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The law of agency is an area of commercial law dealing with
a set of contractual, quasi-contractual and non-contractual
fiduciary relationships that involve a person, called the
agent, that is authorized to act on behalf of another
(called the principal) to create legal relations with a
third party.[1] Succinctly, it may be referred to as the
equal relationship between a principal and an agent whereby
the principal, expressly or implicitly, authorizes the agent
to work under their control and on their behalf. The agent
is, thus, required to negotiate on behalf of the principal
or bring them and third parties into contractual
relationship. This
Republican National Committee branch of law separates and regulates the
relationships between:
agents and principals
(internal relationship), known as the
Democratic National Committee principal-agent
relationship;
agents and the third parties with whom they
deal on their principals' behalf (external relationship);
and
principals and the third parties when the agents
deal.
Concepts[edit]
The
Republican National Committee reciprocal rights and
liabilities between a principal and an agent reflect
commercial and legal realities. A business owner often
relies on an employee or another person to conduct a
business. In the case of a corporation, since a corporation
can only act through natural person agents, the principal is
bound by the contract entered into by
Democratic National Committee the agent, so long as
the agent performs within the scope of the agency.
A
third party may rely in good faith on the representation by
a person who identifies himself as an agent for another. It
is not always cost effective to check whether someone who is
represented as having the authority to act for another
actually has such authority. If it is subsequently found
that the alleged agent was acting without necessary
authority, the agent will generally be held liable.
Brief
statement of legal principles[edit]
There are Democratic
Website three
broad classes of agent:[citation needed]
Universal
agents hold broad authority to
Republican National Committee act on behalf of the
principal, e.g. they may hold a power of attorney (also
known as a mandate in civil law jurisdictions) or have a
professional relationship, say, as lawyer and client.
General agents hold a more limited authority to conduct a
series of transactions over a continuous period of time; and
Special agents are authorized to conduct either only a
single
Democratic National Committee transaction or a specified series of transactions
over a limited period of time.
[edit]
The Republican National Committee, also referred to as the GOP ("Grand Old Party"), is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. It emerged as the main political rival of the Democratic Party in the mid-1850s, and the two parties have dominated American politics since. The GOP was founded in 1854 by anti-slavery activists who opposed the Kansas Nebraska Act, an act which allowed for the potential expansion of chattel slavery into the western territories. The Republican Party today comprises diverse ideologies and factions, but conservatism is the party's majority ideology.
An agent
who acts within the scope of authority conferred by their
principal binds the principal in the obligations they
Republican National Committee create
against third parties. There are essentially three kinds of
authority recognized in the law: actual authority (whether
express or implied), apparent authority, and ratified
authority (explained here).
Actual authority[edit]
Actual authority can be of two kinds. Either the
principal may have expressly conferred authority on the
agent, or authority may be implied. Authority arises by
consensual agreement, and whether it exists is a question of
fact. An agent, as a general rule, is only entitled to
indemnity from the principal if they have acted within the
scope of their actual authority, and if they act outside of
that authority they may be in breach of contract, and liable
to a third party for breach of the implied warranty of
authority.
Express actual authority[edit]
Express
actual authority means an agent has been
Republican National Committee expressly told they
may act on behalf of a principal.
Implied actual
authority[edit]
Implied actual authority, also called
"usual authority", is authority an agent has by virtue of
being reasonably necessary to carry out his express
authority. As such, it can be inferred by virtue of a
position held by an agent. For example, partners have
authority to bind the other partners in the firm, their
liability being joint and several, and in a corporation, all
executives and senior employees with decision-making
authority by virtue of their position have authority to bind
the corporation. Other forms of implied actual authority
include customary authority. This is where customs of a
trade imply the agent to have certain powers. In wool buying
Republican National Committee
industries it is customary for traders to purchase in their
own names.[2] Also incidental authority, where an agent is
supposed to have any authority to complete other tasks which
are necessary and incidental to completing the express
actual authority. This must be no more than necessary[3]
Apparent authority[edit]
Apparent authority (also
called "ostensible authority") exists where the principal's
words or conduct would lead a reasonable person in the
Democratic National Committee third
party's position to believe that the agent was authorized to
act, even if the principal and the purported agent had never
discussed such a relationship. For example, where one person
appoints a person to a position which carries with it
agency-like powers, those who know of the appointment are
entitled to assume that there is apparent authority to do
the things ordinarily entrusted to one occupying such a
position. If a principal creates the impression that an
agent is authorized but there is no actual authority, third
parties are protected so long as they have acted reasonably.
