This is an appeal from a judgment entered for plaintiff after the court granted plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment to enforce a settlement agreement. We reverse.
The defendant, Silver Street Partnership (Silver Street), is the record owner of a parcel of real estate encumbered by a mortgage in favor of plaintiff, New England Educational Training Service, Inc. (NEET). Silver Street acquired the property in 1983 without notice of an outstanding mortgage to NEET that had been granted by a predecessor in title and misindexed. Not long after defеndant acquired the property, it was informed by plaintiff of the outstanding encumbrance. The parties soon entered into informal negotiations aimed at discharge of the mortgage. The parties were unable to settle the dispute at this stage, primarily because of the unwillingness of defendant’s predecessors in title, Donald and Gloria Humphreys, to make any contribution to the settlement package. After these negotiations failed, plaintiff filed *101 this foreclosure action, which was followed by a third-party complaint and numerous cross-claims.
The principal of Silver Street, Jack Heaton, testified that his company retained attorney Rhys Evans to get the problems raised by the dispute and foreclosure action solved, and to that end gave him general authority to conduct the casе on behalf of the partnership’s rights. Attorney Evans testified that he understood that his general authority to represent defendant’s interest in the dispute included the authority to conduct negotiations aimed at settling the dispute. This testimony of Evans was consistent with the testimony of Mr. Heaton on this point.
In addition, attorney Evans testified that in June of 1984, prior to the institution of the foreclosure action, he had been given specific authority to settle the dispute by offering to pay plaintiff $10,000. This offer was in fact made by Evans, but was not accepted by plaintiff. The evidence was otherwise uncontroverted that, subsequent to the $10,000 offer, Evans was never given specific authority to settle the dispute by offering to pay plaintiff any specific amount of money.
The trial court granted summary judgment to plaintiff against defendant in the foreclosure action on the basis of a settlement agreement the court found was made by the parties’ attorneys and enforceable against defendant. The defendant argues, among other things, that any agreement reached by the parties’ attorneys was unenforceable against it because it had not expressly authorized its attorney to enter into such an agreement. The issue, therefore, is whether, as a matter of law, defendant’s attorney could, under these circumstances, bind his client by agreeing to pay plaintiff $60,000 in settlement of plaintiff’s claim. 1
In order to resolve this issue, we must reconcile two competing policies that both find strong support in the law. On one hand, compromises of disputed liability are favored by the courts as a matter of public policy.
Smith
v.
Munro,
In certain areаs of legal representation not affecting the merits of the cause or substantially prejudicing the rights of a client, a lawyer is entitled to make decisions on his own. But otherwise the authority to make decisions is exclusively that of the client and, if made within the framework of the law, such decisions are binding on his lawyer. As typical examples in civil cases, it is for the client to decide whether he will accept a settlement offer ....
Administrative Orders and Rules, Code of Professional Responsibility, EC 7-7 (emphasis added). In resolving this issue, we are also guided by the law of agency which provides the framework for our analysis.
The attorney-client relationship is governed by the law of agency.
Miotk
v.
Rudy,
Plaintiff’s argument is that the evidence supports the conclusion that defendant’s counsel had permission, or authority, from his client to enter into the disputed settlement agreement. There wаs absolutely no evidence, however, that attorney Evans was, at any point in the course of the negotiations, expressly authorized to agree to pay plaintiff $60,000 in settlement of the foreclosure action. Thus plaintiff’s argument, and the trial court’s decision, 2 cаn only be sustained if the evidence supports the conclusion that defendant’s counsel had implied or apparent authority to settle the case for this amount.
Implied authority is “actual authority circumstantially proven from the facts and circumstances attеnding the transaction in question.”
Stevens
v.
Frost,
We think that these decisions are specialized applications оf the general rule, supported by the weight of the authority, that an attorney has no authority to compromise or settle his client’s claim without his client’s permission.
In re J.H.,
Plaintiff’s argument that our holding will undercut the policy in favor of settlement agreements is unpersuasive. First, the incentives for all parties to settle litigation are not affected by our holding today. Whilе our holding will restrict the enforceability of unauthorized agreements against clients, it does not follow that settlement will be discouraged. Rather, the primary effect of this
*105
decision will be to “encourage attorneys negotiating settlements to confirm their, or their opрonent’s, actual extent of authority to bind their respective clients.”
Johnson,
Plaintiff also makes passing reference to apparent authority as a theory that would support the trial court’s decision. Apparent authority, unlike express or implied authority, does not derive from the manifestation of consent by a principal to an agent of the agent’s power to affect the legal relations of the principal. Rather, it derives from сonduct of the principal, communicated or manifested to the third party, which reasonably leads the third party to rely on the agent’s authority.
Apparent authority may arise when the actions of the principal, reasonably interpreted, cause a third person to believe in good faith that the principal consents to the acts of the agent. Apparent authority also may arise when the principal knowingly permits the agent to act in a certain manner as if he were authorized. The action or manifestation of authority giving rise to the reliance must be that of the principal, and the reliance by the third person on the action or manifestation of authority must be reasonable.
Miller,
The fatal flaw with plaintiffs apparent authority argument is that there is absolutely no evidence in the record of conduct on the part of the principal (Silver Street) which could reasonably have been relied on by plaintiff as a manifestation of the authority of its agent to conclude a binding settlement agreement. As noted above, retention of аn attorney, with instructions to negotiate toward settlement, does not create any implied authority to enter into a binding agreement. Similarly, such action by a principal could not be reasonably relied on as the basis for apparent authority to settle the сase.
Johnson,
Since there is insufficient evidence in the record to suрport the conclusion, under any legal theory, that defendant’s attorney had authority to bind his client to a settlement agreement, the judgment must be reversed.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed in this opinion.
Notes
Although appellаnt vigorously challenges the existence of an enforceable settlement agreement, we assume for purposes of this analysis, without deciding, that an agreement was reached.
The trial court made no findings on the issue of authority of defendant’s attorney to settle the case. In its oral decision, however, it rеlied on
Spaulding
v.
Cahill,
