Consolidated Civil Law QQR
Consolidated Civil Law QQR
Consolidated Civil Law QQR
CIVIL LAW
BAR EXAMINATION QUESTIONS
(TRENDING)
COVERAGE 2000 to 2014
659 QUESTIONS
I. Persons
(193 times)
status of an
evidence. The
the lifetime of
on open and
status.
Adoption
(17 times)
Joint adoption (R.A. 8552)
GR: Spouses shall adopt jointly (Article 185,
Family Code); EXC: (i) Spouse adopts the
legitimate child of the other, (ii) Spouse adopts
his/her illegitimate child provided other spouse
signifies
consent,
(iii)
Spouses
legally
separated.
Effect
of
absence,
death,
unsuitability,
remarriage of the surviving parent or
separation of the parents to the parental
authority over the children (Article 212, Family
Code)
dead
for
all
dead
for
all
Unsound mind
Fraud
VICES OF
CONSENT
(Force,
intimidation, undue
influence)
Impotence or STD
(i)
Repeated
physical
violence
against
petitioner, common child, or child of petitioner;
(ii) Compulsion to change religious or political
affiliation of petitioner; (iii) Attempt to corrupt
the petitioner, common child, or child of
petitioner, to engage in prostitution; (iv)
Imprisonment of more than six years, even if
pardoned; (v) Drug addiction or habitual
alcoholism; (vi) Lesbianism or homosexuality;
(vii) Subsequent bigamous marriage in the
Philippines or abroad; (viii) Sexual infidelity or
perversion; (ix) Attempt against the life of the
petitioner; or (x) Unjustifiable abandonment
for more than one year.
Annulment
Characteristics
Use of Surnames
(7 times)
Ground
When to file
No Legal Capacity
to Marry
II. SUCCESSION
(85 times)
Testamentary
6
Will
Theory of Concurrence
Extrinsic Validity
Theory of Exclusion
Viewpoint of place/country
Distribution of Inheritance
Legitime
Part of testators property reserved by law for
compulsory heirs.
Common Rules
(a) Nearer relatives excludes farther relatives;
(b) All of the same class inherit in equal
shares; (c) Legitime of surviving spouse is
always from the Disposable Free Portion; (d)
Legitime of illegitimate child is always from the
Disposable Free Portion; (e) Remainder shall
always form part of Disposable Free Portion; (f)
Illegitimate grandparents and other illegitimate
ascendants cannot inherit from the (illegitimate
child) testator.
Holographic Will
[Article 888]
Legitime
1/2
[Article 893]
Survivor
LPA
SS
[Article 892]
In legal separation, surviving spouse may
inherit if deceased spouse had given cause for
the same.
Survivor
1LC
SS
[Article 899]
Survivor
LPA
SS
IC
Legitime
1/2
1/4
[Article 897]
Survivor
2 or more LC
SS
Legitime
1/2
= 1 LC
Legitime
1/2
1/4 or = 1LC
1/2 of 1 LC
Legitime
1/2
[Article 894]
Survivor
SS
IC
[Article 889]
Each Parent or Ascendant will equally divide
thelegitime received.
Survivor
LPA
Legitime
1/2
1/8
1/4
[Article 901]
Legitime
1/2
Legitime
1/3
1/3
[Article 900]
1/3 if marriage in articulo mortis and the
testator died within 3 months after the
marriage.
Legitime
1/2
All IC share
Survivor
LPA
IC
Legitime
1/2
1/4
Legitime
1/2
Legitime
1/4
1/4
Survivors
Survivor
Adopter
Legitime
1
Provision
LC
SS
Share
Legitime
1/2
1/2
2 or more LC
SS
Legitime
1/3
1/3
1/3
Survivors
LPA
SS
LPA
SS
IC
IP
SS
SS
BSNN
Share
Provision
(2)
(3)
(4)
and
Art. 983
Same as
in Testate
Art.895
2 or more LC
SS
IC
Testate
Art.895
General Provisions
(7 times)
Acceptance and Repudiation of Inheritance
(Article 1041-1057, NCC)
Requisites
Effects
(a) Deprivation of compulsory heir; (b)
Children/descendants of the persondisinherited
shall take his or her place and shall preserve
the rights of compulsory heirs with respect to
the legitime; and (c) Disinherited parent shall
not have the usufruct or administration of the
property which constitutes the legitime.
Common Provisions
(Article 1015-1105) (4 times)
Testamentary succession
10
Intestate succession
1. Things corporeal property
2. Rights real or personal, res of rights
corporeal or incorporeal
Possession
(14 times)
Requisites
Elements
Intention
to
Classes of possession
(1) In ones own name or of another; (2) In
the concept of owner or holder; (3) Good faith
or bad faith
III. Property
(85 times)
Ownership
(16 times)
donor
knows
of
Beneficial Ownership
Forms
Naked Ownership
Enjoyment of all the benefits and privileges of
ownership.
