The principle of imputation or attribution reflects the general public policy underpinning the operation of the law which is that ignorantia juris non excusat, the Latin for ignorance of the law is no excuse. All laws are published and available for study in all the developed states, the content of the law is imputed to all persons who are within the jurisdiction, no matter how transiently (see presumed knowledge of the law). This fiction avoids the unfairness of anyone being able to avoid liability for any acts or omissions through the simple expedient of denying knowledge of the law. The principle also arises in specific areas of law such as Criminal Law and Commercial Law to describe the need for the law to hold one person liable when he or she may not have had actual knowledge of the particular circumstances giving rise to the loss or damage sustained by another.
A problem arises when the defendant is a corporation. By its nature, a fictitious person can only act through the human agency of the natural persons that it employs. Equally, it has no mind to constitute the mens rea. Hence, the notion of vicarious liability for companies and other business entities exclusively depends on the ability to impute knowledge. The test is one of identification. If the natural person who acts can be "identified with the mind of the company" when performing the actions forming the actus reus, all the relevant mental elements will be imputed to the company. This test, sometimes termed the alter ego test, is objective and cannot be distracted by the job title or description formally held by the human agent. This prevents evasion of liability by the simple expedient of naming the real director of affairs as the janitor. However, not all actions trigger this transference. When acting, the human agent identified as the mind must be promoting the company's interests in some practical way. If he or she is engaged in an entirely personal activity, e.g. attacking a fellow employee out of anger or stealing from the company, the courts will not impute the relevant mens rea to the company.
In the United States, the courts use a three-prong test to determine whether a corporation will be held vicariously liable for the acts of its employees:
This rule in favour of imputation relates to the generality of the duties an Agent owes to a Principal, in particular the Agent's duty to communicate material facts to the Principal. Since the purpose of the law is to offer protection to Third Parties who have acted in good faith, it is reasonable to allow them to believe that, in most cases, the Agents have fulfilled this duty. After all, the Principal selects the Agents and has the power to control their actions both through express instructions and incentives intended to influence their behaviour which will include laying down routines for how Agents should handle information, and the extent to which Agents will be rewarded for transmitting information of commercial value. The result is a form of strict liability in which the legal consequences of an Agent's acts or omissions are attributed to a Principal even when the Principal was without fault in appointing or supervising the Agent.
So if a director or officer is expressly authorised to make representations of a particular class on behalf of the company, and fraudulently makes a representation of that class to a Third Party causing loss, the company will be liable even though the particular representation was an improper way of doing what he was authorised to do. The extent of authority is a question fact and is significantly more than the fact of an employment which gave the employee the opportunity to carry out the fraud. In Panorama Developments (Guildford) Limited v Fidelis Furnishing Fabrics Limited * 2 QB 711, a company secretary fraudulently hired cars for his own use without the knowledge of the managing director. A company secretary routinely enters into contracts in the company's name and has administrative responsibities that would give apparent authority to hire cars. Hence, the company was liable.
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"Imputation (law)".
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