goods,
chattels or things in action are governed by Articles, 1403, No. 2 and
240
1405. (1280a)
CHAPTER 4
REFORMATION OF INSTRUMENTS (n)
Art. 1359. When, there having been a meeting of the minds of the
parties to a contract, their true intention is not expressed in the
instrument purporting to embody the agreement, by reason of
mistake, fraud, inequitable conduct or accident, one of the parties
may ask for the reformation of the instrument to the end that such
true intention may be expressed.
Art. 1361. When a mutual mistake of the parties causes the failure of
the instrument to disclose their real agreement, said instrument may
be reformed.
Art. 1362. If one party was mistaken and the other acted
fraudulently or inequitably in such a way that the instrument does
not show their true intention, the former may ask for the
reformation of the instrument.
Art. 1363. When one party was mistaken and the other knew or
believed that the instrument did not state their real agreement, but
concealed that fact from the former, the instrument may be
reformed.
Art. 1365. If two parties agree upon the mortgage or pledge of real
or personal property, but the instrument states that the property is
sold absolutely or with a right of repurchase, reformation of the
instrument is proper.
241
Art. 1366. There shall be no reformation in the following cases:
(2) Wills;
Art. 1367. When one of the parties has brought an action to enforce
the instrument, he cannot subsequently ask for its reformation.
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.
Art. 1372. However general the terms of a contract may be, they
shall not be understood to comprehend things that are distinct and
cases that are different from those upon which the parties intended
to agree. (1283)
242
Art. 1374. The various stipulations of a contract shall be interpreted
together, attributing to the doubtful ones that sense which may
result from all of them taken jointly. (1285)
Art. 1376. The usage or custom of the place shall be borne in mind in
the interpretation of the ambiguities of a contract, and shall fill the
omission of stipulations which are ordinarily established. (1287)
If the doubts are cast upon the principal object of the contract in
such a way that it cannot be known what may have been the
intention or will of the parties, the contract shall be null and void.
(1289)
CHAPTER 6
RESCISSIBLE CONTRACTS
243
(2) Those agreed upon in representation of absentees, if the
latter suffer the lesion stated in the preceding number;
Neither shall rescission 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.
244
in fraud of creditors, when the donor did not reserve sufficient
property to pay all debts contracted before the donation.
If there are two or more alienations, the first acquirer shall be liable
first, and so on successively. (1298a)
For persons under guardianship and for absentees, the period of four
years shall not begin until the termination of the former's incapacity,
or until the domicile of the latter is known. (1299)
CHAPTER 7
VOIDABLE CONTRACTS
245
Art. 1391. The action for annulment shall be brought within four
years.
Art. 1396. Ratification cleanses the contract from all its defects from
the moment it was constituted. (1313)
246
Art. 1398. An obligation having been annulled, the contracting
parties shall restore to each other the things which have been the
subject matter of the contract, with their fruits, and the price with
its interest, except in cases provided by law.
Art. 1399. When the defect of the contract consists in the incapacity
of one of the parties, the incapacitated person is not obliged to make
any restitution except insofar as he has been benefited by the thing
or price received by him. (1304)
If the right of action is based upon the incapacity of any one of the
contracting parties, the loss of the thing shall not be an obstacle to
the success of the action, unless said loss took place through the
fraud or fault of the plaintiff. (1314a)
Art. 1402. As long as one of the contracting parties does not restore
what in virtue of the decree of annulment he is bound to return, the
other cannot be compelled to comply with what is incumbent upon
him. (1308)
CHAPTER 8
UNENFORCEABLE CONTRACTS (n)
247
(2) Those that do not comply with the Statute of Frauds as set
forth in this number. In the following cases an agreement
hereafter made shall be unenforceable by action, unless the
same, or some note or memorandum, thereof, be in writing,
and subscribed by the party charged, or by his agent; evidence,
therefore, of the agreement cannot be received without the
writing, or a secondary evidence of its contents:
248
Art. 1406. When a contract is enforceable under the Statute of
Frauds, and a public document is necessary for its registration in the
Registry of Deeds, the parties may avail themselves of the right
under Article 1357.
CHAPTER 9
VOID AND INEXISTENT CONTRACTS
Art. 1409. The following contracts are inexistent and void from the
beginning:
(1) Those whose cause, object or purpose is contrary to law,
morals, good customs, public order or public policy;
(3) Those whose cause or object did not exist at the time of the
transaction;
249
Art. 1410. The action or defense for the declaration of the
inexistence of a contract does not prescribe.
Art. 1411. When the nullity proceeds from the illegality of the cause
or object of the contract, and the act constitutes a criminal offense,
both parties being in pari delicto, they shall have no action against
each other, and both shall be prosecuted. Moreover, the provisions
of the Penal Code relative to the disposal of effects or instruments of
a crime shall be applicable to the things or the price of the contract.
This rule shall be applicable when only one of the parties is guilty;
but the innocent one may claim what he has given, and shall not be
bound to comply with his promise. (1305)
250
Art. 1416. When the agreement is not illegal per se but is merely
prohibited, and the prohibition by the law is designated for the
protection of the plaintiff, he may, if public policy is thereby
enhanced, recover what he has paid or delivered.
Art. 1418. When the law fixes, or authorizes the fixing of the
maximum number of hours of labor, and a contract is entered into
whereby a laborer undertakes to work longer than the maximum
thus fixed, he may demand additional compensation for service
rendered beyond the time limit.
Art. 1424. When a right to sue upon a civil obligation has lapsed by
extinctive prescription, the obligor who voluntarily performs the
contract cannot recover what he has delivered or the value of the
service he has rendered.
251
Art. 1425. When without the knowledge or against the will of the
debtor, a third person pays a debt which the obligor is not legally
bound to pay because the action thereon has prescribed, but the
debtor later voluntarily reimburses the third person, the obligor
cannot recover what he has paid.
Art. 1430. When a will is declared void because it has not been
executed in accordance with the formalities required by law, but one
of the intestate heirs, after the settlement of the debts of the
deceased, pays a legacy in compliance with a clause in the defective
will, the payment is effective and irrevocable.
252
Art. 1432. The principles of estoppel are hereby adopted insofar as
they are not in conflict with the provisions of this Code, the Code of
Commerce, the Rules of Court and special laws.
Art. 1434. When a person who is not the owner of a thing sells or
alienates and delivers it, and later the seller or grantor acquires title
thereto, such title passes by operation of law to the buyer or
grantee.
(2) The party precluded must intend that the other should act
upon the facts as misrepresented;
(3) The party misled must have been unaware of the true facts;
and
253
Art. 1439. Estoppel is effective only as between the parties thereto
or their successors in interest.
CHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 1440. A person who establishes a trust is called the trustor; one
in whom confidence is reposed as regards property for the benefit of
another person is known as the trustee; and the person for whose
benefit the trust has been created is referred to as the beneficiary.
Art. 1441. Trusts are either express or implied. Express trusts are
created by the intention of the trustor or of the parties. Implied
trusts come into being by operation of law.
Art. 1442. The principles of the general law of trusts, insofar as they
are not in conflict with this Code, the Code of Commerce, the Rules
of Court and special laws are hereby adopted.
CHAPTER 2
EXPRESS TRUSTS
Art. 1445. No trust shall fail because the trustee appointed declines
the designation, unless the contrary should appear in the instrument
constituting the trust.
CHAPTER 3
IMPLIED TRUSTS
254
Art. 1447. The enumeration of the following cases of implied trust
does not exclude others established by the general law of trust, but
the limitation laid down in Article 1442 shall be applicable.
Art. 1448. There is an implied trust when property is sold, and the
legal estate is granted to one party but the price is paid by another
for the purpose of having the beneficial interest of the property. The
former is the trustee, while the latter is the beneficiary. However, if
the person to whom the title is conveyed is a child, legitimate or
illegitimate, of the one paying the price of the sale, no trust is
implied by law, it being disputably presumed that there is a gift in
favor of the child.
255
the obligation is offered by the grantor when it becomes due, he may
demand the reconveyance of the property to him.
CHAPTER 1
NATURE AND FORM OF THE CONTRACT
Art. 1459. The thing must be licit and the vendor must have a right
to transfer the ownership thereof at the time it is delivered. (n)
256
The efficacy of the sale of a mere hope or expectancy is deemed
subject to the condition that the thing will come into existence.
Art. 1462. The goods which form the subject of a contract of sale
may be either existing goods, owned or possessed by the seller, or
goods to be manufactured, raised, or acquired by the seller after the
perfection of the contract of sale, in this Title called "future goods."
Art. 1463. The sole owner of a thing may sell an undivided interest
therein. (n)
257
special order, and not for the general market, it is a contract for a
piece of work. (n)
Art. 1469. In order that the price may be considered certain, it shall
be sufficient that it be so with reference to another thing certain, or
that the determination thereof be left to the judgment of a special
person or persons.
Where such third person or persons are prevented from fixing the
price or terms by fault of the seller or the buyer, the party not in
fault may have such remedies against the party in fault as are
allowed the seller or the buyer, as the case may be. (1447a)
Art. 1471. If the price is simulated, the sale is void, but the act may
be shown to have been in reality a donation, or some other act or
contract. (n)
Art. 1472. The price of securities, grain, liquids, and other things
shall also be considered certain, when the price fixed is that which
the thing sold would have on a definite day, or in a particular
exchange or market, or when an amount is fixed above or below the
price on such day, or in such exchange or market, provided said
amount be certain. (1448)
258
Art. 1473. 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. (1449a)
(1) Where goods are put up for sale by auction in lots, each lot
is the subject of a separate contract of sale.
(4) Where notice has not been given that a sale by auction is
subject to a right to bid on behalf of the seller, it shall not be
lawful for the seller to bid himself or to employ or induce any
person to bid at such sale on his behalf or for the auctioneer, to
employ or induce any person to bid at such sale on behalf of
the seller or knowingly to take any bid from the seller or any
person employed by him. Any sale contravening this rule may
be treated as fraudulent by the buyer. (n)
259
Art. 1477. The ownership of the thing sold shall be transferred to the
vendee upon the actual or constructive delivery thereof. (n)
Art. 1478. The parties may stipulate that ownership in the thing shall
not pass to the purchaser until he has fully paid the price. (n)
Art. 1479. A promise to buy and sell a determinate thing for a price
certain is reciprocally demandable.
Art. 1480. Any injury to or benefit from the thing sold, after the
contract has been perfected, from the moment of the perfection of
the contract to the time of delivery, shall be governed by Articles
1163 to 1165, and 1262.
260
writing, or by word of mouth, or partly in writing and partly by word
of mouth, or may be inferred from the conduct of the parties. (n)
(2) Cancel the sale, should the vendee's failure to pay cover
two or more installments;
(3) Foreclose the chattel mortgage on the thing sold, if one has
been constituted, should the vendee's failure to pay cover two
or more installments. In this case, he shall have no further
action against the purchaser to recover any unpaid balance of
the price. Any agreement to the contrary shall be void. (1454-
A-a)
Art. 1487. The expenses for the execution and registration of the
sale shall be borne by the vendor, unless there is a stipulation to the
contrary. (1455a)
CHAPTER 2
CAPACITY TO BUY OR SELL
Art. 1489. All persons who are authorized in this Code to obligate
themselves, may enter into a contract of sale, saving the
modifications contained in the following articles.
261
Where necessaries are those sold and delivered to a minor or other
person without capacity to act, he must pay a reasonable price
therefor. Necessaries are those referred to in Article 290. (1457a)
Art. 1490. The husband and the wife cannot sell property to each
other, except:
262
(6) Any others specially disqualified by law. (1459a)
CHAPTER 3
EFFECTS OF THE CONTRACT
WHEN THE THING SOLD HAS BEEN LOST
Art. 1493. If at the time the contract of sale is perfected, the thing
which is the object of the contract has been entirely lost, the
contract shall be without any effect.
But if the thing should have been lost in part only, the vendee may
choose between withdrawing from the contract and demanding the
remaining part, paying its price in proportion to the total sum agreed
upon. (1460a)
Art. 1494. Where the parties purport a sale of specific goods, and the
goods without the knowledge of the seller have perished in part or
have wholly or in a material part so deteriorated in quality as to be
substantially changed in character, the buyer may at his option treat
the sale:
(1) As avoided; or
CHAPTER 4
OBLIGATIONS OF THE VENDOR
Art. 1496. The ownership of the thing sold is acquired by the vendee
from the moment it is delivered to him in any of the ways specified
263
in Articles 1497 to 1501, or in any other manner signifying an
agreement that the possession is transferred from the vendor to the
vendee. (n)
Art. 1498. When the sale is made through a public instrument, the
execution thereof shall be equivalent to the delivery of the thing
which is the object of the contract, if from the deed the contrary
does not appear or cannot clearly be inferred.
Art. 1502. When goods are delivered to the buyer "on sale or return"
to give the buyer an option to return the goods instead of paying the
price, the ownership passes to the buyer of delivery, but he may
revest the ownership in the seller by returning or tendering the
goods within the time fixed in the contract, or, if no time has been
fixed, within a reasonable time. (n)
264
When goods are delivered to the buyer on approval or on trial or on
satisfaction, or other similar terms, the ownership therein passes to
the buyer:
Where goods are shipped, and by the bill of lading the goods are
deliverable to the seller or his agent, or to the order of the seller or
of his agent, the seller thereby reserves the ownership in the goods.
But, if except for the form of the bill of lading, the ownership would
have passed to the buyer on shipment of the goods, the seller's
property in the goods shall be deemed to be only for the purpose of
securing performance by the buyer of his obligations under the
contract.
Where goods are shipped, and by the bill of lading the goods are
deliverable to order of the buyer or of his agent, but possession of
the bill of lading is retained by the seller or his agent, the seller
thereby reserves a right to the possession of the goods as against
the buyer.
