@article{Montayana Meher , Ningrum Natasya Sirait_2020, title={GOOD FAITH IN BANK CREDIT AGREEMENT}, volume={18}, url={https://www.archives.palarch.nl/index.php/jae/article/view/2060}, abstractNote={<p>In our life interactions amidst the society, the honest people or people with good faith must be<br>protected. The provisions concerning good faith in the Civil Code are contained in Article 1338<br>Paragraph 3 stating that all agreements should be carried out in a good faith. This means that<br>any party making an agreement should act in a good faith, including the credit agreement in a<br>bank. In the bank credit agreement, the parties are given an opportunity to enter into an<br>agreement (consensus) on the content in accordance with the wishes of the parties. But, not all<br>agreements made with a consent reflecting the values of honesty and propriety available in the<br>society. Sometimes there are parties who seek their own advantage in implementing an<br>agreement by looking for the weaknesses and shortcomings of the agreement. The good will<br>contained in an agreement provides a legal protection for those implementing the agreement.<br>Good faith has to be present from the pre-contract phase where the parties begin to negotiate<br>to reach an agreement up to the stage of contract implementation. In the event that an agreement<br>is deemed to violate the principles of a good faith, the law gives the judge an authority to<br>change or even remove part or all of the agreement. The principles of good faith also provide<br>a clue that in carrying out the agreement each party should be fair to each other.</p>}, number={1}, journal={PalArch’s Journal of Archaeology of Egypt / Egyptology}, author={Montayana Meher , Ningrum Natasya Sirait}, year={2020}, month={Dec.}, pages={476 - 484} }