theonline.mba
← Back to unit 1: Legal Foundations for Managers

LAW 301 · Unit 1 · Lesson 4 of 5

Agency and Authority

Legal Foundations for Managers

Lesson

The sales rep who promised lifetime compostability

A Greenline sales rep told a regional restaurant buyer that bowls would "compost in any backyard pile" to close Q3 volume. The buyer emailed thanks repeating the promise. Marketing had only commercial-facility data. Sofia opened an agency (legal relationship where one party acts for another) inquiry: when do employee words bind Greenline?

Greenline Packaging is a sustainable packaging manufacturer serving food service, restaurant chains, and consumer brands and the anchor organization for LAW 301. Latest annual revenue is approximately $78M across 420 employees and 3 manufacturing plants (Midwest (primary), Southeast, and West Coast). General Counsel Sofia Martinez, CEO James Cole, CFO Dana Whitfield, and VP Operations Marcus Chen navigate supply contracts with resin and fiber suppliers, FTC green-marketing scrutiny, OSHA plant safety, employment and non-compete disputes, board governance, whistleblower intake, and customer data privacy. Products include compostable molded-fiber clamshells, recycled corrugated shippers, and plant-based film liners, sold to national restaurant chains (42% of revenue), food distributors (35%), and consumer packaged goods brands (23%).

Sofia Martinez's legal team supports commercial contracts, employment matters, governance, ethics, and compliance while regulators and customers scrutinize compostable within 180 days in commercial composting facilities; 68% post-consumer recycled content in corrugated lines. Active matters include supplier force majeure dispute ($2.1M), former sales VP non-compete injunction request, FTC inquiry on compostability marketing claims. You will reuse these names and numbers so legal analysis stays tied to managerial decisions, not abstract hypotheticals.

This lesson develops agency and authority for managers who must advise James Cole and document decisions Sofia Martinez can defend under scrutiny.

Actual and apparent authority

Actual authority is power the principal (company) granted, express or implied. Apparent authority (third party reasonably believes actor can bind principal) binds Greenline if the company clothed the rep with signs of authority: business cards, pricing templates, prior course of dealing.

Courts protect buyers who reasonably rely on sales reps in the field. Internal policy that contradicts field behavior still creates exposure.

Respondeat superior and scope of employment

Employers are liable for torts employees commit within scope of employment. Harassment, discrimination, and negligent plant supervision claims use this doctrine. Scope analysis asks whether conduct benefits employer and occurs during work.

Ratification and estoppel

Greenline ratifies (adopts after the fact) unauthorized deals by accepting benefits without protest. Silence after the thank-you email repeating the backyard compost claim could ratify a warranty Greenline cannot substantiate.

Limits and contracting controls

Contracting thresholds, written delegation matrices, and entire agreement clauses in MSAs reduce but do not eliminate apparent authority risk for pre-contract statements.

ControlStops all liability?Value
Signatures over $250kNo for prior repsSlows bad deals
Marketing approved talk tracksNo if ignoredEvidence of reasonableness
MSA integration clauseHelps post-signLimits warranty expansion

Worked example: Backyard compost representation

Buyer email quotes rep promise; MSA unsigned; campaign launches in 10 days.

Part A: Authority analysis

Rep had implied authority to discuss product features; not to extend unsubstantiated environmental warranties outside approved claims.

Part B: Apparent authority

Restaurant buyer met rep at official Greenline booth with branded decks. Reasonable reliance argument likely if promise not corrected.

Part C: Remediation

Corrective email with approved claim language; manager call; offer lab summary; discipline per policy; update talk track training.

Part D: Managerial read

Treat as near-miss warranty claim; do not ratify; document remediation before MSA execution.


Worked example: Purchasing agent signing NDA

Junior buyer signed mutual NDA with 5-year non-solicit of supplier engineers. Actual authority capped at 2 years per delegation matrix. Supplier may argue apparent authority if purchasing historically signed NDAs. Cure with superseding NDA and board awareness.


