Introduction
A demand letter is one of the most common documents used before filing a civil case in the Philippines. It is often sent in disputes involving unpaid loans, bounced payments, breach of contract, unpaid rent, property possession, damages, collection of money, defective goods, construction defects, business obligations, employment-related civil claims, and family or estate-related monetary issues.
But is a demand letter legally required before filing a civil case?
The answer is: not always.
In Philippine practice, a demand letter is often advisable and sometimes necessary, but it is not universally required for every civil case. Whether a demand is required depends on the nature of the claim, the law governing the obligation, the contract terms, whether the debtor is already in delay, the cause of action, the need to prove default, the rules of court, barangay conciliation requirements, small claims procedure, and the kind of relief being sought.
A person may sometimes file a civil case without first sending a demand letter. In other situations, failure to make a prior demand can weaken the case, make the action premature, prevent recovery of damages, or affect the computation of interest, attorney’s fees, penalties, or default.
This article explains when a demand letter is required, when it is not required, why it is useful, what it should contain, how it affects civil cases, and how it fits into Philippine dispute resolution practice.
1. What Is a Demand Letter?
A demand letter is a written communication asking another person or entity to perform an obligation, stop an unlawful act, pay money, deliver property, vacate premises, comply with a contract, repair damage, return documents, account for funds, or otherwise correct a legal wrong.
It usually states:
- Who is making the demand;
- who is being demanded from;
- the factual background;
- the legal or contractual basis;
- the amount or act demanded;
- the deadline for compliance;
- consequences of noncompliance;
- reservation of rights;
- request for settlement or communication.
A demand letter may be sent by the claimant personally or through counsel.
2. Demand Letter vs. Complaint
A demand letter is not a court case. It is a pre-litigation communication.
A civil complaint is the pleading filed in court to start a lawsuit.
A demand letter gives the other party an opportunity to settle, comply, or respond before litigation. A complaint asks the court to grant relief.
A demand letter may lead to settlement. A complaint leads to judicial proceedings.
3. General Rule: A Demand Letter Is Not Required in Every Civil Case
There is no universal rule that every civil case in the Philippines must be preceded by a demand letter.
A civil case may proceed if the complaint already states a valid cause of action and the law does not require prior demand as a condition.
For example, a plaintiff may file a case for damages arising from a tort, injunction against an ongoing unlawful act, partition of property, quieting of title, or certain declaratory or property actions without necessarily sending a prior demand letter, depending on the facts.
However, many civil cases involve obligations where demand is important to show that the defendant failed to perform despite being required to do so.
4. Why People Think Demand Letters Are Always Required
People often think demand letters are mandatory because lawyers commonly send them before suing.
They are common because they:
- Show seriousness;
- create a written record;
- give the other party a chance to settle;
- prove that payment or performance was requested;
- establish delay or default in some obligations;
- support claims for interest, penalties, damages, and attorney’s fees;
- help satisfy contractual notice requirements;
- may be useful in barangay conciliation or small claims;
- sometimes prevent unnecessary litigation.
Because demand letters are so common, they are often mistaken as a universal prerequisite.
5. When Prior Demand May Be Legally Important
A demand letter may be legally important when the claim involves an obligation that becomes enforceable, due, or in default only after demand.
The need for demand commonly arises in obligations:
- To pay money;
- to deliver a thing;
- to perform a contractual act;
- to vacate property;
- to return property;
- to account for money;
- to comply with a lease, loan, sale, or service contract.
In these cases, demand may help prove that the obligation was already due and that the debtor failed to comply.
6. Demand and Delay in Obligations
Under Philippine civil law, a debtor may be considered in delay only after the creditor judicially or extrajudicially demands performance, unless demand is unnecessary under the law or contract.
Delay matters because it can affect liability for:
- Interest;
- penalties;
- damages;
- risk of loss;
- attorney’s fees;
- default;
- rescission;
- acceleration;
- enforcement of contract rights.
An extrajudicial demand is commonly made through a demand letter.
7. When Demand Is Not Necessary for Delay
Demand may not be necessary in certain situations, such as when:
- The obligation or law expressly states that demand is not required;
- Time is of the essence;
- the contract provides automatic default upon failure to pay or perform;
- demand would be useless;
- the obligor has made performance impossible;
- the debtor expressly refuses to perform;
- the obligation is already subject to judicial demand through the complaint;
- the nature of the obligation or circumstances makes prior demand unnecessary.
The exact rule depends on the obligation and facts.
8. Demand Required by Contract
Some contracts expressly require notice or demand before filing suit, cancelling the contract, accelerating payment, imposing penalties, terminating the agreement, or enforcing remedies.
Examples:
- Lease agreements requiring written notice of default;
- loan agreements requiring written demand before acceleration;
- construction contracts requiring notice to cure;
- service agreements requiring breach notice;
- installment sales requiring cancellation notice;
- supply contracts requiring written claim;
- franchise agreements requiring cure period.
If the contract requires demand, failure to comply may make the case premature or weaken the plaintiff’s position.
9. Demand Required by Law or Procedure
Some cases require a prior notice or demand under specific laws or procedural rules.
Examples may include:
- certain ejectment cases;
- some lease disputes;
- obligations where default depends on demand;
- cases where demand is part of the cause of action;
- small claims documentary preparation;
- contract cancellation under specific buyer-protection laws;
- certain foreclosure or enforcement processes;
- situations requiring notice to cure.
The requirement is not because every civil case needs demand, but because the specific claim or remedy requires it.
10. Demand in Collection of Sum of Money
In collection cases, a demand letter is often important.
If a person owes money under a loan, sale, service agreement, promissory note, or account, a written demand can show:
- amount due;
- due date;
- failure to pay;
- creditor’s effort to collect;
- date from which interest or penalties may run;
- debtor’s refusal or neglect;
- basis for attorney’s fees, if allowed.
A collection case may sometimes be filed without prior demand if the debt is already due and demand is not required, but sending a demand letter is usually prudent.
11. Demand in Loan Cases
For loans, demand depends on the terms.
If the promissory note says the loan is payable on a fixed date, the lender may sue after maturity. But demand may still matter for default interest, attorney’s fees, or proof of refusal.
If the loan is payable “on demand,” then demand is essential because the obligation becomes due only when demand is made.
If the loan contract says nonpayment on due date automatically places the debtor in default, prior demand may not be necessary to establish delay, but demand may still be useful.
12. Demand in “Payable on Demand” Obligations
When an obligation is payable on demand, the creditor must demand payment before the debtor can be said to have failed to pay.
A demand letter in this situation is not merely a courtesy. It is part of making the obligation enforceable.
The letter should clearly state that payment is being demanded and should identify the amount due.
13. Demand in Promissory Notes
A promissory note may state:
- Payable on a specific date;
- payable in installments;
- payable upon demand;
- payable upon occurrence of an event;
- subject to acceleration after default;
- subject to interest and penalties.
The language of the promissory note determines whether demand is necessary.
If the note has a fixed maturity date, demand may not be necessary to make the obligation due, but a demand letter may still be useful.
If the note is payable on demand, demand is necessary.
14. Demand in Installment Payments
For installment obligations, a demand letter may be important if the creditor wants to:
- collect overdue installments;
- accelerate the entire balance;
- impose penalties;
- cancel a contract;
- rescind the sale;
- enforce a security;
- apply statutory remedies.
The contract may require a notice of default or notice to cure before cancellation.
A creditor should check the contract and applicable law before suing.
15. Demand in Breach of Contract Cases
In breach of contract cases, a demand letter may be necessary or useful depending on the nature of the breach.
If the breach consists of failure to pay or perform, demand may establish default.
If the breach is already complete, such as delivery of defective goods, unauthorized termination, or refusal to perform, demand may not be strictly necessary but can help document the claim.
A demand letter can also give the breaching party a chance to cure, which may be required by contract.
16. Demand in Rescission of Contract
Rescission or cancellation may require prior demand or notice depending on the contract and law.
For example, if a party wants to cancel a sale, lease, service contract, or installment arrangement, the contract may require written notice and cure period.
Even when immediate rescission is legally arguable, a demand letter can strengthen the record by showing that the other party was given an opportunity to comply.
17. Demand in Specific Performance
A case for specific performance asks the court to compel a party to do what they promised.
Demand may be useful to show:
- the obligation exists;
- the plaintiff requested performance;
- the defendant refused or failed;
- the plaintiff is ready and willing to comply;
- court intervention became necessary.
If the obligation was already due and the defendant clearly refused, demand may not always be required, but it remains helpful.
18. Demand in Damages Cases
For damages arising from negligence, tort, quasi-delict, fraud, nuisance, defamation, or injury, prior demand is not always required.
For example, a person injured in a vehicular accident may file a civil action for damages without first sending a demand letter, though settlement demand is common.
A demand letter may still be useful to:
- attempt settlement;
- document losses;
- give notice of claim;
- preserve evidence;
- interrupt delay in payment;
- support attorney’s fees if litigation becomes necessary.
19. Demand in Quasi-Delict or Negligence Claims
In negligence cases, the defendant’s liability may arise from the wrongful act itself, not from failure to comply after demand.
Thus, prior demand is generally not the source of liability.
However, if the claimant wants reimbursement, repair costs, or settlement, demand may help prove that the defendant refused to compensate.
20. Demand in Property Disputes
Demand may or may not be required in property disputes.
For example:
- In a case to quiet title, prior demand may not be essential.
- In a partition case, demand may not always be required, though prior request for partition can be useful.
- In ejectment, demand to vacate may be required in certain situations.
- In recovery of possession, demand may help show unlawful withholding.
- In trespass or encroachment disputes, demand may show notice and refusal to stop.
The type of property case matters.
21. Demand in Ejectment Cases
Ejectment cases require careful attention to demand.
