Title III. - NATURAL OBLIGATIONS
Art. 1423. Obligations are civil or
natural. Civil obligations give a right of action to compel their
performance. Natural obligations, not being based on positive law but
on equity and natural law, do not grant a right of action to enforce
their performance, but after voluntary fulfillment by the obligor,
they authorize the retention of what has been delivered or rendered
by reason thereof. Some natural obligations are set forth in the
following articles.
Art. 1424. When a right to sue upon a
civil obligation has lapsed by extinctive prescription, the obligor
who voluntarily performs the contract cannot recover what he has
delivered or the value of the service he has rendered.
Art. 1425. When without the knowledge
or against the will of the debtor, a third person pays a debt which
the obligor is not legally bound to pay because the action thereon
has prescribed, but the debtor later voluntarily reimburses the third
person, the obligor cannot recover what he has paid.
Art. 1426. When a minor between
eighteen and twenty-one years of age who has entered into a contract
without the consent of the parent or guardian, after the annulment of
the contract voluntarily returns the whole thing or price received,
notwithstanding the fact the he has not been benefited thereby, there
is no right to demand the thing or price thus returned.
Art. 1427. When a minor between
eighteen and twenty-one years of age, who has entered into a contract
without the consent of the parent or guardian, voluntarily pays a sum
of money or delivers a fungible thing in fulfillment of the
obligation, there shall be no right to recover the same from the
obligee who has spent or consumed it in good faith. (1160A)
Art. 1428. When, after an action to
enforce a civil obligation has failed the defendant voluntarily
performs the obligation, he cannot demand the return of what he has
delivered or the payment of the value of the service he has rendered.
Art. 1429. When a testate or intestate
heir voluntarily pays a debt of the decedent exceeding the value of
the property which he received by will or by the law of intestacy
from the estate of the deceased, the payment is valid and cannot be
rescinded by the payer.
Art. 1430. When a will is declared void
because it has not been executed in accordance with the formalities
required by law, but one of the intestate heirs, after the settlement
of the debts of the deceased, pays a legacy in compliance with a
clause in the defective will, the payment is effective and
irrevocable.
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