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Diploma of Financial Services (Banking) FNSACCT404B Make Decisions in a Legal Context Lecture 2. Principal and Agency Law. Principal and Agent. Relationship where one person is appointed to act as the representative of the other.
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Diploma of Financial Services (Banking) FNSACCT404B Make Decisions in a Legal Context Lecture 2
Principal and Agent • Relationship where one person is appointed to act as the representative of the other. • Agency = the relationship which exists between two parties whereby one party, the principal, authorizes another party, the agent, to do on their behalf acts which will bring the principal into legal relations with a third party.
Agency Principal Agent 3rd Party
Contracts Involved Two contracts involved - one creating the agency, the internal relationship, - second where the agent contracts on behalf of the principal with a third party, the external relationship.
TYPES OF AGENTS • Special agent • General agent • Universal agent (power of attorney)
CAPACITY OF THE AGENT • An agent has the contractual capacity of the principal due to the delegation of contractual capacity by the principal to the agent. • 2 Cases • Minor as principal • Adult as principal
CREATION OF AGENCY • Expressly created agency • Deed (contract under seal) - POA • In writing (simple contract) • Verbally • Impliedly created agency • Agency by necessity • By ratification • By estoppel • By position or status
EXTENT of AGENT’S AUTHORITY Actual Express (verbal or writing)(eg sell land) AUTHORITY Implied (eg to negotiate) Apparent
THE DUTIES OF AN AGENT TO THEIR PRINCIPAL • Duty to follow the principal’s lawful and reasonable instructions • Duty to act personally • Duty to act in the principal’s best interests • Duty to exercise reasonable care, skill and diligence • Duty to keep proper accounts of all money and property received on behalf of the principal
Continued… • Duty to keep all money and property of the principal separate from that of the agent • Duty of confidentiality • Duty not to make a secret profit
RIGHTS OF AGENTS • Right to remuneration – to be paid as agreed • Right to indemnity and reimbursement • Right to a lien over the principal’s property in the agent’s possession until the agent’s remuneration and expenses are paid • Right to redirect the goods in order to possess and retain them
AGENT’S LIABILITY TO THE PRINCIPAL • The agent will only be responsible to the principal if the agent does not comply with the principal’s instructions, or breaches a duty owed, in which circumstances, they will be responsible for any loss.
AGENT’S LIABILITY TO A THIRD PARTY • A third party who wishes to take legal action over a contract that was arranged by an agent usually only has rights against the principal. • The principal and not the agent will be liable to a third party for any torts committed by the agent whilst acting within the scope of their actual or apparent authority, even if the principal gained no benefit from the agent’s conduct. • However, an agent may be responsible to a third party in the following situations:
Liability of Agent • The principal is disclosed and named but special factors make the agent liable • the named principal does not exist • the agent agreed to be liable • it is standard practice in a trade or industry that an agent becomes liable • the agent executed a deed or bill of exchange in their own name instead of that of the principal • the agent acts outside actual or apparent authority (breach of warranty of authority)
Disclosure & Liability of Agent • Existence but not name of the principal is disclosed • No liability except when: • agent acts outside actual authority • agent specifically agrees to be liable • Existence of principal not disclosed • third party can choose whether they sue the agent or the principal, usually based on who will be more able to pay any judgment sum. • A third party who obtains a judgment against one party, loses all rights against the other.
Breach of warranty of authority • This action may exist where the agent has falsely claimed to have authority they do not in truth possess • Thus, warranty of authority will be breached if the agent; • falsely claims to be acting with the principal’s authority – the claim may be made directly or indirectly, fraudulently or innocently; • the claim of authority induced the third party to enter into the subject contract with the principal; • the third party was not aware of the lack of authority; and • the third party suffered loss.
TERMINATION OF AGENCY • Performance of the agency contract as agreed • Mutual agreement • Revocation of the agent’s authority • Renouncement of authority by the agent • Acceptance of secret commission
TERMINATION OF AGENCY Continued. By operation of law • lapse of a set time period for the life of the agency • death, bankruptcy or insanity of the agent or principal • frustration of the contract • object of the contract becomes illegal
REMEDIES OF A PRINCIPAL If breach by agent:- • rescission of the agency agreement; • refusal to pay commission; • damages; • recovery of secret commission; and/ or • criminal charges laid for accepting a secret commission
TYPES of COMMERCIAL AGENTS ‘Factors’ or mercantile agents • eg: sells on consignment • Del Credere agents • Higher commission but guarantees payment upon sale of goods (eg: livestock selling agents) • Real estate agents • Partners • Brokers