Uniform Electronic Transactions Act - Adopté le 13 déc. 1999 - source
: NCCUSL
_____________________________________________________________________________________
UNIFORM ELECTRONIC
TRANSACTIONS ACT
(1999)
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS
ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS
and by it
APPROVED AND RECOMMENDED FOR ENACTMENT
IN ALL THE STATES
ANNUAL CONFERENCE
MEETING IN ITS ONE-HUNDRED-AND-EIGHTH YEAR
IN DENVER, COLORADO
JULY 23 - 30, 1999
WITH PREFATORY NOTE AND COMMENTS
_____________________________________________________________________________________
TABLE OF CONTENTS
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE 4
SECTION 2. DEFINITIONS 4
SECTION 3. SCOPE 13
SECTION 4. PROSPECTIVE APPLICATION 20
SECTION 5. USE OF ELECTRONIC RECORDS AND ELECTRONIC
SIGNATURES;
VARIATION BY AGREEMENT 20
SECTION 6. CONSTRUCTION AND APPLICATION 24
SECTION 7. LEGAL RECOGNITION OF ELECTRONIC RECORDS,
ELECTRONIC
SIGNATURES, AND ELECTRONIC CONTRACTS 26
SECTION 8. PROVISION OF INFORMATION IN WRITING; PRESENTATION OF
RECORDS 28
SECTION 9. ATTRIBUTION AND EFFECT OF ELECTRONIC RECORD
AND
ELECTRONIC SIGNATURE 31
SECTION 10. EFFECT OF CHANGE OR ERROR 33
SECTION 11. NOTARIZATION AND ACKNOWLEDGMENT 37
SECTION 12. RETENTION OF ELECTRONIC RECORDS; ORIGINALS
38
SECTION 13. ADMISSIBILITY IN EVIDENCE 42
SECTION 14. AUTOMATED TRANSACTION 42
SECTION 15. TIME AND PLACE OF SENDING AND RECEIPT
44
SECTION 16. TRANSFERABLE RECORDS 48
SECTION 17. CREATION AND RETENTION OF ELECTRONIC RECORDS
AND
CONVERSION OF WRITTEN RECORDS BY GOVERNMENTAL
AGENCIES 56
SECTION 18. ACCEPTANCE AND DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRONIC RECORDS
BY
GOVERNMENTAL AGENCIES 56
SECTION 19. INTEROPERABILITY 58
SECTION 20. SEVERABILITY CLAUSE 61
SECTION 21. EFFECTIVE DATE 61
_____________________________________________________________________________________
UNIFORM ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS ACT
(1999)
PREFATORY NOTE
With the advent of electronic means of communication and information
transfer, business models and methods for doing business have evolved to take
advantage of the speed, efficiencies, and cost benefits of electronic technologies.
These developments have occurred in the face of existing legal barriers to the
legal efficacy of records and documents which exist solely in electronic media.
Whether the legal requirement that information or an agreement or contract must
be contained or set forth in a pen and paper writing derives from a statute
of frauds affecting the enforceability of an agreement, or from a record retention
statute that calls for keeping the paper record of a transaction, such legal
requirements raise real barriers to the effective use of electronic media.
One striking example of electronic barriers involves so called
check retention statutes in every State. A study conducted by the Federal Reserve
Bank of Boston identified more than 2500 different state laws which require
the retention of canceled checks by the issuers of those checks. These requirements
not only impose burdens on the issuers, but also effectively restrain the ability
of banks handling the checks to automate the process. Although check truncation
is validated under the Uniform Commercial Code, if the bank's customer must
store the canceled paper check, the bank will not be able to deal with the item
through electronic transmission of the information. By establishing the equivalence
of an electronic record of the information, the Uniform Electronic Transactions
Act (UETA) removes these barriers without affecting the underlying legal rules
and requirements.
It is important to understand that the purpose of the UETA
is to remove barriers to electronic commerce by validating and effectuating
electronic records and signatures. It is NOT a general contracting statute -
the substantive rules of contracts remain unaffected by UETA. Nor is it a digital
signature statute. To the extent that a State has a Digital Signature Law, the
UETA is designed to support and compliment that statute.
A. Scope of the Act and Procedural Approach.
The scope of this Act provides coverage which sets forth a clear framework for
covered transactions, and also avoids unwarranted surprises for unsophisticated
parties dealing in this relatively new media. The clarity and certainty of the
scope of the Act have been obtained while still providing a solid legal framework
that allows for the continued development of innovative technology to facilitate
electronic transactions.
With regard to the general scope of the Act, the Act's coverage
is inherently limited by the definition of "transaction." The Act does not apply
to all writings and signatures, but only to electronic records and
signatures relating to a transaction, defined as those interactions between
people relating to business, commercial and governmental affairs. In general,
there are few writing or signature requirements imposed by law on many of the
"standard" transactions that had been considered for exclusion. A good example
relates to trusts, where the general rule on creation of a trust imposes no
formal writing requirement. Further, the writing requirements in other contexts
derived from governmental filing issues. For example, real estate transactions
were considered potentially troublesome because of the need to file a deed or
other instrument for protection against third parties. Since the efficacy of
a real estate purchase contract, or even a deed, between the parties is not
affected by any sort of filing, the question was raised why these transactions
should not be validated by this Act if done via an electronic medium. No sound
reason was found. Filing requirements fall within Sections 17-19 on governmental
records. An exclusion of all real estate transactions would be particularly
unwarranted in the event that a State chose to convert to an electronic recording
system, as many have for Article 9 financing statement filings under the Uniform
Commercial Code.
The exclusion of specific Articles of the Uniform Commercial
Code reflects the recognition that, particularly in the case of Articles 5,
8 and revised Article 9, electronic transactions were addressed in the specific
contexts of those revision processes. In the context of Articles 2 and 2A the
UETA provides the vehicle for assuring that such transactions may be accomplished
and effected via an electronic medium. At such time as Articles 2 and 2A are
revised the extent of coverage in those Articles/Acts may make application of
this Act as a gap-filling law desirable. Similar considerations apply to the
recently promulgated Uniform Computer Information Transactions Act ("UCITA").
The need for certainty as to the scope and applicability of
this Act is critical, and makes any sort of a broad, general exception based
on notions of inconsistency with existing writing and signature requirements
unwise at best. The uncertainty inherent in leaving the applicability of the
Act to judicial construction of this Act with other laws is unacceptable if
electronic transactions are to be facilitated.
Finally, recognition that the paradigm for the Act involves
two willing parties conducting a transaction electronically, makes it necessary
to expressly provide that some form of acquiescence or intent on the part of
a person to conduct transactions electronically is necessary before the Act
can be invoked. Accordingly, Section 5 specifically provides that the Act only
applies between parties that have agreed to conduct transactions electronically.
In this context, the construction of the term agreement must be broad in order
to assure that the Act applies whenever the circumstances show the parties intention
to transact electronically, regardless of whether the intent rises to the level
of a formal agreement.
B. Procedural Approach. Another fundamental
premise of the Act is that it be minimalist and procedural. The general efficacy
of existing law in an electronic context, so long as biases and barriers to
the medium are removed, validates this approach. The Act defers to existing
substantive law. Specific areas of deference to other law in this Act include:
(1) the meaning and effect of "sign" under existing law, (2) the method and
manner of displaying, transmitting and formatting information in Section 8,
(3) rules of attribution in Section 9, and (4) the law of mistake in Section
10.
The Act's treatment of records and signatures demonstrates
best the minimalist approach that has been adopted. Whether a record is attributed
to a person is left to law outside this Act. Whether an electronic signature
has any effect is left to the surrounding circumstances and other law. These
provisions are salutary directives to assure that records and signatures will
be treated in the same manner, under currently existing law, as written records
and manual signatures.