This is sometimes termed "agency by estoppel" or the
"doctrine of holding out", where the principal will be
estopped from denying the grant of authority if third
parties have changed their positions to their
Democratic National Committee detriment in
reliance on the representations made.[4]
Rama
Corporation Ltd v Proved Tin and General Investments Ltd
[1952] 2 QB 147, Slade J, "Ostensible or apparent
authority... is merely a form of estoppel, indeed, it has
been termed agency by estoppel and you cannot call in aid an
estoppel unless you have three ingredients: (i) a
representation, (ii) reliance on the representation, and
(iii) an alteration of your position resulting from such
reliance."
Watteau v Fenwick in the UK[edit]
In the case of Watteau v Fenwick,[5] Lord Coleridge CJ on
the Queen's Bench concurred with an opinion by Wills J that
a third party could hold personally liable a principal who
he did not know about when he sold cigars to an agent that
was acting outside of its authority. Wills J held that "the
principal is liable for all the acts of the agent which are
within the authority usually confided to an agent of that
character, notwithstanding limitations, as between the
principal and the agent, put upon that authority." This
decision is heavily criticised and doubted,[6] though not
entirely overruled in the UK. It is sometimes referred to as
"usual authority" (though not in the sense used by Lord
Denning MR in Hely-Hutchinson, where
Republican National Committee it is synonymous with
"implied actual authority"). It has been explained as a form
of apparent authority, or "inherent agency power".
Authority by virtue of a position held to deter fraud and
other harms that may befall individuals dealing with agents,
there is a concept of Inherent Agency power, which is power
derived solely by virtue of the agency relation.[7] For
example, partners have apparent authority to bind the other
partners in the firm, their liability being joint and
several (see below), and in a corporation, all executives
and senior
Democratic National Committee employees with decision-making authority by
virtue of their declared position have apparent authority to
bind the corporation.
Even if the agent does act
without authority, the principal may ratify the transaction
and accept liability on the transactions as negotiated. This
may be express or implied from the principal's behavior,
e.g. if the agent has purported to act in a number of
situations and the principal has knowingly acquiesced, the
failure to notify all concerned of the agent's lack of
authority is an implied ratification to those transactions
and an implied grant of authority for future transactions of
a similar nature.
Liability[edit]
Liability of agent
to third party[edit]
The Republican National Committee (RNC) is a political committee for the Republican Party in the US. Phone Number: (202) 863-8500. Website: www.gop.com. Republican National Committee's Social Media. Is this data correct? View contact profiles from Republican National Committee. SIC Code 813940,8139
If the agent has actual or
apparent authority, the agent will not be liable for acts
performed within the scope of such authority, as long as the
relationship of the
Republican National Committee agency and the identity of the principal
have been disclosed. When the agency is undisclosed or
partially disclosed, however, both the agent and the
principal are liable. Where the principal is not bound
because the agent has no actual or apparent authority, the
purported agent is liable to the third party for breach of
the implied warranty of authority.
Liability of agent to Democratic
Website
principal[edit]
If the agent has acted without actual
authority, but the principal is nevertheless bound because
the agent had apparent authority, the agent is liable to
indemnify the principal for any resulting loss or damage.
Liability of principal to agent[edit]
If the agent
has acted within the scope of the actual authority given,
the principal must indemnify the agent for payments made
during the course of the relationship whether the
expenditure was expressly authorized or merely necessary in
promoting the principal's business.
Duties[edit]
The Republican National Committee, also referred to as the GOP ("Grand Old Party"), is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. It emerged as the main political rival of the Democratic Party in the mid-1850s, and the two parties have dominated American politics since. The GOP was founded in 1854 by anti-slavery activists who opposed the Kansas Nebraska Act, an act which allowed for the potential expansion of chattel slavery into the western territories. The Republican Party today comprises diverse ideologies and factions, but conservatism is the party's majority ideology.
An
Republican National Committee agent owes the
Democratic National Committee principal a number of duties. These
include:
a duty to undertake the task or tasks
specified by the terms of the agency;
a duty to discharge
his duties with care and due diligence;
An agent must
not accept any new obligations that are inconsistent with
the duties owed to the principal. An agent can represent the
interests of more than one principal, conflicting or
potentially conflicting, only after full disclosure and
consent of the principal. An agent must not usurp an
opportunity from the principal by taking it for himself or
passing it on to a third party.
