Contract Assignment Agreement Spain
CONTRACT ASSIGNMENT AGREEMENT
CONTRACT ASSIGNMENT AGREEMENT (ACUERDO DE CESIÓN DE CONTRATO)
Governed by Código Civil (Real Decreto de 24 de julio de 1889), Articles 1255 and 1526–1536 on assignment of credits (cesión de créditos), and Articles 1203–1213 on novation (novación).
Date: [Agreement Date]
1. PARTIES
1. PARTIES
ASSIGNOR (CEDENTE): [Assignor Name], NIF/DNI/NIE [Assignor NIF], address [Assignor Address] (hereinafter, the "Assignor").
ASSIGNEE (CESIONARIO): [Assignee Name], NIF/DNI/NIE [Assignee NIF], address [Assignee Address] (hereinafter, the "Assignee").
OBLIGOR (DEUDOR CEDIDO): [Obligor Name], NIF/DNI/NIE [Obligor NIF], address [Obligor Address] (hereinafter, the "Obligor"). Obligor consent status: [Obligor Consent Status].
2. ORIGINAL CONTRACT
2. ORIGINAL CONTRACT
The contract subject to this Assignment Agreement is: [Original Contract Description], executed on [Original Contract Date], with end date (if applicable): [Original Contract End Date].
Anti-assignment clause in original contract: [Anti Assignment Clause]. Waiver / compliance details: [Anti Assignment Waiver]. Pending obligations under the original contract: [Pending Obligations].
3. ASSIGNMENT
3. ASSIGNMENT
With effect from [Effective Date], the Assignor hereby assigns to the Assignee the contractual position described above, on the following terms: scope of assignment: [Assignment Scope]. Assignor released from future obligations: [Assignor Release].
Where the assignment transfers obligations, the Obligor's express consent is required under Código Civil Articles 1203 and 1205 to release the Assignor from future liability. The Obligor, by signing this Agreement (or by separate written consent), confirms that it accepts the Assignee as its new contractual partner and releases the Assignor from all obligations arising after [Effective Date].
Where the assignment is of rights only (no obligation transfer), the Assignor shall notify the Obligor of the assignment by [Notification Method] promptly following execution of this Agreement, in accordance with Código Civil Article 1527. Until such notification, the Obligor may validly perform to the Assignor with full discharge.
Consideration for the assignment: [Consideration].
4. WARRANTIES
4. WARRANTIES
The Assignor warrants to the Assignee that: (a) the original contract is valid, enforceable, and in full force as at [Effective Date]; (b) the Assignor has the right to assign the contractual position; (c) any anti-assignment clause has been complied with or waived; (d) the Assignor is not in breach of the original contract; and (e) there are no pending claims, disputes, or set-off rights affecting the assigned position. Breach of these warranties entitles the Assignee to rescind this Agreement and claim damages under Código Civil Article 1529.
5. LIABILITY ALLOCATION
5. LIABILITY ALLOCATION
The Assignor shall bear liability for obligations arising from events occurring before [Effective Date] (pre-assignment liabilities). The Assignee shall bear liability for obligations arising from events occurring on or after [Effective Date] (post-assignment liabilities). Where the Assignor is not released from future obligations under this Agreement, the parties agree that the Assignee shall indemnify the Assignor against any liability incurred by the Assignor to the Obligor as a result of the Assignee's failure to perform post-assignment obligations.
6. GOVERNING LAW AND JURISDICTION
6. GOVERNING LAW AND JURISDICTION
This Agreement is governed by Spanish law, principally Código Civil Articles 1255 and 1526–1536. Disputes shall be referred to the Juzgado de Primera Instancia of [Governing City].
7. SIGNATURES
7. SIGNATURES
In witness whereof, the parties sign this Agreement in [Governing City], on [Agreement Date].
Assignor (Cedente)
________________
Signature
Assignee (Cesionario)
________________
Signature
Obligor (Deudor Cedido)
________________
Signature
What Is a Contract Assignment Agreement Spain?