11
Kinds
Easements
(12 times)
Continuous and discontinuous (Article 615,
NCC)
Continuous: not necessary that use be
incessant.
Distinction lies in the fact that in continuous
easements, exercise or enjoyment can be had
without intervention of man; while in
discontinuous
easements,
requires
intervention of man.
Requisites
12
Party wall
Common wall which separates two estates, built
by common agreement as the dividing line such
that it occupies a portion of both estates on
equal parts.
Drainage of building
Right to divert the rain waters from ones own
roof to the neighboring estate.
Requisites
Easement
NCC)
against
nuisance(Article 694,
Requisite
(1) Can dispose the water; (2) Sufficient for
use intended; (3) Most convenient and least
onerous to third persons; and (4) Indemnify
servient estate owner.
Right of way (Article 649, NCC)
Co-ownership
(8 times)
Requisites
Restrictions
Characteristics
13
Termination
Quieting of Title
(Article 476) (1 time)
Act,
omission,
establishment,
business,
condition of property, or anything else which (i)
Injures or endangers the health or safety of
others; (ii) Annoys or offends the senses;
(iii) Shocks, defies or disregards decency or
morality; (iv) Obstructs or interferes with the
free passage of any public highway or street, or
any body of water; or (v) Hinders or impairs
the use of property.
Usufruct
(1 time)
Remedies
Accession
(6 times)
Characteristics
Classifications
IV. Obligations
(52 times)
14
1. Payment or performance;
2. Loss of the thing due;
3. Condonation or remission of the debt;
4. Confusion or merger of the rights of
creditor and debtor;
5. Compensation;
6. Novation;
7. Annulment;
8. Rescission;
9. Fulfillment of a resolutory condition;
10. Prescription;
11. Renunciation or waiver by the obligee or
creditor;
12. Compromise;
13. Expiration of the resolutory term or
period;
14. Death of one of the contracting parties
in purely personal obligations;
15. The will of one of the contracting
parties in certain contracts; or
16. The agreement of both contracting
parties or what is sometimes known as
mutual assent or dissent.
Solidary obligation
Anyone of the debtors can be held liable for the
entire obligation, and anyone of the creditors is
entitled to demand the entire obligation.
Elements of an obligations
(2 times)
(1) Juridical or legal tie: binds the parties; may
arise from either bilateral or unilateral acts of
persons;(2) Active subject: the obligee or
creditor;(3) Passive subject: the obligor or
debtor;(4) Fact, prestation or service: the
object of the obligation.
Sources of obligations
(Article 1157) (2 times)
(1) Law; (2) Contract; (3) Quasi-contract (4)
Acts or omissions punished by law; (5) Quasidelict
Classification of obligations
(Article 1179-1230) (8 times)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
V. Contracts
(43 times)
Defective Contracts
(17 times)
15
Contracts
(Article
1380-1389,
Effect of contracts
(11 times)
or
assailed
by
third
(1) Consent;
Consideration.
or
assailed
by
Object;
(3)
Cause
or
(2)
Cannot be
persons.
by
Cannot be
persons.
either
third
Kinds of contracts
16
VI. Sales
(44 times)
Elements
Essential for validity:
(a)
Consent;
Object/
Determinate subject matter;
Consideration
(b)
(c)
17
An
express
or
implied
statement
or
representation made by the seller of goods, as
part of the contract of sale, having reference to
the character, quality, or title, of the goods,
where he promises or undertakes to insure that
certain facts shall be as he represents.
In case of breach the buyer may refuse to
proceed with the contract or proceed with the
contract and waive the condition.
Breach of Contract
(2 times)
18
VII. CREDIT
TRANSACTIONS (33 times)
Real Mortgage
(4 times)
Objects
Kinds
(1) Voluntary; (2) Legal; and (3) Equitable.
Transfer of Ownership
(1 time)
Essential requisites:
(1) Secure fulfillment of the principal
obligation;
(2)
Absolute
ownership
by
mortgagor of the thing mortgaged;(3) Free
disposal of property; (4) Cannot exist without a
valid obligation;(5) Thing mortgaged may be
alienated for payment of the principal
obligation, which is due; and (6) Public
19
dulyrecorded.
Foreclosure of mortgage
Kinds
Kinds of redemption
Surety
Relationship where the principal has undertaken
an obligation and a surety is also under a direct
and primary obligation or other duty to the
obligee, who is entitled to but one performance,
and as between the two who are bound, the
second, rather than the first should perform.
20
Subject matter
(1) Only movable/personal; (2)Judicial deposit
may cover movable as well as immovable
property, its purpose being to protect the rights
of the parties to a suit.
Principal purpose: Safekeeping of the thing
delivered
Extinguishment
Extinguishment
Quasi-Contracts
(3 times)
Kinds
(1)judicial - attachment or seizure of property
in litigation is ordered and (2)extrajudicial(i)
voluntary- delivery is made by the depositor or
by two or more persons each of whom believes
himself entitled to the thing deposited; and (ii)
necessary- made in compliance with a legal
obligation, or on the occasion of any calamity,
or by travelers in hotels and inns or by
travelers with common carriers.