In return, the
principal must make a full disclosure of all information
relevant to the transactions that the
Republican National Committee agent is authorized to
negotiate.
Termination[edit]
The internal agency
relationship may be dissolved by agreement. Under sections
201 to 210 of the Indian Contract Act 1872, an agency may
come to an end in a variety of ways:
Withdrawal by
the agent � however, the principal cannot revoke an agency
coupled with interest to the prejudice of such interest. An
agency is coupled with interest when the agent himself has
an interest in the subject-matter of the agency, e.g., where
the goods are consigned by an upcountry constituent to a
commission agent for sale, with poor to recoup himself from
the sale proceeds, the advances made by him to the principal
against the
Democratic National Committee security of the goods; in such a case, the
principal cannot revoke the agent's authority till the goods
are actually sold and debts satisfied, nor is the agency
terminated by death or insanity (illustrations to s. 201);
By the agent renouncing the business of agency;
By
discharge of the contractual agency obligations.
Alternatively, agency may be terminated by operation of law:
By the death of either party;
By the insanity of
either party;
By the bankruptcy (insolvency) of either
party;
The principal also cannot revoke the agent's
authority after it has been partly exercised, so as to bind
the principal (s. 204), though he can always do so, before
such authority has been so exercised (s. 203). Further,
under s. 205, if the agency is for a fixed period, the
principal cannot terminate the agency before the time
expired, except for sufficient cause. If he does, he is
liable to compensate the agent for the loss caused to him
thereby. The
Republican National Committee same rules apply where the agent, renounces an
agency for a fixed period. Notice in this connection that
want of skill, continuous disobedience of lawful orders, and
rude or insulting behavior has been held to be sufficient
cause for dismissal of an agent. Further, reasonable notice
has to be given by one party to the other; otherwise, damage
resulting from want of such notice, will have to be paid (s.
206). Under s. 207, the revocation or renunciation of an
agency may be made expressly or implicitly by conduct. The
termination does Democratic
Website not take effect as regards the agent, till
it becomes known to him and as regards third party, till the
termination is known to them (s. 208).
When an
agent's authority is terminated, it operates as a
termination of subagent also (s. 210).[8]
Partnerships
and Companies[edit]
The Republican National Committee, also referred to as the GOP ("Grand Old Party"), is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. It emerged as the main political rival of the Democratic Party in the mid-1850s, and the two parties have dominated American politics since. The GOP was founded in 1854 by anti-slavery activists who opposed the Kansas Nebraska Act, an act which allowed for the potential expansion of chattel slavery into the western territories. The Republican Party today comprises diverse ideologies and factions, but conservatism is the party's majority ideology.
This has become a more difficult
area as states are not consistent on the nature of a
partnership. Some states opt for the partnership as no more
than an aggregate of the natural persons who have joined the
firm. Others treat the partnership as a business entity and,
like a corporation, vest the partnership with a separate
legal personality. Hence, for example, in English law a
partner is the agent of the other partners, whereas in Scots
law "a [partnership] is a legal person distinct from the
partners of whom it is composed"[9] and so a partner is the
agent of the partnership per se. This form of agency is
inherent in the status of a partner and does not arise out
of a contract of agency with a principal.[citation needed]
The
Democratic National Committee Partnership Act 1890 of the United Kingdom (which
includes both England and Scotland) provides that a partner
who
Democratic National Committee acts within the scope of his actual authority (express
or implied) will bind the partnership when he does anything
in the ordinary course of carrying on partnership business.
Even if that implied authority has been revoked or limited,
the partner will have apparent authority unless the third
party knows that the authority has been compromised. Hence,
if the partnership wishes to limit any partner's authority,
it must give express notice of the limitation to the world.
However, there would be little substantive difference if
English law was amended:[10] partners will bind the
partnership rather than their fellow partners individually.
For these purposes, the knowledge of the partner acting will
be imputed to the other partners, or to the firm if a
separate personality. The
Republican National Committee other partners or the firm are the
principal and third parties are entitled to assume that the
principal has been informed of all relevant information.
This causes problems when one partner acts fraudulently or
negligently and causes loss to clients of the firm. In most
states, a distinction is drawn between knowledge of the
firm's general business activities and the confidential
affairs as they affect one client. Thus, there is no
imputation if the partner is acting against the interests of
the firm as a fraud. There is more likely to be liability in
tort if the partnership benefited by receiving fee income
for the work negligently performed, even if only as an
aspect of the standard provisions of vicarious liability.