There are two main ejectment actions:
- Forcible entry — where possession was obtained by force, intimidation, threat, strategy, or stealth.
- Unlawful detainer — where possession was initially lawful but became unlawful due to expiration or termination of right.
In unlawful detainer, a prior demand to pay or comply and vacate is often required, especially in lease situations, before filing the case.
Failure to make proper demand may result in dismissal or loss of jurisdiction in summary ejectment.
22. Demand to Vacate
A demand to vacate is usually a written notice requiring the occupant, tenant, lessee, borrower, caretaker, or other possessor to leave the property.
It should state:
- identity of the property;
- basis of possession;
- reason possession is being terminated;
- unpaid rentals or violations, if any;
- demand to pay or comply, if applicable;
- demand to vacate;
- deadline;
- consequences of noncompliance.
In ejectment, the timing and content of demand are important.
23. Demand in Lease Cases
In lease disputes, demand may be necessary before filing unlawful detainer if the tenant’s possession was initially lawful.
Common demands include:
- demand to pay rent;
- demand to comply with lease terms;
- demand to vacate;
- notice of termination;
- notice of non-renewal;
- notice of breach;
- notice of cancellation.
The lease contract may also specify notice requirements.
24. Demand in Unpaid Rent Cases
For unpaid rent, a demand letter may state:
- total unpaid rent;
- covered months;
- interest or penalties;
- lease provisions violated;
- demand to pay;
- demand to vacate if payment is not made;
- deadline;
- intention to file ejectment or collection case.
If the landlord wants ejectment, the demand must be drafted with that remedy in mind.
25. Demand in Tolerance Cases
Sometimes a person occupies property by tolerance of the owner, such as a relative, friend, former employee, caretaker, or informal occupant allowed to stay temporarily.
To file unlawful detainer based on tolerance, the owner usually needs to show that tolerance was terminated and demand to vacate was made.
Without demand, the occupant may argue that possession has not yet become unlawful for purposes of ejectment.
26. Demand in Forcible Entry
In forcible entry, prior demand may not be required because the defendant’s possession was unlawful from the start due to force, intimidation, threat, strategy, or stealth.
However, sending a demand may still be useful in some cases.
The key in forcible entry is timely filing and proof of prior physical possession.
27. Demand in Recovery of Possession
In ordinary civil actions for recovery of possession or ownership, demand may be useful but not always required.
The plaintiff’s cause of action may arise from ownership and unlawful withholding of possession.
A demand letter helps show that the defendant refused to return possession after being notified.
28. Demand in Partition Cases
A co-owner may file an action for partition. Prior demand is not always strictly required because co-owners generally have the right to demand partition at any time, subject to limitations.
However, a prior written request for partition may be helpful to show:
- effort to settle;
- refusal by co-owners;
- basis for attorney’s fees;
- date of dispute;
- proposed division.
Demand is often practical even if not strictly required.
29. Demand in Accounting Cases
If one person manages funds or property for another, demand may be important before filing an action for accounting.
Examples:
- co-owner collecting rentals;
- agent handling money;
- partner managing business funds;
- estate heir controlling assets;
- employee entrusted with funds;
- contractor receiving advances.
A demand to render accounting helps show refusal or failure to account.
30. Demand in Agency and Trust Disputes
When an agent, trustee, representative, or fiduciary holds property or money, demand may be necessary to show that continued retention is wrongful.
The letter should demand:
- accounting;
- return of money or property;
- documents;
- explanation;
- settlement within a deadline.
If the fiduciary refuses, civil action may follow.
31. Demand in Replevin or Recovery of Personal Property
Replevin is used to recover possession of personal property.
A prior demand may be useful to show wrongful detention, especially if the defendant originally obtained the property lawfully.
For example:
- borrowed vehicle not returned;
- equipment leased but retained after termination;
- company property kept by former employee;
- goods delivered under conditional sale.
If possession was wrongful from the start, demand may be less important but still useful.
32. Demand in Sale of Goods Disputes
In sale of goods disputes, demand may involve:
- demand for delivery;
- demand for payment;
- demand for replacement;
- demand for refund;
- demand for repair;
- demand for return of defective goods;
- demand for damages.
Whether demand is required depends on contract terms, delivery dates, warranty provisions, and applicable law.
33. Demand in Construction Disputes
Construction disputes commonly involve demand letters.
A demand may require:
- completion of work;
- repair of defects;
- payment of progress billing;
- return of advances;
- accounting of materials;
- compliance with plans;
- correction of delays;
- termination of contract.
Many construction contracts require notice to cure before termination or claims.
34. Demand in Contractor Claims for Payment
A contractor seeking payment should usually send a demand letter if the owner refuses or delays payment.
The letter should attach or refer to:
- contract;
- progress billing;
- completion certificate;
- change orders;
- statement of account;
- proof of delivery;
- photos or reports;
- prior communications.
This helps show the amount due and the owner’s default.
35. Demand in Consumer Disputes
A consumer may send a demand letter before filing a civil action or complaint for defective products, non-delivery, warranty refusal, or service failure.
Demand may ask for:
- refund;
- replacement;
- repair;
- completion of service;
- damages;
- cancellation of transaction.
For some consumer matters, administrative complaint options may also be available.
36. Demand in Insurance Claims
Insurance disputes often require notice of claim and submission of documents under the policy.
A demand letter may be useful after the insurer denies, delays, or underpays the claim.
But the policy terms and insurance regulations must be checked because strict notice and claim requirements may apply.
37. Demand in Employment-Related Civil Claims
Some employment-related claims are filed before labor tribunals rather than ordinary civil courts. However, civil claims may arise in some situations.
A demand letter may be used for:
- unpaid consultancy fees;
- return of company property;
- liquidated damages;
- non-compete or confidentiality issues;
- civil damages;
- settlement of final pay.
The proper forum must be identified first.
38. Demand in Business Partner Disputes
Business partners, shareholders, or co-owners may send demand letters before suing for accounting, damages, inspection of records, return of funds, or enforcement of agreements.
Demand letters in business disputes should be carefully drafted because they may affect settlement, evidence, and future litigation strategy.
39. Demand in Estate Disputes
In inheritance and estate disputes, demand may be useful when one heir:
- controls estate property;
- refuses accounting;
- collects rentals;
- excludes other heirs;
- refuses partition;
- sells estate property without consent;
- withholds documents;
- refuses to settle taxes.
A demand letter can establish a record before filing estate settlement, partition, accounting, or damages actions.
40. Demand in Family Property Disputes
Family disputes often involve informal arrangements. A written demand helps clarify that the issue is now formal and legal.
Examples:
- sibling occupying inherited property;
- relative borrowing money;
- former spouse retaining documents;
- co-heir collecting rent;
- family member refusing to vacate.
A demand letter may also encourage settlement before litigation damages family relationships further.
41. Demand in Defamation or Libel-Related Civil Claims
For civil damages based on defamation, prior demand is not necessarily the source of liability. The wrongful publication or statement may already give rise to the claim.
However, a demand letter may request:
- takedown;
- apology;
- correction;
- cessation;
- damages;
- preservation of evidence.
Care is needed because communications may affect criminal or civil strategy.
42. Demand in Nuisance Cases
If a neighbor or business causes noise, smoke, flooding, obstruction, waste, or other nuisance, a demand letter may ask them to stop or correct the condition.
Demand is often useful because it shows notice and refusal.
However, urgent nuisance cases may require immediate legal action, such as injunction, especially where health or property is at risk.
43. Demand in Injunction Cases
If urgent relief is needed to prevent irreparable harm, a demand letter may not be practical or required.
Examples:
- imminent demolition;
- imminent sale of disputed property;
- ongoing trespass;
- disclosure of confidential information;
- destruction of evidence;
- illegal construction causing immediate danger.
In such cases, prior demand may be skipped if delay would defeat the purpose of the action.
44. Demand and Cause of Action
A civil complaint must show a cause of action. A cause of action consists of the plaintiff’s right, the defendant’s obligation, and the defendant’s violation of that right.
If the defendant’s violation depends on failure to comply after demand, then demand becomes part of the cause of action.
If the violation already occurred independently of demand, then prior demand may not be necessary to create the cause of action.
This is the key analytical point.
45. Demand and Premature Filing
A case may be premature if the plaintiff sues before the defendant’s obligation becomes due or before required demand, notice, or cure period is completed.
Premature filing may lead to dismissal.
Examples:
- suing on a payable-on-demand loan without demand;
- filing unlawful detainer without required demand to vacate;
- cancelling a contract without required notice;
- suing before the contractual cure period expires;
- filing before required barangay conciliation in covered cases.
46. Demand and Interest
Demand can affect when interest begins to run.
In some obligations, interest for delay may begin from the time of extrajudicial or judicial demand, unless the contract or law provides otherwise.
Thus, a demand letter may be important for computing monetary liability.
If no prior demand was sent, interest may begin only from filing of the complaint or another legally relevant date, depending on the circumstances.
47. Demand and Penalties
Penalty clauses may require default. If default requires demand, penalties may run only after demand.
If the contract provides automatic default, penalties may run from missed payment or breach, subject to legal limits and court reduction if unconscionable.
A demand letter helps document when penalties were invoked.
48. Demand and Attorney’s Fees
A demand letter may support a claim for attorney’s fees if the defendant’s refusal forced the claimant to litigate.
However, attorney’s fees are not automatically awarded just because a demand letter was sent.
The court still evaluates the legal basis, facts, and reasonableness.
49. Demand and Moral Damages
A demand letter does not automatically entitle a party to moral damages. Moral damages require legal and factual basis.
However, a demand letter may show that the defendant was given an opportunity to correct the wrong but refused, which may be relevant to bad faith in some cases.