Where the seller of goods draws on the buyer for the price and
transmits the bill of exchange and bill of lading together to the buyer
to secure acceptance or payment of the bill of exchange, the buyer is
bound to return the bill of lading if he does not honor the bill of
exchange, and if he wrongfully retains the bill of lading he acquires
no added right thereby. If, however, the bill of lading provides that
the goods are deliverable to the buyer or to the order of the buyer,
265
or is indorsed in blank, or to the buyer by the consignee named
therein, one who purchases in good faith, for value, the bill of lading,
or goods from the buyer will obtain the ownership in the goods,
although the bill of exchange has not been honored, provided that
such purchaser has received delivery of the bill of lading indorsed by
the consignee named therein, or of the goods, without notice of the
facts making the transfer wrongful. (n)
Art. 1504. Unless otherwise agreed, the goods remain at the seller's
risk until the ownership therein is transferred to the buyer, but when
the ownership therein is transferred to the buyer the goods are at
the buyer's risk whether actual delivery has been made or not,
except that:
(1) Where delivery of the goods has been made to the buyer or
to a bailee for the buyer, in pursuance of the contract and the
ownership in the goods has been retained by the seller merely
to secure performance by the buyer of his obligations under the
contract, the goods are at the buyer's risk from the time of
such delivery;
(2) Where actual delivery has been delayed through the fault of
either the buyer or seller the goods are at the risk of the party
in fault. (n)
Art. 1505. Subject to the provisions of this Title, where goods are
sold by a person who is not the owner thereof, and who does not sell
them under authority or with the consent of the owner, the buyer
acquires no better title to the goods than the seller had, unless the
owner of the goods is by his conduct precluded from denying the
seller's authority to sell.
266
Art. 1506. Where the seller of goods has a voidable title thereto, but
his title has not been avoided at the time of the sale, the buyer
acquires a good title to the goods, provided he buys them in good
faith, for value, and without notice of the seller's defect of title. (n)
267
document of title within the meaning of this Title. But nothing in this
Title contained shall be construed as limiting or defining the effect
upon the obligations of the carrier, warehouseman, or other bailee
issuing a document of title or placing thereon the words "not
negotiable," "non-negotiable," or the like. (n)
Art. 1511. A document of title which is not in such form that it can
be negotiated by delivery may be transferred by the holder by
delivery to a purchaser or donee. A non-negotiable document cannot
be negotiated and the endorsement of such a document gives the
transferee no additional right. (n)
268
If the document is non-negotiable, such person also acquires the
right to notify the bailee who issued the document of the transfer
thereof, and thereby to acquire the direct obligation of such bailee to
hold possession of the goods for him according to the terms of the
document.
(4) That he has a right to transfer the title to the goods and
that the goods are merchantable or fit for a particular purpose,
whenever such warranties would have been implied if the
contract of the parties had been to transfer without a document
of title the goods represented thereby. (n)
Art. 1517. The endorsement of a document of title shall not make the
endorser liable for any failure on the part of the bailee who issued
the document or previous endorsers thereof to fulfill their respective
obligations. (n)
269
Art. 1518. The validity of the negotiation of a negotiable document
of title is not impaired by the fact that the negotiation was a breach
of duty on the part of the person making the negotiation, or by the
fact that the owner of the document was deprived of the possession
of the same by loss, theft, fraud, accident, mistake, duress, or
conversion, if the person to whom the document was negotiated or a
person to whom the document was subsequently negotiated paid
value therefor in good faith without notice of the breach of duty, or
loss, theft, fraud, accident, mistake, duress or conversion. (n)
Where the goods at the time of sale are in the possession of a third
person, the seller has not fulfilled his obligation to deliver to the
270
buyer unless and until such third person acknowledges to the buyer
that he holds the goods on the buyer's behalf.
Art. 1522. Where the seller delivers to the buyer a quantity of goods
less than he contracted to sell, the buyer may reject them, but if the
buyer accepts or retains the goods so delivered, knowing that the
seller is not going to perform the contract in full, he must pay for
them at the contract rate. If, however, the buyer has used or
disposed of the goods delivered before he knows that the seller is
not going to perform his contract in full, the buyer shall not be liable
for more than the fair value to him of the goods so received.
271
Unless otherwise authorized by the buyer, the seller must make such
contract with the carrier on behalf of the buyer as may be
reasonable, having regard to the nature of the goods and the other
circumstances of the case. If the seller omit so to do, and the goods
are lost or damaged in course of transit, the buyer may decline to
treat the delivery to the carrier as a delivery to himself, or may hold
the seller responsible in damages.
Unless otherwise agreed, where goods are sent by the seller to the
buyer under circumstances in which the seller knows or ought to
know that it is usual to insure, the seller must give such notice to
the buyer as may enable him to insure them during their transit,
and, if the seller fails to do so, the goods shall be deemed to be at
his risk during such transit. (n)
Art. 1524. The vendor shall not be bound to deliver the thing sold, if
the vendee has not paid him the price, or if no period for the
payment has been fixed in the contract. (1466)
(1) When the whole of the price has not been paid or tendered;
(1) A lien on the goods or right to retain them for the price
while he is in possession of them;
272
(2) In case of the insolvency of the buyer, a right of stopping
the goods in transitu after he has parted with the possession of
them;
Where the ownership in the goods has not passed to the buyer, the
unpaid seller has, in addition to his other remedies a right of
withholding delivery similar to and coextensive with his rights of lien
and stoppage in transitu where the ownership has passed to the
buyer. (n)
Art. 1527. Subject to the provisions of this Title, the unpaid seller of
goods who is in possession of them is entitled to retain possession
of them until payment or tender of the price in the following cases,
namely:
(1) Where the goods have been sold without any stipulation as
to credit;
(2) Where the goods have been sold on credit, but the term of
credit has expired;
Art. 1528. Where an unpaid seller has made part delivery of the
goods, he may exercise his right of lien on the remainder, unless
such part delivery has been made under such circumstances as to
show an intent to waive the lien or right of retention. (n)
Art. 1529. The unpaid seller of goods loses his lien thereon:
273
(3) By waiver thereof.
The unpaid seller of goods, having a lien thereon, does not lose his
lien by reason only that he has obtained judgment or decree for the
price of the goods. (n)
Art. 1530. Subject to the provisions of this Title, when the buyer of
goods is or becomes insolvent, the unpaid seller who has parted
with the possession of the goods has the right of stopping them in
transitu, that is to say, he may resume possession of the goods at
any time while they are in transit, and he will then become entitled
to the same rights in regard to the goods as he would have had if he
had never parted with the possession. (n)
Art. 1531. Goods are in transit within the meaning of the preceding
article:
(1) From the time when they are delivered to a carrier by land,
water, or air, or other bailee for the purpose of transmission to
the buyer, until the buyer, or his agent in that behalf, takes
delivery of them from such carrier or other bailee;
(2) If the goods are rejected by the buyer, and the carrier or
other bailee continues in possession of them, even if the seller
has refused to receive them back.
274
circumstances of the particular case, whether they are in the
possession of the carrier as such or as agent of the buyer.
If part delivery of the goods has been made to the buyer, or his
agent in that behalf, the remainder of the goods may be stopped in
transitu, unless such part delivery has been under such
circumstances as to show an agreement with the buyer to give up
possession of the whole of the goods. (n)
Art. 1532. The unpaid seller may exercise his right of stoppage in
transitu either by obtaining actual possession of the goods or by
giving notice of his claim to the carrier or other bailee in whose
possession the goods are. Such notice may be given either to the
person in actual possession of the goods or to his principal. In the
latter case the notice, to be effectual, must be given at such time
and under such circumstances that the principal, by the exercise of
reasonable diligence, may prevent a delivery to the buyer.
Art. 1533. Where the goods are of perishable nature, or where the
seller expressly reserves the right of resale in case the buyer should
make default, or where the buyer has been in default in the payment
of the price for an unreasonable time, an unpaid seller having a right
of lien or having stopped the goods in transitu may resell the goods.
He shall not thereafter be liable to the original buyer upon the
contract of sale or for any profit made by such resale, but may
recover from the buyer damages for any loss occasioned by the
breach of the contract of sale.
275
giving or failure to give such notice shall be relevant in any issue
involving the question whether the buyer had been in default for an
unreasonable time before the resale was made.
Art. 1534. An unpaid seller having the right of lien or having stopped
the goods in transitu, may rescind the transfer of title and resume
the ownership in the goods, where he expressly reserved the right to
do so in case the buyer should make default, or where the buyer has
been in default in the payment of the price for an unreasonable time.
The seller shall not thereafter be liable to the buyer upon the
contract of sale, but may recover from the buyer damages for any
loss occasioned by the breach of the contract.
Art. 1535. Subject to the provisions of this Title, the unpaid seller's
right of lien or stoppage in transitu is not affected by any sale, or
other disposition of the goods which the buyer may have made,
unless the seller has assented thereto.
276
Art. 1536. The vendor is not bound to deliver the thing sold in case
the vendee should lose the right to make use of the terms as
provided in Article 1198. (1467a)
Art. 1537. The vendor is bound to deliver the thing sold and its
accessions and accessories in the condition in which they were upon
the perfection of the contract.
All the fruits shall pertain to the vendee from the day on which the
contract was perfected. (1468a)
Art. 1539. The obligation to deliver the thing sold includes that of
placing in the control of the vendee all that is mentioned in the
contract, in conformity with the following rules:
The same shall be done, even when the area is the same, if any part
of the immovable is not of the quality specified in the contract.
The rescission, in this case, shall only take place at the will of the
vendee, when the inferior value of the thing sold exceeds one-tenth
of the price agreed upon.
Art. 1540. If, in the case of the preceding article, there is a greater
area or number in the immovable than that stated in the contract,
the vendee may accept the area included in the contract and reject
the rest. If he accepts the whole area, he must pay for the same at
the contract rate. (1470a)
277
Art. 1541. The provisions of the two preceding articles shall apply to
judicial sales. (n)
Art. 1542. In the sale of real estate, made for a lump sum and not at
the rate of a certain sum for a unit of measure or number, there shall
be no increase or decrease of the price, although there be a greater
or less area or number than that stated in the contract.
Art. 1543. The actions arising from Articles 1539 and 1542 shall
prescribe in six months, counted from the day of delivery. (1472a)
Art. 1544. If the same thing should have been sold to different
vendees, the ownership shall be transferred to the person who may
have first taken possession thereof in good faith, if it should be
movable property.
278
should happen or be performed, such first mentioned party may also
treat the nonperformance of the condition as a breach of warranty.
Where the ownership in the thing has not passed, the buyer may
treat the fulfillment by the seller of his obligation to deliver the same
as described and as warranted expressly or by implication in the
contract of sale as a condition of the obligation of the buyer to
perform his promise to accept and pay for the thing. (n)
(2) An implied warranty that the thing shall be free from any
hidden faults or defects, or any charge or encumbrance not
declared or known to the buyer.
The vendor shall answer for the eviction even though nothing has
been said in the contract on the subject.
279
The contracting parties, however, may increase, diminish, or
suppress this legal obligation of the vendor. (1475a)
Art. 1549. The vendee need not appeal from the decision in order
that the vendor may become liable for eviction. (n)
Art. 1551. If the property is sold for nonpayment of taxes due and
not made known to the vendee before the sale, the vendor is liable
for eviction. (n)
Art. 1553. Any stipulation exempting the vendor from the obligation
to answer for eviction shall be void, if he acted in bad faith. (1476)
Art. 1554. If the vendee has renounced the right to warranty in case
of eviction, and eviction should take place, the vendor shall only pay
the value which the thing sold had at the time of the eviction. Should
the vendee have made the waiver with knowledge of the risks of
eviction and assumed its consequences, the vendor shall not be
liable. (1477)
Art. 1555. When the warranty has been agreed upon or nothing has
been stipulated on this point, in case eviction occurs, the vendee
shall have the right to demand of the vendor:
(1) The return of the value which the thing sold had at the time
of the eviction, be it greater or less than the price of the sale;
(3) The costs of the suit which caused the eviction, and, in a
proper case, those of the suit brought against the vendor for
the warranty;
(4) The expenses of the contract, if the vendee has paid them;
280
(5) The damages and interests, and ornamental expenses, if
the sale was made in bad faith. (1478)
Art. 1556. Should the vendee lose, by reason of the eviction, a part
of the thing sold of such importance, in relation to the whole, that he
would not have bought it without said part, he may demand the
rescission of the contract; but with the obligation to return the thing
without other encumbrances that those which it had when he
acquired it.
The same rule shall be observed when two or more things have been
jointly sold for a lump sum, or for a separate price for each of them,
if it should clearly appear that the vendee would not have purchased
one without the other. (1479a)
Art. 1558. The vendor shall not be obliged to make good the proper
warranty, unless he is summoned in the suit for eviction at the
instance of the vendee. (1481a)
Art. 1559. The defendant vendee shall ask, within the time fixed in
the Rules of Court for answering the complaint, that the vendor be
made a co-defendant. (1482a)
Within one year, to be computed from the execution of the deed, the
vendee may bring the action for rescission, or sue for damages.
281
One year having elapsed, he may only bring an action for damages
within an equal period, to be counted from the date on which he
discovered the burden or servitude. (1483a)
Art. 1561. The vendor shall be responsible for warranty against the
hidden defects which the thing sold may have, should they render it
unfit for the use for which it is intended, or should they diminish its
fitness for such use to such an extent that, had the vendee been
aware thereof, he would not have acquired it or would have given a
lower price for it; but said vendor shall not be answerable for patent
defects or those which may be visible, or for those which are not
visible if the vendee is an expert who, by reason of his trade or
profession, should have known them. (1484a)
282
goods shall be free from any defect rendering them unmerchantable
which would not be apparent on reasonable examination of the
sample. (n)
Art. 1566. The vendor is responsible to the vendee for any hidden
faults or defects in the thing sold, even though he was not aware
thereof.
