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LOAN, PLEDGE & MORTGAGE MCQs 2013-14

1. It is the delivery of property by one person to another in trust for a specific purpose upon a
contract to perform the trust and carry out such object, and thereupon either to return or account
for the property when the special purpose is accomplished or to keep it until the giver reclaims it:
a. assignment of credit;
b. compromise;
c. bailment;
d. usufruct.
2. The ability of an individual to borrow money by virtue of the confidence and trust reposed by
the lender that he will pay what he may promise:
a. surety;
b. credit;
c. collateral;
d. loan.
3. A contract where one of the parties delivers to another, either something not consumable so
that the latter may use the same for a certain time and return it:
a. mutuum or simple loan;
b. commodatum or loan for temporary possession;
c. pledge;
d. guaranty.
4. In commodatum, the bailee acquires:
a. jus utendi or right to use;
b. jus fruendi or right to the fruits;
c. ownership;
d. right to use and right to the fruits.
5. It is a form of commodatum where the bailor may demand the thing at will:
a. precarium;
b. bailment;
c. special commodatum;
d. unilateral.
6. It is one where a person who receives a loan of money or any fungible thing acquires the
ownership thereof, and is bound to pay to the creditor an equal amount of the same kind and
quality:
a. mutuum;
b. commodatum;
c. pledge;
d. usufruct.
7. In mutuum, as distinguished from commodatum:
a. the subject matter is non-fungible and the same thing must be returned;
b. the cause may be gratuitous or onerous;
c. the ownership is retained by the bailor;
d. the contract is purely personal, i.e. death of either party terminates the contract, unless
stipulated.
8. As a rule in commodatum, the borrower is not liable for loss or damage due to a fortuitous
event, unless:
a. he devotes the thing to any purpose different from that for which it has been loaned;
b. if he keeps it longer than the period stipulated;
c. if the thing has been appraised of its value;

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d. all of the above;
e. none of the above.
9. In loan for temporary use or possession, the borrower has no right of retention over the thing
loaned on the ground that the lender owes him something, except:
a. for useful expenses incurred by the bailee which expenses increased the value of the
thing loaned;
b. for necessary expenses incurred by the bailee for the preservation of the thing;
c. for the value of the fruits of the thing loaned delivered to the bailor pursuant to a
stipulation;
d. for damages suffered by bailee due to hidden flaw of the thing loaned which flaw is
known to bailor but not disclosed to the bailee.
10. A contract where the collateral must be placed in the possession of the creditor or third
person:
a. mortgage;
b. pledge;
c. antichresis;
d. all of the above;
e. none of the above.
11. A common requisite to the contracts of pledge and mortgage:
a. that they be constituted to secure the property subject of the contract;
b. that the obligor be the absolute owner at the time the property is to be delivered to
the obligee;
c. that the persons constituting the contract have the free disposal of their
property or legally authorized for the purpose;
d. that only parties to the principal obligation may secure the latter by
pledging or mortgaging their own property;
e. that the obligee may alienate the thing even before the principal obligation becomes
due.
12. If the principal obligation is voidable, unenforceable or merely natural, the pledge or
mortgage is:
a. valid;
b. void;
c. it may be voidable, unenforceable or natural depending on the principal obligation;
d. valid if the parties are in good faith and without notice of the defect.
13. Statement A. Pledges and mortgages are accessory contracts.
Statement B. Their consideration is the same as the consideration of the principal
obligation.
a. only A is correct;
b. only B is correct;
c. A and B are correct;
d. none of the above;
e. all of the above.
14. Pactum commissorium or pacto comisorio refers to:
a. a provision in the agreement to create pledge;
b. a mortgage to secure future advances;
c. a stipulation in a contract where the mortgaged property shall become the
property of the mortgagee upon failure to pay the debt;
d. a stipulation in a contract where the mortgaged property may be alienated