The deference of the Act to other substantive law does not
negate the necessity of setting forth rules and standards for using electronic
media. The Act expressly validates electronic records, signatures and contracts.
It provides for the use of electronic records and information for retention
purposes, providing certainty in an area with great potential in cost savings
and efficiency. The Act makes clear that the actions of machines ("electronic
agents") programmed and used by people will bind the user of the machine, regardless
of whether human review of a particular transaction has occurred. It specifies
the standards for sending and receipt of electronic records, and it allows for
innovation in financial services through the implementation of transferable
records. In these ways the Act permits electronic transactions to be accomplished
with certainty under existing substantive rules of law.
UNIFORM ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS ACT
(1999)
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE. This [Act] may be
cited as the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act.
SECTION 2. DEFINITIONS. In this [Act]:
(1) "Agreement" means the bargain of the parties in fact, as
found in their language or inferred from other circumstances and from rules,
regulations, and procedures given the effect of agreements under laws otherwise
applicable to a particular transaction.
(2) "Automated transaction" means a transaction conducted or
performed, in whole or in part, by electronic means or electronic records, in
which the acts or records of one or both parties are not reviewed by an individual
in the ordinary course in forming a contract, performing under an existing contract,
or fulfilling an obligation required by the transaction.
(3) "Computer program" means a set of statements or instructions
to be used directly or indirectly in an information processing system in order
to bring about a certain result.
(4) "Contract" means the total legal obligation resulting from
the parties' agreement as affected by this [Act] and other applicable law.
(5) "Electronic" means relating to technology having electrical,
digital, magnetic, wireless, optical, electromagnetic, or similar capabilities.
(6) "Electronic agent" means a computer program or an electronic
or other automated means used independently to initiate an action or respond
to electronic records or performances in whole or in part, without review or
action by an individual.
(7) "Electronic record" means a record created, generated,
sent, communicated, received, or stored by electronic means.
(8) "Electronic signature" means an electronic sound, symbol,
or process attached to or logically associated with a record and executed or
adopted by a person with the intent to sign the record.
(9) " Governmental agency" means an executive, legislative,
or judicial agency, department, board, commission, authority, institution, or
instrumentality of the federal government or of a State or of a county, municipality,
or other political subdivision of a State.
(10) "Information" means data, text, images, sounds, codes,
computer programs, software, databases, or the like.
(11) "Information processing system" means an electronic system
for creating, generating, sending, receiving, storing, displaying, or processing
information.
(12) "Person" means an individual, corporation, business trust,
estate, trust, partnership, limited liability company, association, joint venture,
governmental agency, public corporation, or any other legal or commercial entity.
(13) "Record" means information that is inscribed on a tangible
medium or that is stored in an electronic or other medium and is retrievable
in perceivable form.
(14) "Security procedure" means a procedure employed for the
purpose of verifying that an electronic signature, record, or performance is
that of a specific person or for detecting changes or errors in the information
in an electronic record. The term includes a procedure that requires the use
of algorithms or other codes, identifying words or numbers, encryption, or callback
or other acknowledgment procedures.
(15) "State" means a State of the United States, the District
of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, or any territory
or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of the United States. The
term includes an Indian tribe or band, or Alaskan native village, which is recognized
by federal law or formally acknowledged by a State.
(16) "Transaction" means an action or set of actions occurring
between two or more persons relating to the conduct of business, commercial,
or governmental affairs.
Sources: UNICTRAL Model Law on Electronic
Commerce; Uniform Commercial Code; Uniform Computer Information Transactions
Act; Restatement 2d Contracts.
Comment
1. "Agreement."
Whether the parties have reached an agreement is determined by their express
language and all surrounding circumstances. The Restatement 2d Contracts § 3
provides that, "An agreement is a manifestation of mutual assent on the part
of two or more persons." See also Restatement 2d Contracts, Section 2, Comment
b. The Uniform Commercial Code specifically includes in the circumstances from
which an agreement may be inferred "course of performance, course of dealing
and usage of trade . . ." as defined in the UCC. Although the
definition of agreement in this Act does not make specific reference to usage
of trade and other party conduct, this definition is not intended to affect
the construction of the parties' agreement under the substantive law applicable
to a particular transaction. Where that law takes account of usage and conduct
in informing the terms of the parties' agreement, the usage or conduct would
be relevant as "other circumstances" included in the definition under this Act.
Where the law applicable to a given transaction provides that system rules
and the like constitute part of the agreement of the parties, such rules will
have the same effect in determining the parties agreement under this Act. For
example, UCC Article 4 (Section 4-103(b)) provides that Federal Reserve regulations
and operating circulars and clearinghouse rules have the effect of agreements.
Such agreements by law properly would be included in the definition of agreement
in this Act.
The parties' agreement is relevant in determining whether the provisions of
this Act have been varied by agreement. In addition, the parties' agreement
may establish the parameters of the parties' use of electronic records and signatures,
security procedures and similar aspects of the transaction. See Model Trading
Partner Agreement, 45 Business Lawyer Supp. Issue (June 1990). See Section 5(b)
and Comments thereto.
2. "Automated Transaction."
An automated transaction is a transaction performed or conducted by electronic
means in which machines are used without human intervention to form contracts
and perform obligations under existing contracts. Such broad coverage is necessary
because of the diversity of transactions to which this Act may apply.
As with electronic agents, this definition addresses the circumstance where
electronic records may result in action or performance by a party although no
human review of the electronic records is anticipated. Section 14 provides specific
rules to assure that where one or both parties do not review the electronic
records, the resulting agreement will be effective.
The critical element in this definition is the lack of a human actor on one
or both sides of a transaction. For example, if one orders books from Bookseller.com
through Bookseller's website, the transaction would be an automated transaction
because Bookseller took and confirmed the order via its machine. Similarly,
if Automaker and supplier do business through Electronic Data Interchange, Automaker's
computer, upon receiving information within certain pre-programmed parameters,
will send an electronic order to supplier's computer. If Supplier's computer
confirms the order and processes the shipment because the order falls within
pre-programmed parameters in Supplier's computer, this would be a fully automated
transaction. If, instead, the Supplier relies on a human employee to review,
accept, and process the Buyer's order, then only the Automaker's side of the
transaction would be automated. In either case, the entire transaction falls
within this definition.
3. "Computer program." This definition refers to the functional
and operating aspects of an electronic, digital system. It relates to operating
instructions used in an electronic system such as an electronic agent. (See
definition of "Electronic Agent.")
4. "Electronic." The basic nature of most current technologies
and the need for a recognized, single term warrants the use of "electronic"
as the defined term. The definition is intended to assure that the Act will
be applied broadly as new technologies develop. The term must be construed broadly
in light of developing technologies in order to fulfill the purpose of this
Act to validate commercial transactions regardless of the medium used by the
parties. Current legal requirements for "writings" can be satisfied by almost
any tangible media, whether paper, other fibers, or even stone. The purpose
and applicability of this Act covers intangible media which are technologically
capable of storing, transmitting and reproducing information in human perceivable
form, but which lack the tangible aspect of paper, papyrus or stone.
While not all technologies listed are technically "electronic" in nature (e.g.,
optical fiber technology), the term "electronic" is the most descriptive term
available to describe the majority of current technologies. For example, the
development of biological and chemical processes for communication and storage
of data, while not specifically mentioned in the definition, are included within
the technical definition because such processes operate on electromagnetic impulses.
However, whether a particular technology may be characterized as technically
"electronic," i.e., operates on electromagnetic impulses, should not be determinative
of whether records and signatures created, used and stored by means of a particular
technology are covered by this Act. This Act is intended to apply to all records
and signatures created, used and stored by any medium which permits the information
to be retrieved in perceivable form.