50. Demand and Exemplary Damages
Exemplary damages require additional legal basis such as wanton, fraudulent, reckless, oppressive, or malevolent conduct.
Demand may help show the defendant persisted despite notice, but it does not by itself create entitlement.
51. Demand and Prescription
A demand letter does not always stop prescription. Filing a case is usually the safer way to interrupt prescription where legal deadlines are approaching.
Depending on the legal context, written extrajudicial demand may have effects on prescription in some obligations, but relying on a demand letter alone is risky.
If a claim is close to prescription, consult counsel immediately and consider filing suit rather than waiting.
52. Demand and Laches
Laches involves unreasonable delay that prejudices another party. Sending a demand letter may show that the claimant asserted rights, but it does not always defeat laches.
A person should not wait too long to enforce rights.
53. Demand and Settlement
One of the main practical benefits of a demand letter is settlement.
A well-written letter may lead to:
- payment plan;
- compromise agreement;
- return of property;
- voluntary vacating;
- repair;
- refund;
- apology;
- acknowledgment of debt;
- restructuring;
- release and waiver;
- mediation.
Litigation is costly and slow. Demand letters often resolve disputes earlier.
54. Demand and Evidence of Good Faith
Sending a reasonable demand letter may show good faith because the claimant tried to resolve the dispute before going to court.
This may matter in business, family, property, and contract disputes.
However, a demand letter written in bad faith, with threats or false claims, can backfire.
55. Demand and Admissions
A demand letter may cause the other party to respond. The response may contain admissions useful in court.
For example, the debtor may reply:
- “I will pay next month.”
- “I admit the loan but dispute the interest.”
- “I cannot vacate yet.”
- “I received the goods but they were defective.”
- “I used the funds but will account later.”
These admissions may become evidence.
56. Demand and Denial
The other party may also deny liability. This may clarify the dispute and help prepare the complaint.
A denial may show that further negotiation is useless.
57. Demand and Silence
If the other party ignores the demand, silence may not always equal admission. But it may show refusal or failure to comply.
In some contexts, failure to respond after demand supports the plaintiff’s claim that litigation became necessary.
58. Demand Letter Sent by Lawyer vs. Non-Lawyer
A demand letter may be sent by the claimant personally or by a lawyer.
A lawyer’s demand letter may be more formal and legally precise. It may also signal seriousness.
However, a non-lawyer’s written demand can still be valid if it clearly demands performance and is properly delivered.
The key is content, proof, and legal sufficiency.
59. Demand Letter From a Collection Agency
A collection agency may send a demand letter if authorized by the creditor.
However, collection agencies must avoid harassment, threats, false legal claims, privacy violations, or abusive practices.
A debtor may ask for proof that the agency is authorized to collect.
60. Demand Letter From a Law Office
A demand letter from a law office should identify the client, the basis of the claim, and the relief sought.
The recipient should verify that the law office and lawyer are legitimate if in doubt.
A demand letter from a lawyer is not a court order. It is a formal demand, not a judgment.
61. Demand Letter vs. Final Demand
A “final demand” is simply a demand stating that it is the last opportunity to comply before legal action.
Calling a letter “final demand” does not automatically create legal effects beyond its contents.
However, it may support claims that the defendant was given sufficient opportunity to comply.
62. How Many Demand Letters Are Required?
Usually, one sufficient demand is enough, unless the contract or law requires specific notices, multiple notices, or a cure period.
Multiple letters may be sent for negotiation or documentation, but repeated demands may also delay filing or create confusion.
In urgent cases, one clear demand may be better than several vague messages.
63. Verbal Demand
A demand can sometimes be verbal, but written demand is much easier to prove.
Verbal demand creates evidentiary problems:
- Who made the demand?
- When?
- What exactly was said?
- Was a deadline given?
- Did the other party receive it?
- Was there refusal?
For litigation, written demand is safer.
64. Text, Email, and Chat Demands
A demand may be made through text message, email, or chat if it clearly communicates the demand and can be authenticated.
However, for important legal matters, a formal written demand letter is preferable.
Digital demands should preserve:
- sender;
- recipient;
- date and time;
- full message thread;
- delivery or read confirmation;
- attachments;
- screenshots and original files.
Some contracts require notice by specific methods, such as registered mail or personal delivery, so chat may not be enough.
65. Demand by Registered Mail
Registered mail is commonly used because it provides proof of mailing and sometimes proof of receipt or attempted delivery.
Keep:
- copy of letter;
- registry receipt;
- tracking information;
- return card, if any;
- proof of delivery or return;
- envelope if returned.
This may be useful in court.
66. Demand by Personal Service
A demand letter may be personally delivered to the recipient.
Proof may include:
- receiving copy signed by recipient;
- date and time received;
- printed name and signature;
- receiving stamp;
- affidavit of service;
- witness to delivery;
- video or photo evidence where appropriate.
If the recipient refuses to receive, the server may execute an affidavit stating the refusal.
67. Demand by Courier
Courier delivery may be useful if it provides tracking and proof of delivery.
Keep:
- courier receipt;
- tracking record;
- delivery confirmation;
- copy of letter;
- photos if available.
For formal legal notices, check whether courier delivery satisfies the contract.
68. Demand by Email
Email may be appropriate when the parties customarily communicate by email or the contract allows email notices.
Keep:
- sent email;
- attachments;
- email headers;
- delivery confirmation if available;
- replies;
- screenshots;
- downloaded original message.
For high-stakes matters, email may be combined with registered mail or personal service.
69. Demand Through Barangay
For disputes covered by barangay conciliation, the matter may be brought first to the barangay before court action.
This is separate from a private demand letter.
Barangay conciliation may be mandatory in certain disputes where parties are individuals residing in the same city or municipality, subject to exceptions.
A demand letter does not automatically replace barangay conciliation when barangay conciliation is required.
70. Barangay Conciliation Requirement
Some civil disputes must go through barangay conciliation before filing in court. This is a jurisdictional or procedural requirement in covered cases.
If required, failure to undergo barangay conciliation may result in dismissal or suspension of the case.
This is not technically a demand letter requirement. It is a required prior dispute resolution process.
71. When Barangay Conciliation Usually Applies
Barangay conciliation may apply when:
- parties are natural persons;
- they reside in the same city or municipality;
- the dispute is within the authority of the barangay system;
- no exception applies.
It may not apply when:
- one party is a corporation;
- parties reside in different cities or municipalities, subject to specific rules;
- the dispute involves real property in another location;
- the offense or claim is beyond barangay authority;
- urgent legal action is needed;
- government is a party;
- other exceptions apply.
Always check whether barangay conciliation is required before filing.
72. Demand Letter vs. Barangay Summons
A demand letter is sent by a claimant. A barangay summons is issued by the barangay after a complaint is filed before it.
If barangay conciliation is required, the plaintiff may need a certificate to file action before going to court.
A prior demand letter may help show the dispute history, but it is not the same as barangay conciliation.
73. Demand in Small Claims Cases
Small claims cases are designed for simplified collection of money.
A demand letter is often required or expected as part of documentary proof that the defendant was asked to pay.
Small claims forms commonly require details of demand and supporting documents.
Failure to show prior demand may affect the sufficiency of the claim, especially if the obligation is payable on demand or if the plaintiff seeks interest or charges.
74. Demand in Small Claims for Loans
For a small claims loan case, the plaintiff should usually attach:
- promissory note or loan agreement;
- proof of release of loan;
- payment history;
- demand letter;
- proof of receipt or delivery of demand;
- computation of amount due.
A demand letter helps establish that the borrower failed to pay after being asked.
75. Demand in Small Claims for Services or Goods
For unpaid services or goods, attach:
- invoice;
- delivery receipt;
- contract;
- purchase order;
- statement of account;
- demand letter;
- proof of demand delivery;
- communications admitting debt.
Demand is not merely procedural; it helps prove the claim.
76. Demand and Mediation
A demand letter may lead to negotiation or mediation.
The parties may agree to:
- private mediation;
- barangay conciliation;
- court-annexed mediation after filing;
- industry mediation;
- business settlement conference.
Demand letters can frame the issues before mediation.
77. Demand and Arbitration Clauses
If the contract has an arbitration clause, filing directly in court may be improper or subject to dismissal or referral to arbitration.
A demand letter should check dispute resolution clauses.
It may need to be a notice of dispute or notice of arbitration instead of a simple demand.
Failure to follow the dispute resolution clause can create procedural problems.
78. Demand and Contractual Notice Clauses
Many contracts specify how notices must be sent.
Examples:
- by registered mail;
- by personal delivery;
- by courier;
- to a specific address;
- to a corporate officer;
- with copy to counsel;
- by email to designated address;
- after a cure period;
- with a specific subject or reference.
A demand sent to the wrong address or by the wrong method may be challenged as invalid.
79. Demand and Corporate Debtors
If the debtor is a corporation, send the demand to:
- registered office;
- principal office;
- authorized officer;
- corporate secretary;
- designated notice address in contract;
- branch involved, where appropriate.
A demand sent only to a sales agent or employee may be disputed if the person lacked authority to receive.
80. Demand and Individual Debtors
For individuals, send demand to:
- residence;
- business address;
- address in contract;
- email or phone used in transaction, where appropriate;
- last known address.
Keep proof of delivery.
81. Demand Against Deceased Debtor
If the debtor has died, ordinary demand against the deceased person is no longer practical. Claims may need to be filed against the estate or heirs in the proper proceeding.
The creditor should identify whether estate settlement is pending.
Demand may be sent to the administrator, executor, heirs, or estate representative, depending on the situation.
Special rules and deadlines may apply.
82. Demand Against Minors or Incapacitated Persons
If the person liable is a minor or incapacitated, demand may need to be addressed to the parent, guardian, legal representative, or person responsible.
Civil capacity and enforceability must be examined.
