The 2011 edition is famous for its end-of-chapter "Problem Sets." These are concise hypotheticals (e.g., "D promised to pay C if C marries X. C marries X, but X dies. Is D liable?") that mirror bar exam questions. Many bar top scorers from 2012 to 2017 have credited the 2011 edition's problems for their analytical training.
For anyone seeking to understand when a handshake becomes a binding promise, when rain cancels a delivery, or why a debt survives the debtor, Hector De Leon’s 2011 text remains the definitive starting point. It is, in the words of many Philippine jurists, "the book that taught us how to read the law." Law On Obligations And Contracts By Hector De Leon 2011
Hector De Leon’s is widely considered the "student’s bible" for Philippine civil law. It transforms dense legal jargon into digestible concepts, making it a staple for commerce and law students alike. Why It’s a "Survival Guide" for Students The 2011 edition is famous for its end-of-chapter
De Leon breaks down every obligation into four essential requisites that must coexist for a legal bond to be valid: Many bar top scorers from 2012 to 2017