Agency Flashcards
Requirements for Creation of an Agency Relationship
(1) Mutual assent by both the principal and the agent, either expressly or impliedly, that the agent will act for the principal’s benefit/on the principal’s behalf; and
(2) That the agent be subject to the principal’s control.
To create, the principal must have contractual capacity, whereas the agent must only have minimum mental capacity.
Termination of an Agency Relationship
Authority to act for the principal can terminate in several ways, including the principal manifesting a desire to the agent to discontinue the relationship.
Actual Authority
An agent has actual authority to take all actions that are necessary or incidental to achieving the principal’s objectives.
Express: Agent is expressly (orally or in written communications) given authority to act for the principal.
Implied: When the principal’s conduct leads the agent to believe that it has authority. Can be implied by custom, past course of conduct, necessity, or emergency circumstances. Terminates after a reasonable time or following a change in circumstances, death, or incapacity of the principal.
Apparent Authority
When an agent with apparent authority contracts on behalf of a disclosed principal, the principal and the third party are bound.
Arises when the behavior of the principal leads the third party to believe that agent is acting with the principal’s authority.
(1) The person dealing with the agent has a reasonable belief in the agent’s authority; and
(2) The believe must be generated by some manifestation of the principal.
Ratification
The retroactive creation of an agency relationship.
Even if the agent did not have authority to enter into a transaction, the principal can ratify the acts, and thus become liable, by expressly or impliedly affirming or accepting the benefit of the acts, as long as the principal knew the material facts and had capacity.
Vicarious Liability of Employer/Respondeat Superior
An employer is liable in tort for the acts of an agent or employee if the agent or employee —
- Was acting in the scope of employment;
- Made a minor deviation (detour) from employment (not a frolic); OR
- Committed an intentional tort, but only if it was
3(a). For the principal’s benefit,
3(b). Because the principal authorized it, or
3(c). It arose naturally due to the nature of employment.
Agent is also liable under the theory of joint and several liability.
Indemnification
The principal can recover against the agent for indemnification if the agent acts beyond his authority.
Direct Liability of the Principal
The principal is directly liable for his own negligence if he negli
Agency Relationship
An agency relationship is a voluntary, fiduciary relationship between a principal and an agent in which the principal authorizes the agent to act on their behalf.
Can be based on a contract, but a contract is not required.
Gratuitous Agency
Principal does not compensate the agent for work done on their behalf.
Employer-Employee Relationship
Relationship in which the employer has control over what the employee does and how they do it. The higher the level of control, the more liability for the employer.
Employer-Independent Contractor Relationship
Relationship in which the employer has a lower level of control over how the contractor performs. The less control, the lower the amount of liability.
Duties Owed by the Agent to the Principal
Duty of care, duty of loyalty, duty to account, and the duty of candor.
Duty of Care
Absent an agreement to the contrary, the agent owes a duty of care to their principal. This requires the agent to —
- Follow the principal’s reasonable instructions;
- Perform their duties with reasonable care;
- Indemnify the principal against loss caused by the agent’s wrongful behavior/failure to act with care.
Duty of Loyalty
The agent has a duty of loyalty to the principal arising from the fiduciary character of their relationship. The agent must:
- Prefer the interests of the principal over their own;
- Avoid self-dealing; and
- Neither compete with the principal nor usurp their business opportunities for themselves.