Template:Authority capsule: Difference between revisions
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Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) Created page with "Whether the fellow who purports to sign the {{t|contract}} for your counterparty has any ostensible grounds to do — whether she is properly appointe..." |
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Whether the fellow who purports to sign the {{t|contract}} for your counterparty has any [[Ostensible authority|ostensible]] grounds to do — whether she is properly appointed by the board or, by dint of her role within the organisation, has the general authority to sign — so is a question of her {{repprov|authority}}. Here the law of [[agency]] lends an innocent contracting party a hand, with the doctrine of [[ostensible authority]] meaning one can rely on someone who seems to have appropriate {{repprov|authority}} even if she doesn’t, as long as you don’t (or can not reasonably have been expected to) know that. <br> | Whether the fellow who purports to sign the {{t|contract}} for your counterparty has any [[Ostensible authority|ostensible]] grounds to do — whether she is properly appointed by the board or, by dint of her role within the organisation, has the general authority to sign — so is a question of her ''{{repprov|authority}}''. Here the law of [[agency]] lends an innocent contracting party a hand, with the doctrine of [[ostensible authority]] meaning one can rely on someone who ''seems'' to have appropriate {{repprov|authority}} even if she doesn’t, as long as you don’t (or can not reasonably have been expected to) know that. <br> |
Latest revision as of 11:29, 14 February 2020
Whether the fellow who purports to sign the contract for your counterparty has any ostensible grounds to do — whether she is properly appointed by the board or, by dint of her role within the organisation, has the general authority to sign — so is a question of her authority. Here the law of agency lends an innocent contracting party a hand, with the doctrine of ostensible authority meaning one can rely on someone who seems to have appropriate authority even if she doesn’t, as long as you don’t (or can not reasonably have been expected to) know that.