Law On Sales: Atty. Lilibeth Davis Gabutero, CPA, MBA
Law On Sales: Atty. Lilibeth Davis Gabutero, CPA, MBA
Law On Sales: Atty. Lilibeth Davis Gabutero, CPA, MBA
• In the first, after delivery has been made, the seller has
lost ownership and cannot recover it unless the
contract is resolved or rescinded; in the second, since
the seller retains ownership, despite delivery, he is
enforcing and not rescinding the contract if he seeks to
oust the buyer for failure to pay.
Requisites of a Valid Subject Matter
• It must be existing, having potential existence, a
future thing, or contingent or subject to resolutory
condition;
• It must be licit;
• [NOTE: If the buyer has already accepted, but the seller does not know yet of
the acceptance, the seller may still withdraw
• FACTS: On Sept. 13, 1951, Atkins, Kroll and Co. offered to the
respondent 1,000 cartons of sardines, subject to reply by Sept.
23, 1951. The respondent accepted the offer unconditionally,
and delivered his letter of acceptance on Sept. 21, 1951.
• This is why Art. 1405 of the Civil Code provides that contracts infringing the
Statute of Frauds are ratified, among other ways, by the acceptance of the
benefits under them.
• A sold to B in a private instrument a parcel of land for P5,000.
B now wants A to place the contract in a public instrument so
that B could have the same registered in the Registry of
Property. Is B given the right to demand the execution of the
public instrument?
• ANS.: Yes. Under Art. 1357: “If the law requires a document
or other special form, as in the acts and con- tracts
enumerated in Art. 1358, the contracting parties may compel
each other to observe that form, once the contract has been
perfected. This right may be exercised simultaneously with
the action upon the contract.”
• Art. 1357 can be availed of provided:
• a) the contract is VALID (Solis v. Barraso, 53 Phil. 912);
and
• b) the contract is ENFORCEABLE, that is, it does not
violate the Statute of Frauds.
• Therefore, in the problem given, it is clear that B may
compel A to execute the needed public instrument.
• A sold to B a particular gold pen worth exactly P5,000.
To be enforceable, does the sale have to be in writing?
• ANS.: Yes, although the amount is only P250 and therefore less
than the minimum of P500, still the contract must be in writing
in view of the fact that under the first agreement referred to
under the Statute of Frauds, “an agreement that by its terms is
not to be performed within a year from the making thereof”
the same must be in writing to be enforceable.
• A bought two pens from B each worth P300. To be
enforceable does the contract have to be in writing?
• ANS.: It depends:
• 1) If the sale is indivisible (as when A would not have
bought one pen without the other), the sale must be in
writing for the total sum is P600.
• 2) If the sale is divisible, the important amount is P300
and, therefore, need not be in writing in order to be
enforceable
The Sales Tax
• Even if the object sold has not yet been delivered, once
there has been a meeting of the minds, the sale is
perfected and, therefore, the sales tax is already due. It
accrues on perfection, not on the consummation of the
sale.
Effect of Perfection
• After perfection the parties must now comply with
their mutual obligations. Thus, for example, the buyer
can now compel the seller to deliver to him the object
purchased. In the meantime, the buyer has only the
personal, not a real right. Hence, if the seller sells
again a parcel of land to a stranger who is in good
faith, the proper remedy of the buyer would be to sue
for damages.
Art. 1477. The ownership of the thing sold shall be
transferred to the vendee upon the actual or
constructive delivery thereof.
• If the object was lost after delivery to the buyer, clearly the
buyer bears the loss. (Res perit domino — the owner bears
the loss.)
• ANS.: No, Ricardo does not have to pay for the car. There is in
fact no valid contract of sale for at the moment of presumed
perfection (today), there was no more subject matter (the car
having been destroyed yesterday). Eugene, as owner, bears the
loss of the car.
• Art. 1482. Whenever earnest money is given in a con-
tract of sale, it shall be considered as part of the price
and as proof of the perfection of the contract.
(Note: The earnest money here of P50,000 must not be confused with the
money given as consideration for an option. Earnest money applies to a
perfected sale; the money is part of the purchase price; the buyer is
required to pay the balance. Upon the other hand, option money applies
to a sale not yet perfected; the money is not part of the purchase price;
the would-be buyer is not required to buy.)