Antichresis(Arts. 2123-1239)
(1 time)
SolutioIndebiti(Articles 2154-2163)
Characteristics
21
Foreclosure
1. Public sale. 2. Private sale;There is nothing
illegal, immoral or against public order in an
agreement for the private sale of personal
properties covered by chattel mortgage.
Period to Foreclose
General Provisons
1. Debtor is liable with all his property, present
and future, for the fulfillment of his obligations,
subject to exemptions provided by law.
Exempt property
Present and Future property of a debtor who
obtains a discharge from his debts on account
of insolvency, is not liable for the unsatisfied
claims of his creditors with said property;
Property in custodialegis and of public
dominion.
2. Insolvency shall
Insolvency Law
be
governed
by
VIII. GENERAL
PRINCIPLES (34 times)
Effect and Application of Laws
(Civil Code) (32 times)
the
and
22
Book I: Torts
(28 times)
Abuse of Right
Elements:
(1)legal right or duty; (2) duty or right
exercised in bad faith; (3) sole intent of
prejudicing or injuring another.
Principle of DamnumAbsqueInjuria
Test of negligence
Classification
of
Torts-negligence,
intentional, strict liability (2 times)
Negligent torts: It involves voluntary acts or
omissions which result in injury to others,
without intending to cause the same.
Intentional torts:The actor desires to cause the
consequences of his act or believes the
consequences are substantially certain to result
therefrom. (Blacks Law Dictionary)
Civil
wrong;
persons
conduct
causes
compensable injury to a person, property or
recognized interest of another, in violation of a
duty imposed by law.
Right
Prevention
Injury
Act
Fault or Negligence
Omission of diligence required by the nature of
the obligation and corresponds with the
circumstances of the person, time and place.
(Article 1173)
Excusable negligence
24
Elements
Nominal Damages
Awarded for the infraction of a legal right,
where the extent of the loss is not shown, or
where the right is one not dependent upon loss
25
The
spouse,
legitimate
and
illegitimate
descendants and ascendants of the deceased
may demand moral damages for mental
anguish by reason of the death of the
deceased.
Non-registrable Properties
Property of Public Dominion
(2 times)
Forest or timberland
(a) Foreshore land and seashore; (b)
Mangrove swamps; (c) Mineral Lands; (d)
Military Reservations; (e) Navigable rivers
streams & creeks; (f) Lakes; (g) Watershed;
(h) Grazing Lands; (i) Previously titled Land;
(j) Alluvial Deposit along river when manmade.
Subsequent Registration
Torrens System
(6 times)
System for registration of land under which, the
court may, after appropriate proceedings, direct
the register of deeds to issue a certificate of
title.
Purpose
XI. Lease
(12 times)
Original Registration
(4 times)
Original certificate of title (OCT) is the First title
issued in the name of the registered owner by
virtue of judicial or administrative proceedings,
26
Common Carriers
(Articles 1732-1766) (1 time)
27
Forcible Entry
Unlawful Detainer
Defamation
Claim against the estate by a minor or
mentally incapacitated (from removal of
such incapacity).
Actions(for/based on):
28
Actions(for/based on):
(in years)
Mortgage action
Written contract
Obligation Created by Law
Judgment
Forcible Entry
Unlawful Detainer
Defamation
XII. Prescription
Injury upon rights
Prov
isio
n
Oral contracts
(NC
C)
Immovable
property
10 years
30 years
114
6
114
9
Quasi-contracts
Recovery of movables
4 years
Rule
74
Sec.
1
Quasi- delict
Acquisitive Prescription
Movable
property by
possession
2
from
death
(10 times)
11
47
Rule
74
Sec.
5
(NC
C)
1132
from
when lost
114
0
1134
1137
Mortgage action
Written contract
Obligation Created by
Law
Judgment
10
11
42
30
114
1
Imprescri
ptible
114
3
114
4
Right of Way
Must be
brought
within
Pro
visi
on
29
XIII. Partnership
(10 times)
Dissolution
(2 times)
Limited Partnership
(Article 1843) (4 times)
Contract of Partnership
(2 times)
XIV. Agency
(6 times)
Definition of Agency
(2 times)
A contract of agency is one whereby a person
(agent) binds himself to render some service or
to do something in representation or on behalf
of another (principal), with the consent or
authority of the latter. (Article 1868)
Powers
30
Modes of Extinguishment
(1 time)
Article 1919
1.Expiration of the period; 2. Death, civil
interdiction, insanity or insolvency of the
principal or the agent; 3.withdrawal of the
agent
Agency couched in general terms
An agency couched in general terms comprises
only acts of administration, even if the principal
should state that he withholds no power or that
the agent may execute such acts as he may
31
shall
be
32
33