Kategorier: Alle - mortgage - obligations - property

av Brock Mckiness 2 år siden

130

Obligations

The text discusses various aspects of obligations, particularly focusing on the distinctions between real and personal obligations. Real obligations are tied to property and follow the property, while personal obligations follow the individual.

Obligations

Juridical Relations

juridical relation is an interpersonal relation between subjects and objects.  Subjects are the people and objects are the rights and duties.  


Legal Personality (art 24) natural and juridical personality


Legal Capacity  

all persons have legal capacity to have (enjoy) and exercise legal rights and duties unless the law provides otherwise.  


 

Juridical Facts

some event that occurs to which the law give legal consequence regardless of wishes 

 

 

Voluntary

Illicit

bad 

Quasi- Delicts

neg tort 

Delicts

intentional tort 

Licit

good


quasi- contractual realm  

Unjust Enrichment

Unjust Enrichment/Enrichment without cause-”A person who has been enriched without cause at the expense of another is bound to compensate that person. The term “without cause” is used in this context to exclude cases in which the enrichment results from a valid juridical act or the law. The remedy declared here is subsidiary and shall not be available if the law provides another remedy for the impoverishment or declares a contrary rule. The amount of the compensation due is measured by the extent to which one has been enriched or the other has been impoverished, whichever is less.”•Company A hands over equipment to Company B during the negotiation of a lease. The negotiations fall through and the lease is never confected; however, Company B has used the equipment for 3 months. Company B must compensate Company A as a result of its “enrichment without cause.”

Payment of Things Not due

Payment of a Thing Not Owed—”A person who has received a payment or a thing not owed to him is bound to restore it to the person from whom he received it.” (CC 2299)•My employer accidentally deposits two paychecks in my account. I am bound to restore the money that I was not owed.

Management of Affairs

Management of Affairs (NegotiorumGestio)—“There is a management of affairs when a person, the manager, acts without authority to protect the interests of another, the owner, in the reasonable belief that the owner would approve of the action if made aware of the circumstances.”  (CC 2292)•Example:A hurricane bears down on the city. My neighbor, unable to locate me, hires workers to board up my windows and sandbag my yard. My neighbor has “managed my affairs.” •Duties of the Owner (Me): “The owner whose affair has been managed is bound to fulfill the obligations that the manager has undertaken as a prudent administrator and reimburse the manager for all necessary and useful expenses.” (CC 2297)

Involuntary(Natural)

Death

Birth

Juridical Acts

a manifestation of will designed for legal consequence 

 

offer or other 

 

literal contract is "instrument" 


ex: filiation of unclaimed child 

 

unilateral
Multilateral

Extra-Patrimonial Relations

Spousal
Family

Patrimonial Relations

Transferrable


Tranmissible


Seizable


Prescriptable

Obligations
Quasi- delictual
delictual
Quasi- contractual
Contractual
Real Relations
Accessory Real Relations

Privilege

Pledge

Mortgage

Principal Real Relations

Dismemberments of Ownership

Personal Servitudes

Right of Use

Habitation

Usufruct

Predial Servitudes

Ownership

obligations in general1756, Title 3

organization

extinction of obligations
compensation 1893

when both subject owe to each other they deduct from each other

 

no compensation1894

things exempt from seizure

the return of a deposit

bank accounts

things that were unjustly taken

compensation happens no matter what

judicial1902

so ordered

conventional 1901

in agreement

legal

automatic when everything is clear and liquid

passing obligations on

dependant on the relation of the party

proof of obligations
covered under consent
transfer of obligations
subrogation

a pays the banks and becomes the obligee of B and C

kinds of obligations

real obligation 


bad vocab


means property is not an obligation


property can create list of real rights and duties 


obligations can create presonal rights and duties 


 

divisible & indivisible
with multiple objects
with multiple persons1786

extinguished by full performance

judicial decree

performance

solidary

one performance does affect the performance obligation of others

one person performing does not change the obligation of another

obligation classification

solidary

horizontal specific(between the obligors)

