ChapPrincipal: A person who has someone else acting for him ter 28: Agency Law
Principal's Liability for Torts
An employer is liable for a physical tort committed by an employee acting within the scope of employment and a nonphysical tort of an employee acting with authority This principle of liability is called respondeat superior (an employer is liable for a physical tort committed by an employee acting within the scope of employment, and a nonphysical tort of an employee acting with authority),
Duty of principals to agents: Duty to Indemnify
As a general rule, the principal must indemnify (i.e., reimburse) the agent for any expenses she has reasonably incurred
Principal's Remedies when the Agent Breaches a Duty
Damages. The principal can recover from the agent any damages the breach has caused Profits. If an agent breaches, the duty of loyalty, he must turn over to the principal any profits he has earned as a result of his wrongdoing Recission. If the agent has violated her duty of loyalty, the principal may rescind the transaction
Duty of principals to agents:
Duty to compensate as provided by the agreement Duty to reimburse reasonable expenses Duty to cooperate with the agent
Terminating an Agency Relationship
Termination by Agent or Principal Principal or Agent Can No Longer Perform Required Duties Change in Circumstances
Express Authority
The principal grants express authority by words or conduct that, reasonably interpreted, cause the agent to believe the principal desires her to act on the principal's account Eg. asking to do something , agent has express authority to do it
Abandonment
The principal is liable for the actions of the employee that occur while the employee is at work, but not for actions that occur after the employee has abandoned the principal's business
Principal's Liability for Contracts
The principal is liable for the acts and statements of his agent if (1) the agent had authority, or (2) the principal ratified the acts of the agent
Nonphysical torts (whether intentional or unintentional) are treated like a contract claim:
The principal is liable only if the employee acted with express, implied, or apparent authority
when determining if agents are employees or independent contractors, courts consider whether:
The principal supervises details of the work The principal supplies the tools and place of work The agents work full time for the principal The agents receive a salary or hourly wages, not a fixed job price for the job The work is part of the regular business of the principal The principal and agents believe they have an employer-employee relationship The principal is in business
Term Agreement.
Time. Eg. last 2 years Achieving a Purpose Eg. When goals met Mutual Agreement Eg. change mind later as long as it is mutual
Duties of Agents to Principals: Conflict of Interest Between Two Principals
Unless otherwise agreed, an agent may not act for two principals whose interests conflict
Implied Authority
Unless otherwise agreed, authority to conduct a transaction includes authority to do acts that are reasonably necessary to accomplish it Eg. he hires to auction house, agent hires others
The following elements are not required for an agency relationship:
Written Agreement, Formal Agreement, Compensation.
The beneficiary places special confidence in the fiduciary who, in turn, is
obligated to act in good faith and candor, doing what is best for the beneficiary.
A fiduciary relationship is
one of trust: A trustee acts for the benefit of the beneficiary, always putting the interests of the beneficiary before his own
A principal is not liable for the intentional physical torts of an employee unless
(1) the employee intended to serve some purpose of the employer, or (2) the employer was negligent in hiring or supervising this employee
To create an agency relationship, there must be:
A principal and An agent, Who mutually consent that the agent will act on behalf of the principal and Be subject to the principal's control Thereby creating a fiduciary duty
There are two kinds of agents:
There are two kinds of agents: (1) employee and (2) independent contractor
Agent
A person who acts for someone else
Principal
A person who has someone else acting for him
These reimbursable expenses fall into three categories:
A principal must indemnify an agent for any expenses or damages reasonably incurred in carrying out his agency responsibilities A principal must indemnify an agent for tort claims brought by a third party if the principal authorized the agent's behavior and the agent did not realize he was committing a tort The principal must indemnify the agent for any liability to third parties that she incurs as a result of entering into a contract on the principal's behalf, including attorney's fees and reasonable settlements
Duties of Agents to Principals: Competition with the Principal
Agents are not allowed to compete with their principal in any matter within the scope of the agency business
Duties of Agents to Principals: Confidential Information
Agents can neither disclose nor use for their own benefit any confidential information they acquire during their agency
Authorization
An act is within the scope of employment, even is expressly forbidden, if it is of the same general nature as that authorized or if it is incidental to the conduct authorized
Other Duties of an Agent: Duty of Care
An agent has a duty to act with reasonable care An agent with special skills is held to a higher standard because she is expected to use those skills
Other Duties of an Agent: Duty to Provide Information
An agent has a duty to provide the principal with all information in her possession that she has reason to believe the principal wants to know She also has a duty to provide accurate information
Duties of Agents to Principals: Duty of Loyalty
An agent has a fiduciary duty to act loyally for the principal's benefit in all matters connected with the agency relationship
Fully disclosed principal
An agent is not liable for any contracts she makes on behalf of a fully disclosed principal A principal is fully disclosed if the third party knows of his existence and his identity Eg. Tracey friend recommendation, friend not responsible for recommendation
Duties of Agents to Principals: Appropriate Behavior
An agent may not engage in inappropriate behavior that reflects badly on the principal
Duties of Agents to Principals: Outside Benefits
An agent may not receive profits unless the principal knows and approves
Other Duties of an Agent: Duty to Obey Instructions
An agent must obey her principal's instructions unless the principal directs her to behave illegally or unethically
Agent's Liability for Contracts:
Fully Disclosed Principal Unidentified Principal Undisclosed Principal
Ratification
If a person accepts the benefit of an unauthorized transaction or fails to repudiate it, then he is as bound by the act as if he hd originally authorized it He has blank the act Even if an agent acts without authority, the principal can decide later to be bound by her actions as long as these requirements are met:
Duties of Agents to Principals: Secretly Dealing with the Principal
If a principal hires an agent to arrange a transaction, the agent may not become a party to the transaction without the principal's permission
Wrongful Termination.
