Agency

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consensual relationship created by contract or by law where one party, the principal, grants authority
for another party, the agent, to act on behalf of and under the control of the principal to deal with a third
party. An agency relationship is fiduciary in nature, and the actions and words of an agent exchanged
with a third party bind the principal.

An agreement creating an agency relationship may be express or implied, and both the agent and
principal may be either an individual or an entity, such as a corporation or partnership.

Under the law of agency, if a person is injured in a traffic accident with a delivery truck, the truck driver's
employer may be liable to the injured person even if the employer was not directly responsible for the
accident. That is because the employer and the driver are in a relationship known as principal-agent, in
which the driver, as the agent, is authorized to act on behalf of the employer, who is the principal.

The law of agency allows one person to employ another to do her or his work, sell her or his goods, and
acquire property on her or his behalf as if the employer were present and acting in person. The principal
may authorize the agent to perform a variety of tasks or may restrict the agent to specific functions, but
regardless of the amount, or scope, of authority given to the agent, the agent represents the principal and
is subject to the principal's control. More important, the principal is liable for the consequences of acts that
the agent has been directed to perform.

A voluntary, Good Faith relationship of trust, known as a fiduciary relationship, exists between a principal


and an agent for the benefit of the principal. This relationship requires the agent to exercise a duty of
loyalty to the principal and to use reasonable care to serve and protect the interests of the principal. An
agent who acts in his or her own interest violates the fiduciary duty and will be financially liable to the
principal for any losses the principal incurs because of that breach of the fiduciary duty. For example, an
agent who accepts a bribe to purchase only the goods from a particular seller breaches his fiduciary duty
by taking the money, since it is the agent's duty to work only for the best interests of the principal.

An agency relationship is created by the consent of both the agent and the principal; no one can
unwittingly become an agent for another. Although a principal-agent relationship can be created by a
contract between the parties, a contract is not necessary if it is clear that the parties intend to act as
principal and agent. The intent of the parties can be expressed by their words or implied by their conduct.

Perhaps the most important element of a principal-agent relationship is the concept of control: the agent
agrees to act under the control or direction of the principal. The extent of the principal's control over the
agent distinguishes an agent from an Independent Contractor, over whom control and supervision by the
principal may be relatively remote. An independent contractor is subject to the control of an employer only
to the extent that she or he must produce the final work product that she or he has agreed to provide.
Independent contractors have the freedom to use whatever means they choose to achieve that final
product. When the employer provides more specific directions, or exerts more control, as to the means
and methods of doing the job—by providing specific instructions as to how goods are to be sold or
marketed, for example—then an agency relationship may exist.

The agent's authority may be actual or apparent. If the principal intentionally confers express and implied
powers to the agent to act for him or her, the agent possesses actual authority. When the agent exercises
actual authority, it is as if the principal is acting, and the principal is bound by the agent's acts and is liable
for them. For example, if an owner of an apartment building names a person as agent to lease
apartments and collect rents, those functions are express powers, since they are specifically stated. To
perform these functions, the agent must also be able to issue receipts for rent collected and to show
apartments to prospective tenants. These powers, since they are a necessary part of the express duties
of the agent, are implied powers. When the agent performs any or all of these duties, whether express or
implied, it is as if the owner has done so.
A more complicated situation arises when the agent possesses apparent authority. In this case, the
principal, either knowingly or even mistakenly, permits the agent or others to assume that the agent
possesses authority to carry out certain actions when such authority does not, in fact, exist. If other
persons believe in good faith that such authority exists, the principal remains liable for the agent's actions
and cannot rely on the defense that no actual authority was granted. For instance, suppose the owner of
a building offers it for sale and tells prospective buyers to talk to the rental agent. If a buyer enters into a
purchase agreement with the agent, the owner may be liable for breaching that contract if she later
agrees to sell the building to someone else. The first purchaser relied on the apparent authority of the
agent and will not be penalized even if the owner maintains that no authority was ever given to the agent
to enter into the contract. The owner remains responsible for acts done by an agent who was exercising
apparent authority.

The scope of an agent's authority, whether apparent or actual, is considered in determining an agent's
liability for her or his actions. An agent is not personally liable to a third party for a contract the agent has
entered into as a representative of the principal so long as the agent acted within the scope of her or his
authority and signed the contract as agent for the principal. If the agent exceeded her or his authority by
entering into the contract, however, the agent is financially responsible to the principal for violating her or
his fiduciary duty. In addition, the agent may also be sued by the other party to the contract for Fraud. The
principal is generally not bound if the agent was not actually or apparently authorized to enter into the
contract.

With respect to liability in TORT (i.e., liability for a civil wrong, such as driving a car in a negligent manner
and causing an accident), the principal is responsible for an act committed by an agent while acting within
his or her authority during the course of the agent's employment. This legal rule is based on respondeat
superior, which is Latin for "let the master answer." The doctrine of Respondeat Superior, first developed
in England in the late 1600s and adopted in the United States during the 1840s, was founded on the
theory that a master must respond to third persons for losses negligently caused by the master's
servants. In more modern terms, the employer is said to be vicariously liable for injuries caused by the
actions of an employee or agent; in other words, liability for an employee's actions is imputed to the
employer. The agent can also be liable to the injured party, but because the principal may be better able
financially to pay any judgment rendered against him or her (according to the "deep-pocket" theory), the
principal is almost always sued in addition to the agent.

A principal may also be liable for an agent's criminal acts if the principal either authorized or consented to
those acts; if the principal directed the commission of a crime, she or he can be prosecuted as
an Accessory to the crime. Some state and federal laws provide that a corporation may be held criminally
liable for the acts of its agents or officers committed in the transaction of corporate business, since by law
a corporation can only act through its officers.

An agent's authority can be terminated only in accordance with the agency contract that first created the
principal-agent relationship. A principal can revoke an agent's authority at any time but may be liable for
damages if the termination violates the contract. Other events—such as the death, insanity,
or Bankruptcy of the principal—end the principal-agent relationship by operation of law. (Operation of law
refers to rights granted or taken away without the party's action or cooperation, but instead by the
application of law to a specific set of facts.) The rule that death or insanity terminates an agent's authority
is based on the policy that the principal's estate should be protected from potential fraudulent activity on
the part of the agent. Some states have modified these common-law rules, allowing some acts of the
agent to be binding upon other parties who were not aware of the termination.

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