If Sale Is Made Thru an Agent
• The sale of a piece of land or interest therein when
made thru an agent is void (not merely unenforceable)
unless the agent’s authority is in writing. (Art. 1874,
Civil Code). This is true even if the sale itself is in a
public instrument, or even registered.
• (1) The guardian, the property of the person or per- sons who
may be under his guardianship;
• (2) Agents, the property whose administration or sale may have
been entrusted to them, unless the consent of the principal has
been given;
• (3) Executors and administrators, the property of the estate
under administration;
• (4) Public officers and employees, the property of the
State or of any subdivision thereof, or of any
government- owned or controlled corporation or
institution, the administration of which has been
entrusted to them; this provision shall apply to judges
and government experts who, in any manner
whatsoever, take part in the sale;
• (5) Justices, judges, prosecuting attorneys, clerks of superior
and inferior courts, and other officers and employees
connected with the administration of justice, the property
and rights in litigation or levied upon an execution before the
court within whose jurisdiction or territory they exercise their
respective functions; this prohibition includes the act of
acquiring by assignment and shall apply to lawyers, with
respect to the property and rights which may be the object of
any litigation in which they may take part by virtue of their
profession;
• 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 pro-
portion to the total sum agreed upon.
• I sold to Maria my house in Zamboanga which,
unknown to both of us, had been completely
destroyed last night.
• ANS.: The piano not having been delivered to him by A, B has only a
PERSONAL RIGHT to demand its delivery for it is generally only delivery
that transfers the real right of ownership. Not having any right of
ownership over the piano, B may not legally oppose the attachment
levied thereon by C.
DELIVERY OF THE THING SOLD
• Art. 1497. The thing sold shall be understood as delivered, when it is
placed in the control and possession of the vendee.
• Meaning of Tradition
• Tradition, or delivery, is a mode of acquiring ownership, as a
consequence of certain contracts such as sale, by virtue of which,
actually or constructively, the object is placed in the control and
possession of the vendee.
Kinds of Delivery or Tradition
• (a) Actual or real. (Art. 1497, Civil Code).
• (b) Legal or constructive
• 1) legal formalities. (Art. 1498, Civil Code).
• 2) symbolical tradition or traditio simbolica (such as
the delivery of the key of the place where the
movable sold is being kept). (Art. 1498, par. 2, Civil
Code).
3) traditio longa manu (by mere consent or agreement)
if the movable sold cannot yet be transferred to the
possession of the buyer at the time of the sale. (Art.
1499, Civil Code).
• The lien lost is only the possessory lien and not the
vendor’s lien on the price.
• 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.
• This refers to the right of stoppage in transitu, available
to the unpaid seller —
• Real property —
• 1) registrant in good faith;
• 2) possessor in good faith;
• 3) person with the oldest title in good faith.
Illustration of Rules as to Personal Property
• The Surplus Property Commission sold to a buyer “all
the movable goods” in a base area in Guiuan, Samar.
The buyer then immediately took possession of all the
movable properties located within the area.
• A good test:
• (a) If buyer is ignorant, there is a warranty.
• (b) If the buyer is expected to have an opinion AND
the seller has no special opinion, there is no warranty.
• Express warranty” defined —
• The defect must exist at the time the sale was made;
• The defect must ordinarily have been excluded from
the contract;
• (c) If the terms of the pacto de retro sale are clear and
the contract is not assailed as false nor its authenticity
challenged, the literal sense of its terms shall be given
effect
EQUITABLE MORTGAGE
• Art. 1602. The contract shall be presumed to be an
equitable mortgage, in any of the following cases:
(b) Rules:
• 1) No time agreed upon — 4 years from date of con-
tract.
• 2) Time agreed upon — period cannot exceed 10 years.
Can the period of redemption be extended after
the original period has expired?
•ANS.: In one case it was held that this is all
right as long as the total period should not
exceed 10 years from the time of the
making of the contract, because there is
nothing in the law to prohibit this.
LEGAL REDEMPTION
Art. 1619. Legal redemption is the right to be
subrogated, upon the same terms and conditions
stipulated in the contract, in the place of one who
acquires a thing by purchase or dation in
payment, or by any other transaction whereby
ownership is transmitted by onerous title.
Examples
• 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 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
of the vendor.
• Art. 1620: A co-owner of a thing may exercise the right
of redemption in case the shares of all the other co-
owners or of any of them, are sold to a third person. If
the price of the alienation is grossly excessive, the
redemptioner shall pay only a reasonable one.