Common mistakes beginners make

MistakeWhy it failsBetter habit
Assuming 'not authorized' defeats all claimsApparent authority protects third partiesCorrect field behavior and document denials fast
Ignoring ratification by silenceAccepting benefit adopts termsRespond to erroneous emails explicitly
Delegation matrices nobody readsNo reasonable notice to third partiesTrain and audit threshold compliance
Letting talk tracks drift from lab filesCreates false warranty theoriesSync sales training with substantiation
Blaming 'rogue employee' publiclyAdmits control failuresUse disciplined remediation narrative

Practice problem

VP Operations tells a supplier orally that Greenline will buy 2026 volume at 2025 prices. No PO (purchase order) yet. Tasks: (1) Classify authority type. (2) List two ways supplier could enforce. (3) Propose corrective steps.

Solution

Type: Likely apparent or implied authority if VP role includes supply commitments historically. Enforce: Promissory estoppel if supplier relies; signed letter of intent if drafted. Correct: Written clarification that quote non-binding until signed amendment; internal memo restating signature policy.

Key takeaways

  • Companies bind through actual and apparent authority even when policy says otherwise.
  • Ratification and silence adopt unauthorized commitments.
  • Delegation matrices help but do not replace field discipline.
  • Environmental claims from sales reps are high-risk warranties.
  • Greenline corrects third-party reliance quickly and in writing.

After this lesson

  1. Audit who can sign NDAs, POs, and marketing claims in your organization.
  2. Rewrite one talk track to match substantiation files.
  3. Continue to Lesson 5: Managing Legal Risk.

Applying Agency and Authority at Greenline scale

When Greenline Packaging evaluates agency and authority, Sofia Martinez starts from operational facts: $78M revenue, 420 employees, 3 plants, and active matters including supplier force majeure dispute ($2.1M), former sales VP non-compete injunction request, FTC inquiry on compostability marketing claims. legal foundations, sources of law, and risk framing for managers is how James Cole and the board avoid surprises that show up first in customer RFPs (request for proposal, formal bid documents), regulator letters, or employee claims.

Consider how a single contractual ambiguity in a resin supply agreement can cascade. Greenline's Midwest plant consumes roughly $14M of plant-based resin annually. A two-cent per-pound pricing formula error on 28 million pounds is $560,000 over a contract year before liquidated damages or line-down costs. That is why agency and authority training ties legal vocabulary to decision owners: commercial signs, operations executes, finance models exposure, and legal documents the risk register entry.

Greenline's legal foundations, sources of law, and risk framing for managers workflow separates risk identification, risk assessment, and risk response. Identification asks what could go wrong legally or ethically. Assessment asks likelihood, severity, and detectability. Response chooses avoid, mitigate, transfer, or accept with documented rationale. Sofia rejects slide decks that list risks without owners, dollar ranges, or trigger dates. You should copy that discipline even outside packaging manufacturing.

Extended Greenline scenario: cross-functional legal read

Imagine Greenline's quarterly risk review on agency and authority. Sales asks whether a national restaurant chain can demand compostability warranties beyond current testing. Operations asks whether OSHA findings in the Southeast plant affect customer audits. Finance asks whether the supplier force majeure dispute threatens covenant compliance. HR asks whether the former sales VP non-compete blocks a key account hire. A weak legal foundations, sources of law, and risk framing for managers answer addresses one function. A strong answer shows how agency and authority frameworks connect contract, employment, governance, and ethics threads.

Work a magnitude check on reputational exposure. Greenline's restaurant segment is 42% of $78M, roughly $32.8M. If FTC (Federal Trade Commission, U.S. consumer protection agency) scrutiny over green claims delays two top-chain renewals representing 18% of restaurant revenue, near-term revenue at risk is about $5.9M before mitigation. Legal analysis that ignores customer concentration reads precise on doctrine and useless in the boardroom.

