Assignment On The Formation of Agency and Termination
Assignment On The Formation of Agency and Termination
The
Formation
Of Agency
and
Termination
Submitted to :
DR. ANUPAM
ACHARYA
Table Of Contents
Introduction .............................................................................................................................3
Nature of Agency......................................................................................................................6
Termination ..............................................................................................................................11
Conclusion ...............................................................................................................................13
Suggession ................................................................................................................................14
Biblography ..............................................................................................................................14
3
Introduction
(b) A person acting through an agent is acting himself, i.e. act of agent is act of Principal.
- - Since agency is a contract, all usual requirements of a valid contract are applicable to
agency contract also, except to the extent excluded in the Act. One important distinction
is that as per section 185, no consideration is necessary to create an agency.
―In the legal phraseology, every person who acts for another is
not an agent. A domestic servant renders to his master a personal service; a person
may till another’s field or tend his flocks in his shop or factory or may performed
upon his roads; one may act for another in aiding in the performance of his legal or
contractual obligations of third persons….In none of these capacities he is an agent
and he is not acting for another in dealings with third persons. It is only when he acts
as a representative of the other in business negotiation, between that other and third
persons, that he is an agent……
4
Hallmark of agency:-
“Agent” is defined in section 182 of the Indian Contract Act in the following ward:
“The essence of the matter is that the principal authorized the agent to represent or act for
him in bringing the principal into contractual relation with a third person.”
―In the legal phraseology, every person who acts for another is not an
agent. A domestic servant renders to his master a personal service; a person may till
another’s field or tend his flocks or work in his shop or mine; one may for another in
aiding in the performance of his legal or contractual obligations of third persons…. In
none of these capacities he is an agent and he is not acting for another in dealings with
third persons.
1 Shivraj Reddy & Bros v S. Raghu Raj Reddy, AIR 2002 NOC 120 (AP)
2
AIR 1955 SC Mad 648.
5
Research Methodology-:
Objectives-:
1. To analyses the law of agency in India.
2. To understand the effect of globalization on the law of agency.
3. To make certain suggestions in the context of Law of agency in the
Globalization.
Hypothesis -:
The Indian contract Act makes the provision about the presumption of
contract of contrary. It seems that under the contract if the provision about the contract
shall be made mandatory them the interest of third parties can be protect.
The work has been divided into four parts. Part second deals with theconcept of law of
agency in India .
Part third is about the concept, effect of globalization particularly to Indiancontext.
Part four is the conclusion and suggestion of the law of agency inglobalization.
If the agent has actual or apparent authority, the agent will not be
liable for acts performed within the scope of such authority, so long as the relationship
of the 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.
7
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.
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-:
a duty to undertake the task or tasks specified by the terms of the agency (that
is, the agent must not do things that he has not been authorized by the
principal to do);
a duty to discharge his duties with care and due diligence; and
a duty to avoid conflict of interest between the interests of the principal and
his own.
Any person who has the capacity to contract can appoint an agent to acton his or
her behalf.
Persons who lack contractual capacity cannot appoint an agent.
8
Employer-Employee Relationship;
Principal-Agent Relationship;
Principal-Independent Contractor Relationship;
Employer-Employee Relationship-:
An employer hires an employee and gives that employee authority to act and
enter into contracts on his or her behalf.
The extent of this authority is governed by any express agreement between the
parties and implied from the circumstances of the agency.
Principal-Independent Contractor Relationship-:
3
Loon Karan v John & Co. AIR 1967 All 308.
4
Quoting from HALSBURY’S LAWS OF ENGLAND, 3rd Edn, Vol. 1 146.
9
Express Agency-:
An agency that occurs when a principal and an agent expressly agreeto enter
into an agency agreement with each other.
Exclusive agency contract
Power of attorney
Express agency contracts can be either oral or written unless theStatute of Frauds
stipulates that they must be written.
Implied Agency-:
Agency by Ratification-:
Termination-:
An agent's authority can be terminated at any time. If the trust between the
agent and principal has broken down, it is not reasonable to allow the principal to remain
at risk in any transactions that the agent might conclude during a period of notice.
As per Section 201 to 210 The Indian Contract Act, 1872, an agency maycome to an end in a
variety of ways:
(i) By the principal revoking the agency – However, principal cannot revoke an agency
coupled with interest to the prejudice of such interest. Such Agency is coupled with
interest. An agency is coupled with interest whenthe 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 security of the goods; in
such a case, the principal cannot revoke the agent’s authority till the goods are actually
sold, nor is the agency terminated by death or insanity. (Illustrations to section 201)
(iii) By the business of agency being completed; (iv) By the principal being adjudicated
insolvent. (Section 201 of The Indian Contract Act. 1872)
The principal also cannot revoke the agent’s authority after it has been partly exercised, so
as to bind the principal (Section 204 of The Indian Contract Act. 1872), though he can
always do so, before such authority has been so exercised (Sec 203 of The Indian
Contract Act. 1872).
12
Further, as per section 205 of The Indian Contract Act. 1872, 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 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 (Section 206 of The Indian
Contract Act. 1872).
As per section 207 of The Indian Contract Act. 1872, the revocation or renunciation of
an agency may be made expressly or impliedly by conduct. The termination does 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 (Section 208 of The Indian Contract Act. 1872).
Irrevocable Agency-:
CONCLUSION:-
Technology is an indispensable instrument of globalization. Its
globalizing potential , however its influenced shaped by laws and regulations.
Globalization as we understand it today is a conscious process. People perceive the world
as a single or compressed space. Laws and regulations enables the technology to achieve
its globalizing potential and allow human activity to stretch across borders. Laws and
regulations also help to create powerful non-state actors such as international
organizations and corporations by permitting such actors to come into being and to
acquiresources of power.
when an agent is authorized to act on behalf of another (called the Principal) to create a
legal relationship with a Third Party. Succinctly, it may be referred to as the relationship
between a principal and an agent whereby the principal, expressly or impliedly,
authorizes the agent to work under his control and on his behalf. The agent is, thus,
required to negotiate on behalf of the principal or bring him and third parties into
contractual relationship.
Various mechanisms may be used to try to align the interests of the agent in
solidarity with those of the principal, such as piece rates/commissions, profit sharing,
efficiency wages, performance measurement (including financial statements), the agent
posting a bond, or fear of firing.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Law of Contract and Specific Relief By Avtar Singh,9th edi.
LS Sealy and RJA Hooley, Commercial Law: Text, Cases andMaterials (4th
edn OUP 2009)
"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_agency"
The Law of Contract by M.P. Jain.