5. "Electronic agent." This definition establishes that an
electronic agent is a machine. As the term "electronic agent" has come to be
recognized, it is limited to a tool function. The effect on the party using
the agent is addressed in the operative provisions of the Act (e.g., Section
14)
An electronic agent, such as a computer program or other automated means employed
by a person, is a tool of that person. As a general rule, the employer of a
tool is responsible for the results obtained by the use of that tool since the
tool has no independent volition of its own. However, an electronic agent, by
definition, is capable within the parameters of its programming, of initiating,
responding or interacting with other parties or their electronic agents once
it has been activated by a party, without further attention of that party.
While this Act proceeds on the paradigm that an electronic agent is capable
of performing only within the technical strictures of its preset programming,
it is conceivable that, within the useful life of this Act, electronic agents
may be created with the ability to act autonomously, and not just automatically.
That is, through developments in artificial intelligence, a computer may be
able to "learn through experience, modify the instructions in their own programs,
and even devise new instructions." Allen and Widdison, "Can Computers Make Contracts?"
9 Harv. J.L.&Tech 25 (Winter, 1996). If such developments occur,
courts may construe the definition of electronic agent accordingly, in order
to recognize such new capabilities.
The examples involving Bookseller.com and Automaker in the Comment to the definition
of Automated Transaction are equally applicable here. Bookseller acts through
an electronic agent in processing an order for books. Automaker and the supplier
each act through electronic agents in facilitating and effectuating the just-in-time
inventory process through EDI.
6. "Electronic record." An electronic record is a subset of
the broader defined term "record." It is any record created, used or stored
in a medium other than paper (see definition of electronic). The defined term
is also used in this Act as a limiting definition in those provisions in which
it is used.
Information processing systems, computer equipment and programs, electronic
data interchange, electronic mail, voice mail, facsimile, telex, telecopying,
scanning, and similar technologies all qualify as electronic under this Act.
Accordingly information stored on a computer hard drive or floppy disc, facsimiles,
voice mail messages, messages on a telephone answering machine, audio and video
tape recordings, among other records, all would be electronic records under
this Act.
7. "Electronic signature."
The idea of a signature is broad and not specifically defined. Whether any
particular record is "signed" is a question of fact. Proof of that fact must
be made under other applicable law. This Act simply assures that the signature
may be accomplished through electronic means. No specific technology need be
used in order to create a valid signature. One's voice on an answering machine
may suffice if the requisite intention is present. Similarly, including one's
name as part of an electronic mail communication also may suffice, as may the
firm name on a facsimile. It also may be shown that the requisite intent was
not present and accordingly the symbol, sound or process did not amount to a
signature. One may use a digital signature with the requisite intention, or
one may use the private key solely as an access device with no intention to
sign, or otherwise accomplish a legally binding act. In any case the critical
element is the intention to execute or adopt the sound or symbol or process
for the purpose of signing the related record.
The definition requires that the signer execute or adopt the sound, symbol,
or process with the intent to sign the record. The act of applying a sound,
symbol or process to an electronic record could have differing meanings and
effects. The consequence of the act and the effect of the act as a signature
are determined under other applicable law. However, the essential attribute
of a signature involves applying a sound, symbol or process with an intent to
do a legally significant act. It is that intention that is understood in the
law as a part of the word "sign", without the need for a definition.
This Act establishes, to the greatest extent possible, the equivalency of electronic
signatures and manual signatures. Therefore the term "signature" has been used
to connote and convey that equivalency. The purpose is to overcome unwarranted
biases against electronic methods of signing and authenticating records. The
term "authentication," used in other laws, often has a narrower meaning and
purpose than an electronic signature as used in this Act. However, an authentication
under any of those other laws constitutes an electronic signature under this
Act.
The precise effect of an electronic signature will be determined based on the
surrounding circumstances under Section 9(b).
This definition includes as an electronic signature the standard webpage click
through process. For example, when a person orders goods or services through
a vendor's website, the person will be required to provide information as part
of a process which will result in receipt of the goods or services. When the
customer ultimately gets to the last step and clicks "I agree," the person has
adopted the process and has done so with the intent to associate the person
with the record of that process. The actual effect of the electronic signature
will be determined from all the surrounding circumstances, however, the person
adopted a process which the circumstances indicate s/he intended to have the
effect of getting the goods/services and being bound to pay for them. The adoption
of the process carried the intent to do a legally significant act, the hallmark
of a signature.
Another important aspect of this definition lies in the necessity that the
electronic signature be linked or logically associated with the record. In the
paper world, it is assumed that the symbol adopted by a party is attached to
or located somewhere in the same paper that is intended to be authenticated,
e.g., an allonge firmly attached to a promissory note, or the classic signature
at the end of a long contract. These tangible manifestations do not exist in
the electronic environment, and accordingly, this definition expressly provides
that the symbol must in some way be linked to, or connected with, the electronic
record being signed. This linkage is consistent with the regulations promulgated
by the Food and Drug Administration. 21 CFR Part 11 (March 20, 1997).
A digital signature using public key encryption technology would qualify as
an electronic signature, as would the mere inclusion of one's name as a part
of an e-mail message - so long as in each case the signer executed or adopted
the symbol with the intent to sign.
8. "Governmental agency." This definition is important in
the context of optional Sections 17-19.
9. "Information processing system." This definition is consistent
with the UNCITRAL Model Law on Electronic Commerce. The term includes computers
and other information systems. It is principally used in Section 15 in connection
with the sending and receiving of information. In that context, the key aspect
is that the information enter a system from which a person can access it.
10. "Record." This is a standard definition designed to embrace
all means of communicating or storing information except human memory. It includes
any method for storing or communicating information, including "writings." A
record need not be indestructible or permanent, but the term does not include
oral or other communications which are not stored or preserved by some means.
Information that has not been retained other than through human memory does
not qualify as a record. As in the case of the terms "writing" or "written,"
the term "record" does not establish the purposes, permitted uses or legal effect
which a record may have under any particular provision of substantive law. ABA
Report on Use of the Term "Record," October 1, 1996.
11. "Security procedure."
A security procedure may be applied to verify an electronic signature, verify
the identity of the sender, or assure the informational integrity of an electronic
record. The definition does not identify any particular technology. This permits
the use of procedures which the parties select or which are established by law.
It permits the greatest flexibility among the parties and allows for future
technological development.
The definition in this Act is broad and is used to illustrate one way of establishing
attribution or content integrity of an electronic record or signature. The use
of a security procedure is not accorded operative legal effect, through the
use of presumptions or otherwise, by this Act. In this Act, the use of security
procedures is simply one method for proving the source or content of an electronic
record or signature.
A security procedure may be technologically very sophisticated, such as an
asymetric cryptographic system. At the other extreme the security procedure
may be as simple as a telephone call to confirm the identity of the sender through
another channel of communication. It may include the use of a mother's maiden
name or a personal identification number (PIN). Each of these examples is a
method for confirming the identity of a person or accuracy of a message.
12. "Transaction." The definition has been limited to actions
between people taken in the context of business, commercial or governmental
activities. The term includes all interactions between people for business,
commercial, including specifically consumer, or governmental purposes. However,
the term does not include unilateral or non-transactional actions. As such it
provides a structural limitation on the scope of the Act as stated in the next
section.
It is essential that the term commerce and business be understood and construed
broadly to include commercial and business transactions involving individuals
who may qualify as "consumers" under other applicable law. If Alice and Bob
agree to the sale of Alice's car to Bob for $2000 using an internet auction
site, that transaction is fully covered by this Act. Even if Alice and Bob each
qualify as typical "consumers" under other applicable law, their interaction
is a transaction in commerce. Accordingly their actions would be related to
commercial affairs, and fully qualify as a transaction governed by this Act.
Other transaction types include:
1. A single purchase by an individual from a retail merchant, which may be
accomplished by an order from a printed catalog sent by facsimile, or by exchange
of electronic mail.