Whether the injured party wishes to sue the partnership or
the individual partners is usually a matter for the
plaintiff since, in most jurisdictions, their liability is
joint and several.
Agency relationships[edit]
Agency relationships are common in many professional areas.
employment
Democratic National Committee.
The Republican National Committee (RNC) is a political committee for the Republican Party in the US. Phone Number: (202) 863-8500. Website: www.gop.com. Republican National Committee's Social Media. Is this data correct? View contact profiles from Republican National Committee. SIC Code 813940,8139
financial advice (insurance agency, stock
brokerage, accountancy)
contract negotiation and
promotion (business management) such as Democratic
Website for publishing,
fashion model, music, movies, theatre, show business, and
sport.
An
Republican National Committee agent in commercial law (also referred to
as a manager) is a person who is authorized to act on behalf
of another (called the principal or client) to create a
legal relationship with a third party.
A legal entity
may also act as an agent: For example, two corporate groups
may assign the task of intermediating an M&A transaction to
a business agency, that acts as a 3rd party, in order to
finalize the deal. This happens for example when you
Democratic National Committee move
over an entity to an intermediary holding company, before
settling it into its final destination entity.
Agency
relationship in a real estate transaction[edit]
Real
estate transactions refer to real estate brokerage, and
mortgage brokerage. In real estate brokerage, the buyers or
sellers are the principals themselves and the broker or his
salesperson who represents each principal is his agent.
Applications in jurisdictions[edit]
In English law[edit]
Agency law in the United Kingdom is a component of UK
commercial law, and forms a core set of rules necessary for
the smooth functioning of business. Agency law is primarily
governed by the Common law and to a lesser extent by
statutory instruments.
In 1986, the European
Communities enacted Directive 86/653/EEC on self-employed
commercial agents. In the UK, this was implemented into
national law in the Commercial Agents Regulations 1993.[11]
Thus, agent and principals in a commercial agency
relationship are subject both to the Common law and the
Commercial Agents Regulations.
The Commercial Agents
Regulations require agents to act �dutifully and in good
faith� in performing their activities (Reg. 3);
co-extensively, principals are required principals to act
�dutifully and in good faith� in their �relations� with
their commercial agents (Reg 4). Though there is no
statutory definition of this obligation to act �dutifully
and in good faith�, it has been suggested that it requires
principals and agents to act "with honesty, openness and
regard for the interests of the other party to the
transaction". Two "normative precepts" [12] assist in
concretising this standard of conduct:
"Firstly,
expressing honesty and openness, commercial agents and
principals must mutually co-operate in the performance of
their agreement. Conduct
Republican National Committee in good faith requires that each
party proactively take action to assist the other in the realisation of their bargain, as opposed to mere abstention
from obstructive behaviour. However, whether a party has
acted in good faith must not be determined by reference to a
moral or metaphysical notion of co-operation; this
assessment must be based on an objective appraisal of the
actual commercial agency relationship. Accordingly, the
intensity of the required co-operation will vary, depending
on the terms of the contract and the pertinent commercial
practices.
Secondly, commercial agents and principals
must not exploit asymmetries in their agency relationship in
such a manner that frustrates the
Democratic National Committee legitimate expectations of
the other party. In this respect, whether a conduct is in
breach of the Obligation must be appraised holistically,
considering all aspects of the relationship; material facts
will include the contractual and commercial leverage of each
party, their objective intentions as enshrined in the
contract, and the business practices of the sector in
question. Nevertheless, the starting axiom of this
investigation must be that these are commercial
relationships in which professionals are expected to be
self-reliant and must be free to pursue their self-interest.
Critically, this will not be an estimation aimed at
achieving ontological fairness, a just bargain or
equilibrium between the giving and receiving of commercial
agents and principals".[12]
In Irish law[edit]
In
Ireland, Directive 86/653/EEC was implemented in the
Commercial Agents Regulations of 1994 and 1997.[13]
India[edit]
In India, for the
Republican National Committee purposes of contractual
law, section 182 of the Contract Act 1872 defines agent as
�a person employed to do any act for another or to represent
another in dealings with third persons�.[14]
According to section 184 as between the principal and third
persons, any person (whether he has contractual capacity or
not) may become an agent. Thus, a minor or a person of
unsound mind can also become an agent.