This provision shall not apply if the contrary has been stipulated,
and the vendor was not aware of the hidden faults or defects in the
thing sold. (1485)
Art. 1567. In the cases of Articles 1561, 1562, 1564, 1565 and 1566,
the vendee may elect between withdrawing from the contract and
demanding a proportionate reduction of the price, with damages in
either case. (1486a)
Art. 1569. If the thing sold had any hidden fault at the time of the
sale, and should thereafter be lost by a fortuitous event or through
the fault of the vendee, the latter may demand of the vendor the
price which he paid, less the value which the thing had when it was
lost.
If the vendor acted in bad faith, he shall pay damages to the vendee.
(1488a)
Art. 1571. Actions arising from the provisions of the preceding ten
articles shall be barred after six months, from the delivery of the
thing sold. (1490)
Art. 1572. If two or more animals are sold together, whether for a
lump sum or for a separate price for each of them, the redhibitory
283
defect of one shall only give rise to its redhibition, and not that of
the others; unless it should appear that the vendee would not have
purchased the sound animal or animals without the defective one.
The latter case shall be presumed when a team, yoke pair, or set is
bought, even if a separate price has been fixed for each one of the
animals composing the same. (1491)
Art. 1573. The provisions of the preceding article with respect to the
sale of animals shall in like manner be applicable to the sale of other
things. (1492)
This action can only be exercised with respect to faults and defects
which are determined by law or by local customs. (1496a)
Art. 1578. If the animal should die within three days after its
purchase, the vendor shall be liable if the disease which cause the
death existed at the time of the contract. (1497a)
284
answerable for any injury due to his negligence, and not arising from
the redhibitory fault or defect. (1498)
Art. 1580. In the sale of animals with redhibitory defects, the vendee
shall also enjoy the right mentioned in article 1567; but he must
make use thereof within the same period which has been fixed for
the exercise of the redhibitory action. (1499)
CHAPTER 5
OBLIGATIONS OF THE VENDEE
Art. 1582. The vendee is bound to accept delivery and to pay the
price of the thing sold at the time and place stipulated in the
contract.
If the time and place should not have been stipulated, the payment
must be made at the time and place of the delivery of the thing sold.
(1500a)
Art. 1583. Unless otherwise agreed, the buyer of goods is not bound
to accept delivery thereof by installments.
Art. 1584. Where goods are delivered to the buyer, which he has not
previously examined, he is not deemed to have accepted them
unless and until he has had a reasonable opportunity of examining
them for the purpose of ascertaining whether they are in conformity
with the contract if there is no stipulation to the contrary.
285
Unless otherwise agreed, when the seller tenders delivery of goods
to the buyer, he is bound, on request, to afford the buyer a
reasonable opportunity of examining the goods for the purpose of
ascertaining whether they are in conformity with the contract.
Art. 1585. The buyer is deemed to have accepted the goods when he
intimates to the seller that he has accepted them, or when the goods
have been delivered to him, and he does any act in relation to them
which is inconsistent with the ownership of the seller, or when, after
the lapse of a reasonable time, he retains the goods without
intimating to the seller that he has rejected them. (n)
286
Art. 1589. The vendee shall owe interest for the period between the
delivery of the thing and the payment of the price, in the following
three cases:
Art. 1591. Should the vendor have reasonable grounds to fear the
loss of immovable property sold and its price, he may immediately
sue for the rescission of the sale.
Should such ground not exist, the provisions of Article 1191 shall be
observed. (1503)
287
unless a longer period has been stipulated for its payment. (1505)
CHAPTER 6
ACTIONS FOR BREACH OF CONTRACT OF SALE OF GOODS
Art. 1594. Actions for breach of the contract of sale of goods shall be
governed particularly by the provisions of this Chapter, and as to
matters not specifically provided for herein, by other applicable
provisions of this Title. (n)
Although the ownership in the goods has not passed, if they cannot
readily be resold for a reasonable price, and if the provisions of
article 1596, fourth paragraph, are not applicable, the seller may
offer to deliver the goods to the buyer, and, if the buyer refuses to
receive them, may notify the buyer that the goods are thereafter
held by the seller as bailee for the buyer. Thereafter the seller may
treat the goods as the buyer's and may maintain an action for the
price. (n)
288
Where there is an available market for the goods in question, the
measure of damages is, in the absence of special circumstances
showing proximate damage of a different amount, the difference
between the contract price and the market or current price at the
time or times when the goods ought to have been accepted, or, if no
time was fixed for acceptance, then at the time of the refusal to
accept.
Art. 1597. Where the goods have not been delivered to the buyer,
and the buyer has repudiated the contract of sale, or has manifested
his inability to perform his obligations thereunder, or has committed
a breach thereof, the seller may totally rescind the contract of sale
by giving notice of his election so to do to the buyer. (n)
Art. 1598. Where the seller has broken a contract to deliver specific
or ascertained goods, a court may, on the application of the buyer,
direct that the contract shall be performed specifically, without
giving the seller the option of retaining the goods on payment of
damages. The judgment or decree may be unconditional, or upon
such terms and conditions as to damages, payment of the price and
otherwise, as the court may deem just. (n)
(1) Accept or keep the goods and set up against the seller, the
breach of warranty by way of recoupment in diminution or
extinction of the price;
289
(4) Rescind the contract of sale and refuse to receive the goods
or if the goods have already been received, return them or offer
to return them to the seller and recover the price or any part
thereof which has been paid.
290
CHAPTER 7
EXTINGUISHMENT OF SALE
Art. 1600. Sales are extinguished by the same causes as all other
obligations, by those stated in the preceding articles of this Title,
and by conventional or legal redemption. (1506)
(5) When the vendor binds himself to pay the taxes on the
thing sold;
(6) In any other case where it may be fairly inferred that the
real intention of the parties is that the transaction shall secure
the payment of a debt or the performance of any other
obligation.
291
Art. 1603. In case of doubt, a contract purporting to be a sale with
right to repurchase shall be construed as an equitable mortgage. (n)
Art. 1605. In the cases referred to in Articles 1602 and 1604, the
apparent vendor may ask for the reformation of the instrument. (n)
Art. 1608. The vendor may bring his action against every possessor
whose right is derived from the vendee, even if in the second
contract no mention should have been made of the right to
repurchase, without prejudice to the provisions of the Mortgage Law
and the Land Registration Law with respect to third persons. (1510)
Art. 1610. The creditors of the vendor cannot make use of the right
of redemption against the vendee, until after they have exhausted
the property of the vendor. (1512)
292
Art. 1612. If several persons, jointly and in the same contract,
should sell an undivided immovable with a right of repurchase, none
of them may exercise this right for more than his respective share.
The same rule shall apply if the person who sold an immovable alone
has left several heirs, in which case each of the latter may only
redeem the part which he may have acquired. (1514)
Art. 1613. In the case of the preceding article, the vendee may
demand of all the vendors or co-heirs that they come to an
agreement upon the purchase of the whole thing sold; and should
they fail to do so, the vendee cannot be compelled to consent to a
partial redemption. (1515)
Art. 1615. If the vendee should leave several heirs, the action for
redemption cannot be brought against each of them except for his
own share, whether the thing be undivided, or it has been
partitioned among them.
But if the inheritance has been divided, and the thing sold has been
awarded to one of the heirs, the action for redemption may be
instituted against him for the whole. (1517)
Art. 1616. The vendor cannot avail himself of the right of repurchase
without returning to the vendee the price of the sale, and in
addition:
(2) The necessary and useful expenses made on the thing sold.
(1518)
Art. 1617. If at the time of the execution of the sale there should be
on the land, visible or growing fruits, there shall be no
reimbursement for or prorating of those existing at the time of
redemption, if no indemnity was paid by the purchaser when the
sale was executed.
293
Should there have been no fruits at the time of the sale and some
exist at the time of redemption, they shall be prorated between the
redemptioner and the vendee, giving the latter the part
corresponding to the time he possessed the land in the last year,
counted from the anniversary of the date of the sale. (1519a)
Art. 1618. The vendor who recovers the thing sold shall receive it
free from all charges or mortgages constituted by the vendee, but he
shall respect the leases which the latter may have executed in good
faith, and in accordance with the custom of the place where the land
is situated. (1520)
Art. 1621. The owners of adjoining lands shall also have the right of
redemption when a piece of rural land, the area of which does not
exceed one hectare, is alienated, unless the grantee does not own
any rural land.
294
Art. 1622. Whenever a piece of urban land which is so small and so
situated that a major portion thereof cannot be used for any
practical purpose within a reasonable time, having been bought
merely for speculation, is about to be re-sold, the owner of any
adjoining land has a right of pre-emption at a reasonable price.
If the re-sale has been perfected, the owner of the adjoining land
shall have a right of redemption, also at a reasonable price.
CHAPTER 8
ASSIGNMENT OF CREDITS AND OTHER INCORPOREAL RIGHTS
295
Art. 1628. The vendor in good faith shall be responsible for the
existence and legality of the credit at the time of the sale, unless it
should have been sold as doubtful; but not for the solvency of the
debtor, unless it has been so expressly stipulated or unless the
insolvency was prior to the sale and of common knowledge.
Even in these cases he shall only be liable for the price received and
for the expenses specified in No. 1 of Article 1616.
The vendor in bad faith shall always be answerable for the payment
of all expenses, and for damages. (1529)
Art. 1629. In case the assignor in good faith should have made
himself responsible for the solvency of the debtor, and the
contracting parties should not have agreed upon the duration of the
liability, it shall last for one year only, from the time of the
assignment if the period had already expired.
If the credit should be payable within a term or period which has not
yet expired, the liability shall cease one year after the maturity.
(1530a)
Art. 1631. One who sells for a lump sum the whole of certain rights,
rents, or products, shall comply by answering for the legitimacy of
the whole in general; but he shall not be obliged to warrant each of
the various parts of which it may be composed, except in the case of
eviction from the whole or the part of greater value. (1532a)
Art. 1632. Should the vendor have profited by some of the fruits or
received anything from the inheritance sold, he shall pay the vendee
thereof, if the contrary has not been stipulated. (1533)
Art. 1633. The vendee shall, on his part, reimburse the vendor for all
that the latter may have paid for the debts of and charges on the
estate and satisfy the credits he may have against the same, unless
there is an agreement to the contrary. (1534)
296
incurred by him, and the interest on the price from the day on which
the same was paid.
The debtor may exercise his right within thirty days from the date
the assignee demands payment from him. (1535)
CHAPTER 9
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 1636. In the preceding articles in this Title governing the sale of
goods, unless the context or subject matter otherwise requires:
(1) "Document of title to goods" includes any bill of lading,
dock warrant, "quedan," or warehouse receipt or order for the
delivery of goods, or any other document used in the ordinary
course of business in the sale or transfer of goods, as proof of
the possession or control of the goods, or authorizing or
purporting to authorize the possessor of the document to
transfer or receive, either by endorsement or by delivery,
goods represented by such document.
297
An antecedent or pre-existing claim, whether for money or not,
constitutes "value" where goods or documents of title are
taken either in satisfaction thereof or as security therefor.
Art. 1637. The provisions of this Title are subject to the rules laid
down by the Mortgage Law and the Land Registration Law with
regard to immovable property. (1537a)
Art. 1640. One who loses by eviction the thing received in barter
may recover that which he gave in exchange with a right to
damages, or he may only demand an indemnity for damages.
However, he can only make use of the right to recover the thing
which he has delivered while the same remains in the possession of
the other party, and without prejudice to the rights acquired in good
faith in the meantime by a third person. (1540a)
Art. 1641. As to all matters not specifically provided for in this Title,
barter shall be governed by the provisions of the preceding Title
relating to sales. (1541a)
CHAPTER 1
298
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 1643. In the lease of things, one of the parties binds himself to
give to another the enjoyment or use of a thing for a price certain,
and for a period which may be definite or indefinite. However, no
lease for more than ninety-nine years shall be valid. (1543a)
Art. 1644. In the lease of work or service, one of the parties binds
himself to execute a piece of work or to render to the other some
service for a price certain, but the relation of principal and agent
does not exist between them. (1544a)
CHAPTER 2
LEASE OF RURAL AND URBAN LANDS
Art. 1648. Every lease of real estate may be recorded in the Registry
of Property. Unless a lease is recorded, it shall not be binding upon
third persons. (1549a)
Art. 1649. The lessee cannot assign the lease without the consent of
the lessor, unless there is a stipulation to the contrary. (n)
299
part, without prejudice to his responsibility for the performance of
the contract toward the lessor. (1550)
Art. 1652. The sublessee is subsidiarily liable to the lessor for any
rent due from the lessee. However, the sublessee shall not be
responsible beyond the amount of rent due from him, in accordance
with the terms of the sublease, at the time of the extrajudicial
demand by the lessor.
(2) To make on the same during the lease all the necessary
repairs in order to keep it suitable for the use to which it has
been devoted, unless there is a stipulation to the contrary;
300
lessee may choose between a proportional reduction of the rent and
a rescission of the lease. (n)
Art. 1658. The lessee may suspend the payment of the rent in case
the lessor fails to make the necessary repairs or to maintain the
lessee in peaceful and adequate enjoyment of the property leased.
(n)
Art. 1659. If the lessor or the lessee should not comply with the
obligations set forth in Articles 1654 and 1657, the aggrieved party
may ask for the rescission of the contract and indemnification for
damages, or only the latter, allowing the contract to remain in force.
(1556)
Art. 1661. The lessor cannot alter the form of the thing leased in
such a way as to impair the use to which the thing is devoted under
the terms of the lease. (1557a)
301
deferred until the termination of the lease, the lessee is obliged to
tolerate the work, although it may be very annoying to him, and
although during the same, he may be deprived of a part of the
premises.
If the repairs last more than forty days the rent shall be reduced in
proportion to the time - including the first forty days - and the part
of the property of which the lessee has been deprived.
When the work is of such a nature that the portion which the lessee
and his family need for their dwelling becomes uninhabitable, he
may rescind the contract if the main purpose of the lease is to
provide a dwelling place for the lessee. (1558a)
He is also obliged to advise the owner, with the same urgency, of the
need of all repairs included in No. 2 of Article 1654.