83. Demand Against Government Agencies
Claims against government entities may require compliance with special rules, administrative procedures, notices, or exhaustion of remedies.
A simple demand letter may not be enough.
Government contracts, money claims, and damages claims involving public entities may require special handling.
84. Demand Against Banks or Regulated Entities
Claims against banks, insurers, financial institutions, or regulated companies may involve internal complaint processes, regulatory complaint channels, or contract-specific notice requirements.
A demand letter may be useful but may not replace required administrative procedures.
85. Demand Letter Content: Essential Parts
A good demand letter should include:
- Date;
- sender’s name and address;
- recipient’s name and address;
- subject line;
- factual background;
- legal or contractual basis;
- specific demand;
- exact amount, if monetary;
- computation;
- deadline;
- payment or compliance instructions;
- documents attached or referenced;
- consequence of noncompliance;
- reservation of rights;
- signature.
The letter should be clear, professional, and factual.
86. Avoid Vague Demands
A demand letter should not merely say “settle your obligation immediately” without details.
It should state:
- What obligation?
- How much?
- From what transaction?
- Due when?
- Pay where?
- What is the deadline?
- What happens if not paid?
Vague demands may be less useful in court.
87. Demand Amount Must Be Accurate
Overstating the claim can damage credibility. Understating can create confusion.
Include a breakdown:
- principal;
- interest;
- penalties;
- attorney’s fees, if applicable;
- costs;
- less payments made;
- total balance.
If the amount is still subject to final accounting, say so.
88. Demand Should Avoid Threats
A demand letter should not use unlawful threats, insults, harassment, or defamatory accusations.
Avoid statements such as:
- “You will be jailed immediately” for a purely civil debt;
- “We will shame you online”;
- “We will contact your employer” unnecessarily;
- “You are a criminal” without basis;
- “We will ruin your reputation.”
An abusive demand letter can create liability for the sender.
89. Demand Should Not Misrepresent the Law
A demand letter should be firm but accurate.
Do not falsely claim:
- a case has already been filed if it has not;
- a warrant will be issued for civil debt;
- police will arrest the debtor for nonpayment;
- court judgment already exists;
- bank accounts can be frozen without process;
- employer is legally required to pay the debt.
Misleading legal threats can backfire.
90. Demand Should Be Specific About Deadline
The deadline should be reasonable unless the contract requires a specific period.
Examples:
- “within five days from receipt”;
- “within seven calendar days from receipt”;
- “on or before a specific date”;
- “within the cure period provided in the contract.”
For ejectment, statutory and procedural timing should be carefully followed.
91. Demand Should State “From Receipt” When Appropriate
Using “from receipt” helps avoid disputes about when the period begins.
Example:
“Please pay the amount of ₱250,000 within five days from receipt of this letter.”
This connects the deadline to proof of delivery.
92. Demand Should Include Payment Instructions
For money claims, state where payment should be made.
Include:
- bank account or official payment channel;
- payee name;
- office address;
- request for proof of payment;
- requirement for official receipt or acknowledgment.
Avoid ambiguous payment instructions.
93. Demand Should Reserve Rights
A reservation of rights may state that failure to comply will compel the sender to take legal action, without waiving any rights, remedies, damages, interest, costs, or attorney’s fees.
This prevents the letter from being treated as a waiver or complete statement of all claims.
94. Demand Should Be Supported by Documents
Attach or reference relevant documents, such as:
- contract;
- promissory note;
- invoice;
- statement of account;
- delivery receipt;
- lease agreement;
- photos;
- computation;
- prior communications;
- title documents;
- authority to represent.
Do not attach sensitive documents unnecessarily.
95. Demand Should Be Signed
A demand letter should be signed by the claimant or authorized counsel.
If signed by a representative, authority should be clear.
For corporations, the signatory should have authority or at least be a responsible officer.
96. Demand by Corporation
A corporation sending a demand should use its official name and authorized representative.
If the dispute is significant, a board resolution or corporate authority may be needed internally, especially before filing suit.
97. Demand by Lawyer on Behalf of Client
A lawyer may send a demand letter if authorized by the client.
The letter should not disclose privileged matters unnecessarily.
It should be accurate and should avoid abusive collection tactics.
98. Demand Letter as Evidence
In court, a demand letter may be offered to prove:
- demand was made;
- amount demanded;
- date of demand;
- recipient had notice;
- recipient failed or refused to comply;
- interest or penalties began;
- plaintiff tried settlement;
- defendant’s response or silence;
- basis for attorney’s fees.
Proof of receipt is often as important as the letter itself.
99. Proof of Receipt
Keep evidence that the demand was received or delivery was attempted.
Proof may include:
- signed receiving copy;
- registered mail receipt;
- return card;
- courier delivery record;
- email reply;
- chat acknowledgment;
- affidavit of service;
- photo of delivery;
- tracking report.
Without proof of receipt, the defendant may deny receiving the demand.
100. Refusal to Receive Demand
If the recipient refuses to receive the letter, document the refusal.
A refusal may still be treated as notice in some circumstances if properly proven.
The server may execute an affidavit stating:
- date and time;
- place;
- identity of recipient;
- that the letter was offered;
- that recipient refused;
- names of witnesses.
101. Returned Mail
If registered mail is returned unclaimed, moved, refused, or unknown, keep the returned envelope and postal markings.
The legal effect depends on circumstances. It may show attempted notice, but further steps may be needed.
Use the correct address and consider alternative delivery.
102. Demand to Multiple Parties
If several persons are liable, demand should be addressed to all necessary parties.
Examples:
- co-makers;
- guarantors;
- sureties;
- spouses;
- business partners;
- corporation and authorized officer, if personally liable;
- co-lessees;
- co-buyers.
Demanding from only one party may be insufficient for claims against others, depending on the obligation.
103. Demand Against Guarantor or Surety
If there is a guarantor or surety, check the contract.
A guarantor’s liability may require prior demand against the principal debtor or exhaustion of remedies unless waived.
A surety may be directly liable depending on the terms.
Demand should be carefully addressed.
104. Demand Against Solidary Debtors
If debtors are solidarily liable, demand may be made against any or all of them, depending on strategy and contract.
However, sending demand to all may avoid later disputes.
105. Demand Against Spouses
If the debt involves spouses, family home, conjugal property, or community property, demand may need to consider who signed, who benefited, and what property is liable.
Do not assume one spouse is automatically liable for the other spouse’s personal debt.
106. Demand in Corporate Officer Liability
A corporation’s debt is generally not automatically the personal debt of its officers or stockholders.
If a demand letter names officers personally, there should be legal basis, such as personal guarantee, fraud, tort, bad faith, or piercing the corporate veil.
Baseless personal threats against officers may be improper.
107. Demand Before Filing Civil Case vs. Criminal Complaint
This article concerns civil cases. Criminal complaints have different rules.
However, some disputes have both civil and criminal aspects, such as bouncing checks, estafa, fraud, or malicious mischief.
For certain criminal offenses, demand may be relevant to prove elements or intent, but the analysis differs from civil cases.
Do not assume civil demand rules apply the same way to criminal cases.
108. Demand in Bouncing Check Situations
In bounced check situations, notice of dishonor and demand may be important for criminal and civil consequences.
For civil collection, the creditor may sue for the amount due. For criminal liability, specific notice requirements may matter.
Because bounced checks can involve both civil and criminal remedies, demand should be carefully drafted.
109. Demand in Estafa-Related Transactions
A civil demand for payment may help document refusal to return money or property. But estafa depends on specific legal elements, not mere nonpayment.
A demand letter should avoid automatically labeling a debtor as an estafador unless supported by facts.
110. Demand and Abuse of Rights
A demand letter should be made in good faith. A person who uses demand letters to harass, embarrass, extort, or defame may face legal consequences.
Civil law recognizes that rights must be exercised in accordance with justice, honesty, and good faith.
111. Demand Letter and Defamation Risk
A demand letter should be sent only to persons with a legitimate interest.
Sending the letter to the debtor’s employer, relatives, neighbors, or social media contacts may be defamatory or privacy-invasive if unnecessary.
For collection matters, avoid public shaming.
112. Demand Letter and Data Privacy
Demand letters may contain personal information, financial information, and transaction details.
Send them securely and only to appropriate recipients.
Do not unnecessarily disclose debt details to third parties.
113. Demand Letter and Harassment
Creditors must avoid harassment.
Improper conduct includes:
- repeated abusive messages;
- threats of arrest for civil debt;
- contacting unrelated third parties;
- public posting;
- insults;
- intimidation;
- false legal documents;
- pretending to be police or court personnel.
A lawful demand is firm but professional.
114. Responding to a Demand Letter
A recipient should not ignore a serious demand letter.
Possible responses:
- pay in full;
- dispute the claim;
- ask for documents;
- propose settlement;
- request computation;
- raise defenses;
- ask for more time;
- deny liability;
- refer to counsel;
- preserve rights.
A written response may prevent escalation or clarify issues.
115. What If the Demand Is Wrong?
If the demand is wrong, respond calmly and specifically.
State:
- which amount is disputed;
- what payments were already made;
- what documents are missing;
- why the claim is invalid;
- what settlement is offered, if any;
- reservation of rights.
Keep proof of response.
116. What If the Demand Is Abusive?
If the demand contains threats, harassment, or false legal claims, preserve it.
The recipient may:
- respond through counsel;
- demand that harassment stop;
- file a complaint if appropriate;
- report abusive collection;
- use the letter as evidence of bad faith.
Do not respond with threats.
117. What If the Demand Letter Is From a Fake Lawyer?
Verify the lawyer or law office if doubtful.
Red flags include:
- no lawyer name;
- no office address;
- threats of immediate arrest for civil debt;
- payment to personal account;
- refusal to provide authority;
- fake case number;
- unprofessional language.