A Contract Assignment Agreement Spain (Acuerdo de Cesión de Contrato) is a legal instrument through which one party to an existing contract (the cedente or assignor) transfers to a third party (the cesionario or assignee) all or part of their contractual position — including both rights (créditos) and obligations (deudas) — under that contract, with the result that the assignee steps into the shoes of the assignor and the original contract continues in force between the assignee and the remaining original party (the deudor cedido or obligor). The Acuerdo de Cesión de Contrato is governed principally by Código Civil Article 1255 (freedom of contract — autonomía de la voluntad), Articles 1526–1536 (assignment of credits — cesión de créditos), and Articles 1203–1213 on novation (novación) which applies where the assignment extinguishes the assignor's original obligations.
Spanish civil law — the Código Civil, enacted by Real Decreto de 24 de julio de 1889 — does not contain a single codified provision expressly governing the assignment of an entire contractual position (cesión de contrato) as a unified transaction. Instead, the cesión de contrato is constructed from the rules on assignment of credits (for the transfer of rights) and the rules on assumption of debt (asunción de deuda) and novation (novación) for the transfer of obligations. The Tribunal Supremo has recognised the cesión de contrato as an autonomous institution of Spanish private law in its jurisprudencia — particularly in sectors such as commercial leases (Ley 29/1994 LAU Article 32), construction (LOE Article 17), and public procurement (Ley 9/2017 de Contratos del Sector Público Article 214).
The critical distinction in Spanish law is between the assignment of rights (cesión de créditos) — which does not require the debtor's consent under Código Civil Article 1526, though the debtor must be notified — and the assignment of obligations (asunción de deuda or transmisión de deuda) — which requires the obligor's express consent under Código Civil Articles 1203 and 1205 to be fully effective and to release the original debtor. A full cesión de contrato that transfers both rights and obligations therefore requires the consent (consentimiento) of all three parties: the assignor (cedente), the assignee (cesionario), and the obligor (deudor cedido). Without the obligor's consent, the assignor may transfer their rights but cannot transfer their obligations — and remains personally liable to the obligor for performance of the original contract.
In commercial practice, the Contract Assignment Agreement is particularly relevant in sectors where long-term contractual positions have significant value: commercial leases (cesión de arrendamiento) under LAU Article 32; supply contracts (contratos de suministro) under Código de Comercio Article 325; construction and engineering contracts (contratos de obra) under Código Civil Article 1544; IT and software licensing agreements; franchise agreements (contratos de franquicia) under Real Decreto 201/2010; and financial contracts. The agreement must comply with any applicable mandatory rules in the sector — for example, LAU Article 32 requires the landlord's consent for a commercial lease assignment, and Ley 9/2017 LCSP Article 214 imposes strict conditions on the assignment of public contracts.
Commercial contracts in Spain frequently contain anti-assignment clauses (cláusulas de prohibición de cesión) under Código Civil Article 1255 — provisions that expressly prohibit or restrict the assignment of the contract without the other party's consent. The assignor must carefully review the original contract for such clauses before executing an assignment agreement. An assignment in breach of an anti-assignment clause is effective between the assignor and assignee but may constitute a breach of the original contract giving the obligor the right to terminate under Código Civil Article 1124 and claim damages.
When Do You Need a Contract Assignment Agreement Spain?
A Contract Assignment Agreement Spain is needed whenever a party to an existing contract wishes to transfer their contractual position — rights and obligations — to a third party, whether in connection with a business sale, corporate restructuring, financing transaction, or commercial arrangement.
The agreement is needed when a business is sold (compraventa de empresa) and the vendor wishes to transfer existing client contracts, supplier agreements, or service contracts to the buyer as part of the transaction. The contract assignment is typically executed alongside the main sale agreement and requires the consent of the counterparty to each assigned contract to confirm a clean transfer of obligations. Under Ley 3/2009 de Modificaciones Estructurales, a merger (fusión) or demerger (escisión) effects a universal succession (sucesión universal) that automatically transfers all contracts without individual assignment, but for asset deals (compraventa de activos), individual contract assignments are required.