In both cases the lessee shall be liable for the damages which,
through his negligence, may be suffered by the proprietor.
Art. 1664. The lessor is not obliged to answer for a mere act of
trespass which a third person may cause on the use of the thing
leased; but the lessee shall have a direct action against the intruder.
There is a mere act of trespass when the third person claims no right
whatever. (1560a)
Art. 1665. The lessee shall return the thing leased, upon the
termination of the lease, as he received it, save what has been lost
or impaired by the lapse of time, or by ordinary wear and tear, or
from an inevitable cause. (1561a)
302
that the lessee received it in good condition, unless there is proof to
the contrary. (1562)
Art. 1669. If the lease was made for a determinate time, it ceases
upon the day fixed, without the need of a demand. (1565)
Art. 1670. If at the end of the contract the lessee should continue
enjoying the thing leased for fifteen days with the acquiescence of
the lessor, and unless a notice to the contrary by either party has
previously been given, it is understood that there is an implied new
lease, not for the period of the original contract, but for the time
established in Articles 1682 and 1687. The other terms of the
original contract shall be revived. (1566a)
Art. 1671. If the lessee continues enjoying the thing after the
expiration of the contract, over the lessor's objection, the former
shall be subject to the responsibilities of a possessor in bad faith.
(n)
Art. 1673. The lessor may judicially eject the lessee for any of the
following causes:
(1) When the period agreed upon, or that which is fixed for the
duration of leases under Articles 1682 and 1687, has expired;
303
(4) When the lessee devotes the thing leased to any use or
service not stipulated which causes the deterioration thereof;
or if he does not observe the requirement in No. 2 of Article
1657, as regards the use thereof.
Art. 1675. Except in cases stated in Article 1673, the lessee shall
have a right to make use of the periods established in Articles 1682
and 1687. (1570)
If the buyer makes use of this right, the lessee may demand that he
be allowed to gather the fruits of the harvest which corresponds to
the current agricultural year and that the vendor indemnify him for
damages suffered.
304
reimburse said amount, the lessee may remove the improvements,
even though the principal thing may suffer damage thereby. He shall
not, however, cause any more impairment upon the property leased
than is necessary.
Art. 1679. If nothing has been stipulated concerning the place and
the time for the payment of the lease, the provisions or Article 1251
shall be observed as regards the place; and with respect to the time,
the custom of the place shall be followed. (1574)
Art. 1680. The lessee shall have no right to a reduction of the rent on
account of the sterility of the land leased, or by reason of the loss of
fruits due to ordinary fortuitous events; but he shall have such right
in case of the loss of more than one-half of the fruits through
extraordinary and unforeseen fortuitous events, save always when
there is a specific stipulation to the contrary.
Art. 1681. Neither does the lessee have any right to a reduction of
the rent if the fruits are lost after they have been separated from
their stalk, root or trunk. (1576)
Art. 1682. The lease of a piece of rural land, when its duration has
not been fixed, is understood to have been for all the time necessary
for the gathering of the fruits which the whole estate leased may
yield in one year, or which it may yield once, although two or more
years have to elapse for the purpose. (1577a)
Art. 1683. The outgoing lessee shall allow the incoming lessee or the
lessor the use of the premises and other means necessary for the
preparatory labor for the following year; and, reciprocally, the
305
incoming lessee or the lessor is under obligation to permit the
outgoing lessee to do whatever may be necessary for the gathering
or harvesting and utilization of the fruits, all in accordance with the
custom of the place. (1578a)
Art. 1687. If the period for the lease has not been fixed, it is
understood to be from year to year, if the rent agreed upon is
annual; from month to month, if it is monthly; from week to week, if
the rent is weekly; and from day to day, if the rent is to be paid
daily. However, even though a monthly rent is paid, and no period
for the lease has been set, the courts may fix a longer term for the
lease after the lessee has occupied the premises for over one year. If
the rent is weekly, the courts may likewise determine a longer
period after the lessee has been in possession for over six months.
In case of daily rent, the courts may also fix a longer period after the
lessee has stayed in the place for over one month. (1581a)
CHAPTER 3
WORK AND LABOR
306
compensated. Any stipulation that household service is without
compensation shall be void. Such compensation shall be in addition
to the house helper's lodging, food, and medical attendance.
Art. 1690. The head of the family shall furnish, free of charge, to the
house helper, suitable and sanitary quarters as well as adequate
food and medical attendance.
Art. 1691. If the house helper is under the age of eighteen years, the
head of the family shall give an opportunity to the house helper for
at least elementary education. The cost of such education shall be a
part of the house helper's compensation, unless there is a
stipulation to the contrary.
Art. 1692. No contract for household service shall last for more than
two years. However, such contract may be renewed from year to
year.
Art. 1694. The head of the family shall treat the house helper in a
just and humane manner. In no case shall physical violence be used
upon the house helper.
Art. 1695. House helper shall not be required to work more than ten
hours a day. Every house helper shall be allowed four days' vacation
each month, with pay.
Art. 1696. In case of death of the house helper, the head of the
family shall bear the funeral expenses if the house helper has no
relatives in the place where the head of the family lives, with
sufficient means therefor.
Art. 1697. If the period for household service is fixed neither the
head of the family nor the house helper may terminate the contract
before the expiration of the term, except for a just cause. If the
house helper is unjustly dismissed, he shall be paid the
compensation already earned plus that for fifteen days by way of
indemnity. If the house helper leaves without justifiable reason, he
shall forfeit any salary due him and unpaid, for not exceeding fifteen
days.
307
Art. 1698. If the duration of the household service is not determined
either by stipulation or by the nature of the service, the head of the
family or the house helper may give notice to put an end to the
service relation, according to the following rules:
Art. 1700. The relations between capital and labor are not merely
contractual. They are so impressed with public interest that labor
contracts must yield to the common good. Therefore, such contracts
are subject to the special laws on labor unions, collective bargaining,
strikes and lockouts, closed shop, wages, working conditions, hours
of labor and similar subjects.
Art. 1701. Neither capital nor labor shall act oppressively against the
other, or impair the interest or convenience of the public.
Art. 1702. In case of doubt, all labor legislation and all labor
contracts shall be construed in favor of the safety and decent living
for the laborer.
308
Art. 1704. In collective bargaining, the labor union or members of
the board or committee signing the contract shall be liable for non-
fulfillment thereof.
Art. 1706. Withholding of the wages, except for a debt due, shall not
be made by the employer.
Art. 1709. The employer shall neither seize nor retain any tool or
other articles belonging to the laborer.
309
SECTION 3. - Contract for a Piece of Work
Art. 1713. By the contract for a piece of work the contractor binds
himself to execute a piece of work for the employer, in consideration
of a certain price or compensation. The contractor may either
employ only his labor or skill, or also furnish the material. (1588a)
Art. 1715. The contract shall execute the work in such a manner that
it has the qualities agreed upon and has no defects which destroy or
lessen its value or fitness for its ordinary or stipulated use. Should
the work be not of such quality, the employer may require that the
contractor remove the defect or execute another work. If the
contract fails or refuses to comply with this obligation, the employer
may have the defect removed or another work executed, at the
contractor's cost. (n)
Art. 1718. The contractor who has undertaken to put only his work
or skill, cannot claim any compensation if the work should be
destroyed before its delivery, unless there has been delay in
receiving it, or if the destruction was caused by the poor quality of
the material, provided this fact was communicated in due time to the
owner. If the material is lost through a fortuitous event, the contract
is extinguished. (1590a)
(1) The defect is hidden and the employer is not, by his special
knowledge, expected to recognize the same; or
310
(2) The employer expressly reserves his rights against the
contractor by reason of the defect. (n)
Art. 1720. The price or compensation shall be paid at the time and
place of delivery of the work, unless there is a stipulation to the
contrary. If the work is to be delivered partially, the price or
compensation for each part having been fixed, the sum shall be paid
at the time and place of delivery, in the absence if stipulation. (n)
Art. 1721. If, in the execution of the work, an act of the employer is
required, and he incurs in delay or fails to perform the act, the
contractor is entitled to a reasonable compensation.
Art. 1723. The engineer or architect who drew up the plans and
specifications for a building is liable for damages if within fifteen
years from the completion of the structure, the same should collapse
by reason of a defect in those plans and specifications, or due to the
defects in the ground. The contractor is likewise responsible for the
damages if the edifice falls, within the same period, on account of
defects in the construction or the use of materials of inferior quality
furnished by him, or due to any violation of the terms of the
contract. If the engineer or architect supervises the construction, he
shall be solidarily liable with the contractor.
The action must be brought within ten years following the collapse
of the building. (n)
311
Art. 1724. The contractor who undertakes to build a structure or any
other work for a stipulated price, in conformity with plans and
specifications agreed upon with the land-owner, can neither
withdraw from the contract nor demand an increase in the price on
account of the higher cost of labor or materials, save when there has
been a change in the plans and specifications, provided:
Art. 1725. The owner may withdraw at will from the construction of
the work, although it may have been commenced, indemnifying the
contractor for all the latter's expenses, work, and the usefulness
which the owner may obtain therefrom, and damages. (1594a)
In this case the proprietor shall pay the heirs of the contractor in
proportion to the price agreed upon, the value of the part of the
work done, and of the materials prepared, provided the latter yield
him some benefit.
The same rule shall apply if the contractor cannot finish the work
due to circumstances beyond his control. (1595)
Art. 1728. The contractor is liable for all the claims of laborers and
others employed by him, and of third persons for death or physical
injuries during the construction. (n)
Art. 1729. Those who put their labor upon or furnish materials for a
piece of work undertaken by the contractor have an action against
the owner up to the amount owing from the latter to the contractor
at the time the claim is made. However, the following shall not
prejudice the laborers, employees and furnishers of materials:
312
(1) Payments made by the owner to the contractor before they
are due;
Art. 1731. He who has executed work upon a movable has a right to
retain it by way of pledge until he is paid. (1600)
Art. 1733. Common carriers, from the nature of their business and
for reasons of public policy, are bound to observe extraordinary
diligence in the vigilance over the goods and for the safety of the
passengers transported by them, according to all the circumstances
of each case.
Art. 1734. Common carriers are responsible for the loss, destruction,
313
or deterioration of the goods, unless the same is due to any of the
following causes only:
(1) Flood, storm, earthquake, lightning, or other natural
disaster or calamity;
Art. 1739. In order that the common carrier may be exempted from
responsibility, the natural disaster must have been the proximate
and only cause of the loss. However, the common carrier must
exercise due diligence to prevent or minimize loss before, during and
314
after the occurrence of flood, storm or other natural disaster in order
that the common carrier may be exempted from liability for the loss,
destruction, or deterioration of the goods. The same duty is
incumbent upon the common carrier in case of an act of the public
enemy referred to in Article 1734, No. 2.
Art. 1743. If through the order of public authority the goods are
seized or destroyed, the common carrier is not responsible, provided
said public authority had power to issue the order.
Art. 1744. A stipulation between the common carrier and the shipper
or owner limiting the liability of the former for the loss, destruction,
or deterioration of the goods to a degree less than extraordinary
diligence shall be valid, provided it be:
(2) That the common carrier will not be liable for any loss,
destruction, or deterioration of the goods;
315
(3) That the common carrier need not observe any diligence in
the custody of the goods;
(5) That the common carrier shall not be responsible for the
acts or omission of his or its employees;
(7) That the common carrier is not responsible for the loss,
destruction, or deterioration of goods on account of the
defective condition of the car, vehicle, ship, airplane or other
equipment used in the contract of carriage.
Art. 1747. If the common carrier, without just cause, delays the
transportation of the goods or changes the stipulated or usual route,
the contract limiting the common carrier's liability cannot be availed
of in case of the loss, destruction, or deterioration of the goods.
Art. 1750. A contract fixing the sum that may be recovered. by the
owner or shipper for the loss, destruction, or deterioration of the
goods is valid, if it is reasonable and just under the circumstances,
and has been fairly and freely agreed upon.
Art. 1751. The fact that the common carrier has no competitor along
the line or route, or a part thereof, to which the contract refers shall
be taken into consideration on the question of whether or not a
316
stipulation limiting the common carrier's liability is reasonable, just
and in consonance with public policy.
Art. 1753. The law of the country to which the goods are to be
transported shall govern the liability of the common carrier for their
loss, destruction or deterioration.
Art. 1754. The provisions of Articles 1733 to 1753 shall apply to the
passenger's baggage which is not in his personal custody or in that
of his employee. As to other baggage, the rules in Articles 1998 and
2000 to 2003 concerning the responsibility of hotel-keepers shall be
applicable.
The reduction of fare does not justify any limitation of the common
carrier's liability.
317
Art. 1759. Common carriers are liable for the death of or injuries to
passengers through the negligence or wilful acts of the former's
employees, although such employees may have acted beyond the
scope of their authority or in violation of the orders of the common
carriers.
This liability of the common carriers does not cease upon proof that
they exercised all the diligence of a good father of a family in the
selection and supervision of their employees.
Art. 1762. The contributory negligence of the passenger does not bar
recovery of damages for his death or injuries, if the proximate cause
thereof is the negligence of the common carrier, but the amount of
damages shall be equitably reduced.
Art. 1765. The Public Service Commission may, on its own motion or
on petition of any interested party, after due hearing, cancel the
certificate of public convenience granted to any common carrier that
repeatedly fails to comply with his or its duty to observe
extraordinary diligence as prescribed in this Section.
Art. 1766. In all matters not regulated by this Code, the rights and
obligations of common carriers shall be governed by the Code of
318
Commerce and by special laws.
CHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Two or more persons may also form a partnership for the exercise of
a profession. (1665a)
319
(c) As an annuity to a widow or representative of a
deceased partner;
Art. 1775. Associations and societies, whose articles are kept secret
among the members, and wherein any one of the members may
contract in his own name with third persons, shall have no juridical
320
personality, and shall be governed by the provisions relating to co-
ownership. (1669)
Art. 1782. Persons who are prohibited from giving each other any
donation or advantage cannot enter into universal partnership.
