Agency Contract Format: Risks and Precautions
A power of attorney is one of the most widely used legal instruments in the UAE, allowing a principal to authorise another person to carry out acts on their behalf without being personally present. However, this authorisation — especially when drafted in broad, general terms — can turn from a tool of convenience into a genuine risk to the principal's money and property.
In this guide, AWADH ALMHEIRI LAW FIRM AND LEGAL CONSULTATIONS explains the format of a general power-of-attorney contract, the key risks associated with it, and the precautions that must be observed before signing or notarising it.
What Is a General Power of Attorney and How Does It Differ From a Special One?
A power of attorney is a contract by which the principal appoints another person to stand in their place for a permissible, defined act. It may be unrestricted, restricted, conditional, or deferred to a future time. By scope, powers of attorney fall into two main categories:
Special Power of Attorney
Limited to one or more specifically defined matters set out in the deed, which the agent may not exceed, although they may carry out necessary ancillary steps required to complete them.
General Power of Attorney
Not tied to a specific matter, and in principle covers only acts of administration and safekeeping, such as receiving documents and dealing with government departments and banks. Acts of disposition that transfer ownership, such as sale and mortgage, do not fall within the agent's powers unless expressly stated in the deed — the same applies to gifts, which require a specific authorisation.
Essential Elements a Power-of-Attorney Deed Must Include
- Fully and precisely identifying the principal and the agent (name, ID or passport number, nationality).
- Specifying the type of power of attorney (general or special) and the acts authorised to the agent in clear, unambiguous terms.
- Expressly stating any acts of disposition transferring ownership, where intended, rather than relying on broad general wording.
- Setting a term for the power of attorney or tying it to the completion of a specific task, rather than leaving it open-ended.
- Stating whether the agent may appoint a substitute agent — since an agent has no such right unless expressly authorised.
- Notarising the deed before a notary public or a licensed private notary, with both parties present in person.
Key Risks of a General Power of Attorney to the Principal
- The agent may exceed the scope of authorisation and dispose of the principal's money or property for personal gain — which constitutes a misappropriation of the principal's assets.
- Broad, vague wording may be used to justify acts the principal never intended, such as selling assets or transferring ownership without their knowledge.
- The power of attorney may remain valid after the need for it has ended, or after the relationship for which it was granted has come to an end, if the principal fails to formally revoke it.
- Failure to notify the agent of revocation through the correct legal method means the agent's subsequent acts remain enforceable against third parties, even if the principal genuinely intended to end the power of attorney.
- Granting a power of attorney to more than one person without specifying whether they act jointly or individually may create conflicting acts.
Precautions to Observe Before Signing a General Power of Attorney
- Only grant a general power of attorney to someone you trust completely, since the arrangement is fundamentally built on personal trust in the agent's integrity, experience, and competence.
- Never sign a deed containing vague, general wording without reading it and understanding every clause; part of the notary's role when authenticating a deed is to explain the powers granted to the principal and confirm their understanding of its content.
- Avoid leaving the term of the power of attorney open-ended, and it is practically advisable not to extend it for long periods without periodic review.
- Keep a copy of the deed and review it periodically to confirm the need for it still exists.
- Move immediately to revoke the power of attorney if the agent takes any action that raises concern, once its purpose has been fulfilled, or once the relationship on which the trust was based has ended.
How Does a Power of Attorney End, and When Must an Agent Be Revoked Immediately?
A power of attorney ends upon completion of the authorised act, upon expiry of its stated term, upon either party losing legal capacity, or upon the death of the principal or the agent. It also ends when the principal revokes the agent, or when the agent withdraws — in which case the agent remains obliged to bring any work already begun to a point where no harm to the principal is likely.
Revoking an Agent: The Correct Procedure
A mere intention by the principal to end the power of attorney is not enough; the revocation must be formally notified to the agent in writing through one of the legally prescribed methods, such as notice through a notary public, registered mail, or an agreed email address used for correspondence between the parties, and where these are not possible, notice by publication in a widely circulated newspaper. Without proper notification of the revocation, the agent's acts remain enforceable against third parties acting in good faith, and the principal bears the consequences.
This does not prevent the principal from seeking compensation from the agent for any harm caused by an act carried out after the agent was notified of the revocation.
Practical Legal Tips
- Engage a lawyer to draft the deed instead of using generic ready-made templates, to ensure the powers are precisely defined for your purpose without unintended scope.
- Ask for powers to be listed clause by clause rather than relying on a single broad phrase covering "whatever is necessary".
- Do not hesitate to request a certified copy of the deed to keep and review periodically.
- If you have doubts about the agent's conduct, consult a lawyer immediately before taking the step of revocation, so the legal position is documented correctly.
Legal References
- Federal Law No. 5 of 1985 on the Civil Transactions Law and its amendments — Federal Law (provisions on agency).
- Federal legislation governing the notarisation profession and notary-public procedures in the UAE.