indemnity

primary owes the full amount to the co signer that stepped in

co-signers

contribution

b and c are jointly bound for the viral share to A

renunciation

a party who is made jointly liable can still be brought back for contribution

pay to become joint liable not solidary

insolvency

shares is split and added to the others

negative net worth makes them judgment proof

remission

proportionate Verial

settlement for one, reduces but does not settle the obligation of another

forgiveness to one person

transmission

indivisible

does not fall under the above rule due to the impossibility of division

new solidary obligors

divisible

can create situations where succeors are jointly bound while the remaining are still solidary

protects sucessors

rules of divisible v. indivisible must be applied453

transmission

nature of the obligation

intent of the parties

defenses are still personal in nature1801

relative nullity only

default of one is default of all

interruption of perception interrupts the others

full performance by any 1

undivided

caps the amount they have to perform

one obligation

remission of 1 changes nothing for the others

presumption of

divided by head

one obligation

several

many obligation

subject to a term

renunciation of a term1780s

where both bennefit

cannot renounce without consent

for the benefit of the obligor

right to do early

presumption

includes the last day of the term

the day after it takes effect

duration 1778

uncertain

variable terms

when this happens that will happen

we know it will happen, just not the date

certain time = fixed

we know the precise time

continuous/periodic performance

terminates on the obligation

delay, when the obligation becomes due

sources

by court 2013

by law2680

arise from agreement or the nature of the agreement

expressed or implied

by law

the nature of the contract

intentions of the party

expressed by condition

conventional

definition

no term performance is due immediately

a certain time period that makes performance suspensive

certain or uncertain

when paid not if paid

party specific

conditions1767

pure and simple or affected by a modality 


modality = condition or a term 

prohibited1769

really about cause

 

suspensive means that cause is more directly tied

 

resoltory may mean this is a secondary cause 


prime and major cause 

potestative 1770

must be purely potestative 


weighing of interest 

1770

resolutory

simply

in good faith

null

focus is on the obligor

only bad sometimes

pure v. simply

simply = on the will

pure = on a whim

contrast with casual

power?

within the power of the party to perform

illegal

fulfillment

third party rights and acts of administration

fault of the party contrary to the interest of the party1772

example:

buyer cannot be the reason the conditions fail

purchase agreement is a conditional contract

considered fulfilled

positive v. negative

negative 1774

it is certain it cannot

that time has elapsed without the condition occurring

positive1773

if the condition is suspensive that would mean the obligation is not enforceable 


if the condition is resolutory that would mean the obligation is enforceable 

 

certain failure

fixed time

something will vs something wont

sources

implied

the law

reconduction of lease

nature of the contract

sale of a future thing

intent of the parties

wedding gifts

express conditions

conditions

features

dependency

resolutory

already performing, condition to reverse

immediately enforceable but ends at the condition

suspensive

must wait; duty is suspended

unless and until

uncertainty

from the point of view of the parties

one that is dependant on an uncertain event

pure & simple

no implied terms

performance is immediately

goes on indefinitely

comes into existence immediately

strictly personal vs heritable

when?

exceptions

when the obligation is intended for the benefit the obligee exlucively

special skills required

all performances that required personal performance

as default, all are deemed heritable except when exceptions arise:

from which point of view? obligee or obligor

is it a right, a duty, or what?

strictly personal 1766

cannot be transferred

heritable1765

performance can be executed by a successor

includes between living persons

obligations that can be transferred

real v. personal

real obligations follow things 



personal obligations follow people 

 

follows the house

real right to judicial sale

personal obligation to pay

real

effects 1764

successor, person who takes the place of another

particular successor

is not personally bound because they have not acquierd all

universal successor

like heirs 

legatee

general legatee

particular rights and duties

universal legatee

legetee= by virtue of will 

parts of or entire patrimony

heir or legateee of all or a portion of the patrimony

property obligations

examples

privilege

mineral rights

usufruct

building restrictions

servitude

ownership

natural obligations

obligation that arises from a moral duty creating some of the effects of a civil obligation


produces limited effects 


obligee has no right to enforce performance 


obligor may not recover a performance freely rendered 



a promise to perform transforms a natural obligation to a civil one 



payment of a thing not do does not work under a natural obligation to do so

source1760

a particular moral duty

examples1762

invalid donation due to form, then dies, creates natural obligation for those in the will

