Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

AGENCY. Introduction Agency One person acts for the benefit of and under the direction of another Agent Person acting for the benefit of another Principal.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "AGENCY. Introduction Agency One person acts for the benefit of and under the direction of another Agent Person acting for the benefit of another Principal."— Presentation transcript:

1 AGENCY

2 Introduction Agency One person acts for the benefit of and under the direction of another Agent Person acting for the benefit of another Principal Person directing another to act on his behalf

3 TYPES OF RELATIONSHIPS Principal/agent Employer/employee Master/servant Employer/independent contractor

4 How do you determine if a worker is an employee or an independent contractor? Common-law agency test Who has the right to control the manner in which the work is performed? IRS test 20 factors to determine whether someone is an employee or an independent contractor Derived from results of court judgments

5 IRS 20 FACTOR ANALYSIS 1. Instructions 2. Training 3. Integration 4. Services rendered personally. 5. Hiring, supervising, and paying assistants. 6. Continuing relationships 7. Set hours of work

6 IRS 20 FACTOR ANALYSIS 8. Full time required 9. Doing work on the employee’s premises 10. Order or sequenced set. 11. Oral or written reports 12. Furnishing tools and materials 13. Payment by hour, week, or month. 14. Payment of business or traveling expenses

7 IRS 20 FACTOR ANALYSIS 15. Significant investment 16. Realization of profit or loss 17. Working for more than one firm at a time 18. Making services available to the general public. 19. Right to discharge 20. Right to terminate

8 U.S. Supreme Court six-factor test Whether the organization can hire or fire the individual or set the rules and regulations of the individual’s work; Whether, and to what extent, the organization supervises the individual’s work;

9 Whether the individual reports to someone higher in the organization; Whether and to what extent the individual is able to influence the organization; Whether the parties intended that the individual be an employee, as expressed in written agreements or contracts; and Whether the individual shares in the profits, losses, and liabilities of the organization.

10 See John Weary v. William S. Cochran, 377 F.3d 522, 2004 U.S. App. Lexis 15589 (2004).

11 LIABILITY TO EACH OTHER

12 Duties of Agents to Principals Duty of Loyalty Fiduciary Dual Agency Confidential Information Duty to Obey Instructions Duty to Exercise Care and Skill Ordinary care and skill common for kind of work Duty to Communicate Information

13 Duties of Agents to Principals Duty to Account for Funds and Property Property Return to principal or account for inability to do so An Accounting Periodically give principal accurate record of receipts and expenditures Commingling Keep principal’s property separate from own Embezzlement If agent takes property with intent to deprive principal of it, agent is guilty of the crime of embezzlement

14 Duties of Principals to Agents Duty to Compensate Contingent Compensation Procuring Cause Duration of Employment Real Estate Commissions Insurance Commissions Duty to Reimburse and Indemnify Duty to Keep Accounts

15 Enforcement of Liabilities between Principals and Agents Breach of Duty by Agent Deduct damages from agent’s compensation Bring a lawsuit Pay no compensation Terminate agency Breach of Duty by Principal Attach lien on principal’s property in agent’s possession Bring a lawsuit Terminate agency

16 LIABILITY TO THIRD PARTIES

17 CONTRACT LIABILITY

18 The Agent’s Authority to Bind the Principal on Contracts Actual Authority Express Authority Example: Power of Attorney Implied Authority Test - Justifiable belief of the agent Apparent Authority Test - Justifiable belief of a third party Apparent Agent Duty of Third Persons to Determine Agent’s Authority

19 The Agent’s Authority to Bind the Principal on Contracts Ratification Nature of Ratification One may become liable through ratification for an unauthorized act that was done by an agent Requirements for Ratification Agent must have acted on behalf of the principal Entire act must be ratified Effect of Ratification Agent released from liability Principal is bound as if agent had been fully authorized

20 Contract Liability of the Agent Introduction Unauthorized Actions Agent is liable to third party Nonexistent or Incompetent Principal Agent is liable to third party Agreements by the Agent to Assume Liability Joint liability between principal and agent

21 Contract Liability of the Agent Disclosed Principal Rights and Liabilities of Agent Rights and Liabilities of Principal Undisclosed Principal Rights and Liabilities of Agent Rights and Liabilities of Principal Partially Disclosed Principal Rights and Liabilities of Agent Rights and Liabilities of Principal

22 TORT LIABILITY

23 Employers may be vicariously liable for the actions of employees based on one of several theories : 1. negligent entrustment 2. failure to properly supervise 3. respondeat superior

24 Respondeat superior is a strict liability theory. The primary defense is that the employee was not acting within “the scope of employment.”

25 An employee’s conduct is within the scope of his/her employment if it meets each of the following four tests: 1. It was of the kind that the employee was employed to perform. 2. It occurred substantially within the authorized time period. 3. It occurred substantially within the location authorized by the employer. 4. It was motivated at least in part by the purpose of serving the employer.

26 See Rappaport v. International Playtex Corp., 352 N.Y.S. 2d 241

27 Exception to Respondeat Superior: Fellow-servant rule


Download ppt "AGENCY. Introduction Agency One person acts for the benefit of and under the direction of another Agent Person acting for the benefit of another Principal."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google