2. Recurring orders on a weekly or monthly basis between large companies which
have entered into a master trading partner agreement to govern the methods and
manner of their transaction parameters.
3. A purchase by an individual from an online internet retail vendor. Such
an arrangement may develop into an ongoing series of individual purchases, with
security procedures and the like, as a part of doing ongoing business.
4. The closing of a business purchase transaction via facsimile transmission
of documents or even electronic mail. In such a transaction, all parties may
participate through electronic conferencing technologies. At the appointed time
all electronic records are executed electronically and transmitted to the other
party. In such a case, the electronic records and electronic signatures are
validated under this Act, obviating the need for " in person" closings.
A transaction must include interaction between two or more persons. Consequently,
to the extent that the execution of a will, trust, or a health care power of
attorney or similar health care designation does not involve another person
and is a unilateral act, it would not be covered by this Act because not occurring
as a part of a transaction as defined in this Act. However, this Act does
apply to all electronic records and signatures related to a transaction,
and so does cover, for example, internal auditing and accounting records related
to a transaction.
SECTION 3. SCOPE.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b), this [Act] applies to electronic
records and electronic signatures relating to a transaction.
(b) This [Act] does not apply to a transaction to the extent it is governed
by:
(1) a law governing the creation and execution of wills, codicils, or testamentary
trusts;
(2) [The Uniform Commercial Code other than Sections 1-107 and 1-206, Article
2, and Article 2A];
(3) [the Uniform Computer Information Transactions Act]; and
(4) [other laws, if any, identified by State].
(c) This [Act] applies to an electronic record or electronic signature otherwise
excluded from the application of this [Act] under subsection (b) to the extent
it is governed by a law other than those specified in subsection (b).
(d) A transaction subject to this [Act] is also subject to other applicable
substantive law.
See Legislative Note below - Following Comments.
Comment
1. The scope of this Act is inherently limited by the fact
that it only applies to transactions related to business, commercial (including
consumer) and governmental matters. Consequently, transactions with no relation
to business, commercial or governmental transactions would not be subject to
this Act. Unilaterally generated electronic records and signatures which are
not part of a transaction also are not covered by this Act. See Section 2, Comment
12.
2. This Act affects the medium in which information, records
and signatures may be presented and retained under current legal requirements.
While this Act covers all electronic records and signatures which are used in
a business, commercial (including consumer) or governmental transaction, the
operative provisions of the Act relate to requirements for writings and signatures
under other laws. Accordingly, the exclusions in subsection (b) focus on those
legal rules imposing certain writing and signature requirements which will not
be affected by this Act.
3. The exclusions listed in subsection (b) provide clarity
and certainty regarding the laws which are and are not affected by this Act.
This section provides that transactions subject to specific laws are unaffected
by this Act and leaves the balance subject to this Act.
4. Paragraph (1) excludes wills, codicils and testamentary
trusts. This exclusion is largely salutary given the unilateral context in which
such records are generally created and the unlikely use of such records in a
transaction as defined in this Act (i.e., actions taken by two or more persons
in the context of business, commercial or governmental affairs). Paragraph (2)
excludes all of the Uniform Commercial Code other than UCC Sections 1-107 and
1-206, and Articles 2 and 2A. This Act does not apply to the excluded UCC articles,
whether in "current" or "revised" form. The Act does apply to UCC Articles 2
and 2A and to UCC Sections 1-107 and 1-206.
5. Articles 3, 4 and 4A of the UCC impact payment systems and
have specifically been removed from the coverage of this Act. The check collection
and electronic fund transfer systems governed by Articles 3, 4 and 4A involve
systems and relationships involving numerous parties beyond the parties to the
underlying contract. The impact of validating electronic media in such systems
involves considerations beyond the scope of this Act. Articles 5, 8 and 9 have
been excluded because the revision process relating to those Articles included
significant consideration of electronic practices. Paragraph 4 provides for
exclusion from this Act of the Uniform Computer Information Transactions Act
(UCITA) because the drafting process of that Act also included significant consideration
of electronic contracting provisions.
6. The very limited application of this Act to Transferable
Records in Section 16 does not affect payment systems, and the section is designed
to apply to a transaction only through express agreement of the parties. The
exclusion of Articles 3 and 4 will not affect the Act's coverage of Transferable
Records. Section 16 is designed to allow for the development of systems which
will provide "control" as defined in Section 16. Such control is necessary as
a substitute for the idea of possession which undergirds negotiable instrument
law. The technology has yet to be developed which will allow for the possession
of a unique electronic token embodying the rights associated with a negotiable
promissory note. Section 16's concept of control is intended as a substitute
for possession.
The provisions in Section 16 operate as free standing rules,
establishing the rights of parties using Transferable Records under this
Act. The references in Section 16 to UCC Sections 3-302, 7-501, and 9-308
(R9-330(d)) are designed to incorporate the substance of those provisions into
this Act for the limited purposes noted in Section 16(c). Accordingly, an electronic
record which is also a Transferable Record, would not be used for purposes of
a transaction governed by Articles 3, 4, or 9, but would be an electronic record
used for purposes of a transaction governed by Section 16. However, it is important
to remember that those UCC Articles will still apply to the transferable record
in their own right. Accordingly any other substantive requirements, e.g., method
and manner of perfection under Article 9, must be complied with under those
other laws. See Comments to Section 16.
7. This Act does apply, in toto, to transactions under
unrevised Articles 2 and 2A. There is every reason to validate electronic contracting
in these situations. Sale and lease transactions do not implicate broad systems
beyond the parties to the underlying transaction, such as are present in check
collection and electronic funds transfers. Further sales and leases generally
do not have as far reaching effect on the rights of third parties beyond the
contracting parties, such as exists in the secured transactions system. Finally,
it is in the area of sales, licenses and leases that electronic commerce is
occurring to its greatest extent today. To exclude these transactions would
largely gut the purpose of this Act.
In the event that Articles 2 and 2A are revised and adopted
in the future, UETA will only apply to the extent provided in those Acts.
8. An electronic record/signature may be used for purposes
of more than one legal requirement, or may be covered by more than one law.
Consequently, it is important to make clear, despite any apparent redundancy,
in subsection (c) that an electronic record used for purposes of a law which
is not affected by this Act under subsection
(b) may nonetheless be used and validated for purposes of other laws not excluded
by subsection (b). For example, this Act does not apply to an electronic record
of a check when used for purposes of a transaction governed by Article 4 of
the Uniform Commercial Code, i.e., the Act does not validate so-called electronic
checks. However, for purposes of check retention statutes, the same electronic
record of the check is covered by this Act, so that retention of an electronic
image/record of a check will satisfy such retention statutes, so long as the
requirements of Section 12 are fulfilled.
In another context, subsection (c) would operate to allow this
Act to apply to what would appear to be an excluded transaction under subsection
(b). For example, Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code applies generally
to any transaction that creates a security interest in personal property. However,
Article 9 excludes landlord's liens. Accordingly, although this Act excludes
from its application transactions subject to Article 9, this Act would apply
to the creation of a landlord lien if the law otherwise applicable to landlord's
liens did not provide otherwise, because the landlord's lien transaction is
excluded from Article 9.
9. Additional exclusions under subparagraph (b)(4) should be
limited to laws which govern electronic records and signatures which may be
used in transactions as defined in Section 2(16). Records used unilaterally,
or which do not relate to business, commercial (including consumer), or governmental
affairs are not governed by this Act in any event, and exclusion of laws relating
to such records may create unintended inferences about whether other records
and signatures are covered by this Act.