A Contract Assignment Agreement is needed when a company undergoes a corporate restructuring — for example, transferring a business unit (rama de actividad) to a subsidiary or spin-off — and requires the transfer of contracts associated with that business unit. The agreement must address the consent requirements of each counterparty and the liability allocation between assignor and assignee for pre-assignment and post-assignment obligations.
The agreement is required when a project finance or debt finance transaction involves the assignment of a key commercial contract as security (cesión en garantía) to a lender — for example, the assignment of an energy purchase agreement (contrato de compraventa de energía) to a project finance lender under a solar or wind energy project. Under Ley Hipotecaria Article 2 and Ley del Mercado de Valores, the assignment of certain financial contracts as security requires specific formalities.
A Contract Assignment Agreement is needed when a construction or development company (promotor) transfers a construction contract (contrato de obra) or development agreement to a buyer who is taking over the project mid-development — requiring the builder's consent under Código Civil Article 1205 to release the original promotor from its obligations and substitute the buyer as the new employer.
The agreement is also required when an insurance policyholder (tomador de seguro) transfers an insurance policy (póliza de seguro) to a third party — a transaction governed by Ley 50/1980 de Contrato de Seguro Article 34, which requires the insurer's consent for the assignment of the policyholder's position — confirming that the assignee is properly registered as the new policyholder and that coverage obligations continue without interruption.
Under the Ley de Sociedades de Capital (LSC) RDL 1/2010, the Registro Mercantil maintains the register of Spanish companies. The Código de Comercio 1885 governs commercial obligations. The Agencia Estatal de Administración Tributaria (AEAT) administers Impuesto sobre Sociedades (IS) under Ley 27/2014. The Comisión Nacional de los Mercados y la Competencia (CNMC) enforces competition law. The Código Civil governs general contractual obligations under Article 1255.
What to Include in Your Contract Assignment Agreement Spain
A valid Contract Assignment Agreement Spain under Código Civil Articles 1255 and 1526–1536 must contain the following essential elements to be legally effective and to protect all parties involved in the assignment.
Identification of All Three Parties: Full legal names, DNI/NIE/NIF numbers, and registered addresses of: (1) the assignor (cedente) — the party transferring their contractual position; (2) the assignee (cesionario) — the party receiving the contractual position; and (3) the obligor (deudor cedido or cedido) — the remaining original contracting party whose consent is required for the transfer of obligations. Where any party is a legal entity, NIF, Registro Mercantil details, and legal representative authority must be stated.
Description of the Original Contract: Full details of the contract being assigned — parties, date of execution, subject matter, duration, and any amendments. A copy of the original contract (and any amendments) should be attached as an annex. The agreement should confirm the current status of the original contract — whether it is in force, whether there are any pending obligations or disputes, and whether any consents or authorisations required under the original contract for the assignment have been or will be obtained.
Scope of the Assignment: Clear statement of whether the assignment transfers the entire contractual position (cesión total) or only certain rights (cesión parcial). Where obligations are transferred, express confirmation that all three parties consent to the assumption of obligations by the assignee (asunción de deuda) and the release of the assignor (liberación del cedente) under Código Civil Articles 1203 and 1205 — without this tripartite consent, the assignor remains jointly and severally liable with the assignee to the obligor.
Consent of the Obligor: The obligor's express written consent to the assignment of both rights and obligations — the most critical element for the full effectiveness of the cesión de contrato under Spanish law. The consent should confirm: (a) the obligor accepts the assignee as its new contractual partner; (b) the obligor releases the assignor from all future obligations under the original contract from the assignment date; and (c) the obligor waives any claims against the assignor for matters arising after the assignment date.
Representations and Warranties: The assignor's representations that the original contract is valid, enforceable, and in full force; that the assignor has the right to assign it; that there are no anti-assignment clauses in the original contract that have not been complied with or waived; that the assignor is not in breach of any obligation under the original contract; and that there are no pending claims, disputes, or set-off rights that would affect the assigned position. Breach of these representations triggers the assignor's warranty liability under Código Civil Article 1529.