a promis to uphold, with create the civil obligation

had dicernment lacked capacity

kid makes second promis or partically performs

civil obligation has been extinguished

discharged

bankruptcy

follow juris prudence

SF Co v. Daigle

cant get payments back but did not make additional promise to pay full amount

pay a debt must be in writing

promise must be express and unequivocal

not just an acknowledgment

discharged debt, partially performed on

Stoll v. Goodnight Corp

employee promise to pay for a mistake

Wortmann

promis to give to make up for fidelity

Jones

used as an alternative to gratuitous contract

natural obligation for a free caretaker

Thomas v. Bryant

promiissory note formedical bills for step son

must rise to the level

special features

transfer to civil obligation

not a violation of public order

FREELY promise or performance

vices of consent except error

natural obligation

effect on partimony

pecuniary value

feel strong enough to have a feeling of indebtedness

partcial performance

promise

towards particular person

not every moral duty

general principles

good faith1759

will govern the subjects in whatever pertains to the obligation

general effects 1758 (b)

contest actions
proper discharge

effects of 1758(a)

3
recover damages
2
enforce through another at their expense
1
enforce performance

sources 1757

judicial
quasi contractual

Contracts

analysis 


was there an offer?


is it irrevocable?

    how long

    what is a reasonable time


has it expired?




 

potential remedies
damages 1994

always available

stipulated 2005

term is same as liquidated damages in common law

must be enforced, unless extremely unreasonable 2021

compensatory

non pecuniary1998

pecuniary

patrimonial 

 

direct relation to monetary loss 

 

measured by loss sustained and profit deprived 1995

expectation of profit

out of pocket

Moretory

failure to perform

not breech of contract in LA 

 

nonperformance

can occur when announced

anticipatory breech is just nonperformance

defective performance

delayed performance 1989

lots of special rules 

 

bilateral performance1993

party must perform or be ready to b4 putting the other in default

risk of delivery1992

time

clearly determinable from the circumstances

fixed

default

methods

contractual provisions

can make it automatic

suit for performance

oral notice/2 witnesses

must be satisfied to incur damages unless complete non performance

starts incurring damages

puts the obligor on notice of liability being incurred by being late

moretory damages

damages that result from being late

and
dissolutions 2013

alternate to sp

 

binding force is brought to an end 

 

obligee is released from its obligations 


obligor is relieved from their correlative obligation

 

distinct from rescission 

 

effects 2018

ready to perform2022

bilateral, one does not perform if they know the other isnt

partial performance

of continuous or periodic performance

past performance is not affected by dissolution

non-substantial 2018

quasi-contractual

partial dissolution possible2019

phases of performance or other situation

may entitle to damages

substantial 2014

may prevent

entitled to full contractual damages

unwinding

extrajudicial dissolution

exceptional method

express dissolution clauses2017

unspecified duration 2024

dissolved at the time provided

the obligee regards the contract as dissolved

judicial dissolution 2013

usual method

contingently grant

factors to determine if they should grant additional time to perform Waseco Factors

surrounding economic circumstances

faith of the parties

nature of the obligor fault

extent and gravity of the failure to perform

more time ending in auto dissolution

court decreed

advantage here is additional discretion by courts.  


supports good faith by parties 

 

court order is still required for damages

without notice to perform2016

time is of the essence

anticipatory breach

assurance rule; same as common law2023

security = real or personal or simple assurances

may demand in writing security of performance

with notice to perform2015

putting in default2099

specific prevision in contract

suit for performance

oral 2 witnesses

written notice

reasonable time

not the same as rescission

rescission is the result of nullity 


dissolution is the result of breach 


a fully enforceable contract that is breached is dissolved.  a contract that is null is resolution 


