Not necessarily. Morals are, by definition, more subjective than the law.
You may have a moral obligation to do something for which there is no legal punishment available at all. Maybe you have a moral obligation to give your children presents as your money may permit, but there is no legal obligation to give them more than the necessaries, even if you are filthy rich.
In other cases you may have a moral obligation that merely creates a separate and distinct legal obligation.
For example, you may have a moral obligation to perform services on a contract, but you cannot be physically forced to actually perform. The only "legal obligation" would be to pay for damages caused by your failure to perform, if any.
Therefore, even if there is a legal obligation stemming from such a moral obligation ("you gave your word"), they are not the same obligation.
An obligation is something you are bound by duty to do. It could be a legal obligation arising from a contract, in which a person has promised to do a certain thing as a part of the contract. It could be a moral or ethical obligation which could arise as a result of a promise which is not legally binding, or from a relationship. E.g. "You said you'd visit the sick and elderly after church and you have an obligation to follow through." "I feel that, as a friend, I have an obligation to attend her funeral." "It's your obligation to take care of your brother's widow and children."
Unless you have an "Uncle Louie" in Chicago to come and break his legs- or, get it in writing, you don't have a "legal leg" to stand on! Pun intended. A promise is only worth the paper it is written on.
Yes, of course. So could any creditor. Where your money/asset comes from makes no difference. You essentially spent or committed it to the one you owe when you incurred the debt and made the promise/obligation to pay.
The person who made a promise will have a hard time to making it happen.
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No, a promisee is the person to whom a promise is made. They are the one who is entitled to the benefit or performance promised by the other party, known as the promisor.
A creed is a statement of belief that makes a promise.
Unilateral
a nun
The branch that makes sure laws are legal is the Ligislative Branch.
The person who made a promise will have a hard time to making it happen.
She-Ra Princess of Power - 1985 She-Ra Makes a Promise 3-7 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G