justalayman
Senior Member
But the contract is not between the OP and the recruiter. She is not the one providing the benefits.
that's fine and not a problem.
The recruiter, if an agent of the company, can bind the company to terms and conditions. If the recruiter was an agent of the company, OP's claim would be against the company. I think that is not what the op actually wants though.
If the recruiter was not an agent of the company, they were still acting as a pseudo agent as it was the entity the OP had to deal with to obtain employment with the company. As such, the recruiter makes statements of benefits and conditions the prospect can, and actually must, rely upon since they cannot be verified directly. As such, since the recruiter is not an agent of the company, the company is not liable for the statements made but the recruiter can be held liable. They made representations of the benefits and conditions which proved to be false. The company is not liable to provide a remedy since the recruiter was not an agent of the company.
let me compare this to something I can explain a bit better:
real estate
a RE agent can be held individually liable (even though they are an agent of the seller (in this example)) for false representations made to a prospective buyer if it is of a material fact. There is no contract between the buyer and RE agent there either yet is is quite enforceable to seek the RE agent provide a remedy for misrepresentations they make (that are not otherwise stated to be not dependable through whatever waivers are present).
an example:a house being viewed is noted to have municipal water. if a re agent says to a buyer; there is a water well on this property and the seller has not made that representation to the agent, the agent can be held liable for the lack of a well being on that property. It doesn't matter if the well issue would not have caused the buyer to not buy. It is a misrepresentation of a material fact in the inducement to get the buyers to buy.
Now, if the buyers never had use for the well, they are not going to force the RE agent to install a well because there are no actual damages caused by the fact there is actually not a well but if the buyers later decide they want to grow a garden and go; hey, there is a well here we can use as a water source so we don't get charged for the water that we would otherwise have to get from the city.
agent is going to have to pay for a well. The only issue remaining is; the specifics of the well and that is where zigner's statement comes into play. What exactly did the recruiter represent as the coverage of the STD.
wow there was a lot of posts while I was typing