Agency & Partnership Rules Flashcards
Subject Acrostic - Principals CORRAL their agent’s activities.
CREATION of agent/principal relationship OBLIGATIONS loyalty, obedience, stewardship RIGHTS of parties RATIFICATION by principal AUTHORITY express, implied, apparent LIABILITY primary & vicarious (respondeat superior)
Formation of Agency Relationship - Creating an agency relationship is as easy as ABCD.
ASSENT (usually requires mutuality)
BENEFIT conferred upon principal
CONTROL of agent by principal
DURING and within scope of agent’s employment
AGENCY DEFINITION
An agency is a legal relationship where an agent is authorized to represent a principal in business dealings with third parties. This requires assent by the parties, benefitting the principal, and control of the agent by the principal.
AGENCY FORMATION
ASSENT: An agreement between a principal and agent.
o Capacity: While an agent does not require capacity, a principal must have contractual capacity – thus, for example, a child could be an agent but not a principal.
BENEFIT: The agent’s conduct must be for the principal’s benefit.
CONTROL: The principal must have the right to control the agent. Control means having the power to supervise the manner of the agent’s performance.
CONSENT: Consent of both parties is required.
WRITING: Not required, but if the agreement falls within the SOF, then writing necessary.
METHODS TO CREATE AN AGENCY:
o An act of the parties where they enter into an agency agreement between the principal and agent (actual authority) holding out by the principal (apparent authority) or ratification; or
o By operation of law:
• Estoppel which requires third party reliance on the principal’s communication; or
• Statutes creating agencies
DUTIES AGENT OWES TO PRINCIPAL
CARE: Duty to exercise reasonable care.
OBEY: Duty to obey reasonable instructions (i.e., not lie or break the law) – obedience.
LOYALTY:
o Self-dealing- Agent cannot:
1. Receive a benefit to the detriment of the principal;
2. Usurp the principal’s opportunity; or
3. Receive secret profits (“at the principal’s expense”).
PRINCIPAL’S REMEDIES
- Contract actions (against compensated agents);
- Tort actions;
- Actions for secret profits;
- Equitable actions for an accounting; and
- Withholding of compensation for intentional torts or intentional breaches of fiduciary duty.
o The principal may recover the actual profits or properties held by the agent whether or not the agent’s profit has caused the principal any loss.
DUTIES PRINCIPAL OWES THE AGENT
- *DUTIES IMPOSED BY CONTRACT:**
1. Reasonable Compensation: If the agent agreement is silent as to this term, the agent is entitled to reasonable compensation.
2. Reimbursement for Expenses.
3. Agent’s Performance: Cannot unreasonably interfere with the agent’s performance
AGENT’S REMEDIES
A compensated agent has the usual contract remedies against the principal (also a duty to mitigate) and the right to a possessory lien for any money due from the principal, including compensation owed for services.
AGENCY POWER: CONTRACT LIABILITY-
TYPES OF AUTHORITY
A principal will be liable for any contract that is entered into by an agent, if the principal authorized the agent to enter into the contract.
Actual (Express) Authority: Principal uses words to express authority to agent to enter into the contract. Can be an oral agreement, unless the contract if an interest in land lasting longer than one year (SOF)
Actual Implied Authority: Authority which agent reasonably believes the principal has given, because of Necessity, Custom or Prior Dealings.
Apparent Authority: Occurs when an agent appears to have authority, and a third-party reasonably relies on this appearance.
o Limitations on authority: Even if a principal has limited the authority, the principal will still be liable if the third party is unaware.
o Continuation of authority: If the agent continues to act on the principal’s behalf after the authority has ended, the principal will still be liable until a third party has notice that the agency has ended.
Ratification: Even if an agency did not exist when an act or task transpired, the principal may be bound if s/he later validates the act.
AGENCY POWER: CONTRACT LIABILITY-
LIABILITIES TO THIRD PARTIES
THIRD PARTY v. PRINCIPAL: The principal will be liable to the third party on the contract entered into by her agent if the agent had valid authority to act (any of above).
