Extinguishment of Obligations
Extinguishment of Obligations
Extinguishment of Obligations
OF OBLIGATIONS
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Art. 1231. Obligations are extinguished:
(1) By payment or performance:
(2) By the loss of the thing due:
(3) By the condonation or remission of the debt;
(4) By the confusion or merger of the rights of creditor and debtor;
(5) By compensation;
(6) By novation.
Other causes of extinguishment of obligations, such as annulment, rescission,
fulfillment of a resolutory condition, and prescription, are governed elsewhere in
this Code. (1156a)
SECTION 1. – Payment or Performance
Art. 1232. Payment means not only the delivery of money but also the
performance, in any other manner, of an obligation.
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.
SECTION 1. – Payment or Performance
Art. 1234. If the obligation has been substantially performed in good
faith, the obligor may recover as though there had been a strict and
complete fulfillment, less damages suffered by the obligee.
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.
SECTION 1. – Payment or Performance
Art. 1236. The creditor is not bound to accept payment or performance
by a third person who has no interest in the fulfillment of the
obligation, unless there is a stipulation to the contrary.
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.
SECTION 1. – Payment or Performance
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.
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.
SECTION 1. – Payment or Performance
Art. 1239. In obligations to give, payment made by one who does not
have the free disposal of the thing due and capacity to alienate it shall
not be valid, without prejudice to the provisions of Article 1427 under
the Title on “Natural Obligations.”
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.
SECTION 1. – Payment or Performance
Art. 1241. Payment to a person who is incapacitated to administer his property
shall be valid if he has kept the thing delivered, or insofar as the payment has been
beneficial to him.
Payment made to a third person shall also be valid insofar as it has redounded to
the benefit of the creditor. Such benefit to the creditor need not be proved in the
following cases:
(1) If after the payment, the third person acquires the creditor’s rights;
(2) If the creditor ratifies the payment to the third person;
(3) If by the creditor’s conduct, the debtor has been led to believe that the third
person had authority to receive the payment.
SECTION 1. – Payment or Performance
Art. 1242. Payment made in good faith to any person in possession of
the credit shall release the debtor. (1164)
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.
SECTION 1. – Payment or Performance
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.
In the meantime, the action derived from the original obligation shall be held in
the abeyance.
SECTION 1. – Payment or Performance
Art. 1250. In case an extraordinary inflation or deflation of the currency
stipulated should supervene, the value of the currency at the time of
the establishment of the obligation shall be the basis of payment,
unless there is an agreement to the contrary.
SECTION 1. – Payment or Performance
Art. 1251. Payment shall be made in the place designated in the obligation.
There being no express stipulation and if the undertaking is to deliver a determinate thing, the
payment shall be made wherever the thing might be at the moment the obligation was
constituted.
In any other case the place of payment shall be the domicile of the debtor.
If the debtor changes his domicile in bad faith or after he has incurred in delay, the additional
expenses shall be borne by him.
These provisions are without prejudice to venue under the Rules of Court.
SUBSECTION 1. – Application of Payments
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.
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.
SUBSECTION 2. – Payment by Cession
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.
SUBSECTION 3. – Tender of Payment and
Consignation
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.
SUBSECTION 3. – Tender of Payment and
Consignation
Consignation alone shall produce the same effect in the following
cases:
(1) When the creditor is absent or unknown, or does not appear at the
place of payment;
(2) When he is incapacitated to receive the payment at the time it is
due;
(3) When, without just cause, he refuses to give a receipt;
(4) When two or more persons claim the same right to collect;
(5) When the title of the obligation has been lost.
SUBSECTION 3. – Tender of Payment and
Consignation
Art. 1258. Consignation shall be made by depositing the things due at
the disposal of judicial authority, before whom the tender of payment
shall be proved, in a proper case, and the announcement of the
consignation in other cases.
The consignation having been made, the interested parties shall also be
notified thereof.
SUBSECTION 3. – Tender of Payment and
Consignation
Art. 1259. The expenses of consignation, when properly made, shall be
charged against the creditor. (1178)
Art. 1260. Once the consignation has been duly made, the debtor may
ask the judge to order the cancellation of the obligation.
Before the creditor has accepted the consignation, or before a judicial
declaration that the consignation has been properly made, the debtor
may withdraw the thing or the sum deposited, allowing the obligation
to remain in force.
SUBSECTION 3. – Tender of Payment and
Consignation
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.
SECTION 2. – Loss of the Thing Due
Art. 1262. An obligation which consists in the delivery of a determinate
thing shall be extinguished if it should be lost or destroyed without the
fault of the debtor, and before he has incurred in delay.
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.
SECTION 3. – Condonation or Remission of
the Debt
Art. 1270. Condonation or remission is essentially gratuitous, and
requires the acceptance by the obligor. It may be made expressly or
impliedly.
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
SECTION 3. – Condonation or Remission of
the Debt
Art. 1271. The delivery of a private document evidencing a credit, made
voluntarily by the creditor to the debtor, implies the renunciation of the
action which the former had against the latter.
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.
SECTION 3. – Condonation or Remission of
the Debt
Art. 1274. It is presumed that the accessory obligation of pledge has
been remitted when the thing pledged, after its delivery to the creditor,
is found in the possession of the debtor, or of a third person who owns
the thing.
SECTION 4. – Confusion or Merger of
Rights
Art. 1275. The obligation is extinguished from the time the characters
of creditor and debtor are merged in the same person. (1192a)
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.
SECTION 4. – Confusion or Merger of
Rights
Art. 1277. Confusion does not extinguish a joint obligation except as
regards the share corresponding to the creditor or debtor in whom the
two characters concur.
SECTION 5. – Compensation
Art. 1278. Compensation shall take place when two persons, in their
own right, are creditors and debtors of each other.
SECTION 5. – Compensation
Art. 1279. In order that compensation may be proper, it is necessary:
(1) That each one of the obligors be bound principally, and that he be at the
same time a principal creditor of the other;
(2) That both debts consist in a sum of money, or if the things due are
consumable, they be of the same kind, and also of the same quality if the
latter has been stated;
(3) That the two debts be due;
(4) That they be liquidated and demandable;
(5) That over neither of them there be any retention or controversy,
commenced by third persons and communicated in due time to the debtor.
SECTION 5. – Compensation
Art. 1280. Notwithstanding the provisions of the preceding article, the
guarantor may set up compensation as regards what the creditor may
owe the principal debtor.
Art. 1281. Compensation may be total or partial. When the two debts
are of the same amount, there is a total compensation.
SECTION 5. – Compensation
Art. 1282. The parties may agree upon the compensation of debts
which are not yet due.
Art. 1283. If one of the parties to a suit over an obligation has a claim
for damages against the other, the former may set it off by proving his
right to said damages and the amount thereof.
SECTION 5. – Compensation
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.
SECTION 5. – Compensation
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.
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.
SECTION 5. – Compensation
Art. 1286. Compensation takes place by operation of law, even though
the debts may be payable at different places, but there shall be an
indemnity for expenses of exchange or transportation to the place of
payment.
SECTION 5. – Compensation
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.
SECTION 5. – Compensation
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.
SECTION 6. – Novation
Art. 1291. Obligations may be modified by:
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.
SECTION 6. – Novation
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)
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.