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when the principal obligation becomes due.
15. Statement A: The mortgage credit may be alienated or assigned by the mortgagee to a third
person.
Statement B: The alienation of the thing mortgaged is a matter of right on the part of the
mortgagor.
a. only A is true;
b. only B is true;
c. both are true;
d. both are false.
16. Julia borrowed P10,000 from Alex secured by the pledge of laptop worth P7,500 and watch
worth P2,500. Subsequently, Julia paid half of the obligation, what is her right?
a. Julia can demand for the proportionate extinguishment of the pledge;
b. Julia can demand the return of the ring;
c. she can demand the cancellation of the pledge;
d. she cannot demand the cancellation of the pledge until the loan is fully paid;
e. none of the above.
17. Which of the following cannot be secured by a pledge or mortgage?
a. pure obligation;
b. conditional obligation;
c. alternative obligation;
d. joint and solidary obligations;
e. none of the above.
18. Mr. Gor borrowed P2 Million from Mr. Gee. The parties agreed that Mr. Gor would execute a
mortgage on his land to secure the obligation. However, Mr. Gor failed to execute a mortgage.
Which of the following is the remedy of Mr. Gee?
a. foreclose the mortgage;
b. demand the constitution of the mortgage;
c. ask the court for reformation of the contract;
d. demand novation of the contract.
19. A pledge created by operation of law;
a. voluntary;
b. conventional;
c. legal;
d. real.
20. All movables which are within commerce may be pledged, provided they are susceptible of
possession, which of the following cannot be pledged?
a. negotiable instruments and documents;
b. bonds and shares of stock;
c. warehouse receipts and bills of lading;
d. all of the above;
e. none of the above.
21. A pledge may take effect only against third persons if the following formalities are followed:
a. the pledge must be in a public instrument and recorded in the registry;
b. it must be in a public instrument containing the description of the thing pledged and
the date of the pledge;
c. it must be in writing duly signed by the parties;
d. it must be in a public instrument.
22. An obligation of the pledgee:
a. to sell the thing pledged at public auction;

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b. to answer for the loss of the thing pledged in case of negligence;
c. to deposit the thing pledged with a third person;
d. to use the thing pledged.
23. The creditor is not entitled to recover any deficiency in case the price of sale of the thing
pledged is less than the amount due, what is the reason?
a. equity;
b. it is iniquitous;
c. to compel creditor to hold an honest public sale;
d. to discourage creditors from abusing the financial needs of the borrower.
24. What is the obligation of the pledgee when the pledge earns or produces fruits, income,
dividends, or interests?
a. to give fruits, income, dividends, or interests to the pledgor;
b. to account for them and deduct them from the principal obligation;
c. to compensate them with those which owing to him, or insofar as the amount may
exceed that which is due, he shall apply it to the principal;
d. pledgee has no obligation because the pledge extends to the fruits, income, dividends
and interests earned or produced by the thing pledged.
25. If there is danger of destruction, impairment, or diminution in value of the thing pledged,
what is the duty of the pledgee without fault?
a. he may cause the same to be sold at a public sale;
b. he may demand that the thing be returned to the pledgor and be substituted with a thing
of the same kind and not of inferior quality;
c. he may ask that the thing be judicially or extrajudicially deposited;
d. he may require that the thing be deposited with a third person.
26. An obligation of the pledgor:
a. to reimburse the pledgee for expenses made for its preservation;
b. to demand the return of the thing pledged upon extinction of the principal
obligation;
c. to bid and have preference at the foreclosure sale;
d. to substitute the thing pledged.
27. Mr. Borrowie pledged his SMC bond with a face value of P100,000.00 to secure his loan
from Mr. Lendy in the amount of P50,000.00. The bond was due on January 30, 2013 while the
loan is due on February 3, 2013. In this case the bond becomes due before it is redeemed, which
of the following statements is correct?
a. Mr. Borrowie has the right to collect and receive the amount due from the bond and the
obligation to pay the loan from the proceeds of the bond;
b. Mr. Lendy may collect and receive the amount due from the bond and apply the same
to the payment of his claim and deliver the surplus to Mr. Borrowie;
c. the principal obligation is extinguished;
d. the pledge is extinguished.
28. Pledges created by operation of law refers to:
a. right of redemption;
b. right of retention;
c. right of subrogation;
d. right of substitution.
29. Which rule is not applicable to legal pledges?
a. the creditor shall take care of the thing with diligence of a good father of a
family;