damages after rescission are from quasi-contract 

an unwinding of the contract

alternative to specific performance

or

injunction

procedural devices that intersect with this area of law

TRO

after word must prove they are entitled to a permanent injunction

must show they are suffering from and injury

non competes are statutorily regulated

generally against policy in LA, unless they follow 23:921

the right to 1986

not ongoing

affirmative one time actions

discretionary

impracticable

test

social costs

negaytive impact on 3rd parties

no longer in creditor's interest

obligee

greatly disproportionate $$$

impossible

some damages

SHALL impose sp for failures + damages

failure to deliver, to act, or execute an instrument

history

under civil law, it was the natural thing to do as it was the cause of the contract

still recognizes policy deterrence of

only sp with lots of exceptions

one of the remedies that were never traditionally available under common law except through the monarch

no sp with a few exceptions

general effects1983
effects on third parties1985

non except where law provides

3rd party beneficiary

rights are heritable and assignable1984

patrimonial

dissolved through consent
must be good faith
effects of law on the party

nullity2029

if the contract "never" exsisted because of nulity; than damages are unjust enrichments under the quasi-contract rules 

recognitive acts
effects

retroactive 1844

ratification 1843

spouse without proper concurrence

mandatory without proper authority

basically a confirmation for agent authority issue

confirmation1842

declaration of intent to be bound

must have clear evidence of intent to do so
cures relatively nullity
right to confirmation 1920
must be immediately
must have been ignorant at the time of the contract
relative
absolute

vices of consent

lesion
duress1959

effect

3rd persons

by 3rd party1961

ransom rule1963

obligations occurred to prevent other threats are enforceable

no collusion

good faith

vitiated regardless of knowledge

threat toward 3rd person 1960

others, courts discretion

family, yes

economic

duress of goods in some cases

almost never

threats

of lawful act or legal right

unless completely frivolous

not sufficient

of violence

of imprisonment

violence

actual injury

beating

violence

related to the actual contract

by imprisonment

must be sufficiently severe

like them

other personal circumstances

age, health, disposition

would a reasonable person been afraid

fraud1953

guilty party is liable for damages and attorney fees1958

relatively nullity

proof1957

circumstantial evidence

preponderance of the evidence

can result from in action or silence

only when there is an affirmative duty to speak

two prongs from code

intent to gain an unjust advantage OR cause a loss OR inconvenience

a misstatement or omission of fact

material

intentional error

error1949

effect

person liable does not get damages

as if never happened

relative nullity

not if willing to correct the error 1951

party should have known

must be related to the cause

the obligation would not have been accepted had the party known

Forming

Object 1756
determined or determinable

quantity1973

outputs or requirements1975

not unreasonable or disproportionate

good faith emphasized

3rd person, named and willing

opens window for court

certain or by method (math, percentage)

kind

weight the factors of product type, relationships, and other facts

specific enough

meeting of the minds

future object1976

conditions of 2450

contract exsist, just not enforcable until condition is met

possible

for anyone to perform

not impractibility

at the onset?

lawful

you cannot contract for the succession of a living person

may be different than cause lawful

freedom of parties1971

Art. 1971. Freedom of parties


Parties are free to contract for any object that is lawful, possible, and determined or determinable.

Rights and cooresponding duties

not doing

doing

giving

sometimes refers to a thing, not always

Cause1967 (1st .5)
detrimental alliance 1967 (2nd section)

A party may be obligated by a promise when he knew or should have known that the promise would induce the other party to rely on it to his detriment and the other party was reasonable in so relying. Recovery may be limited to the expenses incurred or the damages suffered as a result of the promisee's reliance on the promise. Reliance on a gratuitous promise made without required formalities is not reasonable.

Recession for liability 1952

unless other party should have known too

must pay damages

due to his own error

commencement 1941

When commencement of the performance either constitutes acceptance or makes the offer irrevocable, the offeree must give prompt notice of that commencement unless the offeror knows or should know that the offeree has begun to perform. An offeree who fails to give the notice is liable for damages.