Consideration: The consideration (contraprestación) for the assignment — whether a cash payment, assumption of a liability, or other agreed consideration. Assignment agreements in Spain are frequently entered into for nominal consideration as part of a larger corporate transaction (in which case the consideration is the global transaction price), or for a specific cash amount agreed between assignor and assignee. ITPAJD or IVA implications of the assignment must be addressed.
Liability Allocation: Agreement on which party (assignor or assignee) bears liability for obligations arising from events before the assignment date (pre-assignment liabilities) and after the assignment date (post-assignment liabilities). Where the obligor has not released the assignor, the assignor remains jointly and severally liable (responsabilidad solidaria) to the obligor for pre-assignment obligations — the agreement should set out the indemnity obligations between assignor and assignee to address this residual exposure.
Notification of the Assignment: If the assignment is of rights only (and does not require the obligor's consent for validity), the procedure for notifying the obligor of the assignment under Código Civil Article 1527 — which provides that the assignment is effective against the obligor from the date of notification. Until notification, the obligor may pay or perform to the original assignor with full discharge. Notification should be made by burofax (certified fax with confirmation) or conducto notarial to create an irrefutable record.
Forms-legal.com provides this Contract Assignment Agreement Spain template as a reference tool. Contract assignment under Spanish law involves complex interactions between novation, assignment of credits, and debt assumption rules — parties should engage an abogado especialista before executing any assignment, particularly where anti-assignment clauses or regulated contracts are involved.
Under the Ley de Sociedades de Capital (LSC) RDL 1/2010, the Registro Mercantil maintains the register of Spanish companies. The Código de Comercio 1885 governs commercial obligations. The Agencia Estatal de Administración Tributaria (AEAT) administers Impuesto sobre Sociedades (IS) under Ley 27/2014. The Comisión Nacional de los Mercados y la Competencia (CNMC) enforces competition law. The Código Civil governs general contractual obligations under Article 1255.
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Frequently Asked Questions
La necesidad de consentimiento de la otra parte (deudor cedido) para una cesión de contrato en España depende de si la cesión transmite solo derechos o también obligaciones. Conforme al artículo 1526 del Código Civil, la cesión de créditos no requiere el consentimiento del deudor — solo notificación. Sin embargo, la transmisión de obligaciones contractuales (asunción de deuda) requiere el consentimiento expreso del acreedor conforme a los artículos 1203 y 1205 del Código Civil — sin dicho consentimiento, el cedente permanece personalmente responsable frente al deudor cedido de dichas obligaciones incluso tras la presunta cesión. Una cesión de contrato completa que transmite tanto derechos como obligaciones requiere consentimiento tripartito: cedente, cesionario y deudor cedido. Además, muchos contratos mercantiles contienen cláusulas anti-cesión amparadas en el artículo 1255 CC que exigen contractualmente el consentimiento de la otra parte con independencia de si se transmiten obligaciones. Determinados regímenes legales también exigen consentimiento: la cesión de arrendamiento comercial bajo el artículo 32 LAU requiere el consentimiento del arrendador; la cesión de contratos públicos bajo el artículo 214 de la Ley 9/2017 LCSP requiere la autorización del órgano de contratación.
La novación conforme a los artículos 1203–1213 del Código Civil es un concepto más amplio que puede modificar o extinguir una obligación existente — incluye cambios en el objeto, las partes o los términos de la obligación original. La novación subjetiva pasiva implica la sustitución del deudor original por uno nuevo con el consentimiento del acreedor, mecanismo utilizado para transmitir obligaciones en una cesión de contrato. La novación extintiva extingue la obligación original y crea una nueva, mientras que la novación modificativa simplemente modifica una obligación existente sin extinguirla. En una cesión de contrato, el objetivo típico no es extinguir el contrato original sino transferir la posición contractual de una parte a otra — por ello la cesión emplea un enfoque de novación modificativa para las obligaciones (sustituyendo al deudor) mientras utiliza el mecanismo de cesión de créditos para los derechos. Cuando las partes pretendan extinguir el contrato original íntegramente y crear uno nuevo entre el cesionario y el deudor cedido en términos idénticos, resulta más adecuada una novación extintiva que una cesión.