A demand letter from a fake lawyer may support complaints for fraud or unauthorized practice.
118. What If the Demand Letter Gives an Unrealistic Deadline?
A short deadline does not automatically make the demand invalid, but it may be unreasonable.
The recipient may respond requesting reasonable time, especially if the amount is large or documents are needed.
For contractual cure periods, the contract controls.
119. Can a Demand Letter Be Withdrawn?
A demand letter may be withdrawn, modified, or superseded by a later communication, but doing so may have legal consequences.
For example, extending a deadline may affect default, interest, or cancellation.
Put any modification in writing.
120. Can a Demand Letter Be Used Against the Sender?
Yes.
A demand letter can be used against the sender if it contains:
- admissions;
- incorrect amounts;
- threats;
- defamatory statements;
- waiver language;
- inconsistent facts;
- bad faith;
- acknowledgment of obligations;
- settlement offers, subject to evidentiary rules.
Draft carefully.
121. Should a Demand Letter Be Notarized?
A demand letter does not generally need to be notarized to be valid.
However, some people notarize affidavits of service or related documents.
Notarization does not guarantee that the demand is legally correct. Content and delivery matter more.
122. Should a Demand Letter Be Written in English or Filipino?
A demand letter may be written in English, Filipino, or another language understood by the recipient.
For legal clarity, use language that is precise and understandable.
If the recipient cannot understand the language, they may later claim they did not understand the demand.
123. Demand Letter Before Filing: Strategic Considerations
Before sending a demand letter, consider:
- Is demand legally required?
- Will it trigger settlement?
- Will it warn the other party to hide assets?
- Is urgent injunctive relief needed?
- Will it help prove default?
- Does the contract require a specific notice?
- Is barangay conciliation required?
- Is prescription near?
- Is there a risk of retaliation?
- Should the letter come from counsel?
In some cases, immediate filing may be better.
124. When Not Sending a Demand Letter May Be Better
A demand letter may be skipped when:
- urgent court relief is needed;
- assets may be hidden if warned;
- evidence may be destroyed;
- the defendant is already clearly in breach;
- demand would be useless;
- the claim is near prescription;
- the law does not require demand;
- prior communications already show refusal;
- safety concerns exist.
This is a strategic decision.
125. When Sending a Demand Letter Is Strongly Advisable
A demand letter is strongly advisable when:
- collecting debt;
- enforcing lease obligations;
- preparing ejectment;
- demanding payment for services;
- seeking return of property;
- requesting accounting;
- invoking contract default;
- giving notice to cure;
- documenting settlement efforts;
- computing interest from demand;
- preserving professional tone before litigation.
In many civil cases, it is inexpensive protection.
126. Demand Letter and Lawyer’s Fees Before Filing
Some claimants worry that hiring a lawyer just to send a demand letter is unnecessary.
For small or simple claims, a claimant may send a personal demand letter. But lawyer assistance is useful when:
- the claim is large;
- contract terms are complex;
- ejectment is contemplated;
- legal deadlines matter;
- the other side has counsel;
- the dispute involves land;
- there are multiple parties;
- there is possible criminal exposure;
- the demand must be carefully worded.
A poorly drafted demand may harm the case.
127. Sample Structure of a Demand Letter
A simple structure:
- Date;
- recipient’s name and address;
- subject;
- introduction and authority to write;
- summary of facts;
- basis of obligation;
- computation or specific act demanded;
- deadline;
- consequences of noncompliance;
- reservation of rights;
- signature.
The letter should be adapted to the facts.
128. Sample Demand for Payment Structure
A demand for payment may state:
- On a specific date, debtor borrowed or agreed to pay a sum;
- the amount became due on a specific date;
- despite reminders, debtor failed to pay;
- total amount due is stated with breakdown;
- debtor is demanded to pay within a stated period from receipt;
- payment should be made to specified channel;
- failure will compel filing of appropriate civil action and claim for interest, damages, costs, and attorney’s fees.
Avoid unnecessary insults or criminal threats.
129. Sample Demand to Vacate Structure
A demand to vacate may state:
- the sender owns or lawfully possesses the property;
- recipient’s basis of possession was lease, tolerance, or other arrangement;
- the right to possess has expired or been terminated;
- unpaid rent or violation exists, if applicable;
- recipient is demanded to pay and vacate, or simply vacate, depending on the case;
- deadline is stated;
- failure will result in ejectment and claims for rentals, damages, attorney’s fees, and costs.
Ejectment demands should be drafted carefully because defective demand may affect the case.
130. Demand Letter and Statement of Account
For money claims, attach a statement of account.
It should show:
- principal;
- payments made;
- dates;
- interest;
- penalties;
- charges;
- total balance;
- supporting invoices or agreements.
This reduces dispute over computation.
131. Demand Letter and Compromise Offer
A demand letter may include a settlement option, such as installment payment or discounted lump sum.
Be careful with wording. If the settlement offer is rejected, the creditor may still want to claim the full amount.
Use “without prejudice” language where appropriate, but understand that evidentiary effects may depend on context.
132. Demand Letter and Acknowledgment Agreement
If the debtor responds and agrees to pay, reduce the agreement to writing.
An acknowledgment or settlement agreement should state:
- amount admitted;
- payment schedule;
- due dates;
- interest or penalties;
- default consequences;
- waiver or reservation;
- signatures;
- witnesses or notarization if appropriate.
This may avoid litigation.
133. Demand Letter and Installment Settlement
If the debtor proposes installment payment, the creditor should require written terms.
Avoid vague arrangements such as “magbabayad ako kapag kaya ko.”
State exact dates and amounts.
134. Demand Letter and Partial Payment
Partial payment after demand may be evidence that the obligation exists.
Issue proper receipt or acknowledgment.
Clarify whether partial payment is accepted as:
- partial settlement only;
- without waiver of balance;
- full settlement;
- compromise;
- payment applied to interest first or principal first.
Ambiguity may cause later disputes.
135. Demand Letter and Waiver
A claimant should avoid accidentally waiving rights.
For example, saying “pay ₱100,000 and we will consider this closed” may be treated as a settlement offer. If accepted and paid, the claimant may be barred from claiming more.
Use precise language.
136. Demand Letter and Acceleration Clause
Some contracts allow the creditor to declare the entire obligation due after default.
If acceleration requires notice, the demand letter should clearly state that the creditor is accelerating the balance pursuant to the contract.
If acceleration is automatic, the demand letter may still confirm that the entire balance is now due.
137. Demand Letter and Guaranty
If a guarantor is involved, the demand should comply with guaranty terms.
The creditor may need to demand from the principal debtor first unless the guarantor waived benefit of excussion or agreed to solidary liability.
Misunderstanding guaranty law can delay collection.
138. Demand Letter and Suretyship
A surety is often directly and solidarily liable with the principal debtor.
Still, demand should be sent to both principal and surety when possible.
Check the surety agreement.
139. Demand Letter and Interest Rates
Demand letters should state interest accurately.
If no interest was agreed upon, do not invent excessive interest.
If interest is agreed, cite the agreement and compute clearly.
Courts may reduce unconscionable interest or penalties.
140. Demand Letter and Attorney’s Fees
A demand letter may demand attorney’s fees if there is a contractual or legal basis.
However, claiming excessive attorney’s fees may be challenged.
State attorney’s fees reasonably and reserve the right to claim them in court.
141. Demand Letter and Liquidated Damages
If the contract provides liquidated damages, cite the clause and amount.
The court may still reduce liquidated damages if iniquitous or unconscionable.
142. Demand Letter and Rescission With Damages
If the claimant wants rescission and damages, the letter should clearly state the breach and demanded remedy.
Depending on the contract, the claimant may demand compliance first, then rescission if no compliance occurs.
143. Demand Letter and Return of Property
A demand for return of property should identify:
- property description;
- serial number or identifying marks;
- basis of possession;
- date property was received;
- demand to return;
- deadline;
- place of return;
- consequences.
This is useful for replevin, damages, or criminal-related evaluation.
144. Demand Letter and Accounting
A demand for accounting should ask for:
- books;
- receipts;
- inventory;
- bank records;
- rental collections;
- sales records;
- disbursement records;
- contracts;
- liquidation of funds;
- return of balance.
Give a clear deadline.
145. Demand Letter and Defective Work
A demand for defective work should describe:
- contract;
- work performed;
- defects;
- photos or inspection findings;
- required correction;
- deadline;
- request for refund or damages if not corrected.
Attach inspection reports where available.
146. Demand Letter and Real Estate Developer Disputes
Buyers may demand from developers:
- refund;
- title transfer;
- delivery of possession;
- completion of development;
- correction of defects;
- accounting of payments;
- release of documents;
- cancellation under law.
Developer contracts often have specific notice and dispute provisions.
147. Demand Letter and Condominium or Subdivision Dues
Associations may send demands for unpaid dues. Unit or lot owners may also send demands for accounting, repairs, or compliance with restrictions.
Check association bylaws, deed restrictions, and applicable rules.
148. Demand Letter and Corporate Shareholder Disputes
Shareholders may demand inspection of corporate books, dividends, accounting, or compliance with corporate obligations.
Some corporate remedies require written demand or exhaustion of intra-corporate processes.
The proper forum may be a special commercial court, depending on the dispute.
149. Demand Letter and Derivative Suits
In derivative suits, demand on the corporation’s board may be required or must be excused depending on the circumstances.
This is a specialized area. A simple demand letter may not be enough.
150. Demand Letter and Condominium Buyers
A buyer may demand turnover, title, refund, or compliance from a condominium developer.
Check the reservation agreement, contract to sell, license to sell, and regulatory remedies.
151. Demand Letter and Vehicle Sale Disputes
For vehicle sale disputes, demand may involve:
- delivery of OR/CR;
- transfer of registration;
- payment of balance;
- repair of defects;
- return of vehicle;
- refund;
- cancellation.