(1677)
321
Art. 1783. A particular partnership has for its object determinate
things, their use or fruits, or specific undertaking, or the exercise of
a profession or vocation. (1678)
CHAPTER 2
OBLIGATIONS OF THE PARTNERS
322
The same rule applies to any amount he may have taken from the
partnership coffers, and his liability shall begin from the time he
converted the amount to his own use. (1682)
Art. 1793. A partner who has received, in whole or in part, his share
of a partnership credit, when the other partners have not collected
theirs, shall be obliged, if the debtor should thereafter become
insolvent, to bring to the partnership capital what he received even
though he may have given receipt for his share only. (1685a)
323
efforts in other activities of the partnership, unusual profits have
been realized. (1686a)
Art. 1795. The risk of specific and determinate things, which are not
fungible, contributed to the partnership so that only their use and
fruits may be for the common benefit, shall be borne by the partner
who owns them.
324
The designation of losses and profits cannot be intrusted to one of
the partners. (1690)
Art. 1800. The partner who has been appointed manager in the
articles of partnership may execute all acts of administration despite
the opposition of his partners, unless he should act in bad faith; and
his power is irrevocable without just or lawful cause. The vote of the
partners representing the controlling interest shall be necessary for
such revocation of power.
Art. 1801. If two or more partners have been intrusted with the
management of the partnership without specification of their
respective duties, or without a stipulation that one of them shall not
act without the consent of all the others, each one may separately
execute all acts of administration, but if any of them should oppose
the acts of the others, the decision of the majority shall prevail. In
case of a tie, the matter shall be decided by the partners owning the
controlling interest. (1693a)
Art. 1802. In case it should have been stipulated that none of the
managing partners shall act without the consent of the others, the
concurrence of all shall be necessary for the validity of the acts, and
the absence or disability of any one of them cannot be alleged,
unless there is imminent danger of grave or irreparable injury to the
partnership. (1694)
Art. 1803. When the manner of management has not been agreed
upon, the following rules shall be observed:
325
is manifestly prejudicial to the interest of the partnership, the
court's intervention may be sought. (1695a)
Art. 1804. Every partner may associate another person with him in
his share, but the associate shall not be admitted into the
partnership without the consent of all the other partners, even if the
partner having an associate should be a manager. (1696)
Art. 1806. Partners shall render on demand true and full information
of all things affecting the partnership to any partner or the legal
representative of any deceased partner or of any partner under legal
disability. (n)
Art. 1807. Every partner must account to the partnership for any
benefit, and hold as trustee for it any profits derived by him without
the consent of the other partners from any transaction connected
with the formation, conduct, or liquidation of the partnership or from
any use by him of its property. (n)
Art. 1808. The capitalist partners cannot engage for their own
account in any operation which is of the kind of business in which
the partnership is engaged, unless there is a stipulation to the
contrary.
Art. 1809. Any partner shall have the right to a formal account as to
partnership affairs:
326
(4) Whenever other circumstances render it just and
reasonable. (n)
327
during the continuance of the partnership, to interfere in the
management or administration of the partnership business or
affairs, or to require any information or account of partnership
transactions, or to inspect the partnership books; but it merely
entitles the assignee to receive in accordance with his contract the
profits to which the assigning partner would otherwise be entitled.
However, in case of fraud in the management of the partnership, the
assignee may avail himself of the usual remedies.
328
Art. 1815. Every partnership shall operate under a firm name, which
may or may not include the name of one or more of the partners.
Art. 1816. All partners, including industrial ones, shall be liable pro
rata with all their property and after all the partnership assets have
been exhausted, for the contracts which may be entered into in the
name and for the account of the partnership, under its signature and
by a person authorized to act for the partnership. However, any
partner may enter into a separate obligation to perform a
partnership contract. (n)
Art. 1817. Any stipulation against the liability laid down in the
preceding article shall be void, except as among the partners. (n)
329
(4) Confess a judgment;
Where title to real property is in the name of one or more but not all
the partners, and the record does not disclose the right of the
partnership, the partners in whose name the title stands may convey
title to such property, but the partnership may recover such property
if the partners' act does not bind the partnership under the
provisions of the first paragraph of Article 1818, unless the
purchaser or his assignee, is a holder for value, without knowledge.
Where the title to real property is in the name of one or more or all
the partners, or in a third person in trust for the partnership, a
conveyance executed by a partner in the partnership name, or in his
own name, passes the equitable interest of the partnership, provided
the act is one within the authority of the partner under the
provisions of the first paragraph of Article 1818.
330
Where the title to real property is in the name of all the partners a
conveyance executed by all the partners passes all their rights in
such property. (n)
(1) Where one partner acting within the scope of his apparent
authority receives money or property of a third person and
misapplies it; and
Art. 1824. All partners are liable solidarily with the partnership for
everything chargeable to the partnership under Articles 1822 and
1823. (n)
331
such representation, given credit to the actual or apparent
partnership, and if he has made such representation or consented to
its being made in a public manner he is liable to such person,
whether the representation has or has not been made or
communicated to such person so giving credit by or with the
knowledge of the apparent partner making the representation or
consenting to its being made:
CHAPTER 3
DISSOLUTION AND WINDING UP
332
relation of the partners caused by any partner ceasing to be
associated in the carrying on as distinguished from the winding up of
the business. (n)
(c) By the express will of all the partners who have not
assigned their interests or suffered them to be charged
for their separate debts, either before or after the
termination of any specified term or particular
undertaking;
333
the thing when it occurs after the partnership has acquired the
ownership thereof;
334
Art. 1832. Except so far as may be necessary to wind up partnership
affairs or to complete transactions begun but not then finished,
dissolution terminates all authority of any partner to act for the
partnership:
(1) With respect to the partners:
(a) When the dissolution is not by the act, insolvency or
death of a partner; or
335
place (or in each place if more than one) at which the
partnership business was regularly carried on.
Nothing in this article shall affect the liability under Article 1825 of
any person who, after dissolution, represents himself or consents to
another representing him as a partner in a partnership engaged in
carrying business. (n)
336
partnership creditor and the person or partnership continuing the
business; and such agreement may be inferred from the course of
dealing between the creditor having knowledge of the dissolution
and the person or partnership continuing the business.
Art. 1836. Unless otherwise agreed, the partners who have not
wrongfully dissolved the partnership or the legal representative of
the last surviving partner, not insolvent, has the right to wind up the
partnership affairs, provided, however, that any partner, his legal
representative or his assignee, upon cause shown, may obtain
winding up by the court. (n)
(b) The right, as against each partner who has caused the
dissolution wrongfully, to damages breach of the
agreement.
337
same name either by themselves or jointly with others, may do
so, during the agreed term for the partnership and for that
purpose may possess the partnership property, provided they
secure the payment by bond approved by the court, or pay any
partner who has caused the dissolution wrongfully, the value of
his interest in the partnership at the dissolution, less any
damages recoverable under the second paragraph, No. 1 (b) of
this article, and in like manner indemnify him against all
present or future partnership liabilities.
338
payments made by him in respect of the partnership liabilities;
and
(6) Any partner or his legal representative shall have the right
to enforce the contributions specified in No. 4, to the extent of
the amount which he has paid in excess of his share of the
liability.
339
(7) The individual property of a deceased partner shall be liable
for the contributions specified in No. 4.
(2) When all but one partner retire and assign (or the
representative of a deceased partner assigns) their rights in
partnership property to the remaining partner, who continues
the business without liquidation of partnership affairs, either
alone or with others;
(3) When any partner retires or dies and the business of the
dissolved partnership is continued as set forth in Nos. 1 and 2
of this article, with the consent of the retired partners or the
representative of the deceased partner, but without any
assignment of his right in partnership property;
340
(4) When all the partners or their representatives assign their
rights in partnership property to one or more third persons who
promise to pay the debts and who continue the business of the
dissolved partnership;
Art. 1841. When any partner retires or dies, and the business is
continued under any of the conditions set forth in the preceding
article, or in Article 1837, second paragraph, No. 2, without any
settlement of accounts as between him or his estate and the person
or partnership continuing the business, unless otherwise agreed, he
341
or his legal representative as against such person or partnership
may have the value of his interest at the date of dissolution
ascertained, and shall receive as an ordinary creditor an amount
equal to the value of his interest in the dissolved partnership with
interest, or, at his option or at the option of his legal representative,
in lieu of interest, the profits attributable to the use of his right in
the property of the dissolved partnership; provided that the creditors
of the dissolved partnership as against the separate creditors, or the
representative of the retired or deceased partner, shall have priority
on any claim arising under this article, as provided Article 1840,
third paragraph. (n)
Art. 1842. The right to an account of his interest shall accrue to any
partner, or his legal representative as against the winding up
partners or the surviving partners or the person or partnership
continuing the business, at the date of dissolution, in the absence of
any agreement to the contrary. (n)
CHAPTER 4
LIMITED PARTNERSHIP (n)
342
(e) The term for which the partnership is to exist;
(2) File for record the certificate in the Office of the Securities
and Exchange Commission.
A limited partnership is formed if there has been substantial
compliance in good faith with the foregoing requirements.
343
Art. 1845. The contributions of a limited partner may be cash or
property, but not services.
Art. 1846. The surname of a limited partner shall not appear in the
partnership name unless:
(2) Prior to the time when the limited partner became such, the
business has been carried on under a name in which his
surname appeared.
Art. 1850. A general partner shall have all the rights and powers and
be subject to all the restrictions and liabilities of a partner in a
partnership without limited partners. However, without the written
consent or ratification of the specific act by all the limited partners,
a general partner or all of the general partners have no authority to:
344
(2) Do any act which would make it impossible to carry on the
ordinary business of the partnership;
Art. 1851. A limited partner shall have the same rights as a general
partner to:
(1) Have the partnership books kept at the principal place of
business of the partnership, and at a reasonable hour to
inspect and copy any of them;
A limited partner shall have the right to receive a share of the profits
or other compensation by way of income, and to the return of his
contribution as provided in Articles 1856 and 1857.
345
ascertaining the mistake he promptly renounces his interest in the
profits of the business, or other compensation by way of income.
Art. 1854. A limited partner also may loan money to and transact
other business with the partnership, and, unless he is also a general
partner, receive on account of resulting claims against the
partnership, with general creditors, a pro rata share of the assets.
No limited partner shall in respect to any such claim:
Art. 1855. Where there are several limited partners the members
may agree that one or more of the limited partners shall have a
priority over other limited partners as to the return of their
contributions, as to their compensation by way of income, or as to
any other matter. If such an agreement is made it shall be stated in
the certificate, and in the absence of such a statement all the limited
partners shall stand upon equal footing.
Art. 1856. A limited partner may receive from the partnership the
share of the profits or the compensation by way of income stipulated
for in the certificate; provided that after such payment is made,
whether from property of the partnership or that of a general
346
partner, the partnership assets are in excess of all liabilities of the
partnership except liabilities to limited partners on account of their
contributions and to general partners.
Art. 1857. A limited partner shall not receive from a general partner
or out of partnership property any part of his contributions until:
(2) The consent of all members is had, unless the return of the
contribution may be rightfully demanded under the provisions
of the second paragraph; and
(2) When the date specified in the certificate for its return has
arrived, or
A limited partner may have the partnership dissolved and its affairs
wound up when:
(2) The other liabilities of the partnership have not been paid,
or the partnership property is insufficient for their payment as
347
required by the first paragraph, No. 1, and the limited partner
would otherwise be entitled to the return of his contribution.
348
income, or the return of his contribution, to which his assignor
would otherwise be entitled.
The substituted limited partner has all the rights and powers, and is
subject to all the restrictions and liabilities of his assignor, except
those liabilities of which he was ignorant at the time he became a
limited partner and which could not be ascertained from the
certificate.
The estate of a deceased limited partner shall be liable for all his
liabilities as a limited partner.
349
The interest may be redeemed with the separate property of any
general partner, but may not be redeemed with partnership
property.
(4) Those to general partners other than for capital and profits;
350
(2) A person is substituted as a limited partner;
351
person who must execute the writing refuses to do so, may petition
the court to order a cancellation or amendment thereof.
If the court finds that the petitioner has a right to have the writing
executed by a person who refuses to do so, it shall order the Office
of the Securities and Exchange Commission where the certificate is
recorded, to record the cancellation or amendment of the certificate;
and when the certificate is to be amended, the court shall also cause
to be filed for record in said office a certified copy of its decree
setting forth the amendment.
Art. 1867. A limited partnership formed under the law prior to the
effectivity of this Code, may become a limited partnership under this
Chapter by complying with the provisions of Article 1844, provided
the certificate sets forth:
352
A limited partnership formed under the law prior to the effectivity of
this Code, until or unless it becomes a limited partnership under this
Chapter, shall continue to be governed by the provisions of the old
law.
Title X. - AGENCY
CHAPTER 1
NATURE, FORM AND KINDS OF AGENCY
Art. 1869. Agency may be express, or implied from the acts of the
principal, from his silence or lack of action, or his failure to repudiate
the agency, knowing that another person is acting on his behalf
without authority.
Agency may be oral, unless the law requires a specific form. (1710a)
Art. 1871. Between persons who are present, the acceptance of the
agency may also be implied if the principal delivers his power of
attorney to the agent and the latter receives it without any
objection. (n)
Art. 1872. Between persons who are absent, the acceptance of the
agency cannot be implied from the silence of the agent, except:
353
former case with respect to the person who received the special
information, and in the latter case with regard to any person.