Una cesión ejecutada en incumplimiento de una cláusula de prohibición de cesión del contrato original es válida y exigible entre cedente y cesionario conforme al Derecho español (artículo 1255 CC — libertad contractual entre las partes contratantes), pero constituye un incumplimiento del contrato original frente al deudor cedido. Las consecuencias para el cedente incluyen: el derecho del deudor cedido a resolver el contrato original por incumplimiento grave conforme al artículo 1124 CC; el derecho a reclamar daños y perjuicios por las pérdidas causadas por el incumplimiento; y el derecho a negarse a reconocer o tratar con el cesionario. El Tribunal Supremo ha confirmado en múltiples sentencias que las cláusulas anti-cesión son restricciones válidas y exigibles bajo el principio de autonomía de la voluntad. El cesionario que conociera la cláusula anti-cesión al tiempo de la cesión también puede incurrir en responsabilidad frente al deudor cedido por inducción a la infracción contractual conforme al artículo 14 de la Ley 3/1991 de Competencia Desleal.
Los contratos del sector público en España pueden cederse sujetos a condiciones estrictas conforme al artículo 214 de la Ley 9/2017, de 8 de noviembre, de Contratos del Sector Público (LCSP). La LCSP permite la cesión de un contrato público a un tercero únicamente si: (1) el órgano de contratación otorga autorización previa y expresa; (2) el cesionario tiene la capacidad técnica, económica y financiera exigida en el procedimiento de licitación original; (3) la cesión no constituye una modificación sustancial del contrato que habría requerido un nuevo procedimiento de contratación conforme al artículo 205 LCSP; y (4) el cedente ha ejecutado al menos el 20% del valor total del contrato antes de la efectividad de la cesión. El cesionario debe ser solvente, no debe estar incurso en ninguna de las prohibiciones de contratar del artículo 71 LCSP y debe aceptar todas las obligaciones del contratista original. La cesión de un contrato público sin autorización previa es nula conforme al artículo 214.4 LCSP.
Conforme al artículo 1529 del Código Civil, el cedente de un derecho contractual garantiza al cesionario la existencia y legitimidad (veracidad) del derecho cedido al tiempo de la cesión — el principio de saneamiento por evicción aplicado a las cesiones de crédito. El cedente no garantiza, sin embargo, la solvencia o capacidad de cumplimiento del deudor cedido salvo pacto expreso — el artículo 1529.2 CC establece que el cedente solo responde de la solvencia del deudor si se pacta expresamente, limitada al precio recibido por la cesión. En una cesión de contrato completa, el cedente típicamente garantiza además que: el contrato original es válido y exigible; no ha cedido o gravado previamente la posición contractual; no se encuentra en incumplimiento del contrato original; no existen reclamaciones ni derechos de compensación pendientes; y no existen cláusulas anti-cesión que impidan la cesión. El incumplimiento de estas garantías faculta al cesionario para resolver el acuerdo de cesión y reclamar daños y perjuicios conforme a los artículos 1101 y 1106 CC, incluyendo lucro cesante.
Conforme al artículo 1527 del Código Civil, la cesión de un crédito (y por extensión, de un derecho contractual) es oponible al deudor desde el momento en que el deudor recibe notificación de la cesión. Hasta la notificación, el deudor puede válidamente pagar o cumplir al cedente original, extinguiendo la obligación aunque la cesión ya se haya producido. La notificación debe realizarse sin demora tras la firma del acuerdo de cesión. En España, los métodos de notificación preferentes que proporcionan prueba fiable de entrega incluyen: burofax con acuse de recibo a través de Correos, que genera un justificante de entrega legalmente reconocido; conducto notarial — el método probatorio más robusto; correo electrónico con acuse de recibo si el contrato original especifica el correo electrónico como medio de notificación acordado; o carta certificada con acuse de recibo a través de Correos. La notificación debe identificar al cedente, al cesionario, el contrato cedido y la fecha efectiva de la cesión, y debe proporcionar los datos de contacto del cesionario e instrucciones de pago para futuras prestaciones.
This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer
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