Demand helps establish breach and refusal.
152. Demand Letter and Bank Loans
Banks usually send demand letters before filing collection, foreclosure, or other actions.
Loan agreements often specify default and acceleration provisions.
Borrowers should take bank demand letters seriously because they may trigger acceleration and enforcement.
153. Demand Letter and Foreclosure
Foreclosure may require notices under law and contract. A demand letter may be part of the process but is not always the only notice required.
Mortgage and pledge enforcement should follow strict rules.
154. Demand Letter and Rent-to-Own Arrangements
Rent-to-own arrangements often combine lease and sale elements.
Demand requirements depend on the contract.
A demand may need to address:
- unpaid installments;
- termination of right to occupy;
- cancellation of purchase rights;
- demand to vacate;
- refund or forfeiture terms;
- applicable buyer protections.
155. Demand Letter and Contractual Cure Period
A cure period gives the breaching party time to fix the breach.
If the contract gives a 15-day cure period, the demand letter should respect it.
Filing suit before the cure period ends may be premature.
156. Demand Letter and Notice of Termination
A demand letter may also serve as notice of termination, but only if it clearly says so and complies with the contract.
If termination requires separate notice, send a separate notice.
157. Demand Letter and Bad Faith
A demand letter may help prove bad faith if the defendant knowingly refused to comply despite clear obligation.
But if the claim is genuinely disputed, refusal to pay does not automatically prove bad faith.
158. Demand Letter and Liquidated Claims
A liquidated claim is one where the amount is already determined or easily computable.
Demand letters are easier for liquidated claims because the amount can be clearly stated.
Unliquidated damages may still be demanded, but the amount may be estimated or reserved for court determination.
159. Demand Letter and Unliquidated Damages
For injury, negligence, emotional distress, reputational harm, or consequential damages, the amount may not be fixed.
A demand letter may state the basis and proposed settlement amount, while reserving the right to prove damages in court.
160. Demand Letter and “Without Prejudice” Communications
Some settlement communications may be marked “without prejudice.” This can help protect settlement negotiations, but it is not magic wording.
Admissions of fact and independent communications may still have legal effects.
Use carefully.
161. Demand Letter and Acknowledgment of Debt
A debtor’s written acknowledgment after demand can be important evidence and may affect prescription or settlement.
If a debtor admits the debt, preserve the message or document.
162. Demand Letter and Novation
If after demand the parties agree to new terms, the agreement may modify or novate the obligation.
Be careful when accepting new payment terms.
State whether the new agreement replaces the old obligation or merely grants accommodation.
163. Demand Letter and Compromise Agreement
If settlement is reached, put it in writing.
A compromise agreement may be judicial or extrajudicial.
It should state:
- claims settled;
- payment terms;
- releases;
- default provisions;
- confidentiality, if any;
- tax effects;
- signatures;
- authority of parties.
164. Demand Letter and Court-Annexed Mediation
Even if a demand letter fails and a case is filed, the court may refer the case to mediation.
A prior demand may help identify the issues and settlement positions.
165. Demand Letter and Filing Fees
A demand letter itself does not require court filing fees.
When a case is filed, filing fees are based on the nature of the action and amount claimed.
The amount demanded may affect the amount claimed in the complaint. Be careful with computations.
166. Demand Letter and Jurisdiction
A demand letter does not determine court jurisdiction. Jurisdiction is determined by law, amount claimed, nature of action, location, and other factors.
However, the amount stated in demand may be relevant to later pleadings.
167. Demand Letter and Venue
A demand letter does not control venue unless the contract has a venue clause or the parties later agree.
If litigation is expected, check where the case must be filed.
168. Demand Letter and Small Claims Amount Limit
If the amount is within small claims jurisdiction, a demand letter may be used before filing small claims.
If the amount exceeds the limit, the claimant should decide whether to waive excess or file ordinary civil action, depending on strategy and rules.
169. Demand Letter and Splitting Causes of Action
A claimant should not split a single cause of action into multiple cases improperly.
Demand letters should consider all related claims before filing.
170. Demand Letter and Counterclaims
Before sending a demand, consider whether the other party has counterclaims.
A debtor may claim:
- defective goods;
- prior payments;
- overcharging;
- damages;
- breach by claimant;
- setoff;
- fraud;
- invalid contract.
A demand letter may trigger counter-demands.
171. Demand Letter and Setoff or Compensation
If both parties owe each other, demand should consider legal compensation or setoff.
For example, a contractor demands payment, but owner claims repair costs.
The demand should address known offsets if possible.
172. Demand Letter and Documentation Before Sending
Before sending a demand, gather:
- contracts;
- invoices;
- receipts;
- messages;
- proof of delivery;
- payment records;
- photos;
- witness information;
- computation;
- title documents;
- prior notices;
- IDs and authority documents.
Do not send a demand based on incomplete or uncertain facts.
173. Demand Letter and False Claims
Sending a demand for a false claim may expose the sender to counterclaims, damages, or even criminal issues in extreme cases.
Verify facts before demanding.
174. Demand Letter and Emotional Disputes
In family, neighbor, or business-partner disputes, emotional wording can escalate conflict.
A demand letter should be firm, not insulting.
Avoid moral lectures, personal attacks, and unnecessary accusations.
175. Demand Letter and Preservation of Evidence
A demand letter may include a request to preserve evidence, such as:
- CCTV footage;
- records;
- contracts;
- emails;
- accounting documents;
- defective products;
- property condition;
- digital logs.
This is useful if litigation is expected.
176. Demand Letter and Spoliation Concerns
If evidence may be destroyed, a demand to preserve may help show that the other party had notice.
However, if warning them may cause immediate destruction, consider urgent court relief instead.
177. Demand Letter and Public Officials
If the dispute involves public officials personally or government offices, be careful with tone and forum.
Some claims require administrative remedies or notices before civil action.
178. Demand Letter and Professional Negligence
For claims against professionals, demand may help request records, explanation, refund, or settlement.
But professional negligence claims may require expert evaluation and careful factual investigation.
179. Demand Letter and Medical Claims
Medical negligence or hospital billing disputes require careful handling.
Demand may be useful, but records, expert opinion, and proper forum are important.
180. Demand Letter and Landlord Self-Help
A landlord should not use demand letters as a basis for illegal self-help eviction.
Even after demand, the landlord should not:
- padlock unlawfully;
- cut utilities without legal basis;
- forcibly remove belongings;
- threaten tenants;
- enter without authority.
If the tenant does not vacate, proper legal action may be needed.
181. Demand Letter and Tenant Rights
A tenant receiving demand should check:
- lease terms;
- rent payments;
- validity of termination;
- notice period;
- rent control rules, if applicable;
- deposit application;
- repairs and habitability issues;
- whether ejectment requirements were met.
Respond in writing if disputing.
182. Demand Letter and Homeowners’ Association Disputes
Associations may demand dues or compliance with restrictions. Owners may demand accounting, services, or correction of assessments.
Check bylaws, deed restrictions, board resolutions, and association rules.
183. Demand Letter and Vehicle Accidents
After a vehicle accident, a demand letter may seek payment for:
- repair costs;
- medical expenses;
- lost income;
- participation fee;
- towing;
- damages.
Attach police report, photos, estimates, receipts, and medical records.
Prior demand is not always required before a damages suit, but it is common.
184. Demand Letter and Insurance Participation Fee
If the insured paid participation fee and seeks reimbursement from the at-fault party, demand should include proof of payment, repair estimate, and accident documents.
185. Demand Letter and Defective Product
Demand may ask for repair, replacement, refund, or damages.
Attach:
- receipt;
- warranty;
- photos;
- service reports;
- communications;
- proof of defect.
186. Demand Letter and Non-Delivery of Purchased Item
For non-delivery, demand should state:
- item purchased;
- date paid;
- amount paid;
- promised delivery date;
- proof of payment;
- demand to deliver or refund.
This is common in online transactions.
187. Demand Letter and Online Seller Disputes
Online seller demand may be sent through registered address, email, platform messaging, or business contact.
Preserve screenshots and transaction records.
If the seller identity is unclear, identify the legal seller before filing.
188. Demand Letter and Fraudulent Transactions
If fraud is suspected, demand may be useful but may also warn the wrongdoer.
If there is risk of disappearing assets or evidence, legal advice is recommended before sending demand.
189. Demand Letter and Injured Reputation
If the dispute involves harmful public statements, a demand letter may request:
- deletion;
- correction;
- apology;
- undertaking not to repeat;
- damages.
Preserve screenshots before sending demand.
190. Demand Letter and Cease-and-Desist
A cease-and-desist letter demands that the recipient stop doing something.
It may be used for:
- trespass;
- nuisance;
- defamation;
- intellectual property infringement;
- harassment;
- unfair competition;
- breach of confidentiality;
- unauthorized use of property.
It is a type of demand letter.
191. Demand Letter and Intellectual Property
In intellectual property disputes, cease-and-desist letters should be carefully drafted.
A baseless infringement demand may expose the sender to counterclaims.
Identify the IP rights, infringing acts, and demanded remedies clearly.
192. Demand Letter and Confidentiality Breach
A demand may require:
- stop disclosure;
- return documents;
- delete files;
- account for recipients;
- pay damages;
- sign undertaking.
Urgent injunction may be needed if disclosure is ongoing.
193. Demand Letter and Data Privacy Violations
A demand may ask an entity to:
- stop processing;
- delete data;
- correct records;
- explain breach;
- compensate harm;
- preserve logs;
- identify recipients.
Regulatory complaint options may also apply.
194. Demand Letter and Neighbor Encroachment
For encroachment, demand should include:
- property description;
- survey or title basis;
- nature of encroachment;
- demand to remove or settle;
- deadline;
- request for joint survey if appropriate.
