Thunga Chui Vs
Thunga Chui Vs
Thunga Chui Vs
QUE BENTEC
GRN 929; October 8, 1903
1. CONTRACT; ENFORCEABILITY; FORMAL REQUISITES.-When the essential
requisites for the existence of a contract are present, the contract is binding
upon the parties whatever may be the amount involved, and, although
required to be in writing by article 1280 of the Civil Code, the plaintiff can
maintain an action on the verbal agreement without first bringing an action
under article 1279 to compel the execution of a written instrument.
2. ID.; CIVIL PARTNERSHIP.-An oral contract of partnership under the Civil
Code is valid and binding between the parties, even if the amount of capital
contributed is in excess of the sum of 1,500 pesetas.
3. ID.; MERCANTILE PARTNERSHIP; FORMAL REQUISITES.-Although a
mercantile partnership, to affect persons, must be reduced to writing and
recorded in the mercantile registry, a verbal contract of partnership is good
as between the parties themselves.
This case was before this court in November, 1902. It was then decided that
the only question open to the appellant was whether the findings of fact
made by the trial judge in his decision supported the judgment. (Thunga
Chuirs. Que Bentec, I Off. Gaz., p. 4.)1
The appellant claims that the partnership contract was required to be in
writing by article 119. of the Code of Commerce and, the amount of the
capital being more than 1,500 pesetas, by article 1280 of the Civil Code and
article 51 of the Code of Commerce.
We think it fairly appears from the decision that the contract of partnership
was not in writing. Whether this was a civil or a commercial partnership we
consider immaterial, for in neither case do we think that the contention of
the appellant can prevail.
1. Considered as a civil partnership, that part of article 1280 of the Civil Code
applicable to the case is as follows:
"All other contracts, on which the amount of the prestacioncs of one or of the
two contracting parties exceed 1,500 pesetas, must also be drawn in writing,
even when they are private documents."
Articles 1278 and 1279 of the same code are as follows:
"ART.278. Contracts shall be binding, whatever the form may be in which
they have been entered into, provided the essential conditions required for
their validity are present.
"ART. 1279. When the law exacts the execution of a deed or other special
form for making effectual suitable obligations of a contract, the contracting
parties may compel each other to comply with such forms, from the moment
in which consent and the other requirements, necessary for their validity,
have taken place."
The plaintiff contributed to the partnership 1,000 pesos and the defendant
2,000, and it is therefore claimed by the latter that the case falls under
article 1280, and that before the plaintiff can maintain any action on the
verbal contract he must proceed under article 1279 to compel the defendant
to reduce it to writing. Whatever may be said of earlier decisions of the
supreme court of Spain upon the proper construction of these three articles,
the later ones have, we think, settled the question involved against the claim
of the appellant.
In the judgment of May 3, 1897, the court said:
"Article 1279 does not impose an obligation, but confers a privilege upon
both contracting parties, and the fact that plaintiff has not made use of same
does not bar his action."
In the judgment of October 19, 1901 (Alcubilla, Appendix, 1902, p.139), it
appeared that the plaintiff, Doa Ana Laborda, agreed with the defendant,
Don Nemesio Alamanzon, to leave the employment which she then had Ana
to enter the defendant's service, and he agreed that if she left his service he
would pay her during life an annuity equal to the salary which she was
receiving in her former employment. This contract was verbal. Having been
dismissed, she sued for several months' salary and the annuity. The
judgment of the audiencia was in her favor, and the defendant removed the
case to the Supreme Court, assigning as error that the court had infringed
article 1280. The judgment was affirmed, the court saying:
"Contracts are binding and therefore enforceable reciprocally by the
contracting parties, whatever may be the form in which the contract has
been entered into, provided that the essential conditions for their validity are
present.
The observance of this general rule, expressly established by article 1278 of
the Civil Code, is not in opposition to the provisions of the two following
articles, as this Supreme Court has repeatedly held, and especially in its
judgment of July 4, 1899. Article 1280 is limited to an enumeration of the
acts -and contracts which should be reduced to writing, in a public or private
document, Article 1279, far from making, the enforceability of the contract
dependent upon any special extrinsic form, recognizes its enforceability by
the mere act of granting to the contracting parties an adequate remedy
change in the law in this respect, that article would have been retained. But
as it appears from the preface cited below, the intention was to change that
provision.
The most reliable commentary on this Code is the preface attached to the
Code of the Peninsula of 1885. Therein is declared the meaning of the law,
and upon the question here at issue are made the following statements:
"The provisions of the projected Code with respect to the different manners
and forms under which mercantile partnerships can be organized are based
upon similar principles. These principles may be reduced to three, to wit:
Absolute lack of restriction on the part of associations to organize as they
may see fit; complete absence of governmental intervention in the interior
regime of these entities; publicity of such partnership matters as may be of
interest to third persons. * * * in consequence of the third principle, i. e., the
guaranty of the interest of third persons, it is provided that, although every
contract of partnership is binding upon the associates in whatsoever manner
it may appear the contract has been entered into, it is not so with respect to
outsiders until such time as the contract is evidenced by a public writing
recorded in the Mercantile Registry, in which office, furthermore, must be
recorded all contracts introducing reforms into the original contract of
partnership, the emission of shares and bonds payable to bearer, and the
dissolution of partnership. * * * Although the- projected Code does not
impose any penalty or establish any coercive measures in order to compel
the associates to make public the organization of the partnership by means
of the Mercantile Registry, it holds all persons directly in charge of the
management of the company personally liable for all damages which a
failure to comply with this requisite may cause to third persons, who in no
case will be bound by the terms or conditions of the contract of partnership
of the contents of which they are ignorant. But for this same reason the
partners can not avail themselves of this lack of publicity, for they having full
knowledge of the terms and conditions of the agreement by which the
partnership is created, it is binding upon them from the very moment of its
celebration. This is the doctrine of the projected Code, in this respect
repealing the present Code, which establishes a contrary principle."
In the case of Prautch, Scholes & Co vs. Hernandez (1 Off. Gaz., 203)1 we
held that a commercial partnership which had not complied with article 119
could not maintain an action in its partnership name against a third person.
That case is consistent with our present holding.
There being no provision of the Code of Commerce which requires the
contract of partnership to be in any particular form as between the partners,
this case does not fall within the terms of article 52 of this Code, and that
article is not applicable.