Defective Contracts
Defective Contracts
Defective Contracts
Defective contracts are those failed to meet or partially meet the legal test of validity because
they lack some essential element, or the parties thereto lack the capacity to contract, or there is a vice in
the consent of one of the parties or lesion in certain case. The defective contracts in the order of their
defectiveness are as follows: rescissible, voidable, unenforceable and void or inexistent contracts.
RECESSIBLE CONTRACTS
Concept and requisites of recission. Recission is a remedy granted by law to the contracting
parties or their successors in interest or even to third persons, in order to secure reparation of damages
caused by them by a contract, even if the contract is valid, by means of restoration of things to their
condition prior to the celebration of the contract. In order the recission may be availed of by a party, the
elements that must concur are: (1) a case especially provided by law; (2) mutual restitution of what the
parties have received under the contract; (3) object of the contract must not be in the possession of a
third person who acquired it in good faith and for value; (4) no other legal remedy except by recission;
and (5) action has not prescribed.
Contracts that may be rescinded. The following contracts are expressly provided by law to
be rescissible.
1. Those which are entered into by guardians whenever the wards whom they represent suffer
lesion by more than one-fourth of the value of things which are the object thereof;
2. Those agreed in representation of absentees if the latter suffer the lesion stated in the
preceding number;
3. Those undertaken in fraud of creditors when the latter cannot in any other manner collect the
claims due them;
4. Those which refer to things under litigation if entered into by defendant without the knowledge
and approval of the litigants or competent judicial authority.
5. Payments made under a contract where the debtor is in the state insolvency for obligations to
whose fulfilment, he could not be compelled at the time they were effected (Article 1382); and
6. All other contracts especially declared by law to be subject to recission.
Meaning of lesion. Lesion is the damage or injury to the party asking for recission by reason of the
fact that the price is unjust or inadequate. To constitute lesion the damage must be substantial because
mere inadequacy of price, unless shocking to the conscience is not a sufficient ground for setting aside a
sale, if there is no showing that in the event of resale a better price can be secured.
Those undertaken in fraud of creditors, etc. to enable the creditors to exercise the remedy
of rescission , it must be proven by the prejudiced creditor that he cannot collect the claims due in any
other manner. Thus, if X to evade the paying his debt to Y amounting to Php50,000 enters into a
contract selling his only Ford Fierra for the same amount to Z, Y, can file an action for rescission as the
contract was made to defraud him – a creditor.
Those referring the things in litigation. A thing is considered to be in litigation when the
respondent has already received service of summons from the court taking cognizance of the case. Thus,
if X sues Y for the recovery of a car and pending trial the same is sold by Y to Z without the approval of X
or the court, the sale is rescissible.
Payment under the contract of insolvency. Insolvency here need not be a judicially declared
one, but may be under a situation where the debtor is publicly known to have defaulted in the payment
of obligations due to his various creditors. Thus, if a debtor, being insolvent, pays an obligation which is
not yet due, a creditor at the time of payment may ask the court to rescind payment.
Contracts declared by law . subject to rescission. These comprises all other contracts
scattered in the Code, like judicial or extra-judicial partition where one of the heirs received a share less
than one-fourth of his legitimate share (Articles 1098), an unpaid seller of things (Articles 1526 and
1524), and breach of reciprocal obligations under Article 1191, among others.