It is also important that additional exclusions, if any, be
incorporated under subsection (b)(4). As noted in Comment 8 above, an electronic
record used in a transaction excluded under subsection (b), e.g., a check used
to pay one's taxes, will nonetheless be validated for purposes of other, non-excluded
laws under subsection (c), e.g., the check when used as proof of payment. It
is critical that additional exclusions, if any, be incorporated into subsection
(b) so that the salutary effect of subsection (c) apply to validate those records
in other, non-excluded transactions. While a legislature may determine that
a particular notice, such as a utility shutoff notice, be provided to a person
in writing on paper, it is difficult to see why the utility should not be entitled
to use electronic media for storage and evidentiary purposes. Legislative
Note Regarding Possible Additional Exclusions under Section 3(b)(4).
The following discussion is derived from the Report dated September
21, 1998 of The Task Force on State Law Exclusions (the "Task Force") presented
to the Drafting Committee. After consideration of the Report, the Drafting Committee
determined that exclusions other than those specified in the Act were not warranted.
In addition, other inherent limitations on the applicability of the Act (the
definition of transaction, the requirement that the parties acquiesce in the
use of an electronic format) also militate against additional exclusions. Nonetheless,
the Drafting Committee recognized that some legislatures may wish to exclude
additional transactions from the Act, and determined that guidance in some major
areas would be helpful to those legislatures considering additional areas for
exclusion.
Because of the overwhelming number of references in state law
to writings and signatures, the following list of possible transactions is not
exhaustive. However, they do represent those areas most commonly raised during
the course of the drafting process as areas that might be inappropriate for
an electronic medium. It is important to keep in mind however, that the Drafting
Committee determined that exclusion of these additional areas was not warranted.
1. Trusts (other than testamentary trusts).
Trusts can be used for both business and personal purposes. By virtue of the
definition of transaction, trusts used outside the area of business and commerce
would not be governed by this Act. With respect to business or commercial trusts,
the laws governing their formation contain few or no requirements for paper
or signatures. Indeed, in most jurisdictions trusts of any kind may be created
orally. Consequently, the Drafting Committee believed that the Act should apply
to any transaction where the law leaves to the parties the decision of whether
to use a writing. Thus, in the absence of legal requirements for writings, there
is no sound reason to exclude laws governing trusts from the application of
this Act.
2. Powers of Attorney. A power of attorney
is simply a formalized type of agency agreement. In general, no formal requirements
for paper or execution were found to be applicable to the validity of powers
of attorney.
Special health powers of attorney have been established by
statute in some States. These powers may have special requirements under state
law regarding execution, acknowledgment and possibly notarization. In the normal
case such powers will not arise in a transactional context and so would not
be covered by this Act. However, even if such a record were to arise in a transactional
context, this Act operates simply to remove the barrier to the use of an electronic
medium, and preserves other requirements of applicable substantive law, avoiding
any necessity to exclude such laws from the operation of this Act. Especially
in light of the provisions of Sections 8 and 11, the substantive requirements
under such laws will be preserved and may be satisfied in an electronic format.
3. Real Estate Transactions. It is important
to distinguish between the efficacy of paper documents involving real estate
between the parties, as opposed to their effect on third parties. As between
the parties it is unnecessary to maintain existing barriers to electronic contracting.
There are no unique characteristics to contracts relating to real property as
opposed to other business and commercial (including consumer) contracts. Consequently,
the decision whether to use an electronic medium for their agreements should
be a matter for the parties to determine. Of course, to be effective against
third parties state law generally requires filing with a governmental office.
Pending adoption of electronic filing systems by States, the need for a piece
of paper to file to perfect rights against third parties, will be a consideration
for the parties. In the event notarization and acknowledgment are required under
other laws, Section 11 provides a means for such actions to be accomplished
electronically.
With respect to the requirements of government filing, those
are left to the individual States in the decision of whether to adopt and implement
electronic filing systems. (See optional Sections 17-19.) However, government
recording systems currently require paper deeds including notarized, manual
signatures. Although California and Illinois are experimenting with electronic
filing systems, until such systems become widespread, the parties likely will
choose to use, at the least, a paper deed for filing purposes. Nothing in this
Act precludes the parties from selecting the medium best suited to the needs
of the particular transaction. Parties may wish to consummate the transaction
using electronic media in order to avoid expensive travel. Yet the actual deed
may be in paper form to assure compliance with existing recording systems and
requirements. The critical point is that nothing in this Act prevents the parties
from selecting paper or electronic media for all or part of their transaction.
4. Consumer Protection Statutes. Consumer
protection provisions in state law often require that information be disclosed
or provided to a consumer in writing. Because this Act does apply to such transactions,
the question of whether such laws should be specifically excluded was considered.
Exclusion of consumer transactions would eliminate a huge group of commercial
transactions which benefit consumers by enabling the efficiency of the electronic
medium. Commerce over the internet is driven by consumer demands and concerns
and must be included.
At the same time, it is important to recognize the protective
effects of many consumer statutes. Consumer statutes often require that information
be provided in writing, or may require that the consumer separately sign or
initial a particular provision to evidence that the consumer's attention was
brought to the provision. Subsection (1) requires electronic records to be retainable
by a person whenever the law requires information to be delivered in writing.
The section imposes a significant burden on the sender of information. The sender
must assure that the information system of the recipient is compatible with,
and capable of retaining the information sent by, the sender's system. Furthermore,
nothing in this Act permits the avoidance of legal requirements of separate
signatures or initialing. The Act simply permits the signature or initialing
to be done electronically.
Other consumer protection statutes require (expressly or implicitly)
that certain information be presented in a certain manner or format. Laws requiring
information to be presented in particular fonts, formats or in similar fashion,
as well as laws requiring conspicuous displays of information are preserved.
Section 8(b)(3) specifically preserves the applicability of such requirements
in an electronic environment. In the case of legal requirements that information
be presented or appear conspicuous, the determination of what is conspicuous
will be left to other law. Section 8 was included to specifically preserve the
protective functions of such disclosure statutes, while at the same time allowing
the use of electronic media if the substantive requirements of the other laws
could be satisfied in the electronic medium.
Formatting and separate signing requirements serve a critical
purpose in much consumer protection legislation, to assure that information
is not slipped past the unsuspecting consumer. Not only does this Act not disturb
those requirements, it preserves those requirements. In addition, other bodies
of substantive law continue to operate to allow the courts to police any such
bad conduct or overreaching, e.g., unconscionability, fraud, duress, mistake
and the like. These bodies of law remain applicable regardless of the medium
in which a record appears.
The requirement that both parties agree to conduct a transaction
electronically also prevents the imposition of an electronic medium on unwilling
parties See Section 5(b). In addition, where the law requires inclusion of specific
terms or language, those requirements are preserved broadly by Section 5(e).
Requirements that information be sent to, or received by, someone
have been preserved in Section 15. As in the paper world, obligations to send
do not impose any duties on the sender to assure receipt, other than reasonable
methods of dispatch. In those cases where receipt is required legally, Sections
5, 8, and 15 impose the burden on the sender to assure delivery to the recipient
if satisfaction of the legal requirement is to be fulfilled.
The preservation of existing safeguards, together with the
ability to opt out of the electronic medium entirely, demonstrate the lack of
any need generally to exclude consumer protection laws from the operation of
this Act. Legislatures may wish to focus any review on those statutes which
provide for post-contract formation and post-breach notices to be in paper.
However, any such consideration must also balance the needed protections against
the potential burdens which may be imposed. Consumers and others will not be
well served by restrictions which preclude the employment of electronic technologies
sought and desired by consumers.
SECTION 4. PROSPECTIVE APPLICATION. This [Act]
applies to anyelectronic record or electronic signature created, generated,
sent, communicated, received, or stored on or after the effective date of this
[Act].
Comment
This section makes clear that the Act only applies to validate
electronic records and signatures which arise subsequent to the effective date
of the Act. Whether electronic records and electronic signatures arising before
the effective date of this Act are valid is left to other law.
SECTION 5. USE OF ELECTRONIC RECORDS AND ELECTRONIC
SIGNATURES; VARIATION BY AGREEMENT.