Sofia's credible briefing format for agency and authority is four bullets: recommended action, legal basis with confidence level, residual risk after mitigation, and what would change the recommendation within sixty days. A fifth bullet names the stakeholder who must sign the risk acceptance if the company proceeds despite yellow flags.

Technical mechanics and checks (legal work patterns)

For agency and authority, Greenline's legal team shows work the way finance shows reconciliations. A contract summary table lists parties, term, auto-renewal, termination for convenience, liability cap, indemnity scope, and governing law. An employment matter log lists jurisdiction, protected class issues, documentation status, and estimated exposure band. A governance memo maps director duties to the specific decision (related-party transaction, executive comp, ESG disclosure). A compliance ticket traces control owner, evidence artifact, and retest date.

Use plain-language issue statements before citations. Example for supplier dispute: Issue: whether pandemic-related resin shortages trigger force majeure relief or only price renegotiation rights. Facts: allocation letters, 2022-2024 delivery shortfalls, $2.1M claimed damages. Options: litigate, arbitrate per MSA (master supply agreement), or settle with volume commit. Recommendation: negotiate with parallel preservation of evidence. Random case citations without this structure confuse executives.

For document replication, write the decision date and decision owner first. Greenline forbids ambiguous legal memos that end with "it depends" and no default. Sofia expects a recommendation with stated assumptions, not encyclopedic neutrality that pushes liability back to the CEO without analysis.

Common executive questions (and disciplined legal answers)

Executives ask short questions that require disciplined answers. "Can we sign today?" maps to unresolved redlines, uncapped indemnities, and missing insurance certificates. "What's the worst case?" maps to exposure bands with assumptions, not theatrical worst-case storytelling. "Will we get sued?" maps to probability language tied to precedent and facts, not false certainty. "Is this ethical?" maps to frameworks and conflicts disclosed, not personal comfort alone.

Greenline's answer format for agency and authority is three bullets: recommendation, legal/ethics basis, and next step if the board disagrees. A fourth bullet lists monitoring triggers (regulatory deadline, discovery cutoff, employee complaint threshold). That discipline prevents legal from becoming either a bottleneck or a rubber stamp.

Practice the translation loop until it is habit. Business problem to legal issue to options analysis to recommendation to board or CEO memo. When the loop is complete, Greenline proceeds with eyes open. When the loop is broken, the company buys false confidence and pays in settlements, churn, or talent loss later.

Practice extension: self-check without peeking

Before re-reading solutions, open a blank document and complete four rows for agency and authority at Greenline. Row one: write the business decision James Cole faces. Row two: list the primary legal issue and jurisdiction. Row three: name two mitigation options with cost order-of-magnitude. Row four: state what evidence would upgrade your confidence from low to medium. Compare your rows to the worked example. Gaps indicate what to re-read.

If you work outside manufacturing, substitute your company but keep numeric discipline. A SaaS firm might replace plant OSHA issues with data breach notification duties. A retailer might replace compostability claims with sourcing representations. The structural habits from LAW 301 remain: define terms, show checks, label uncertainty, and tie results to decisions with explicit limitations.

Connection to OMBA 101 and STR 301

OMB 101 (Business Foundations) positioned stakeholder analysis and executive decision framing. STR 301 (Competitive Strategy) stressed governance choices under competitive pressure. LAW 301 adds the enforceable layer: which stakeholder claims become contract damages, regulatory penalties, derivative suits, or reputational crises. Treat the three courses as a stack: strategy names where to play, foundations name who is affected, law names what commitments bind the firm.

When you present to the board, integrate the stack in one narrative arc. Example: STR 301 chose sustainability-led differentiation; OMBA 101 mapped restaurant buyers and activist investors; LAW 301 flags FTC substantiation standards and customer warranty clauses that make marketing claims contractual. That integrated story is what the Unit 6 governance memo requires.

