Agency Relationship
One party acts on behalf of another party and legally binds that other party
- only an entity or individual can have (contractual) capacity
What are the different Agency Typet
General Special Universal Agent Subagent- M Power of Attorney Independent Contractors Agency coupled with an interest
Formation of Express Agency
** implied authority goes with express authority based on what is customary to the position and whatever is in the agreement
Formation of Apparent Agency Relationship
Apparent Agency - carries the trappings of being an agent; there is no express agreement but there is an appearance of having authority (no agreement)
Example: Agent is not an employee of principal but in the presence of the principal the agent says he is and as such the agent implies he is an employee
Lingering Apparent Agency - carries over after termination due to no notice (notice to customers + general notice)
Agency by Estoppel or Ostensible Authority - apparent authority agency where principal acts as if another agent is his/her agent
Formation of Agency by Ratification
How many people are in an agent relationship and what is their responsibility?
Two people
Principal: Party who delegates authority to another in order to accomplish a task or consummate a transaction
Agent: One who acts on principal’s behalf to accomplish a task or consummate a transaction for the principal
Special Agent
One authorized to conduct a single transaction or series of related transactions on the principal’s behalf
Example: #1 Real estate agent to sell only the principal's house #2 hiring an executor to sell all the personal property for the estate #3 bankruptcy trustee hires a company to liquidate all assets of the company in bankruptcy
General Agent
One authorized to conduct all necessary personnel or business transactions for the principal
Example: #1: Restaurant owner hires a manager to run the restaurant - such an agent can fire/hire employees, purchase supplies, and deal with health inspectors
Universal Agent
One authorized to do all acts that can be legally delegated to an agent
Example: #1: A soldier who goes abroad hires his sister as the universal agent to be in charge of handle all his business affairs during his absence
Power of Attorney
Formal written creation of an agency relationship that lists the authority granted
Independent Contractor
Someone who acts on behalf of the principal but principal does not control the agents day to day activities and the scope is limited
Example: hire a lawyer to create a living trust for you or hiring a CPA to do audit/tax
Subagent
Agent hired by another agent on behalf of the principal
Agent Coupled with Interest
Agency in which the agent holds a property right in the subject matter of the agency
Example: book agent
Examples of Agency Relationships
Hotel Desk Clerks Managers (Hollywood) Store Clerks Sales People Independent Contractors
What are the duties of the principal to the agent?
To comply with the agreement
To reimburse reasonable expenses
* principle is liable for injuries during the agent;s scope of work
What are the duties of the agent to the principle?
What are the different terminations?
Termination by Fulfillment - agency relationship is complete
Termination by lapse of time - time ends
Termination by specific event - event is done
Termination by mutual agreement
Termination by unilateral act of 1 party
* principle cannot terminate an agent that is coupled by interest (must be in writing)
Termination by act of parties
Principal must notify third parties about termination
Agent has duty to honor termination and not use apparent authority to continue
Lingering apparent authority must end through actual actual notice or constructive notice
Termination by Operation of Law
- Insanity of principal
Termination by Operation of Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy of the agent terminates an agency relationship only if the agent’s bankruptcy would impair A’s ability to act as an agent.
Termination of Change of Law or Law
immediately ends relationship
Termination of loss/destruction subject matter
immediately ends relationship
In order to terminate apparent authority, notice is required but to revoke authority, a principal can fire an agent. (T/F)
True
Principal’s are not liable to third parties for the misrepresentation of an independent contractor. (T/F)
True