A survey is often needed before suing.
195. Demand Letter and Boundary Disputes
Boundary disputes should be supported by technical evidence.
A demand without survey basis may be weak.
Consider a geodetic survey before sending demand.
196. Demand Letter and Unpaid Association Dues
Associations should state:
- assessment period;
- rate;
- authority for dues;
- payments credited;
- penalties;
- total due;
- deadline;
- remedies under bylaws.
Owners may dispute improper assessments.
197. Demand Letter and School or Tuition Disputes
A school may demand unpaid tuition or fees. Parents or students may demand refund or release of records, depending on rules.
Educational disputes may have administrative remedies.
198. Demand Letter and Hospital Bills
Hospitals may demand payment, but patient rights and billing documentation matter.
Patients may request itemized billing and dispute charges.
199. Demand Letter and Professional Fees
Professionals may demand unpaid fees if supported by engagement, billing, or services rendered.
Clients may demand accounting, return of documents, or refund where appropriate.
200. Demand Letter and Return of Documents
A demand may seek return of:
- titles;
- IDs;
- receipts;
- corporate records;
- school records;
- medical records;
- accounting records;
- contracts;
- client files.
The letter should specify documents and deadline.
201. Demand Letter and Attorney-Client Disputes
Clients may demand accounting, return of files, or explanation from former counsel. Lawyers may demand unpaid fees.
Professional responsibility rules may apply.
202. Demand Letter and Demand for Apology
A demand for apology may be included in defamation, harassment, or personal injury disputes.
However, courts may not always compel apology as the main relief. Monetary damages or injunctive relief may be more legally concrete.
203. Demand Letter and Demand for Public Retraction
A demand for public retraction should identify the false statement and requested corrective language.
Preserve the original publication.
204. Demand Letter and Demand for Removal of Online Content
Demand should include:
- URL;
- screenshots;
- date posted;
- why unlawful;
- requested takedown;
- preservation of evidence;
- deadline.
Platform reporting may also be used.
205. Demand Letter and Demand for Refund
A refund demand should state:
- amount paid;
- date paid;
- reason refund is due;
- contract or law basis;
- payment channel for refund;
- deadline.
Attach proof of payment.
206. Demand Letter and Demand for Replacement or Repair
A repair or replacement demand should identify the defect and the requested remedy.
Attach warranty documents, photos, and service reports.
207. Demand Letter and Demand for Delivery
A delivery demand should identify goods, quantity, delivery date, purchase order, payment, and delivery address.
208. Demand Letter and Demand for Performance
A performance demand should specify the exact act required.
Examples:
- sign deed;
- deliver title;
- complete work;
- issue receipt;
- release documents;
- repair defect;
- account for funds.
Vague demands are less useful.
209. Demand Letter and Demand for Cessation
A cessation demand should state what conduct must stop.
Examples:
- stop entering property;
- stop using trade name;
- stop contacting employees;
- stop disclosing data;
- stop construction encroachment.
210. Demand Letter and Demand for Indemnity
An indemnity demand should identify the legal or contractual basis for reimbursement.
Attach proof of loss.
211. Demand Letter and Reservation of Criminal Remedies
If a dispute may have criminal aspects, a demand letter may reserve the right to pursue criminal remedies.
But avoid baseless threats.
State that appropriate legal remedies may be taken if warranted by facts and law.
212. Demand Letter and Settlement Deadline
A reasonable deadline can encourage settlement.
However, if the deadline is too short, the recipient may ignore it or argue it was unreasonable.
For simple payment, five to fifteen days from receipt is common in practice, but the proper period depends on facts and contract.
213. Demand Letter and Follow-Up
If the recipient does not respond, the claimant may send a follow-up or proceed with legal action.
Repeated follow-ups are optional unless required by agreement.
214. Demand Letter and Filing After Deadline
After the demand deadline expires, the claimant may file the appropriate case if all other prerequisites are met.
However, before filing, confirm:
- correct forum;
- cause of action;
- prescription;
- barangay conciliation;
- jurisdiction;
- venue;
- evidence;
- filing fees;
- parties;
- relief.
215. Demand Letter and Court Complaint Allegations
If demand was made, the complaint should allege:
- date of demand;
- manner of service;
- receipt by defendant;
- failure or refusal to comply;
- attachment of demand letter and proof of receipt, if necessary.
This helps show cause of action.
216. If No Demand Was Made
If no demand was made, the complaint should explain why demand was unnecessary, if the issue may arise.
Possible explanations:
- obligation matured by fixed date;
- contract waived demand;
- defendant repudiated obligation;
- demand would be useless;
- urgent relief needed;
- cause of action arises from tort;
- law does not require demand;
- judicial demand is being made by filing.
A lawyer should analyze this carefully.
217. Can Filing the Complaint Itself Be the Demand?
Yes, in some contexts, filing a complaint may constitute judicial demand.
However, if the law or contract requires prior extrajudicial demand before filing, the complaint itself may not cure premature filing.
This distinction is important.
218. Demand and Judicial Demand
Judicial demand occurs when a case is filed in court.
Extrajudicial demand occurs outside court, usually through a letter or communication.
Some obligations allow either judicial or extrajudicial demand to place the debtor in delay. But if the action requires demand before suit, judicial demand may be too late.
219. Demand and Default Judgment
A demand letter is not the same as default in court.
Court default occurs when a defendant fails to answer after being properly served summons, subject to procedural rules.
A debtor’s default under civil law or contract is different from procedural default in litigation.
220. Demand Letter and Summons
A demand letter does not replace summons.
Even if the defendant received a demand letter, the court must still acquire jurisdiction over the defendant through proper service of summons after the complaint is filed.
221. Demand Letter and Notice of Hearing
A demand letter is not a notice of hearing. It does not require the recipient to appear in court unless a case is actually filed and proper court notices are served.
222. Demand Letter and Court Order
A demand letter is not a court order.
The recipient is not in contempt of court for ignoring a demand letter. But ignoring it may lead to a lawsuit and may affect liability.
223. Demand Letter and Police Assistance
Police generally should not be used to collect civil debts.
A demand letter threatening police action for a purely civil obligation is improper.
Civil claims should be pursued through civil remedies unless there is a genuine criminal offense.
224. Demand Letter and Barangay Blotter
A barangay blotter is not a civil judgment. Recording a demand or incident at the barangay does not replace filing the proper case.
However, barangay records may support evidence of prior complaint or demand.
225. Demand Letter and Demand for Interest From Date of Demand
If interest is claimed from the date of demand, the demand letter should be clear and proof of receipt preserved.
The computation should state the applicable interest rate and basis.
226. Demand Letter and Accrual of Cause of Action
In some cases, the cause of action accrues only after demand and refusal.
Examples may include return of property initially held lawfully, accounting, or payable-on-demand obligations.
In such cases, the demand letter helps determine when the right to sue arises.
227. Demand Letter and Demand Futility
Demand may be excused if it would be useless.
Examples:
- debtor expressly refuses to pay;
- obligor says they will never perform;
- property has been sold to another;
- defendant has made performance impossible;
- urgent harm is ongoing;
- defendant cannot be located despite diligent efforts.
Demand futility should be supported by facts.
228. Demand Letter and Anticipatory Breach
If a party clearly states before due date that they will not perform, the other party may consider legal remedies depending on contract and law.
A demand or notice may still be useful to confirm the refusal.
229. Demand Letter and Notice to Cure
A notice to cure is a demand giving the breaching party an opportunity to fix the breach.
It should state:
- breach;
- required cure;
- cure period;
- consequence if not cured.
This is common in commercial contracts.
230. Demand Letter and Notice of Rescission
A notice of rescission states that the contract is being rescinded or will be rescinded if breach is not cured.
Depending on the contract and law, judicial rescission may still be necessary.
Do not assume unilateral letter automatically cancels all contracts.
231. Demand Letter and Demand for Liquidation of Cash Advance
Employers or principals may demand liquidation of cash advances.
The letter should state:
- amount advanced;
- purpose;
- date;
- liquidation deadline;
- documents required;
- balance to return.
If the recipient fails, civil or other remedies may follow.
232. Demand Letter and Demand for Return of Company Property
A company may demand return of laptop, phone, vehicle, documents, access cards, tools, or records.
The demand should list items and return location.
233. Demand Letter and Former Employee
For former employees, be careful whether the dispute is labor or civil.
Some claims belong before labor tribunals. Others may be civil, such as return of property or enforcement of separate civil obligations.
234. Demand Letter and Independent Contractor
For independent contractors, unpaid invoices or defective services may be civil or commercial disputes.
Demand should cite the service agreement and deliverables.
235. Demand Letter and Loan From Friend or Relative
Loans between friends or relatives often lack formal documents.
A demand letter can help formalize the claim.
Attach proof such as bank transfers, messages, acknowledgments, or witnesses.
236. Demand Letter and No Written Contract
A demand letter may still be sent even without a written contract.
It should describe the oral agreement and supporting evidence.
However, proving the case may be harder.
237. Demand Letter and Oral Obligations
For oral obligations, demand helps show:
- terms of agreement;
- amount claimed;
- due date;
- refusal;
- creditor’s assertion.
The recipient’s response may provide evidence.
238. Demand Letter and Acknowledgment Through Chat
If the debtor acknowledged the obligation through chat, preserve it.
A demand letter may refer to the acknowledgment.
239. Demand Letter and Electronic Evidence
Digital communications may be evidence if properly authenticated.
Preserve original files, screenshots, metadata, phone backups, and full conversation context.
240. Demand Letter and Demand for Documents
Sometimes the immediate demand is not payment but documents.
Examples:
- title;
- receipts;
- invoices;
- accounting records;
- contracts;
- IDs;
- certificates;
- corporate records;
- permits.