limitation on the theory

no reliance on gratuitous promise w/out proper form

no detrimental

no reason to rely on this

restore to position b4 reliance

justice

remedies

expenses actually incurred

specific performance

damages

full contractual relief

change in position to one's detriment because of such

justifiable reliance

representation by conduct or words

reason for an obligation without the contract

unlawful cause 1968

absolute nullity

retroactivly: never exsisted

includes public policy

cause and object get intertwined her, but are still distinct

common issues

price as an essential element of sale 2464

cause for donation, but disguising as sale

sale needs writing; donation needs authentic act

effects

against 3rd persons2028

imovables

3rd person can buy from the pretence person

recorder provides normal affect to 3rd parties

secret agreements have no effect

movables

money goes to the true owner, good goes to the buy, bad faither pays the parties

protected in good faith

simulation

absolute2026

pretending there is no contract when there is

relative 2027

if the true kind is unlawful, it is unlawful

enforceable if in the form of the real nominate

difference between expressed type and actual

other writing expressing = counter letter

when expression is untrue, the obligation is still effective if another can be shown1970

does not have to be express1969

intent and reality is more important than declaration by instrument

categories

subjective cause

unlawful cause

simulations

strategery

tax purposes

to get bigger or more or closer

cause of the contract

objective cause

error and fraud

absence or failure of cause

to get ownership

to exchange money or goods

cause of the obligation

function

significant factor in nominate, legality, and form

determine which rules apply to the contract

determine which contract to enforce

the "reason" a person is binding themselves

the why sometimes the thing, sometimes the motive

Consent1927
express v implied v tacit

tacit / silence

tacit must be unequivocal outside of statutory

many situations are covered by the CC like auto renewal

any reasonable alternative for silence will block consent

established through offer and acceptance

acceptance defined by doctrine

unilateral juridical act 

 

content1943

some rules match the UCC exceptions2601-2

counter offer without mirror

mirror image rule

acceptance through silence 1942

offers of reward1944, 1946

revocation must be made in the same way or an equally effective means 1945

contractual value differs from the compensation for unjust enrichment

binding even if the performer does not know

vocabulary issues in jurisprudence

implied = behavior

tacit = silence or inaction

controlling rule when not expressed by law in other place

by complete performance1940

offeree is not bound to complete

based on the nature and usage of the contract

not certain if delivery is possible

only completion is acceptance

by performance1939

notice of commencement 1941

unless oferor should have know, when an offer is accepted through commencement the offeree must give notice of that commencement

offeree is bound to complete

creates a irrevocable offer

assumed completion will result from commencing the performance

starting performance is acceptance

express acceptance

irrevocable offers 1934

not knowledge

upon receipt

at possession1938

revocable offers1935

when transmitted

elements

conformity only when required by the offer

exception is formal requirements by law

made by proper party

timely

offerdefined by doctrine

options1933, 2620

requirements

formal requirements of that type of sale

the price

stipulated time

a thing

offer to sell or buy

as a contract it is heritable

must have value exchanged

not just an irevocable offer; a contract to contract

revocable v. irrevocable 1930, 1931

upon receipt not knowledge

rejection and counter offers kill offers

death or incapacity cause expiration

irrevocable offers that expire no longer exist

revocable offers expire after a reasonable time

if its not irrevocable it is revocable

prerequisites

firm

must be indicative of offeror's intent to conclude the contract with the offeree's assent

precise and complete

nominate contracts have different standards for required terms

the thing and the rent

the price and the thing

must contain the essential terms

serious

indicative of intent to be legally bound

opposed to social or moral duty

declared

express, implied, or tacit

to the person

outward projection

unilateral declaration of will (juridical act) to form a contract

more subjective standard in LA
Capacity1918
clear and convincingly and by the great weight of the evidence
rescission for incapacity1921
lack of capacity

persons deprived of reason

interdicts389-390

curators392

limited

specific capacity removed

full389

of person and property

consistent, infirm, court ordered loss of capacity

unemancipated minors

majority29

support, education, business

of excersise

pervasive, affecting all types of juridical acts for persons with certain characteristics

enjoy

incapacity of enjoyment

Sale of litigious rights2447

litigious rights cannot be bought by officers of a court

general legal capacity to have rights and duties

ObligationsArt 1756

a legal bond that binds two person's in such a way that one of them, obligee/creditor, is entitled to demand from the others, obligor/debtor, a certain performance.  