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b. after payment of the debt and expenses, the remainder of the price of the sale shall be
delivered to the obligor;
c. the thing pledged may be sold only after demand;
d. the pledgee may conduct private sale within one month after demand.
30. A characteristic of a real mortgage:
a. divisible;
b. principal;
c. limitation on ownership;
d. separable;
31. Nora mortgaged his farmland to Vilma. The farmland has a fair market value of P50,000
while the loan is only P10,000. Thereafter, Nora sold the farmland to Boyet. What is the legal
effect of the sale to Boyet.
a. the sale is void and Vilma may foreclose the mortgage in case of default by
Nora;
b. the sale is valid but it does not affect the mortgage;
c. the sale is unenforceable as Nora was not authorized to sell the property;
d. Vilma may foreclose the property to protect her interest.
32. It is a remedy available to mortgagee where he subjects the mortgaged property to the
satisfaction of the obligation through the sale of the property at public auction and the
application of the proceeds thereof to the payment of his claims:
a. foreclosure;
b. assignment;
c. alienation;
d. encumbrance.
33. The following are the kinds of real estate mortgage, except;
a. voluntary mortgages;
b. legal mortgages;
c. contracts of sale with right of repurchase;
d. equitable mortgages;
e. all of the above.
34. The contract of mortgage extends to and includes the following except:
a. growing fruits;
b. improvements, even those made by third persons subsequent to mortgage;
c. natural accessions;
d. proceeds of insurance received from insurance of the property;
e. none of the above.
35. Which of the following is not a principal obligation of the mortgagor?
a. to comply with his obligations at the time stipulated;
b. to pay any deficiency in case there is a balance due to the mortgagee after
applying the proceeds of the foreclosure sale;
c. to respect the right of the mortgagee;
d. to continue in the ownership and possession of the mortgaged property;
e. all of the above.
36. Which of the following is not a principal right of the mortgagee?
a. to compel the mortgagor to execute a contract of mortgage in a public
instrument;
b. to free the property from the encumbrance once the obligation is fulfilled;
c. to claim from the transferee of the mortgaged property the payment of the
part of credit secured by the property which the transferee possesses;

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d. to recover any deficiency in case there be a balance due after applying the
proceeds of the foreclosure sale;
e. all of the above.
37. A similarity between pledge and chattel mortgage:
a. delivery is necessary;
b. constitute a lien on the property;
c. the creditor is entitled to recover any deficiency;
d. registration is necessary for validity of the contract;
e. all of the above.
38. An affidavit of good faith refers to an oath in a contract of chattel mortgage wherein the
parties severally swear that:
a. the mortgage is made for the purpose of securing the obligation specified in
the conditions thereof and for no other purpose, and that same is valid
obligation and one not entered into for fraud;
b. they will abide by the stipulations of the contract and any violation thereof
will subject the guilty party to interest and penalties;
c. the mortgage is executed for the purpose of securing the obligations of the
debtor and the latter undertakes that he is the absolute owner of the
property mortgaged;
d. all of the above;
e. none of the above.
39. It is the right of the mortgagor to redeem the mortgaged property after his default but before
the auction sale:
a. right of pre-emption;
b. right of redemption;
c. equitable right;
d. equity of redemption.
40. True or false:
a. Consumable goods may be the subject of commodatum.
b. In commodatum, the bailor need not be the owner of the thing loaned but the bailee
can neither lend nor lease the thing loaned to him to a third person.
c. As a general rule in commodatum, the members of the bailees household may make
use of the thing loaned.
d. In commodatum, the borrower is entitled only to the use of the thing loaned and not to
its fruits.
e. In mutuum, ownership of the thing passes to the borrower.
f. In simple loan, no interest shall be due unless it has been expressly stipulated in
writing.
g. In mutuum, the contracting parties may stipulate to capitalize the interest due and
unpaid, which shall earn new interest.
h. Just like guaranty, pledge and mortgage cannot exist without valid
principal obligation, nevertheless they may be constituted to secure
voidable, unenforceable or natural obligation.
i. Future properties can be pledged or mortgaged.

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j. The pledgor or owner may only alienate the thing pledged with the consent of the
pledgee.
k. Indivisibility of a pledge or mortgage applies only if the debtors are
solidary.
l. A thing pledged must be placed in the possession of the creditor, or of a
third party by common agreement, however, constructive or symbolical delivery
is sufficient.
m. All movables which are within the commerce may be pledged, provided
they are susceptible of possession, thus, incorporeal rights may not be
pledged.
n. In order for the pledge to take effect against third persons, it must be in a
public instrument and the instrument must contain the description of
the thing pledged and the date of the pledge.
o. In pledge, the sale of the thing pledged extinguishes the principal obligation, whether
or not the proceeds of the sale are equal to the amount of the principal obligation,
interest and expenses.
p. In chattel mortgage, if the proceeds are less than the principal obligation, the creditor
is not entitled to recover the deficiency.
q. In chattel mortgage, the thing mortgaged is not transferred to the possession of the
creditor.
r. In case of non-payment in pledge, the creditor shall proceed before a court sheriff for
the public auction of the thing pledged.

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