A document demand may precede a larger civil action.
241. Demand Letter and Inspection Rights
In corporate, partnership, property, or construction disputes, demand may request inspection.
If refused, a case may be filed to enforce inspection or obtain accounting.
242. Demand Letter and Legal Hold Notice
A legal hold notice asks the recipient to preserve evidence.
This is useful in corporate, employment, data, construction, and digital disputes.
243. Demand Letter and Apology for Personal Disputes
For personal conflicts, a demand letter may be perceived as escalation. Consider mediation or barangay conciliation first where appropriate.
244. Demand Letter and Negotiation Tone
A good demand letter leaves room for settlement while preserving legal rights.
Tone matters. Overly aggressive letters can harden positions.
245. Demand Letter and Reputation of Sender
Businesses should use professional demand letters because abusive collection can damage reputation and trigger complaints.
246. Demand Letter and Recordkeeping
Keep a complete demand file:
- final signed letter;
- attachments;
- proof of service;
- delivery tracking;
- recipient response;
- settlement communications;
- payment records;
- follow-up letters.
This file may later support court filing.
247. Demand Letter and Limitation of Claims
A demand letter should not unintentionally limit claims.
Use language such as “including but not limited to” where appropriate.
248. Demand Letter and Clear Identification of Parties
Make sure the correct legal names are used.
For businesses, use registered corporate or trade names correctly.
Demanding from the wrong entity can delay litigation.
249. Demand Letter and Correct Address
Use the contract address, registered address, or last known address.
Incorrect address can defeat proof of demand.
250. Demand Letter and Multiple Addresses
For important demands, send to multiple relevant addresses:
- registered office;
- business address;
- residence;
- email;
- counsel, if known;
- notice address in contract.
This increases proof of notice.
251. Demand Letter and Proof of Authority
If a representative sends the demand, they should be authorized.
A debtor may ignore a demand from someone who cannot prove authority.
252. Demand Letter and Assignment of Claim
If the claim was assigned to another person, the demand should explain the assignment and attach proof where appropriate.
253. Demand Letter and Subrogation
If an insurer paid a claim and is subrogated, the demand should identify the insurer’s right to recover.
254. Demand Letter and Heirs
If heirs demand on behalf of an estate, they should establish their authority or status.
For estate property, all heirs may need to be considered.
255. Demand Letter and Co-Owners
A co-owner may demand protection of co-owned property, but some actions may require participation of all co-owners or representation of common interest.
256. Demand Letter and Attorney-in-Fact
If an attorney-in-fact sends demand, attach or mention the special power of attorney.
257. Demand Letter and Notarial Demand
A notarized demand letter is not usually required, but an affidavit of service may be notarized.
For some legal processes, notarized notices may be preferred.
258. Demand Letter and Formal Offer of Settlement
A demand letter may also offer settlement. Make settlement terms clear and time-limited.
259. Demand Letter and Confession of Judgment
Do not include confession of judgment clauses casually. These may raise enforceability concerns.
260. Demand Letter and Waiver of Defenses
A settlement after demand may include waiver of defenses, but it must be voluntary and clear.
261. Demand Letter and Court Annexed Compromise
If a case is later filed, the parties may convert settlement into a court-approved compromise judgment.
262. Demand Letter and Enforcement of Settlement
If settlement is breached, the creditor may sue on the settlement agreement, the original obligation, or both depending on terms.
Draft settlement carefully.
263. Demand Letter and Demand Before Counterclaim
A defendant may file counterclaims without prior demand if the counterclaim has already accrued. But if the counterclaim itself requires demand, prior demand may matter.
264. Demand Letter and Third-Party Claims
If a defendant seeks indemnity from a third party, demand may be sent before impleading or filing separate action.
265. Demand Letter and Cross-Claims
Co-defendants may demand contribution or indemnity depending on liability.
266. Demand Letter and Contribution Among Solidary Debtors
A solidary debtor who paid may demand reimbursement from co-debtors.
Demand helps establish refusal and compute interest.
267. Demand Letter and Subdivision of Claims
Avoid sending inconsistent demands for different theories without strategy.
Consult counsel for complex claims.
268. Demand Letter and Court Dismissal for Lack of Demand
A case may be dismissed if demand is an essential element and the complaint fails to allege it.
Examples commonly include certain unlawful detainer cases and payable-on-demand obligations.
269. Demand Letter and Amendment of Complaint
If demand was omitted but made later, amendment may or may not cure the defect depending on the case and timing.
If the case was premature when filed, later demand may not always save it.
270. Demand Letter and Evidence at Trial
At trial, the plaintiff may present:
- demand letter;
- proof of service;
- witness who served it;
- postal or courier records;
- defendant’s response.
Prepare these early.
271. Demand Letter and Judicial Affidavit
The plaintiff’s witness may state in a judicial affidavit that demand was made and attach proof.
272. Demand Letter and Defendant’s Defense
The defendant may argue:
- no demand was received;
- demand was defective;
- amount was wrong;
- claim was not due;
- cure period not observed;
- wrong person was demanded from;
- demand was waived;
- obligation already paid;
- creditor breached first.
A good demand anticipates these defenses.
273. Demand Letter and Plaintiff’s Burden
The plaintiff must prove the facts necessary for the claim. If demand is one of those facts, the plaintiff must prove demand.
274. Demand Letter and Court’s View
Courts generally appreciate evidence that parties attempted to settle, but courts also require compliance with law.
A demand letter cannot fix a weak claim.
275. Practical Decision Guide
Ask these questions before filing:
- What is the cause of action?
- Is the obligation already due?
- Does the contract require demand?
- Does the law require demand?
- Is demand needed to establish delay?
- Is ejectment involved?
- Is barangay conciliation required?
- Is urgent relief needed?
- Is prescription near?
- Will demand help settlement?
- Can demand cause evidence destruction?
- Is there proof of delivery?
- Is the amount correct?
- Are all defendants included?
- Is the proper forum identified?
276. Practical Checklist Before Sending Demand
Before sending:
- verify claim;
- compute amount;
- review contract;
- check notice clause;
- identify correct recipient;
- prepare attachments;
- choose delivery method;
- set deadline;
- avoid threats;
- preserve proof;
- calendar deadline;
- plan next step.
277. Practical Checklist Before Filing Without Demand
If filing without demand, confirm:
- demand is not legally required;
- obligation is already due or breach is complete;
- no contractual notice clause applies;
- no barangay conciliation requirement is being skipped;
- urgent relief justifies immediate filing;
- prescription concerns justify immediate action;
- complaint explains why demand is unnecessary if relevant.
278. Practical Checklist After Sending Demand
After sending:
- track delivery;
- save proof of receipt;
- wait until deadline;
- document responses;
- evaluate settlement offers;
- avoid verbal-only settlement;
- prepare complaint if no compliance;
- update computation;
- check prescription;
- confirm barangay requirements;
- file appropriate case if necessary.
279. Frequently Asked Questions
Is a demand letter always required before filing a civil case?
No. It depends on the nature of the case, the law, the contract, and whether demand is necessary to establish default or cause of action.
Can I file a collection case without a demand letter?
Sometimes yes, especially if the debt is already due and demand is not required. But a demand letter is usually advisable and may affect interest, penalties, attorney’s fees, and proof of default.
Is demand required for small claims?
A demand letter is commonly required or expected as supporting proof in small claims, especially for money claims. It is best to send one and keep proof of receipt.
Is demand required for ejectment?
For unlawful detainer, demand to pay, comply, or vacate is often required. For forcible entry, demand may not be required because possession was unlawful from the start.
Can filing the complaint itself count as demand?
Filing a complaint may be judicial demand in some obligations. But if prior extrajudicial demand is required before filing, the complaint itself may not cure the defect.
Does a demand letter need to be notarized?
Usually no. What matters more is that the demand is clear and that receipt or service can be proven.
Can demand be made by text or email?
It may be possible if clear and provable, but formal written demand by registered mail, courier, or personal service is safer, especially for litigation.
What if the recipient refuses to receive the demand letter?
Document the refusal through affidavit, witnesses, or delivery records. Refusal may still support notice in proper cases.
How long should the deadline be?
It depends on the contract, law, and facts. Common practice may range from a few days to fifteen days, but contractual cure periods must be followed.
Can a demand letter threaten criminal charges?
Only if there is a legitimate factual and legal basis. Do not threaten arrest or criminal prosecution for a purely civil debt.
Can I send a demand letter without a lawyer?
Yes. But for complex, high-value, ejectment, corporate, land, or legally sensitive disputes, lawyer review is advisable.
What happens if I do not send a demand letter?
If demand was legally required, the case may be premature or dismissed. If not required, the case may still proceed, but you may lose some strategic or evidentiary advantages.
280. Conclusion
A demand letter is not universally required before filing every civil case in the Philippines. Many civil actions may be filed without one if the cause of action has already accrued and no law or contract requires prior demand. However, a demand letter is often legally important and practically wise.
It may be required or strongly advisable in collection cases, payable-on-demand obligations, lease disputes, unlawful detainer, contract default, return of property, accounting, installment obligations, and cases where delay, interest, penalties, attorney’s fees, or refusal must be proven. It is also useful for settlement, documentation, and showing good faith.
The correct approach is to analyze the specific claim. Ask whether the obligation is already due, whether demand is required by law or contract, whether default depends on demand, whether barangay conciliation is required, and whether urgent court action makes demand impractical. A well-written demand letter can prevent litigation or strengthen the eventual case. A defective, abusive, or unnecessary demand can create problems.
In Philippine civil litigation, demand letters are not mere formalities. They are tools. Used properly, they clarify disputes, preserve evidence, trigger compliance periods, support claims for interest and damages, and give parties a chance to resolve matters before going to court.