CHAPTER 7
VOIDABLE CONTRACTS
Art. 1390. The following contracts are
voidable or annullable, even though there may have been no damage to
the contracting parties:
(1) Those where one of the parties is
incapable of giving consent to a contract;
(2) Those where the consent is vitiated
by mistake, violence, intimidation, undue influence or fraud.
These contracts are binding, unless
they are annulled by a proper action in court. They are susceptible
of ratification. (n)
Art. 1391. The action for annulment
shall be brought within four years.
This period shall begin:
In cases of intimidation, violence or
undue influence, from the time the defect of the consent ceases.
In case of mistake or fraud, from the
time of the discovery of the same.
And when the action refers to contracts
entered into by minors or other incapacitated persons, from the time
the guardianship ceases. (1301a)
Art. 1392. Ratification extinguishes
the action to annul a voidable contract. (1309a)
Art. 1393. Ratification may be effected
expressly or tacitly. It is understood that there is a tacit
ratification if, with knowledge of the reason which renders the
contract voidable and such reason having ceased, the person who has a
right to invoke it should execute an act which necessarily implies an
intention to waive his right. (1311a)
Art. 1394. Ratification may be effected
by the guardian of the incapacitated person. (n)
Art. 1395. Ratification does not
require the conformity of the contracting party who has no right to
bring the action for annulment. (1312)
Art. 1396. Ratification cleanses the
contract from all its defects from the moment it was constituted.
(1313)
Art. 1397. The action for the annulment
of contracts may be instituted by all who are thereby obliged
principally or subsidiarily. However, persons who are capable cannot
allege the incapacity of those with whom they contracted; nor can
those who exerted intimidation, violence, or undue influence, or
employed fraud, or caused mistake base their action upon these flaws
of the contract. (1302a)
Art. 1398. An obligation having been
annulled, the contracting parties shall restore to each other the
things which have been the subject matter of the contract, with their
fruits, and the price with its interest, except in cases provided by
law.
In obligations to render service, the
value thereof shall be the basis for damages. (1303a)
Art. 1399. When the defect of the
contract consists in the incapacity of one of the parties, the
incapacitated person is not obliged to make any restitution except
insofar as he has been benefited by the thing or price received by
him. (1304)
Art. 1400. Whenever the person obliged
by the decree of annulment to return the thing can not do so because
it has been lost through his fault, he shall return the fruits
received and the value of the thing at the time of the loss, with
interest from the same date. (1307a)
Art. 1401. The action for annulment of
contracts shall be extinguished when the thing which is the object
thereof is lost through the fraud or fault of the person who has a
right to institute the proceedings.
If the right of action is based upon
the incapacity of any one of the contracting parties, the loss of the
thing shall not be an obstacle to the success of the action, unless
said loss took place through the fraud or fault of the plaintiff.
(1314a)
Art. 1402. As long as one of the
contracting parties does not restore what in virtue of the decree of
annulment he is bound to return, the other cannot be compelled to
comply with what is incumbent upon him. (1308)
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