Deep dive: legal definitions Greenline reuses every quarter

Material contract at Greenline means any agreement with expected annual value above $500,000 or any exclusivity affecting a plant line. Related-party transaction includes deals where a director or executive has a 5%+ economic interest in the counterparty. Compostable claim requires specified ASTM (American Society for Testing and Materials, technical standards body) lab results, facility type qualifiers, and no unqualified "biodegradable in landfill" language. At-will employment applies to U.S. non-union staff but remains constrained by anti-discrimination statutes, wage-hour rules, and public policy exceptions. Privilege covers counsel-directed investigation documents; not every Slack thread labeled "legal."

These definitions appear boring until someone changes them silently. A marketing deck that drops "commercial composting facility" qualifiers can convert a compliant claim into an enforcement target. Agency and Authority training includes insisting on definition links in contract schedules and RFP attachments.

For legal foundations, sources of law, and risk framing for managers, also document approval paths and evidence retention. Commercial deviations above $250,000 need CFO and GC sign-off. Hotline reports preserve metadata for 7 years. Board minutes capture executive session topics without waiving privilege. A policy without retention and owner is wallpaper.

Walk through a quarterly reconciliation. Open contract pipeline value should match CRM (customer relationship management) stage probabilities within agreed bands. Hotline volume trends should map to investigation closures. Training completion rates should hit 98% before year-end cert signatures. Training completion at 81% with signed officer certifications is a governance red flag Sofia will not ignore.

Managerial judgment prompts for Agency and Authority

  1. If legal analysis is inconclusive, what is the cheapest next step Greenline could take in two weeks?
  2. If sales wants to sign today and Sofia wants another indemnity cap round, what pre-written rule breaks the tie?
  3. Which stakeholder loses most if Greenline accepts a false positive on agency and authority?
  4. What would a smart skeptic ask about jurisdiction, insurance, or prior oral promises?
  5. What single guardrail metric would convince you to pause a deal that looks commercially urgent?

Write ninety-word answers as a memo appendix. Use Greenline numbers wherever possible. This exercise converts lesson prose into decision reflexes you will use under time pressure.

Additional study path: compare this lesson's worked example to the practice problem. Identify one assumption that changed and explain how that change alters the recommendation. Then compare to Unit 6 capstone memo structure: decision ask, legal basis, limitations, monitoring plan. Capstone integration is intentional; courses compound when you reuse the same company, matters, and vocabulary across units.

Regulatory and stakeholder map for agency and authority

Greenline's external stakeholders for legal foundations, sources of law, and risk framing for managers include the FTC and state attorneys general on environmental marketing, OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration, U.S. workplace safety regulator) on plant conditions, EEOC (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, federal employment discrimination agency) on workplace claims, SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission, U.S. securities regulator) if pre-IPO disclosures accelerate, and customers who embed sustainability and safety clauses in MSAs. Internal stakeholders include plant managers who experience law as line stoppages, sales leaders who experience law as deal velocity, and independent directors who experience law as tail risk to reputation.

Map each stakeholder to remedy type: injunction, damages, audit rights, termination, or reputational boycott. Sofia teaches associates that remedies matter more than doctrinal labels in executive conversations. A breach that triggers customer audit rights may cost more than modest direct damages if the audit pauses shipments during a promotional season.

Document insurance and indemnity flows whenever agency and authority touches third-party claims. Greenline carries general liability, product liability, D&O (directors and officers liability coverage for leadership claims), and cyber policies with different retentions. An uncapped indemnity in a customer MSA can pierce coverage limits quickly when restaurant slip-and-fall theories join packaging failure allegations.

Lesson exercise

30 min

Sales warranty correction

1. Complete backyard compost practice problem. 2. Draft corrective customer email and internal talk track update. 3. Write delegation matrix row for environmental claims. 4. Note ratification risk if silent.

Deliverable

Customer correction email + talk track.

Rubric

  • Authority types identified
  • Remediation timely
  • Delegation row complete
  • Ratification avoided