If an agency relationship is not working out, the courts will not force the agent and principal to stay together Either party always has the power to terminate They may not, however, have the right If leaves, pay damages, but can still leave Gratuitous agent can leave anytime without penalty
Principal or Agent Can No Longer Perform Required Duties
If either the agent or the principal fails to obtain (or keep) a license necessary to perform duties under the agency agreement, the agreement ends Lawyer The bankruptcy of the agent or the principal terminates an agency relationship only if it affects the ability to perform An agency relationship terminates upon the death or incapacity of either the principal or the agent If the agent violates her duty of loyalty, the agency argument automatically terminates
Unauthorized Agent
If the agent has no authority (express, implied or apparent), the principal is not liable to the third party, and the agent is
Change in Circumstances
If these changes are significant enough to undermine the purpose of the agreement, the relationship ends automatically Eg. market value for something skyrockets Other changes: Change of law. Agent's responsibilities become illegal Eg. ordering avocados, fruit flies quarantine shipment Loss or destruction of subject matter
Agency at Will.
If they make no agreement in advance about the term of the agreement, either principal or agent can terminate at any time
Undisclosed Principal
In the case of an undisclosed principal, the third party can recover from either the agent or the principal A principal is undisclosed if the third party did not know of his existence Eg. buying the horse for a third party without mentioning the third party, he is undisclosed principal A third party is not bound to the contract with an undisclosed principal if (1) the contract specifically provides that the third party is not bound to anyone other than the agent, or (2) the agent lies about the principal because she knows the third party would refuse to contract with him
Unidentified Principal
In the case of an unidentified principal, the third party can recover from either the agent or the principal An unidentified principal is also sometimes called a "partially disclosed principal" A principal is unidentified if the third party knew of his existence but not his identity Eg. unidentified friend so cannot research (definition below) Jointly and severally liable (all members of a group are liable. They can be sued as a group, or any one of them can be sued individually for the full amount owed. But the plaintiff cannot recover more than the total she is owed
An employee is acting within the scope of employment if the act:
Is one that employees are generally responsible for, Takes place during hours that the employee is generally employed, Is part of the principal's business Is similar to the one the principal authorized Is one for which the principal supplied the tools, and Is not seriously criminal
Liability to Third Parties
Once a principal hires an agent, she may be liable to third parties for his acts, even if he disobeys instructions Agents may also find themselves liable to third parties
Effects of Termination
Once an agency relationship ends, the agent no longer has the authority to act for the principal If she continues to act, she is liable to the principal for any damages he incurs as a result Eg. avocado fruit fly sends anyway, agent is liable not principal
The agent loses her authority to act, but some of the duties of both the principal and agent continue even after the relationship ends:
Principal's duty to indemnify agent. Eg. avocado gas mileage must pay Confidential information. Cannot use confidential information
Duty of principals to agents: Duty to Cooperate
Principals have a duty to cooperate with their agent: The principal must furnish the agent with the opportunity to work. If someone hires a person to sell their house, they have to give them access to the house The principal cannot unreasonably interfere with the agent's ability to accomplish his task. Has to clean house and cannot make disparaging comments to customers The principal must perform her part of the contract.
The two parties- principal and agent- have these choices in terminating their relationship:
Term Agreement. Agency at Will. Wrongful Termination.
All three elements- blank- are necessary to create an agency relationship
consent, control, and a fiduciary duty
Authority A principal is bound by the acts of an agent if the agent had authority There are three types of authority:
express, implied, and apparent
Agents have a blank to their principals
fiduciary duty
A nonphysical tort is one that
harms only reputation, feelings, or waller
A principal is liable for the physical torts of an independent contractor if
the principal has been negligent in hiring or supervising her
Subagents
intermediary agent- someone who hires subagents (someone appointed by an agent to perform the agent's duties) for the principal. Typically agent cannot hire someone to do their job But when an agent is authorized to hire a subagent, the principal is as liable for the acts of a subagent as he is for the acts of a regular agent
If principals direct their agents to commit an act,
it seems fair to hold the principal liable when that act causes harm
In an agency relationship,
someone (the agent) agrees to perform a task for, and under the control of, someone else (the principal).
gratuitous agent
someone not paid for performing duties Gratuitous agents are liable if they commit gross negligence, but not ordinary negligence
Generally a principal is liable for the physical torts of an employee but is not liable for
the physical torts of an independent contractor
Apparent authority,
the principal is liable for the agent's actions even though the agent was not authorized A principal can be liable for the acts of an agent who is not, in fact, acting with authority if the principal's conduct causes a third party reasonably to believe that the agent is authorized Apparent authority is different: The principal has not authorized the agent, but has done something to make an innocent third party believe the agent is authorized Remember that the issue in apparent authority is always what the principal has done to make the third party believe that the agent has authority
under respondeat superior,
the principal is liable without fault for the torts of employees
To establish consent,
the principal must ask the agent to do something, and the agent must agree
It is important to remember that agents are always liable for
their own torts
Principals are liable for an agent's acts because
they exercise control over that person