classification scheme

doctrinal
freely negotiated v. adhesionary

LA Law does not have "unconscionably" or contracts of adhesion

some rules address:

fraud, error, duress, lesion, good faith, etc

consensual v. solemn v real

solemenity means to comtemplate in an offical capacity 


form purpose is the lvl of proof and thought

real are not enforceable until the thing is delivered

deposit2926

manual gift1543

corporeal movables on delivery

formal (solemn) require a certain form for enforceability

proof of obligation 1831

juridical confession

full proof

testimonial proof1846

> $500

1 witness & other corroborating circumstances

< $500

competent evidence

parol evidence1848

in the interest of justice

proof of fraud is a good example

evidence of fraud is rarely in the writing

may be admitted to prove circumstances like vice of consent or modification

once a writing is in place, verbal cannot be admitted to vary of negate it

wether a writing is required for a contract or not

APS1838

ack under private signature 

 

signatures must be proven

APSDA1836

act under private signature duly acknowledged 

 

preponderance of the evidence

prima facie

authentic act

burden to prove fraud

strong, clear, and positively convincing evidence

full proof of agreement

voluntary solemnity1947

modification agreement works differently because its a separate contract

if they agree to only modify in writing, but insist on being bound at that time may override this

frequently litigated

will be on the bar exam

requires clear evidence

Breaux Brothers

agree to only be bond by writing

form contemplated becomes the binding form (1947)

important ones

surety to pay another

must be in writing

certain debts 1847

parole evidence is not good enough to bind 3rd parties to pay the debt of another or prescribed

parole evidence = not in writing

matrimonial agreement2331

duly acknowledged or

donation inter vivos 1541, 1543

manual gift

corporeal movable

on delivery

notary +2 witnesses

transfer of immovable 1839, 2440

exception of testimony and delivery

compromise3072

settlement

types

duly acknowledged

after the fact notary

under private signature

unless acknowledged

burden of proof on whoever contests

authentic act1833-1835

full proof1835

notary + 2

in writing or not parole evidence

electronic transaction acts

parties must agree in advance

LUETA

RS Title 9

purpose

tradeoffs.

example given1577

notarial will

what is sacrificed

solemnity function

failure to comply is absolute nullity

evidentiary function

consensual are simply formed by party consent

contract for services

sale of movables

From LA CC
nominate v innominateLA CC 1914-15

innominate are any others following normal code rule under the title

transfer of ownership in return for services rendered

nominate can have special (additional) rules (LA CC 1916)

lease

giving in payment

exchange

sale

nominate = special name; like sales or lease contracts

Principle & AccessoryLA CC 1913

accessory depends on the principle

one depends on the other to exsist

accessory provide security for the performance

pledge

mortgage

suretyship

the contract the gives rise to the obligations

all

loan

commutative v aleatoryLA CC 1911 & 1912

significance

sale2464, 2589

there is no sale if the parties did not fix a pricecommutative

price must be fixed by the party

failure of equivalence, not void if aleatory

aleatory, one parties performance is certain and the other is not

sale of a hope(2451)

insurance, gambling, lottery, etc

communitive, CC makes mistake, opposite of aleatory

sale, lease, exchange

onerous v gratuitousLA CC 1909 & 1910

pure

purely onerous

inomminate has no form requirement

onerouse contracts follow the form of their appropriate nominate

2/3rds test1526

value of the charge 

 

<

 

2/3 the value gift 


greater than 66% value = onerous 


less than = gratuitous 


must fallow the special rules for donations inter vivos authentic act 1541

 

purely gratuitous contracts

donations are subject special rules

etc

potential annulment by forced heirs 1503

revocation for ingraditude 1556

heightened formalities

not all gratuitous contracts are donations

3rd party beneficiary contracts1978

for and by a 3rd person 

 



exception to the "privity" of contracts.  this is the exception because bilateral juridical acts should normally only have an effect on the parties of the contract 


