Compensation for Moral Damage within the Scope of Contractual Liability under the Jordanian Civil Code

A Comparative Study

Authors

  • Dr. Bakhit Mh'd Al Dajeh Faculty of Law – The University of Jordan
  • Dr. Ihab Fahmi Rayyan Faculty of Law – The University of Jordan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35246/y3yqxg39

Keywords:

Contracts, Moral (Non-Pecuniary) Damage, Contractual Liability, Compensation, Human Rights

Abstract

Compensation for moral (non-pecuniary) damage remains a vital issue in civil law, reflecting the legal system’s commitment to safeguarding human dignity and emotional well-being beyond material interests. Such damage typically arises from psychological harm, defamation, or negligence that inflicts emotional suffering difficult to quantify yet deeply affecting the injured party. While this form of harm is traditionally addressed within tortious liability, its recognition under contractual liability remains controversial and legally uncertain. This study explores the extent to which compensation for moral damage can be granted within contractual relations under the Jordanian Civil Code. It identifies a legislative gap and analyzes judicial and comparative perspectives to determine whether existing legal provisions implicitly allow such compensation. Adopting descriptive, analytical, and comparative methodologies, the research examines relevant statutory texts, doctrinal opinions, and judicial reasoning in Jordan and other civil law systems. The findings reveal that Jordanian law does not explicitly regulate moral damage within contractual liability, leaving interpretation to courts. The study recommends formal recognition of such compensation, given its impact on the contracting party’s dignity and emotional state, and argues that doing so would strengthen justice, contractual confidence, and alignment with contemporary comparative legal developments.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

i. Bénabent, A. (2005). Droit civil: Les obligations (12ᵉ éd.). Paris: LGDJ.

ii. Carbonnier, J. (2000). Droit civil: Les obligations. Paris: Dalloz.

iii. Chabas, F. (1975). Responsabilité civile et responsabilité pénale. Paris: Montchrestien.

iv. Draganov, H. G. (2019). Moral damages and the activity of insurance companies. D. A. Tsenov Academy of Economics, 1(20). https://ideas.repec.org/a/dat/bmngmt/y2019i1p56-66.html

v. Flour, J., Aubert, J.-L., & Savaux, É. (2011). Les obligations – Le rapport d’obligation (7ᵉ éd.). Paris: Sirey.

vi. Micallef-Grimaud, C. (2011). Article 1045 of the Maltese Civil Code: Is compensation for moral damage compatible therewith? Journal of Civil Law Studies, 4, https://digitalcommons.law.lsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1050&context=jcls

vii. Starck, B., Roland, H., & Boyer, L. (1996). Les obligations. Paris: LGDJ.

viii. Abu Tayeh, B. A., & Al-Tarawneh, A. (2024).The scope of compensation for moral damage in contractual liability under the Jordanian Civil Code and Islamic jurisprudence. ordan Journal of Law and Political Sciences, 16(2). https://doi.org/10.35682/jjlps.v16i2.822.

ix. Al-Jubouri, Y. M. (2024). The general theory of obligations and personal rights: Sources of obligation (Vol. 1).Amman, Jordan: Dar Al-Thaqafa for Publishing and Distribution.

x. Jum‘a, A. R. (2017).Judicial guarantee within the scope of contractual liability according to the provisions of the Jordanian Civil Code: A comparative study. Dirasat: Shari‘a and Law Sciences, 44(Suppl. 2). University of Jordan.

xi. Al-Jundi, M. S. (2015).On tort liability: Liability for harmful acts—A study in Western jurisprudence, Islamic jurisprudence, and the Jordanian Civil Code (Vol. 1).Amman, Jordan: Dar Al-Thaqafa for Publishing and Distribution.

xii. Al-Habashi, A. A. M. (2022).Compensation for moral damage: A comparative study with the provisions of Kuwaiti law.Journal of Law, (1). Kuwait University.

xiii. Dhanun, H. A. (2006).Al-Mabsut in the explanation of the civil law.

xiv. Amman, Jordan: Dar Wael Publishing.

xv. Al-Sanhouri, A. A. (2015).Al-Wasit in the explanation of the new civil code: The general theory of obligation—Sources of obligation (3rd ed.).Beirut, Lebanon: Al-Halabi Legal Publications.

xvi. Al-Sanhouri, A. A. (2015).Al-Wasit in the explanation of the civil code: Sources of obligation (Vol. 1).Beirut, Lebanon: Al-Halabi Legal Publications.

xvii. Amer, H. A. (1979).Civil liability: Tortious and contractual (2nd ed.).

xviii. Cairo, Egypt: Dar Al-Ma‘arif.

xix. Al-Awji, M. (2009).Civil law: Civil liability (Part II).

xx. Beirut, Lebanon: Al-Halabi Legal Publications.

xxi. Qasim, M. H. (2018).Civil law: Obligations – Sources – Contract (Vol. 2).Beirut, Lebanon: Al-Halabi Legal Publications.

xxii. Markus, S. (n.d.).On the theory of exoneration from civil liability: Fortuitous event and force majeure, act of the injured creditor, act of a third party—A comparative study in contractual and tort liability in French and Egyptian law. Cairo, Egypt: Al-I‘timad Press.

Downloads

Published

2025-12-25

How to Cite

Al Dajeh, Bakhit, and Ihab Rayyan. 2025. “Compensation for Moral Damage Within the Scope of Contractual Liability under the Jordanian Civil Code: A Comparative Study”. Journal of Legal Sciences 40 (2): 641-65. https://doi.org/10.35246/y3yqxg39.

Similar Articles

11-20 of 235

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.