(a) This [Act] does not require a record or signature to be
created, generated, sent, communicated, received, stored, or otherwise processed
or used by electronic means or in electronic form.
(b) This [Act] applies only to transactions between parties
each of which has agreed to conduct transactions by electronic means. Whether
the parties agree to conduct a transaction by electronic means is determined
from the context and surrounding circumstances, including the parties' conduct.
(c) A party that agrees to conduct a transaction by electronic
means may refuse to conduct other transactions by electronic means. The right
granted by this subsection may not be waived by agreement.
(d) Except as otherwise provided in this [Act], the effect
of any of its provisions may be varied by agreement. The presence in certain
provisions of this [Act] of the words "unless otherwise agreed", or words of
similar import, does not imply that the effect of other provisions may not be
varied by agreement.
(e) Whether an electronic record or electronic signature has
legal consequences is determined by this [Act] and other applicable law.
Comment
This section limits the applicability of this Act to transactions
which parties have agreed to conduct electronically. Broad interpretation of
the term agreement is necessary to assure that this Act has the widest possible
application consistent with its purpose of removing barriers to electronic commerce.
1. This section makes clear that this Act is intended to facilitate
the use of electronic means, but does not require the use of electronic records
and signatures. This fundamental principle is set forth in subsection (a) and
elaborated by subsections (b) and (c), which require an intention to conduct
transactions electronically and preserve the right of a party to refuse to use
electronics in any subsequent transaction.
2. The paradigm of this Act is two willing parties doing transactions
electronically. It is therefore appropriate that the Act is voluntary and preserves
the greatest possible party autonomy to refuse electronic transactions. The
requirement that party agreement be found from all the surrounding circumstances
is a limitation on the scope of this Act.
3. If this Act is to serve to facilitate electronic transactions,
it must be applicable under circumstances not rising to a full fledged contract
to use electronics. While absolute certainty can be accomplished by obtaining
an explicit contract before relying on electronic transactions, such an explicit
contract should not be necessary before one may feel safe in conducting transactions
electronically. Indeed, such a requirement would itself be an unreasonable barrier
to electronic commerce, at odds with the fundamental purpose of this Act. Accordingly,
the requisite agreement, express or implied, must be determined from all available
circumstances and evidence.
4. Subsection (b) provides that the Act applies to transactions
in which the parties have agreed to conduct the transaction electronically.
In this context it is essential that the parties' actions and words be broadly
construed in determining whether the requisite agreement exists. Accordingly,
the Act expressly provides that the party's agreement is to be found from all
circumstances, including the parties' conduct. The critical element is the intent
of a party to conduct a transaction electronically. Once that intent is established,
this Act applies. See Restatement 2d Contracts, Sections 2, 3, and 19.
Examples of circumstances from which it may be found that parties
have reached an agreement to conduct transactions electronically include the
following:
A. Automaker and supplier enter into a Trading Partner Agreement
setting forth the terms, conditions and methods for the conduct of business
between them electronically.
B. Joe gives out his business card with his business e-mail
address. It may be reasonable, under the circumstances, for a recipient of the
card to infer that Joe has agreed to communicate electronically for business
purposes. However, in the absence of additional facts, it would not necessarily
be reasonable to infer Joe's agreement to communicate electronically for purposes
outside the scope of the business indicated by use of the business card.
C. Sally may have several e-mail addresses - home, main
office, office of a non-profit organization on whose board Sally sits. In each
case, it may be reasonable to infer that Sally is willing to communicate electronically
with respect to business related to the business/purpose associated with the
respective e-mail addresses. However, depending on the circumstances, it may
not be reasonable to communicate with Sally for purposes other than those related
to the purpose for which she maintained a particular e-mail account.
D. Among the circumstances to be considered in finding an agreement
would be the time when the assent occurred relative to the timing of the use
of electronic communications. If one orders books from an on-line vendor, such
as Bookseller.com, the intention to conduct that transaction and to receive
any correspondence related to the transaction electronically can be inferred
from the conduct. Accordingly, as to information related to that transaction
it is reasonable for Bookseller to deal with the individual electronically.
The examples noted above are intended to focus the inquiry
on the party's agreement to conduct a transaction electronically. Similarly,
if two people are at a meeting and one tells the other to send an e-mail to
confirm a transaction - the requisite agreement under subsection (b) would
exist. In each case, the use of a business card, statement at a meeting, or
other evidence of willingness to conduct a transaction electronically must be
viewed in light of all the surrounding circumstances with a view toward broad
validation of electronic transactions.
5. Just as circumstances may indicate the existence of agreement,
express or implied from surrounding circumstances, circumstances may also demonstrate
the absence of true agreement. For example:
A. If Automaker, Inc. were to issue a recall of automobiles
via its Internet website, it would not be able to rely on this Act to validate
that notice in the case of a person who never logged on to the website, or indeed,
had no ability to do so, notwithstanding a clause in a paper purchase contract
by which the buyer agreed to receive such notices in such a manner.
B. Buyer executes a standard form contract in which an agreement
to receive all notices electronically in set forth on page 3 in the midst of
other fine print. Buyer has never communicated with Seller electronically, and
has not provided any other information in the contract to suggest a willingness
to deal electronically. Not only is it unlikely that any but the most formalistic
of agreements may be found, but nothing in this Act prevents courts from policing
such form contracts under common law doctrines relating to contract formation,
unconscionability and the like.
6. Subsection (c) has been added to make clear the ability
of a party to refuse to conduct a transaction electronically, even if the person
has conducted transactions electronically in the past. The effectiveness of
a party's refusal to conduct a transaction electronically will be determined
under other applicable law in light of all surrounding circumstances. Such circumstances
must include an assessment of the transaction involved.
A party's right to decline to act electronically under a specific
contract, on the ground that each action under that contract amounts to a separate
"transaction," must be considered in light of the purpose of the contract and
the action to be taken electronically. For example, under a contract for the
purchase of goods, the giving and receipt of notices electronically, as provided
in the contract, should not be viewed as discreet transactions. Rather such
notices amount to separate actions which are part of the "transaction" of purchase
evidenced by the contract. Allowing one party to require a change of medium
in the middle of the transaction evidenced by that contract is not the purpose
of this subsection. Rather this subsection is intended to preserve the party's
right to conduct the next purchase in a non-electronic medium.
7. Subsection (e) is an essential provision in the overall
scheme of this Act. While this Act validates and effectuates electronic records
and electronic signatures, the legal effect of such records and signatures is
left to existing substantive law outside this Act except in very narrow circumstances.
See, e.g., Section 16. Even when this Act operates to validate records and signatures
in an electronic medium, it expressly preserves the substantive rules of other
law applicable to such records. See, e.g., Section 11.
For example, beyond validation of records, signatures and contracts
based on the medium used, Section 7 (a) and (b) should not be interpreted as
establishing the legal effectiveness of any given record, signature or contract.
Where a rule of law requires that the record contain minimum substantive content,
the legal effect of such a record will depend on whether the record meets the
substantive requirements of other applicable law.
Section 8 expressly preserves a number of legal requirements
in currently existing law relating to the presentation of information in writing.
Although this Act now would allow such information to be presented in an electronic
record, Section 8 provides that the other substantive requirements of law must
be satisfied in the electronic medium as well.
SECTION 6. CONSTRUCTION AND APPLICATION. This
[Act] must be construed and applied:
(1) to facilitate electronic transactions consistent with other
applicable law; (2) to be consistent with reasonable practices concerning electronic
transactions and with the continued expansion of those practices; and
(3) to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the law
with respect to the subject of this [Act] among States enacting it.