The former comprises all the business of the principal. The latter,
one or more specific transactions. (1712)
354
(6) To make gifts, except customary ones for charity or those
made to employees in the business managed by the agent;
(8) To lease any real property to another person for more than
one year;
Art. 1881. The agent must act within the scope of his authority. He
may do such acts as may be conducive to the accomplishment of the
purpose of the agency. (1714a)
Art. 1882. The limits of the agent's authority shall not be considered
exceeded should it have been performed in a manner more
advantageous to the principal than that specified by him. (1715)
Art. 1883. If an agent acts in his own name, the principal has no
right of action against the persons with whom the agent has
contracted; neither have such persons against the principal.
355
In such case the agent is the one directly bound in favor of the
person with whom he has contracted, as if the transaction were his
own, except when the contract involves things belonging to the
principal.
CHAPTER 2
OBLIGATIONS OF THE AGENT
Art. 1884. The agent is bound by his acceptance to carry out the
agency, and is liable for the damages which, through his non-
performance, the principal may suffer.
He must also finish the business already begun on the death of the
principal, should delay entail any danger. (1718)
Art. 1886. Should there be a stipulation that the agent shall advance
the necessary funds, he shall be bound to do so except when the
principal is insolvent. (n)
Art. 1887. In the execution of the agency, the agent shall act in
accordance with the instructions of the principal.
Art. 1888. An agent shall not carry out an agency if its execution
would manifestly result in loss or damage to the principal. (n)
Art. 1889. The agent shall be liable for damages if, there being a
conflict between his interests and those of the principal, he should
prefer his own. (n)
356
been authorized to lend money at interest, he cannot borrow it
without the consent of the principal. (n)
Art. 1892. The agent may appoint a substitute if the principal has not
prohibited him from doing so; but he shall be responsible for the acts
of the substitute:
Art. 1895. If solidarity has been agreed upon, each of the agents is
responsible for the non-fulfillment of agency, and for the fault or
negligence of his fellows agents, except in the latter case when the
fellow agents acted beyond the scope of their authority. (n)
Art. 1896. The agent owes interest on the sums he has applied to his
own use from the day on which he did so, and on those which he still
owes after the extinguishment of the agency. (1724a)
Art. 1897. The agent who acts as such is not personally liable to the
party with whom he contracts, unless he expressly binds himself or
357
exceeds the limits of his authority without giving such party
sufficient notice of his powers. (1725)
Art. 1901. A third person cannot set up the fact that the agent has
exceeded his powers, if the principal has ratified, or has signified his
willingness to ratify the agent's acts. (n)
Art. 1902. A third person with whom the agent wishes to contract on
behalf of the principal may require the presentation of the power of
attorney, or the instructions as regards the agency. Private or secret
orders and instructions of the principal do not prejudice third
persons who have relied upon the power of attorney or instructions
shown them. (n)
Art. 1903. The commission agent shall be responsible for the goods
received by him in the terms and conditions and as described in the
consignment, unless upon receiving them he should make a written
statement of the damage and deterioration suffered by the same. (n)
Art. 1904. The commission agent who handles goods of the same
kind and mark, which belong to different owners, shall distinguish
them by countermarks, and designate the merchandise respectively
belonging to each principal. (n)
358
Art. 1905. The commission agent cannot, without the express or
implied consent of the principal, sell on credit. Should he do so, the
principal may demand from him payment in cash, but the
commission agent shall be entitled to any interest or benefit, which
may result from such sale. (n)
Art. 1908. The commission agent who does not collect the credits of
his principal at the time when they become due and demandable
shall be liable for damages, unless he proves that he exercised due
diligence for that purpose. (n)
Art. 1909. The agent is responsible not only for fraud, but also for
negligence, which shall be judged with more or less rigor by the
courts, according to whether the agency was or was not for a
compensation. (1726)
CHAPTER 3
OBLIGATIONS OF THE PRINCIPAL
Art. 1910. The principal must comply with all the obligations which
the agent may have contracted within the scope of his authority.
As for any obligation wherein the agent has exceeded his power, the
principal is not bound except when he ratifies it expressly or tacitly.
(1727)
Art. 1911. Even when the agent has exceeded his authority, the
principal is solidarily liable with the agent if the former allowed the
latter to act as though he had full powers. (n)
359
Art. 1912. The principal must advance to the agent, should the latter
so request, the sums necessary for the execution of the agency.
Should the agent have advanced them, the principal must reimburse
him therefor, even if the business or undertaking was not successful,
provided the agent is free from all fault.
Art. 1913. The principal must also indemnify the agent for all the
damages which the execution of the agency may have caused the
latter, without fault or negligence on his part. (1729)
Art. 1914. The agent may retain in pledge the things which are the
object of the agency until the principal effects the reimbursement
and pays the indemnity set forth in the two preceding articles.
(1730)
Art. 1916. When two persons contract with regard to the same thing,
one of them with the agent and the other with the principal, and the
two contracts are incompatible with each other, that of prior date
shall be preferred, without prejudice to the provisions of Article
1544. (n)
Art. 1918. The principal is not liable for the expenses incurred by the
agent in the following cases:
(2) When the expenses were due to the fault of the agent;
360
(3) When the agent incurred them with knowledge that an
unfavorable result would ensue, if the principal was not aware
thereof;
CHAPTER 4
MODES OF EXTINGUISHMENT OF AGENCY
(6) By the expiration of the period for which the agency was
constituted. (1732a)
Art. 1920. The principal may revoke the agency at will, and compel
the agent to return the document evidencing the agency. Such
revocation may be express or implied. (1733a)
Art. 1921. If the agency has been entrusted for the purpose of
contracting with specified persons, its revocation shall not prejudice
the latter if they were not given notice thereof. (1734)
Art. 1922. If the agent had general powers, revocation of the agency
does not prejudice third persons who acted in good faith and without
knowledge of the revocation. Notice of the revocation in a
newspaper of general circulation is a sufficient warning to third
persons. (n)
361
Art. 1923. The appointment of a new agent for the same business or
transaction revokes the previous agency from the day on which
notice thereof was given to the former agent, without prejudice to
the provisions of the two preceding articles. (1735a)
Art. 1928. The agent may withdraw from the agency by giving due
notice to the principal. If the latter should suffer any damage by
reason of the withdrawal, the agent must indemnify him therefor,
unless the agent should base his withdrawal upon the impossibility
of continuing the performance of the agency without grave
detriment to himself. (1736a)
Art. 1929. The agent, even if he should withdraw from the agency
for a valid reason, must continue to act until the principal has had
reasonable opportunity to take the necessary steps to meet the
situation. (1737a)
Art. 1930. The agency shall remain in full force and effect even after
the death of the principal, if it has been constituted in the common
interest of the latter and of the agent, or in the interest of a third
person who has accepted the stipulation in his favor. (n)
362
Art. 1932. If the agent dies, his heirs must notify the principal
thereof, and in the meantime adopt such measures as the
circumstances may demand in the interest of the latter. (1739)
GENERAL PROVISIONS
CHAPTER 1
COMMODATUM
Art. 1935. The bailee in commodatum acquires the used of the thing
loaned but not its fruits; if any compensation is to be paid by him
who acquires the use, the contract ceases to be a commodatum.
(1941a)
363
Art. 1937. Movable or immovable property may be the object of
commodatum. (n)
Art. 1938. The bailor in commodatum need not be the owner of the
thing loaned. (n)
(1) The death of either the bailor or the bailee extinguishes the
contract;
(2) The bailee can neither lend nor lease the object of the
contract to a third person. However, the members of the
bailee's household may make use of the thing loaned, unless
there is a stipulation to the contrary, or unless the nature of
the thing forbids such use. (n)
Art. 1940. A stipulation that the bailee may make use of the fruits of
the thing loaned is valid. (n)
Art. 1941. The bailee is obliged to pay for the ordinary expenses for
the use and preservation of the thing loaned. (1743a)
Art. 1942. The bailee is liable for the loss of the thing, even if it
should be through a fortuitous event:
(3) If the thing loaned has been delivered with appraisal of its
value, unless there is a stipulation exemption the bailee from
responsibility in case of a fortuitous event;
364
(5) If, being able to save either the thing borrowed or his own
thing, he chose to save the latter. (1744a and 1745)
Art. 1943. The bailee does not answer for the deterioration of the
thing loaned due only to the use thereof and without his fault.
(1746)
Art. 1944. The bailee cannot retain the thing loaned on the ground
that the bailor owes him something, even though it may be by
reason of expenses. However, the bailee has a right of retention for
damages mentioned in Article 1951. (1747a)
Art. 1945. When there are two or more bailees to whom a thing is
loaned in the same contract, they are liable solidarily. (1748a)
Art. 1946. The bailor cannot demand the return of the thing loaned
till after the expiration of the period stipulated, or after the
accomplishment of the use for which the commodatum has been
constituted. However, if in the meantime, he should have urgent
need of the thing, he may demand its return or temporary use.
Art. 1947. The bailor may demand the thing at will, and the
contractual relation is called a precarium, in the following cases:
(1) If neither the duration of the contract nor the use to which
the thing loaned should be devoted, has been stipulated; or
Art. 1948. The bailor may demand the immediate return of the thing
if the bailee commits any act of ingratitude specified in Article 765.
(n)
Art. 1949. The bailor shall refund the extraordinary expenses during
the contract for the preservation of the thing loaned, provided the
bailee brings the same to the knowledge of the bailor before
365
incurring them, except when they are so urgent that the reply to the
notification cannot be awaited without danger.
Art. 1950. If, for the purpose of making use of the thing, the bailee
incurs expenses other than those referred to in Articles 1941 and
1949, he is not entitled to reimbursement. (n)
Art. 1951. The bailor who, knowing the flaws of the thing loaned,
does not advise the bailee of the same, shall be liable to the latter
for the damages which he may suffer by reason thereof. (1752)
Art. 1952. The bailor cannot exempt himself from the payment of
expenses or damages by abandoning the thing to the bailee. (n)
CHAPTER 2
SIMPLE LOAN OR MUTUUM
If what was loaned is a fungible thing other than money, the debtor
owes another thing of the same kind, quantity and quality, even if it
should change in value. In case it is impossible to deliver the same
kind, its value at the time of the perfection of the loan shall be paid.
(1754a)
366
Art. 1957. Contracts and stipulations, under any cloak or device
whatever, intended to circumvent the laws against usury shall be
void. The borrower may recover in accordance with the laws on
usury. (n)
Art. 1960. If the borrower pays interest when there has been no
stipulation therefor, the provisions of this Code concerning solutio
indebiti, or natural obligations, shall be applied, as the case may be.
(n)
CHAPTER 1
DEPOSIT IN GENERAL AND ITS DIFFERENT KINDS
367
Art. 1966. Only movable things may be the object of a deposit.
(1761)
CHAPTER 2
VOLUNTARY DEPOSIT
Art. 1971. If the deposit has been made by a capacitated person with
another who is not, the depositor shall only have an action to
recover the thing deposited while it is still in the possession of the
depositary, or to compel the latter to pay him the amount by which
he may have enriched or benefited himself with the thing or its
price. However, if a third person who acquired the thing acted in bad
faith, the depositor may bring an action against him for its recovery.
(1765a)
Art. 1972. The depositary is obliged to keep the thing safely and to
return it, when required, to the depositor, or to his heirs and
successors, or to the person who may have been designated in the
contract. His responsibility, with regard to the safekeeping and the
368
loss of the thing, shall be governed by the provisions of Title I of this
Book.
Art. 1974. The depositary may change the way of the deposit if
under the circumstances he may reasonably presume that the
depositor would consent to the change if he knew of the facts of the
situation. However, before the depositary may make such change, he
shall notify the depositor thereof and wait for his decision, unless
delay would cause danger. (n)
The above provision shall not apply to contracts for the rent of
safety deposit boxes. (n)
Art. 1977. The depositary cannot make use of the thing deposited
without the express permission of the depositor.
369
Art. 1978. When the depositary has permission to use the thing
deposited, the contract loses the concept of a deposit and becomes a
loan or commodatum, except where safekeeping is still the principal
purpose of the contract.
Art. 1979. The depositary is liable for the loss of the thing through a
fortuitous event:
(1) If it is so stipulated;
Art. 1981. When the thing deposited is delivered closed and sealed,
the depositary must return it in the same condition, and he shall be
liable for damages should the seal or lock be broken through his
fault.
370
depositor as regards the deposit cannot be executed without
opening the box or receptacle. (n)
Art. 1983. The thing deposited shall be returned with all its products,
accessories and accessions.
Art. 1984. The depositary cannot demand that the depositor prove
his ownership of the thing deposited.
Nevertheless, should he discover that the thing has been stolen and
who its true owner is, he must advise the latter of the deposit.
Art. 1985. When there are two or more depositors, if they are not
solidary, and the thing admits of division, each one cannot demand
more than his share.
When there is solidarity or the thing does not admit of division, the
provisions of Articles 1212 and 1214 shall govern. However, if there
is a stipulation that the thing should be returned to one of the
depositors, the depositary shall return it only to the person
designated. (1772a)
Art. 1986. If the depositor should lose his capacity to contract after
having made the deposit, the thing cannot be returned except to the
persons who may have the administration of his property and rights.
(1773)
Art. 1987. If at the time the deposit was made a place was
designated for the return of the thing, the depositary must take the
thing deposited to such place; but the expenses for transportation
shall be borne by the depositor.
