Chapter 4 - Agency Flashcards

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1
Q

How is consent expressed?

A

Expressed/implied orally or in writing

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2
Q

What is ratification?

A

Ratification validates past acts of the agent to create an agency relationship retrospectively, as if the agent were authorised to act from the beginning.

Only validates past acts

Provides no future authority

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3
Q

What are the conditions that allow a principal to ratify acts of the agent?

A

Principal was in existence at the time of the agent’s act

Principal had the legal capacity to make the contract himself, both at the time the act was
carried out and at the time of the purported ratification

Agent at the time either names or sufficiently identifies the principal on whose behalf he is making the contract

Ratifications occurs within a reasonable time

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4
Q

How must a principal communicate ratification?

A

Must communicate a sufficiently clear intention of ratifying by express words or conduct

Mere passive inactivity won’t amount to ratification

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5
Q

What does ratification of part of the contract operate as?

A

Ratification of the entire contract.

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6
Q

What are the rights of an agent?

A

Indemnity - entitled to be repaid expenses and to be indemnified by principal against losses and liabilities, provided acts are done properly

Remuneration

Lien - agent has right to exercise a lien over property owned by principal

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7
Q

What are the 3 sources of agent authority?

A

Actual express of authority

Actual implied authority

Ostensible authority

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8
Q

When an Agent had authority and
was known to be an agent, what are the liabilities of parties involved?

A

Third party - may sue and be sued by the principal

Principal - may sue or be sued

Agent - usually none unless intended otherwise

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9
Q

When an agent Agent had authority but
is not known to be an agent, what are the liabilities of parties involved?

A

Third party - can choose to sue either principal or agent

Principal/agent - may sue or be sued

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10
Q

When an agent has no authority, what are the liabilities of parties involved?

A

Third party - No rights against principal but may have claim against the agent

Principal - can’t sue/be sued

Agent - Potential liability under the tort of deceit/breach of warranty of authority

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11
Q

What is agency?

A

Agent establishes privity of contract between principal and 3rd party

Contract enforceable both by and against principal and 3rd party

Agent drops out of the picture

As if principal made contract themselves

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12
Q

Where may issues arise with agency?

A

Whether someone has acted as an agent/ independent contractor in their own right

Ambiguity over which party is the principal

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13
Q

Does an agent need to have full contractual capacity?

A

Not necessarily

Principal must

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14
Q

What are the 3 types of agency?

A

Agency by consent

Agency by estoppel (holding out)

Agency by necessity

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15
Q

What is agency by consent?

A

Consent expressed

Exception - agent is to execute a deed, agency itself must also be created to execute a deed

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16
Q

In commercial transactions, how is an agent appointed?

A

Usually in writing to avoid misunderstanding

17
Q

What is agency by estoppel?

A

Words/conduct of the principal give 3rd party the impression the person is the agent of the principal

18
Q

What is agency by necessity?

A

Arises where a person is dealing with an emergency in which property/interests of another person are in imminent jeopardy

Probably only applies where there is already a contractual relationship between parties

19
Q

What must an agent acting by necessity show?

A

Must show the agent had no practical way of contracting the principal their actions arose from pressing need

Modern telecom may prevent this from arising

20
Q

What duties does the law imply into any contract of agency?

A

Accountability - agent must provide full info to the principal and account for all monies arising from them

Accepting commission/reward as an inducement is a bribe and contract is fraudulent

No conflict of interest between own interest and principal’s

Any agent may refuse to perform an illegal act

21
Q

If an agent agrees to perform services for their principal for reward, is there a contract?

A

Yes, even if agent undertakes duties without reward, they have obligations

22
Q

What are the duties of an agent?

A

Obedience - agent must act strictly in accordance with instructions as long as they’re lawful and reasonable

Skill - agent undertakes to maintain standard of skill and care to be expected of a professional

Personal performance - agent usually selected for personal qualities and owes duty to perform tasks themselves and not delegate

Confidence - must keep knowledge of principal’s affair confident, even after cessation of agency relationship

23
Q

What is actual authority?

A

Explicitly given by the principal in respect of a particular contract

24
Q

What is actual implied authority?

A

Implied from nature of agent’s activities/usual circumstances

Agent has actual implied authority to do all things incidental and all things usual by virtue of agent’s office

3rd parties entitled to assume agent has implied authority unless otherwise

25
Q

What is ostensible/apparent authority?

A

Authority which the agent’s principal represents to other persons that the principal has given to the agent

Not restricted to what is usual and incidental

26
Q

What will the agent be considered when principal isn’t named?

A

Contracting party

27
Q

When may an agent incur personal liability?

A

Under rules of trade usage

Where name is added as party to negotiable instrument

Contract made under seal

28
Q

If an agent receives commission on behalf of a principal and decides to keep it who is liable?

A

Party that paid the commission

29
Q

Is remuneration always payable to an agent?

A

Yes, in the absence of any excess provision

30
Q

When can an agent be liable?

A

If they expressly describe themselves as an agent when entering into a contract

31
Q

Can ratification create a valid agency relationship?

A

Yes

32
Q

Are an agents duties limited to what’s in the contract?

A

No, duties can be implied by statute and common law

33
Q

What are incidental and usual authority part of?

A

actual authority