Comment
1. The purposes and policies of this Act are
(a) to facilitate and promote commerce and governmental transactions
by validating and authorizing the use of electronic records and electronic signatures;
(b) to eliminate barriers to electronic commerce and governmental
transactions resulting from uncertainties relating to writing and signature
requirements;
(c) to simplify, clarify and modernize the law governing commerce
and governmental transactions through the use of electronic means;
(d) to permit the continued expansion of commercial and governmental
electronic practices through custom, usage and agreement of the parties;
(e) to promote uniformity of the law among the States (and
worldwide) relating to the use of electronic and similar technological means
of effecting and performing commercial and governmental transactions;
(f) to promote public confidence in the validity, integrity
and reliability of electronic commerce and governmental transactions; and
(g) to promote the development of the legal and business infrastructure
necessary to implement electronic commerce and governmental transactions.
2. This Act has been drafted to permit flexible application
consistent with its purpose to validate electronic transactions. The provisions
of this Act validating and effectuating the employ of electronic media allow
the courts to apply them to new and unforeseen technologies and practices. As
time progresses, it is anticipated that what is new and unforeseen today will
be commonplace tomorrow. Accordingly, this legislation is intended to set a
framework for the validation of media which may be developed in the future and
which demonstrate the same qualities as the electronic media contemplated and
validated under this Act.
SECTION 7. LEGAL RECOGNITION OF ELECTRONIC RECORDS,
ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES, AND ELECTRONIC CONTRACTS.
(a) A record or signature may not be denied legal effect or
enforceability solely because it is in electronic form.
(b) A contract may not be denied legal effect or enforceability
solely because an electronic record was used in its formation.
(c) If a law requires a record to be in writing, an electronic
record satisfies the law.
(d) If a law requires a signature, an electronic signature
satisfies the law.
Source: UNCITRAL Model Law on Electronic Commerce,
Articles 5, 6, and 7.
Comment
1. This section sets forth the fundamental premise of this
Act: namely, that the medium in which a record, signature, or contract is created,
presented or retained does not affect it's legal significance. Subsections (a)
and (b) are designed to eliminate the single element of medium as a reason to
deny effect or enforceability to a record, signature, or contract. The fact
that the information is set forth in an electronic, as opposed to paper, record
is irrelevant.
2. Under Restatement 2d Contracts Section 8, a contract may
have legal effect and yet be unenforceable. Indeed, one circumstance where a
record or contract may have effect but be unenforceable is in the context of
the Statute of Frauds. Though a contract may be unenforceable, the records may
have collateral effects, as in the case of a buyer that insures goods purchased
under a contract unenforceable under the Statute of Frauds. The insurance company
may not deny a claim on the ground that the buyer is not the owner, though the
buyer may have no direct remedy against seller for failure to deliver. See Restatement
2d Contracts, Section 8, Illustration 4.
While this section would validate an electronic record for
purposes of a statute of frauds, if an agreement to conduct the transaction
electronically cannot reasonably be found (See Section 5(b)) then a necessary
predicate to the applicability of this Act would be absent and this Act would
not validate the electronic record. Whether the electronic record might be valid
under other law is not addressed by this Act.
3. Subsections (c) and (d) provide the positive assertion that
electronic records and signatures satisfy legal requirements for writings and
signatures. The provisions are limited to requirements in laws that a record
be in writing or be signed. This section does not address requirements imposed
by other law in addition to requirements for writings and signatures See, e.g.,
Section 8.
Subsections (c) and (d) are particularized applications of
subsection (a). The purpose is to validate and effectuate electronic records
and signatures as the equivalent of writings, subject to all of the rules applicable
to the efficacy of a writing, except as such other rules are modified by the
more specific provisions of this Act.
Illustration 1: A sends the following e-mail
to B: "I hereby offer to buy widgets from you, delivery next Tuesday. /s/ A."
B responds with the following e-mail: "I accept your offer to buy widgets for
delivery next Tuesday. /s/ B." The e-mails may not be denied effect solely because
they are electronic. In addition, the e-mails do qualify as records under the
Statute of Frauds. However, because there is no quantity stated in either record,
the parties' agreement would be unenforceable under existing UCC Section 2-201(1).
Illustration 2: A sends the following e-mail
to B: "I hereby offer to buy 100 widgets for $1000, delivery next Tuesday. /s/
A." B responds with the following e-mail: "I accept your offer to purchase 100
widgets for $1000, delivery next Tuesday. /s/ B." In this case the analysis
is the same as in Illustration 1 except that here the records otherwise satisfy
the requirements of UCC Section 2-201(1). The transaction may not be denied
legal effect solely because there is not a pen and ink "writing" or "signature".
4. Section 8 addresses additional requirements imposed by other
law which may affect the legal effect or enforceability of an electronic record
in a particular case. For example, in Section 8(a) the legal requirement addressed
is the provision of information in writing. The section then sets forth
the standards to be applied in determining whether the provision of information
by an electronic record is the equivalent of the provision of information in
writing. The requirements in Section 8 are in addition to the bare validation
that occurs under this section.
5. Under the substantive law applicable to a particular transaction
within this Act, the legal effect of an electronic record may be separate from
the issue of whether the record contains a signature. For example, where notice
must be given as part of a contractual obligation, the effectiveness of the
notice will turn on whether the party provided the notice regardless of whether
the notice was signed (See Section 15). An electronic record attributed to a
party under Section 9 and complying with the requirements of Section 15 would
suffice in that case, notwithstanding that it may not contain an electronic
signature.
SECTION 8. PROVISION OF INFORMATION IN WRITING; PRESENTATION
OF RECORDS.
(a) If parties have agreed to conduct a transaction by electronic
means and a law requires a person to provide, send, or deliver information in
writing to another person, the requirement is satisfied if the information is
provided, sent, or delivered, as the case may be, in an electronic record capable
of retention by the recipient at the time of receipt. An electronic record is
not capable of retention by the recipient if the sender or its information processing
system inhibits the ability of the recipient to print or store the electronic
record.
(b) If a law other than this [Act] requires a record (i) to
be posted or displayed in a certain manner, (ii) to be sent, communicated, or
transmitted by a specified method, or (iii) to contain information that is formatted
in a certain manner, the following rules apply:
(1) The record must be posted or displayed in the manner specified
in the other law.
(2) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d)(2), the
record must be sent, communicated, or transmitted by the method specified in
the other law.
(3) The record must contain the information formatted in the
manner specified in the other law.
(c) If a sender inhibits the ability of a recipient to store
or print an electronic record, the electronic record is not enforceable against
the recipient.
(d) The requirements of this section may not be varied by agreement,
but:
(1) to the extent a law other than this [Act] requires information
to be provided, sent, or delivered in writing but permits that requirement to
be varied by agreement, the requirement under subsection (a) that the information
be in the form of an electronic record capable of retention may also be varied
by agreement; and
(2) a requirement under a law other than this [Act] to send,
communicate, or transmit a record by [first-class mail, postage prepaid] [regular
United States mail], may be varied by agreement to the extent permitted by the
other law.
Source: Canadian - Uniform Electronic
Commerce Act
Comment
1. This section is a savings provision, designed to assure,
consistent with the fundamental purpose of this Act, that otherwise applicable
substantive law will not be overridden by this Act. The section makes clear
that while the pen and ink provisions of such other law may be satisfied electronically,
nothing in this Act vitiates the other requirements of such laws. The section
addresses a number of issues related to disclosures and notice provisions in
other laws.
2. This section is independent of the prior section. Section
7 refers to legal requirements for a writing. This section refers to legal requirements
for the provision of information in writing or relating to the method or manner
of presentation or delivery of information. The section addresses more specific
legal requirements of other laws, provides standards for satisfying the more
particular legal requirements, and defers to other law for satisfaction of requirements
under those laws.
3. Under subsection (a), to meet a requirement of other law
that information be provided in writing, the recipient of an electronic record
of the information must be able to get to the electronic record and read it,
and must have the ability to get back to the information in some way at a later
date. Accordingly, the section requires that the electronic record be capable
of retention for later review.