THIRD PARTY v. AGENT: Depends on disclosure of principal:
o Disclosed Principal: The principal will be liable when the third party knows the agent is working for the principal, and also knows who the principal is (i.e., the principal is disclosed). An exception is if the contract intends the agent to be responsible.
o Partially Disclosed or Undisclosed:
• Partially Disclosed Principal: One whose existence is known, but identity is withheld.
• Undisclosed Principal: Neither identity nor existence is disclosed. This results in liability for BOTH the agent and principal.
PRINCIPAL v. THIRD PARTY: When the principal is disclosed, only the principal (not the agent) may enforce the contract and hold the third party liable. If the principal is undisclosed or partially disclosed, either the principal or the agent can enforce the contract against the third party.
AGENCY TORT LIABILITY: RESPONDEAT SUPERIOR
Generally, a principal will be vicariously liable for the torts committed by an agent.
- *REQUIREMENTS:**
1. A principal-agent relationship exists; and
2. The tort was committed by the agent within the scope of that relationship.
a. Sub-agents: When an agent enlists the help of a sub-agent, the principal will not be liable for a sub-agent’s torts unless the principal has the right to control the sub-agent. This rule also applies if a principal borrows another principal’s agent.
b. Independent Contractor: A principal will not be liable for an independent contractor’s torts (element of control is lacking).
i. Exceptions: Ultra-hazardous activities & Estoppel
SCOPE:
Normal Conduct: If the agent’s conduct is of the kind the agent was hired to perform (for example, if it was in the job description), then the more likely it will be within the scope of the agency.
Frolic v. Detour: When did the tort occur?
o A Frolic is a new and independent journey. Principal is not vicariously liable.
o A Detour is a mere departure from an assigned task. Principal will be vicariously liable
AGENCY TORT LIABILITY:
INTENTIONAL TORTS
Intentional torts are ordinarily outside the scope of agency.
Exceptions: Intentional torts are within the scope if the conduct was:
o Specifically authorized by the principal;
o Natural from the nature of employment; or
o Motivated by a desire to serve the principal.
PARTNERSHIP: DEFINITIONS
A partnership is an association of two or more persons to carry on as co-workers a business for profit. Partnership law is based on the law of contract and agency.
LEGAL STATUS: A partnership is a legal entity – it is distinct from the partners that make up the partnership. The partnership can own land and property, as well as be sued.
GOVERNING LAW: The Revised Uniform Partnership Act (“R.U.P.A.”) sets out default rules for partnerships. Partners may agree to follow different rules, which must be outlined in a partnership agreement. There are certain provisions that cannot be waived, such as the duty of loyalty and the right of a court to expel a partner. Any rules that are not covered in the agreement will be governed by the R.U.P.A.
PARTNERSHIP FORMATION
PARTNERSHIP FORMATION
FORMALITIES: There are no formalities to becoming a general partnership – a partnership may exist through conduct alone (i.e., acting as though the relationship is a partnership, such as sharing profits).
- *AGREEMENT**: No formal agreement is required. Party’s intent is implied from conduct.
- *WRITING**: Generally not required, unless a partnership exists for more than one year.
- *CAPACITY**: Anyone capable of entering into a contract can be a partner.
- *LEGALITY OF PURPOSE**: Cannot be formed for an illegal purpose.
- *CONSENT**: Need express consent from all partners.
- *STATEMENT OF PARTNERSHIP AUTHORITY**: A partnership may choose to file a statement of partnership authority with the secretary of state, which can give constructive knowledge of the extent of the partners’ authority with regard to the partnership
FUDICIARY DUTIES OF PARTNERS
DUTY OF LOYALTY: Partners may not engage in: (1) Self-dealing; (2) Usurping partnership opportunities (by competing with the partnership); or (3) Making a secret/undisclosed profit at the partnership’s expense.
o REMEDY: Action for Accounting. Only form of action that can be brought by a partnership against one of its own partners for a breach of duty of loyalty. Partnership may recover: (1) Losses caused by the breach; and (2) May disgorge profits made by the breaching partner.
INDEMNIFICATION: A partnership must indemnify every partner with regard to payments made and obligations reasonably incurred in carrying on partnership business.
DUTY TO INSPECT: Partner has a duty to inspect and copy partnership books.