371
If no place has been designated for the return, it shall be made
where the thing deposited may be, even if it should not be the same
place where the deposit was made, provided that there was no
malice on the part of the depositary. (1774)
This provision shall not apply when the thing is judicially attached
while in the depositary's possession, or should he have been notified
of the opposition of a third person to the return or the removal of the
thing deposited. In these cases, the depositary must immediately
inform the depositor of the attachment or opposition. (1775)
Art. 1991. The depositor's heir who in good faith may have sold the
thing which he did not know was deposited, shall only be bound to
return the price he may have received or to assign his right of action
against the buyer in case the price has not been paid him. (1778)
Art. 1993. The depositor shall reimburse the depositary for any loss
arising from the character of the thing deposited, unless at the time
of the constitution of the deposit the former was not aware of, or
was not expected to know the dangerous character of the thing, or
unless he notified the depositary of the same, or the latter was
aware of it without advice from the depositor. (n)
372
Art. 1994. The depositary may retain the thing in pledge until the full
payment of what may be due him by reason of the deposit. (1780)
CHAPTER 3
NECESSARY DEPOSIT
Art. 1999. The hotel-keeper is liable for the vehicles, animals and
articles which have been introduced or placed in the annexes of the
hotel. (n)
373
any force majeure. The fact that travellers are constrained to rely on
the vigilance of the keeper of the hotels or inns shall be considered
in determining the degree of care required of him. (1784a)
Art. 2001. The act of a thief or robber, who has entered the hotel is
not deemed force majeure, unless it is done with the use of arms or
through an irresistible force. (n)
Art. 2002. The hotel-keeper is not liable for compensation if the loss
is due to the acts of the guest, his family, servants or visitors, or if
the loss arises from the character of the things brought into the
hotel. (n)
Art. 2004. The hotel-keeper has a right to retain the things brought
into the hotel by the guest, as a security for credits on account of
lodging, and supplies usually furnished to hotel guests. (n)
CHAPTER 4
SEQUESTRATION OR JUDICIAL DEPOSIT
374
Title XIII. - ALEATORY CONTRACTS
GENERAL PROVISIONS
CHAPTER 1
INSURANCE
Art. 2012. Any person who is forbidden from receiving any donation
under Article 739 cannot be named beneficiary of a life insurance
policy by the person who cannot make any donation to him,
according to said article. (n)
CHAPTER 2
GAMBLING
375
Art. 2016. If the loser refuses or neglects to bring an action to
recover what has been lost, his or her creditors, spouse,
descendants or other persons entitled to be supported by the loser
may institute the action. The sum thereby obtained shall be applied
to the creditors' claims, or to the support of the spouse or relatives,
as the case may be. (n)
Art. 2017. The provisions of Article 2014 and 2016 apply when two
or more persons bet in a game of chance, although they take no
active part in the game itself. (1799a)
Art. 2020. The loser in any game which is not one of chance, when
there is no local ordinance which prohibits betting therein, is under
obligation to pay his loss, unless the amount thereof is excessive
under the circumstances. In the latter case, the court shall reduce
the loss to the proper sum. (1801a)
CHAPTER 3
LIFE ANNUITY
Art. 2021. The aleatory contract of life annuity binds the debtor to
pay an annual pension or income during the life of one or more
determinate persons in consideration of a capital consisting of
money or other property, whose ownership is transferred to him at
once with the burden of the income. (1802a)
Art. 2022. The annuity may be constituted upon the life of the
person who gives the capital, upon that of a third person, or upon
the lives of various persons, all of whom must be living at the time
the annuity is established.
376
It may also be constituted in favor of the person or persons upon
whose life or lives the contract is entered into, or in favor of another
or other persons. (1803)
Art. 2023. Life annuity shall be void if constituted upon the life of a
person who was already dead at the time the contract was entered
into, or who was at that time suffering from an illness which caused
his death within twenty days following said date. (1804)
Art. 2024. The lack of payment of the income due does not authorize
the recipient of the life annuity to demand the reimbursement of the
capital or to retake possession of the property alienated, unless
there is a stipulation to the contrary; he shall have only a right
judicially to claim the payment of the income in arrears and to
require a security for the future income, unless there is a stipulation
to the contrary. (1805a)
Art. 2025. The income corresponding to the year in which the person
enjoying it dies shall be paid in proportion to the days during which
he lived; if the income should be paid by installments in advance, the
whole amount of the installment which began to run during his life
shall be paid. (1806)
CHAPTER 1
COMPROMISES
377
Art. 2029. The court shall endeavor to persuade the litigants in a
civil case to agree upon some fair compromise. (n)
Art. 2031. The courts may mitigate the damages to be paid by the
losing party who has shown a sincere desire for a compromise. (n)
Art. 2033. Juridical persons may compromise only in the form and
with the requisites which may be necessary to alienate their
property. (1812a)
Art. 2034. There may be a compromise upon the civil liability arising
from an offense; but such compromise shall not extinguish the
public action for the imposition of the legal penalty. (1813)
378
(5) The jurisdiction of courts;
Art. 2037. A compromise has upon the parties the effect and
authority of res judicata; but there shall be no execution except in
compliance with a judicial compromise. (1816)
379
regard it as rescinded and insist upon his original demand. (n)
CHAPTER 2
ARBITRATIONS
Art. 2042. The same persons who may enter into a compromise may
submit their controversies to one or more arbitrators for decision.
(1820a)
Art. 2045. Any clause giving one of the parties power to choose more
arbitrators than the other is void and of no effect. (n)
CHAPTER 1
NATURE AND EXTENT OF GUARANTY
380
Art. 2050. If a guaranty is entered into without the knowledge or
consent, or against the will of the principal debtor, the provisions of
Articles 1236 and 1237 shall apply. (n)
Art. 2053. A guaranty may also be given as security for future debts,
the amount of which is not yet known; there can be no claim against
the guarantor until the debt is liquidated. A conditional obligation
may also be secured. (1825a)
Art. 2054. A guarantor may bind himself for less, but not for more
than the principal debtor, both as regards the amount and the
onerous nature of the conditions.
381
Art. 2057. If the guarantor should be convicted in first instance of a
crime involving dishonesty or should become insolvent, the creditor
may demand another who has all the qualifications required in the
preceding article. The case is excepted where the creditor has
required and stipulated that a specified person should be the
guarantor. (1829a)
CHAPTER 2
EFFECTS OF GUARANTY
Art. 2060. In order that the guarantor may make use of the benefit
of exclusion, he must set it up against the creditor upon the latter's
demand for payment from him, and point out to the creditor
available property of the debtor within Philippine territory, sufficient
to cover the amount of the debt. (1832)
Art. 2061. The guarantor having fulfilled all the conditions required
in the preceding article, the creditor who is negligent in exhausting
the property pointed out shall suffer the loss, to the extent of said
property, for the insolvency of the debtor resulting from such
negligence. (1833a)
382
Art. 2062. In every action by the creditor, which must be against the
principal debtor alone, except in the cases mentioned in Article
2059, the former shall ask the court to notify the guarantor of the
action. The guarantor may appear so that he may, if he so desire, set
up such defenses as are granted him by law. The benefit of
excussion mentioned in Article 2058 shall always be unimpaired,
even if judgment should be rendered against the principal debtor
and the guarantor in case of appearance by the latter. (1834a)
Art. 2065. 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
shares which they are respectively bound to pay, unless solidarity
has been expressly stipulated.
Art. 2066. The guarantor who pays for a debtor must be indemnified
by the latter.
(2) The legal interests thereon from the time the payment was
made known to the debtor, even though it did not earn interest
for the creditor;
383
(3) The expenses incurred by the guarantor after having
notified the debtor that payment had been demanded of him;
Art. 2068. If the guarantor should pay without notifying the debtor,
the latter may enforce against him all the defenses which he could
have set up against the creditor at the time the payment was made.
(1840)
Art. 2069. If the debt was for a period and the guarantor paid it
before it became due, he cannot demand reimbursement of the
debtor until the expiration of the period unless the payment has
been ratified by the debtor. (1841a)
Art. 2070. If the guarantor has paid without notifying the debtor,
and the latter not being aware of the payment, repeats the payment,
the former has no remedy whatever against the debtor, but only
against the creditor. Nevertheless, in case of a gratuitous guaranty,
if the guarantor was prevented by a fortuitous event from advising
the debtor of the payment, and the creditor becomes insolvent, the
debtor shall reimburse the guarantor for the amount paid. (1842a)
Art. 2071. The guarantor, even before having paid, may proceed
against the principal debtor:
(3) When the debtor has bound himself to relieve him from the
guaranty within a specified period, and this period has expired;
(5) After the lapse of ten years, when the principal obligation
has no fixed period for its maturity, unless it be of such nature
384
that it cannot be extinguished except within a period longer
than ten years;
Art. 2073. When there are two or more guarantors of the same
debtor and for the same debt, the one among them who has paid
may demand of each of the others the share which is proportionally
owing from him.
385
CHAPTER 3
EXTINGUISHMENT OF GUARANTY
Art. 2081. The guarantor may set up against the creditor all the
defenses which pertain to the principal debtor and are inherent in
the debt; but not those that are personal to the debtor. (1853)
CHAPTER 4
LEGAL AND JUDICIAL BONDS
Art. 2083. If the person bound to give a bond in the cases of the
preceding article, should not be able to do so, a pledge or mortgage
considered sufficient to cover his obligation shall be admitted in lieu
thereof. (1855)
386
Art. 2084. A judicial bondsman cannot demand the exhaustion of the
property of the principal debtor.
CHAPTER 1
PROVISIONS COMMON TO PLEDGE AND MORTGAGE
Third persons who are not parties to the principal obligation may
secure the latter by pledging or mortgaging their own property.
(1857)
Art. 2087. It is also of the essence of these contracts that when the
principal obligation becomes due, the things in which the pledge or
mortgage consists may be alienated for the payment to the creditor.
(1858)
Art. 2088. The creditor cannot appropriate the things given by way
of pledge or mortgage, or dispose of them. Any stipulation to the
contrary is null and void. (1859a)
387
Therefore, the debtor's heir who has paid a part of the debt cannot
ask for the proportionate extinguishment of the pledge or mortgage
as long as the debt is not completely satisfied.
Neither can the creditor's heir who received his share of the debt
return the pledge or cancel the mortgage, to the prejudice of the
other heirs who have not been paid.
Art. 2091. The contract of pledge or mortgage may secure all kinds
of obligations, be they pure or subject to a suspensive or resolutory
condition. (1861)
CHAPTER 2
PLEDGE
Art. 2094. All movables which are within commerce may be pledged,
provided they are susceptible of possession. (1864)
388
similar documents may also be pledged. The instrument proving the
right pledged shall be delivered to the creditor, and if negotiable,
must be indorsed. (n)
Art. 2096. A pledge shall not take effect against third persons if a
description of the thing pledged and the date of the pledge do not
appear in a public instrument. (1865a)
Art. 2097. With the consent of the pledgee, the thing pledged may be
alienated by the pledgor or owner, subject to the pledge. The
ownership of the thing pledged is transmitted to the vendee or
transferee as soon as the pledgee consents to the alienation, but the
latter shall continue in possession. (n)
Art. 2099. The creditor shall take care of the thing pledged with the
diligence of a good father of a family; he has a right to the
reimbursement of the expenses made for its preservation, and is
liable for its loss or deterioration, in conformity with the provisions
of this Code. (1867)
Art. 2100. The pledgee cannot deposit the thing pledged with a third
person, unless there is a stipulation authorizing him to do so.
389
Art. 2103. Unless the thing pledged is expropriated, the debtor
continues to be the owner thereof.
Nevertheless, the creditor may bring the actions which pertain to the
owner of the thing pledged in order to recover it from, or defend it
against a third person. (1869)
Art. 2104. The creditor cannot use the thing pledged, without the
authority of the owner, and if he should do so, or should misuse the
thing in any other way, the owner may ask that it be judicially or
extrajudicially deposited. When the preservation of the thing
pledged requires its use, it must be used by the creditor but only for
that purpose. (1870a)
Art. 2105. The debtor cannot ask for the return of the thing pledged
against the will of the creditor, unless and until he has paid the debt
and its interest, with expenses in a proper case. (1871)
Art. 2106. If through the negligence or wilful act of the pledgee, the
thing pledged is in danger of being lost or impaired, the pledgor may
require that it be deposited with a third person. (n)
Art. 2108. If, without the fault of the pledgee, there is danger of
destruction, impairment, or diminution in value of the thing pledged,
he may cause the same to be sold at a public sale. The proceeds of
the auction shall be a security for the principal obligation in the
same manner as the thing originally pledged. (n)
390
Art. 2110. If the thing pledged is returned by the pledgee to the
pledgor or owner, the pledge is extinguished. Any stipulation to the
contrary shall be void.
Art. 2112. The creditor to whom the credit has not been satisfied in
due time, may proceed before a Notary Public to the sale of the thing
pledged. This sale shall be made at a public auction, and with
notification to the debtor and the owner of the thing pledged in a
proper case, stating the amount for which the public sale is to be
held. If at the first auction the thing is not sold, a second one with
the same formalities shall be held; and if at the second auction there
is no sale either, the creditor may appropriate the thing pledged. In
this case he shall be obliged to give an acquittance for his entire
claim. (1872a)
Art. 2113. At the public auction, the pledgor or owner may bid. He
shall, moreover, have a better right if he should offer the same
terms as the highest bidder.
The pledgee may also bid, but his offer shall not be valid if he is the
only bidder. (n)
Art. 2114. All bids at the public auction shall offer to pay the
purchase price at once. If any other bid is accepted, the pledgee is
deemed to have been received the purchase price, as far as the
pledgor or owner is concerned. (n)
Art. 2115. The sale of the thing pledged shall extinguish the principal
obligation, whether or not the proceeds of the sale are equal to the
amount of the principal obligation, interest and expenses in a proper
case. If the price of the sale is more than said amount, the debtor
391
shall not be entitled to the excess, unless it is otherwise agreed. If
the price of the sale is less, neither shall the creditor be entitled to
recover the deficiency, notwithstanding any stipulation to the
contrary. (n)
Art. 2116. After the public auction, the pledgee shall promptly advise
the pledgor or owner of the result thereof. (n)
Art. 2117. Any third person who has any right in or to the thing
pledged may satisfy the principal obligation as soon as the latter
becomes due and demandable.(n)
Art. 2118. If a credit which has been pledged becomes due before it
is redeemed, the pledgee may collect and receive the amount due.
