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(Steven Felgate) #1
What is agency?

An agent is a person who has the power to alter the legal position of another person, known
as the principal. Generally, an agent has the power to make contracts on the principal’s
behalf. Once the contract has been made, it is the principal and not the agent who will be
bound by it.

Example
The owner of a painting (the principal) asks an auctioneer (an agent) to sell it at auction.
A third party buys the painting for £500. The contract of sale takes effect between the prin-
cipal and the third party. (The painting which belonged to the principal has been sold to the
third party.) But the contract of sale was actually negotiated and concluded by the agent,
the auctioneer.

Agency is essential to the business world. If every person making a contract had to do so
personally, then the business world would come to a standstill. Without agency, companies
and partnerships could not exist. Agency is also far more common that most people think.
Shop assistants, for example, are agents. The goods which they sell belong not to themselves
but to the owners of the shops in which they work.
As well as having the power to make contracts, agents often also have the power to
receive payment on behalf of their principals. For example, shop assistants have the power
to receive payment for goods sold on their principal’s behalf. If a dishonest shop assistant

Chapter 6


Agency


Figure 6.1 Agency
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