Abstract
This article aims to define the obligations and duties of information, which assist the parties in a preliminary negotiation. In turn, aims to demonstrate how the information is a contractual mechanism that encourages or balances existing inequalities between subjects and is a protector of the weak part of the relationship. It makes a study on modernizing the law of obligations that has been brewing in Europe, where models based on early pro damnato principles are strengthening the dynamics and especially the secondary duties of conduct.
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