He shall apply the same to the payment of his claim, and deliver the
surplus, should there be any, to the pledgor. (n)
Art. 2119. If two or more things are pledged, the pledgee may
choose which he will cause to be sold, unless there is a stipulation to
the contrary. He may demand the sale of only as many of the things
as are necessary for the payment of the debt. (n)
392
laws and regulations concerning them shall be observed, and
subsidiarily, the provisions of this Title. (1873a)
CHAPTER 3
MORTGAGE
393
Art. 2129. The creditor may claim from a third person in possession
of the mortgaged property, the payment of the part of the credit
secured by the property which said third person possesses, in the
terms and with the formalities which the law establishes. (1879)
CHAPTER 4
ANTICHRESIS
Art. 2133. The actual market value of the fruits at the time of the
application thereof to the interest and principal shall be the measure
of such application. (n)
Art. 2134. The amount of the principal and of the interest shall be
specified in writing; otherwise, the contract of antichresis shall be
void. (n)
The sums spent for the purposes stated in this article shall be
deducted from the fruits. (1882)
394
But the latter, in order to exempt himself from the obligations
imposed upon him by the preceding article, may always compel the
debtor to enter again upon the enjoyment of the property, except
when there is a stipulation to the contrary. (1883)
Art. 2137. The creditor does not acquire the ownership of the real
estate for non-payment of the debt within the period agreed upon.
Every stipulation to the contrary shall be void. But the creditor may
petition the court for the payment of the debt or the sale of the real
property. In this case, the Rules of Court on the foreclosure of
mortgages shall apply. (1884a)
Art. 2138. The contracting parties may stipulate that the interest
upon the debt be compensated with the fruits of the property which
is the object of the antichresis, provided that if the value of the
fruits should exceed the amount of interest allowed by the laws
against usury, the excess shall be applied to the principal. (1885a)
Art. 2139. The last paragraph of Article 2085, and Articles 2089 to
2091 are applicable to this contract. (1886a)
CHAPTER 5
CHATTEL MORTGAGE
Art. 2141. The provisions of this Code on pledge, insofar as they are
not in conflict with the Chattel Mortgage Law shall be applicable to
chattel mortgages. (n)
CHAPTER 1
QUASI-CONTRACTS
Art. 2142. Certain lawful, voluntary and unilateral acts give rise to
395
the juridical relation of quasi-contract to the end that no one shall be
unjustly enriched or benefited at the expense of another. (n)
In the first case, the provisions of Articles 1317, 1403, No. 1, and
1404 regarding unauthorized contracts shall govern.
In the second case, the rules on agency in Title X of this Book shall
be applicable. (1888a)
Art. 2145. The officious manager shall perform his duties with all the
diligence of a good father of a family, and pay the damages which
through his fault or negligence may be suffered by the owner of the
property or business under management.
396
Art. 2147. The officious manager shall be liable for any fortuitous
event:
Art. 2150. Although the officious management may not have been
expressly ratified, the owner of the property or business who enjoys
the advantages of the same shall be liable for obligations incurred in
his interest, and shall reimburse the officious manager for the
necessary and useful expenses and for the damages which the latter
may have suffered in the performance of his duties.
Art. 2151. Even though the owner did not derive any benefit and
there has been no imminent and manifest danger to the property or
business, the owner is liable as under the first paragraph of the
preceding article, provided:
397
(2) The property or business is intact, ready to be returned to
the owner. (n)
Art. 2156. If the payer was in doubt whether the debt was due, he
may recover if he proves that it was not due. (n)
Art. 2157. The responsibility of two or more payees, when there has
been payment of what is not due, is solidary. (n)
398
Art. 2159. Whoever in bad faith accepts an undue payment, shall pay
legal interest if a sum of money is involved, or shall be liable for
fruits received or which should have been received if the thing
produces fruits.
399
support to the deceased, said relatives shall reimburse the third
person, should the latter claim reimbursement. (1894a)
Art. 2169. When the government, upon the failure of any person to
comply with health or safety regulations concerning property,
undertakes to do the necessary work, even over his objection, he
shall be liable to pay the expenses.
Art. 2171. The rights and obligations of the finder of lost personal
property shall be governed by Articles 719 and 720.
400
lawlessness, fire, flood, storm or other calamity, any one who
objects to the plan and refuses to contribute to the expenses but is
benefited by the project as executed shall be liable to pay his share
of said expenses.
Art. 2175. Any person who is constrained to pay the taxes of another
shall be entitled to reimbursement from the latter.
CHAPTER 2
QUASI-DELICTS
Art. 2178. The provisions of Articles 1172 to 1174 are also applicable
to a quasi-delict. (n)
Art. 2179. When the plaintiff's own negligence was the immediate
and proximate cause of his injury, he cannot recover damages. But if
his negligence was only contributory, the immediate and proximate
cause of the injury being the defendant's lack of due care, the
plaintiff may recover damages, but the courts shall mitigate the
damages to be awarded. (n)
The father and, in case of his death or incapacity, the mother, are
responsible for the damages caused by the minor children who live
in their company.
401
Guardians are liable for damages caused by the minors or
incapacitated persons who are under their authority and live in their
company.
Art. 2181. Whoever pays for the damage caused by his dependents
or employees may recover from the latter what he has paid or
delivered in satisfaction of the claim. (1904)
402
the use of the due diligence, prevented the misfortune. It is
disputably presumed that a driver was negligent, if he had been
found guilty or reckless driving or violating traffic regulations at
least twice within the next preceding two months.
If the owner was not in the motor vehicle, the provisions of Article
2180 are applicable. (n)
Art. 2186. Every owner of a motor vehicle shall file with the proper
government office a bond executed by a government-controlled
corporation or office, to answer for damages to third persons. The
amount of the bond and other terms shall be fixed by the competent
public official. (n)
403
substances which have not been kept in a safe and adequate
place;
Art. 2194. The responsibility of two or more persons who are liable
for quasi-delict is solidary. (n)
CHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 2196. The rules under this Title are without prejudice to special
provisions on damages formulated elsewhere in this Code.
Compensation for workmen and other employees in case of death,
injury or illness is regulated by special laws. Rules governing
damages laid down in other laws shall be observed insofar as they
are not in conflict with this Code.
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(1) Actual or compensatory;
(2) Moral;
(3) Nominal;
(5) Liquidated; or
Art. 2198. The principles of the general law on damages are hereby
adopted insofar as they are not inconsistent with this Code.
CHAPTER 2
ACTUAL OR COMPENSATORY DAMAGES
405
Art. 2203. The party suffering loss or injury must exercise the
diligence of a good father of a family to minimize the damages
resulting from the act or omission in question.
Art. 2207. If the plaintiff's property has been insured, and he has
received indemnity from the insurance company for the injury or
loss arising out of the wrong or breach of contract complained of,
the insurance company shall be subrogated to the rights of the
insured against the wrongdoer or the person who has violated the
contract. If the amount paid by the insurance company does not fully
406
cover the injury or loss, the aggrieved party shall be entitled to
recover the deficiency from the person causing the loss or injury.
(5) Where the defendant acted in gross and evident bad faith in
refusing to satisfy the plaintiff's plainly valid, just and
demandable claim;
(11) In any other case where the court deems it just and
equitable that attorney's fees and expenses of litigation should
be recovered.
407
Art. 2209. If the obligation consists in the payment of a sum of
money, and the debtor incurs in delay, the indemnity for damages,
there being no stipulation to the contrary, shall be the payment of
the interest agreed upon, and in the absence of stipulation, the legal
interest, which is six per cent per annum. (1108)
Art. 2212. Interest due shall earn legal interest from the time it is
judicially demanded, although the obligation may be silent upon this
point. (1109a)
(1) That the plaintiff himself has contravened the terms of the
contract;
(2) That the plaintiff has derived some benefit as a result of the
contract;
(5) That since the filing of the action, the defendant has done
his best to lessen the plaintiff's loss or injury.
408
CHAPTER 3
OTHER KINDS OF DAMAGES
(10) Acts and actions referred to in Articles 21, 26, 27, 28, 29,
30, 32, 34, and 35.
409
The parents of the female seduced, abducted, raped, or abused,
referred to in No. 3 of this article, may also recover moral damages.
Art. 2222. The court may award nominal damages in every obligation
arising from any source enumerated in Article 1157, or in every case
where any property right has been invaded.
410
Art. 2226. Liquidated damages are those agreed upon by the parties
to a contract, to be paid in case of breach thereof.
Art. 2234. While the amount of the exemplary damages need not be
proved, the plaintiff must show that he is entitled to moral,
temperate or compensatory damages before the court may consider
the question of whether or not exemplary damages should be
awarded. In case liquidated damages have been agreed upon,
although no proof of loss is necessary in order that such liquidated
damages may be recovered, nevertheless, before the court may
consider the question of granting exemplary in addition to the
411
liquidated damages, the plaintiff must show that he would be
entitled to moral, temperate or compensatory damages were it not
for the stipulation for liquidated damages.
CHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 2236. The debtor is liable with all his property, present and
future, for the fulfillment of his obligations, subject to the
exemptions provided by law. (1911a)
CHAPTER 2
CLASSIFICATION OF CREDITS
412
Art. 2241. With reference to specific movable property of the debtor,
the following claims or liens shall be preferred:
(1) Duties, taxes and fees due thereon to the State or any
subdivision thereof;
(8) Credits between the landlord and the tenant, arising from
the contract of tenancy on shares, on the share of each in the
fruits or harvest;
(9) Credits for transportation, upon the goods carried, for the
price of the contract and incidental expenses, until their
delivery and for thirty days thereafter;
413
(10) Credits for lodging and supplies usually furnished to
travellers by hotel keepers, on the movables belonging to the
guest as long as such movables are in the hotel, but not for
money loaned to the guests;
(11) Credits for seeds and expenses for cultivation and harvest
advanced to the debtor, upon the fruits harvested;
(12) Credits for rent for one year, upon the personal property
of the lessee existing on the immovable leased and on the
fruits of the same, but not on money or instruments of credit;
(2) For the unpaid price of real property sold, upon the
immovable sold;
414
(7) Credits annotated in the Registry of Property, in virtue of a
judicial order, by attachments or executions, upon the property
affected, and only as to later credits;
Art. 2244. With reference to other property, real and personal, of the
debtor, the following claims or credits shall be preferred in the order
named:
415
(6) Support during the insolvency proceedings, and for three
months thereafter;
Art. 2245. Credits of any other kind or class, or by any other right or
title not comprised in the four preceding articles, shall enjoy no
preference. (1925)
CHAPTER 3
ORDER OF PREFERENCE OF CREDITS
416
Art. 2247. If there are two or more credits with respect to the same
specific movable property, they shall be satisfied pro rata, after the
payment of duties, taxes and fees due the State or any subdivision
thereof. (1926a)
Art. 2249. If there are two or more credits with respect to the same
specific real property or real rights, they shall be satisfied pro rata,
after the payment of the taxes and assessments upon the immovable
property or real right. (1927a)
Art. 2250. The excess, if any, after the payment of the credits which
enjoy preference with respect to specific property, real or personal,
shall be added to the free property which the debtor may have, for
the payment of the other credits. (1928a)
Art. 2251. Those credits which do not enjoy any preference with
respect to specific property, and those which enjoy preference, as to
the amount not paid, shall be satisfied according to the following
rules:
(2) Common credits referred to in Article 2245 shall be paid pro rata
regardless of dates. (1929a)
TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS
Art. 2252. Changes made and new provisions and rules laid down by
this Code which may prejudice or impair vested or acquired rights in
accordance with the old legislation shall have no retroactive effect.
For the determination of the applicable law in cases which are not
specified elsewhere in this Code, the following articles shall be
observed: (Pars. 1 and 2, Transitional Provisions).
Art. 2253. The Civil Code of 1889 and other previous laws shall
govern rights originating, under said laws, from acts done or events
which took place under their regime, even though this Code may
417
regulate them in a different manner, or may not recognize them. But
if a right should be declared for the first time in this Code, it shall be
effective at once, even though the act or event which gives rise
thereto may have been done or may have occurred under prior
legislation, provided said new right does not prejudice or impair any
vested or acquired right, of the same origin. (Rule 1)
Art. 2255. The former laws shall regulate acts and contracts with a
condition or period, which were executed or entered into before the
effectivity of this Code, even though the condition or period may still
be pending at the time this body of laws goes into effect. (n)
Art. 2256. Acts and contracts under the regime of the old laws, if
they are valid in accordance therewith, shall continue to be fully
operative as provided in the same, with the limitations established in
these rules. But the revocation or modification of these acts and
contracts after the beginning of the effectivity of this Code, shall be
subject to the provisions of this new body of laws. (Rule 2a)
Art. 2258. Actions and rights which came into being but were not
exercised before the effectivity of this Code, shall remain in full force
in conformity with the old legislation; but their exercise, duration
and the procedure to enforce them shall be regulated by this Code
and by the Rules of Court. If the exercise of the right or of the action
418
was commenced under the old laws, but is pending on the date this
Code takes effect, and the procedure was different from that
established in this new body of laws, the parties concerned may
choose which method or course to pursue. (Rule 4)
Art. 2264. The status and rights of natural children by legal fiction
referred to in article 89 and illegitimate children mentioned in Article
287, shall also be acquired by children born before the effectivity of
this Code. (n)
419
Art. 2266. The following shall have not only prospective but also
retroactive effect:
Art. 2267. The following provisions shall apply not only to future
cases but also to those pending on the date this Code becomes
effective:
(1) Article 29, Relative to criminal prosecutions wherein the
accused is acquitted on the ground that his guilt has not been
proved beyond reasonable doubt;
Art. 2268. Suits between members of the same family which are
pending at the time this Code goes into effect shall be suspended,
under such terms as the court may determine, in order that
compromise may be earnestly sought, or, in case of legal separation
proceedings, for the purpose of effecting, if possible, a
reconciliation. (n)
420
REPEALING CLAUSE
Art. 2270. The following laws and regulations are hereby repealed:
(1) Those parts and provisions of the Civil Code of 1889 which
are in force on the date when this new Civil Code becomes
effective:
421