Text of the provision
Art. 1189. When the conditions have been imposed with the intention of suspending the efficacy of an obligation to give, the following rules shall be observed in case of the improvement, loss or deterioration of the thing during the pendency of the condition:
(1) If the thing is lost without the fault of the debtor, the obligation shall be extinguished;
(2) If the thing is lost through the fault of the debtor, he shall be obliged to pay damages; it is understood that the thing is lost when it perishes, or goes out of commerce, or disappears in such a way that its existence is unknown or it cannot be recovered;
(3) When the thing deteriorates without the fault of the debtor, the impairment is to be borne by the creditor;
(4) If it deteriorates through the fault of the debtor, the creditor may choose between the rescission of the obligation and its fulfillment, with indemnity for damages in either case;
(5) If the thing is improved by its nature, or by time, the improvement shall inure to the benefit of the creditor;
(6) If it is improved at the expense of the debtor, he shall have no other right than that granted to the usufructuary.
(1122)
Civil Code of the Philippines, Republic Act No. 386, approved June 18, 1949, effective August 30, 1950. Reproduced in full; verified verbatim against the LawPhil and ChanRobles official-text renderings.
What this article means
This sets the rules while a suspensive condition is pending: loss without the debtor's fault extinguishes the obligation; loss through fault means damages; deterioration without fault is borne by the creditor, with fault gives the creditor a choice of rescission or fulfillment plus damages; natural improvements benefit the creditor, while improvements at the debtor's expense give only a usufructuary's rights.
Related provisions
- Article 1188 — Rights Pending the Condition.
- Article 1190 — Effect of a Resolutory Condition Fulfilled.
Cases interpreting this article
- Authorities on this article will be added here as each is verified against primary sources.