 

identifying TPB

additional prerequisites

one must determine

not a "mere incident" of the contract

certainty as to the benefit

stipulation is "manifestly clear

must clearly stipulate or illustrate a benefit to a specific party

not incidental

smith factor test

exsisitng factual relationship

desire to donate

stip may derive bennefit or advantage from the benefit

stip may owe duty in the future

exsisting legal relationship

stip owes preexisiting duty to TPB

donation beneficiary

is there a future obligation

how does the stipulator benefit by the promisor performing to the beneficiary

look to the stipulator's ________ with the TPB

obligations

prexisting duties to relieve or prevent liability

relationship

contractual

creditors

cause

subjective or other wise that would justify this exception

revocation 1979

revocation or refusal1980

performance to the stipulator

if the promisor has an interest in performing the benefit directly, making it irrevocable

stipulator can revoke the benefit before tpb can avail themselves of the benefit

onerous v. gratuitous

stipulation pour autrui1978

exceptable reasons why

benificiary expects to be creditor of the stipulator

beneficiary is creditor of stipulator

familiar relationship

promesse de prte-fort1977

stipulation for another 

 

Subtopic

binds the third party to perform

with their consent

parties

beneficiary

must avail themselves of the benefit to have rights

promisor has same defenses1982

rights1981

can refuse the bennefit

promissor

responsible for benefit

stipulator

promisee

wants the bennefit to the 3rd party

beneficiaries are entitled to a right

debt of a third person

charitable subscriptions

indirect liberality

annulment

significance of the party1950, cmt d

standard of care2930

onerous care is more strict

form1547, 2440

act under private signature

mirror signing of a document

authentic act

with notary & 2 witnesses

for donation1541

gratuitous needs more proof

consent1888, 1890

gratuitousno patrimonial value

remission1888

a release from liability

suretyship3044

gratuitous by default, can be onerous

co sign

promise to pay another's debt

deposit2926, 2928

loan for use 2891

mandate2989, 2992

agency or POA

donation inter vivos1468

exchange 2660

sale2439

unilateral v bilateralLA CC 1907 & 1908

significance

Dissolution2013, 2704

not relevant to unilateral, because no one own anyone

ending the contract to end obligation to another

putting in default (1993)

bilateral- synallagmaticrecipical and coorelated

Exchange2662

Sale2439

lease2668

to loan

unilateral when accepting party does not assume a reciprocal duty

loan2891

mandate2989

Donation inter vivos1468

Sources

delictsquasi-delicts

tort

Traditional Tort damages

gen shortLA CC 3492

capacity & consent less important

illicit

quasi contracts

generally limited to loss sustained

10 yrs LA CC 3499

capacity and consent less important

juridical act

licit

voluntary

contractsart 1906

Multilateral juridical act


capacity and consent essential 


 

remedies

Traditional contract damages

lost profits

loss sustained

prescription

exceptions

LA CC 3499, 3494

10 yrs, unless

effectivity

capacity & consent essential

source

juridical act

multilateral

definition

obligation is:

extinguished

modified, or

created

agreement of two or more parties

Rights

unless secured it is not a real right in the fact that it is dependant on the obligation.  a mortgage or security can make it patrimonial because then there are now other rights that can be enforced without the obligee

 

Real
real duty

object involves a thing

coorelates to a real right

subject

passive

not to

everyone else

active

holder

from or of the thing

abusus

fructus

usus

Personal
specific to the person

categorization

Joint, several, in solido
in solido
joint
several
Institutional
societal (family ties)
Lack Patrimonial
Patrimonial
prescriptable

loss can occur due to only passage of time 

acquisitive perscription

squater rights 


adverse possession 

seizable

a creditor can seize a right in a thing as a matter of satisfying what is owed to them 

transferable
transmissible

heritable

credit-right
Natural v Civil

Components of an obligation

object
to not do

only one for passive under property law

result in destruction or injunction

forbearance

to do

specific performance, monetary damages

of means

to standard or effort

to deliver

result

to render a specific result

to give

onerous

gratuitous

to transfer of ownership

a real right in a thing

the actual performance expected

contrast with consideration

not just the thing

unlike in property law

to give, do or not

legal bond
distinguishes the obligation between natural and civil
what makes it enforceable
tripartite (State)
vinculum juris
subject
active v passive

passive is always one or more identifiable persons, unlike with property

debtor / obligor

owes the performance

creditor / obligee

entitled to demand