Exam 38: Relationships Between Principal and Agent
Differentiate between a servant and an independent contractor (as under agency law).
Until, the early nineteenth century, any employee whose work duties were subject to an employer's control was called a servant. The Restatement (Second) of Agency, Section 2, defines a servant as "an agent employed by a master [employer] to perform service in his affairs whose physical conduct in the performance of the service is controlled or is subject to the right to control by the master." However, not every contract for services necessarily creates a master-servant relationship. There is an important distinction between the status of a servant and that of an independent contractor. According to the Restatement (Second) of Agency, Section 2, "an independent contractor is a person who contracts with another to do something for him but who is not controlled by the other nor subject to the other's right to control with respect to his physical conduct in the performance of the undertaking." As the name implies, the independent contractor is legally autonomous. A plumber salaried to a building contractor is an employee and agent of the contractor. But a plumber who hires himself out to repair pipes in people's homes is an independent contractor. If you hire a lawyer to settle a dispute, that person is not your employee or your servant she is an independent contractor.
In case where, Michelle, in anticipation of her death, gives Adam, her son, power of attorney, Adam will be acting as a general agent on behalf of Michelle.
True
Employers not infrequently "mislabel" employees as independent contractors in order to
C
A general agent has the authority to act in any way required by the principal's business.
A contract entered into by an undisclosed agent does not create any liability different from that made by a disclosed agent.
Under the traditional _____ doctrine, an employee who is not hired for a specific period can be fired at any time, for any reasons except bad reasons.
An agent's authority can usually be revoked by the principal at any time.
In which of the following states of the U.S. are workers' compensation laws not compulsory?
The penalty for breach of the fiduciary duty of an agent is:
A gratuitous agent owes the principal the same duties as does a compensated agent.
An agent may appoint his or her own agents to carry out his/her duties, with or without the authorization of his/her principal.
An agent who accepts a bribe to purchase goods for a principal only from a seller who is a personal friend breaches his _____ duty by taking the money, since it is the agent's duty to work only for the best interests of the principal.
The fiduciary relation between an agent and principal is two-way, that is, the agent is the principal's fiduciary and the principal is the agent's fiduciary.
Marlene hires Arthur to find a location for her new pizza store. Arthur owns a former gas station that would be just right for a pizza place, and he sells it to Marlene at a fair price, not disclosing his interest. He has breached his fiduciary duty to Marlene.
Oral agencies are not legally binding unless reduced to writing.
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