The section specifically provides that any inhibition on retention
imposed by the sender or the sender's system will preclude satisfaction of this
section. Use of technological means now existing or later developed which prevents
the recipient from retaining a copy the information would result in a determination
that information has not been provided under subsection (a). The policies underlying
laws requiring the provision of information in writing warrant the imposition
of an additional burden on the sender to make the information available in a
manner which will permit subsequent reference. A difficulty does exist for senders
of information because of the disparate systems of their recipients and the
capabilities of those systems. However, in order to satisfy the legal requirement
of other law to make information available, the sender must assure that the
recipient receives and can retain the information. However, it is left for the
courts to determine whether the sender has complied with this subsection if
evidence demonstrates that it is something peculiar the recipient's system which
precludes subsequent reference to the information.
4. Subsection (b) is a savings provision for laws which provide
for the means of delivering or displaying information and which are not affected
by the Act. For example, if a law requires delivery of notice by first class
US mail, that means of delivery would not be affected by this Act. The information
to be delivered may be provided on a disc, i.e., in electronic form, but the
particular means of delivery must still be via the US postal service. Display,
delivery and formatting requirements will continue to be applicable to electronic
records and signatures. If those legal requirements can be satisfied in an electronic
medium, e.g., the information can be presented in the equivalent of 20 point
bold type as required by other law, this Act will validate the use of the medium,
leaving to the other applicable law the question of whether the particular electronic
record meets the other legal requirements. If a law requires that particular
records be delivered together, or attached to other records, this Act does not
preclude the delivery of the records together in an electronic communication,
so long as the records are connected or associated with each other in a way
determined to satisfy the other law.
5. Subsection (c) provides incentives for senders of information
to use systems which will not inhibit the other party from retaining the information.
However, there are circumstances where a party providing certain information
may wish to inhibit retention in order to protect intellectual property rights
or prevent the other party from retaining confidential information about the
sender. In such cases inhibition is understandable, but if the sender wishes
to enforce the record in which the information is contained, the sender may
not inhibit its retention by the recipient. Unlike subsection (a), subsection
(c) applies in all transactions and simply provides for unenforceability against
the recipient. Subsection (a) applies only where another law imposes the writing
requirement, and subsection (a) imposes a broader responsibility on the sender
to assure retention capability by the recipient.
6. The protective purposes of this section justify the non-waivability
provided by subsection (d). However, since the requirements for sending and
formatting and the like are imposed by other law, to the extent other law permits
waiver of such protections, there is no justification for imposing a more severe
burden in an electronic environment.
SECTION 9. ATTRIBUTION AND EFFECT OF ELECTRONIC RECORD
AND ELECTRONIC SIGNATURE.
(a) An electronic record or electronic signature is attributable
to a person if it was the act of the person. The act of the person may be shown
in any manner, including a showing of the efficacy of any security procedure
applied to determine the person to which the electronic record or electronic
signature was attributable.
(b) The effect of an electronic record or electronic signature
attributed to a person under subsection (a) is determined from the context and
surrounding circumstances at the time of its creation, execution, or adoption,
including the parties' agreement, if any, and otherwise as provided by law.
Comment
1. Under subsection (a), so long as the electronic record or
electronic signature resulted from a person's action it will be attributed to
that person - the legal effect of that attribution is addressed in subsection
(b). This section does not alter existing rules of law regarding attribution.
The section assures that such rules will be applied in the electronic environment.
A person's actions include actions taken by human agents of the person, as well
as actions taken by an electronic agent, i.e., the tool, of the person. Although
the rule may appear to state the obvious, it assures that the record or signature
is not ascribed to a machine, as opposed to the person operating or programing
the machine.
In each of the following cases, both the electronic record
and electronic signature would be attributable to a person under subsection
(a):
A. The person types his/her name as part of an e-mail purchase
order;
B. The person's employee, pursuant to authority, types the
person's name as part of an e-mail purchase order;
C. The person's computer, programmed to order goods upon receipt
of inventory information within particular parameters, issues a purchase order
which includes the person's name, or other identifying information, as part
of the order.
In each of the above cases, law other than this Act would ascribe
both the signature and the action to the person if done in a paper medium. Subsection
(a) expressly provides that the same result will occur when an electronic medium
is used.
2. Nothing in this section affects the use of a signature as
a device for attributing a record to a person. Indeed, a signature is often
the primary method for attributing a record to a person. In the foregoing examples,
once the electronic signature is attributed to the person, the electronic record
would also be attributed to the person, unless the person established fraud,
forgery, or other invalidating cause. However, a signature is not the only method
for attribution.
3. The use of facsimile transmissions provides a number of
examples of attribution using information other than a signature. A facsimile
may be attributed to a person because of the information printed across the
top of the page that indicates the machine from which it was sent. Similarly,
the transmission may contain a letterhead which identifies the sender. Some
cases have held that the letterhead actually constituted a signature because
it was a symbol adopted by the sender with intent to authenticate the facsimile.
However, the signature determination resulted from the necessary finding of
intention in that case. Other cases have found facsimile letterheads NOT to
be signatures because the requisite intention was not present. The critical
point is that with or without a signature, information within the electronic
record may well suffice to provide the facts resulting in attribution of an
electronic record to a particular party.
In the context of attribution of records, normally the content
of the record will provide the necessary information for a finding of attribution.
It is also possible that an established course of dealing between parties may
result in a finding of attribution Just as with a paper record, evidence of
forgery or counterfeiting may be introduced to rebut the evidence of attribution.
4. Certain information may be present in an electronic environment
that does not appear to attribute but which clearly links a person to a particular
record. Numerical codes, personal identification numbers, public and private
key combinations all serve to establish the party to whom an electronic record
should be attributed. Of course security procedures will be another piece of
evidence available to establish attribution.
The inclusion of a specific reference to security procedures
as a means of proving attribution is salutary because of the unique importance
of security procedures in the electronic environment. In certain processes,
a technical and technological security procedure may be the best way to convince
a trier of fact that a particular electronic record or signature was that of
a particular person. In certain circumstances, the use of a security procedure
to establish that the record and related signature came from the person's business
might be necessary to overcome a claim that a hacker intervened. The reference
to security procedures is not intended to suggest that other forms of proof
of attribution should be accorded less persuasive effect. It is also important
to recall that the particular strength of a given procedure does not affect
the procedure's status as a security procedure, but only affects the weight
to be accorded the evidence of the security procedure as tending to establish
attribution.
5. This section does apply in determining the effect of a "click-through"
transaction. A "click-through" transaction involves a process which, if executed
with an intent to "sign," will be an electronic signature. See definition of
Electronic Signature. In the context of an anonymous "click-through," issues
of proof will be paramount. This section will be relevant to establish that
the resulting electronic record is attributable to a particular person upon
the requisite proof, including security procedures which may track the source
of the click-through.
6. Once it is established that a record or signature is attributable
to a particular party, the effect of a record or signature must be determined
in light of the context and surrounding circumstances, including the parties'
agreement, if any. Also informing the effect of any attribution will be other
legal requirements considered in light of the context. Subsection (b) addresses
the effect of the record or signature once attributed to a person.
SECTION 10. EFFECT OF CHANGE OR ERROR. If
a change or error in an electronic record occurs in a transmission between parties
to a transaction, the following rules apply:
(1) If the parties have agreed to use a security procedure
to detect changes or errors and one party has conformed to the procedure, but
the other party has not, and the nonconforming party would have detected the
change or error had that party also conformed, the conforming party may avoid
the effect of the changed or erroneous electronic record.
(2) In an automated transaction involving an individual, the
individual may avoid the effect of an electronic record that resulted from an
error made by the individual in dealing with the electronic agent of another
person if the electronic agent did not provide an opportunity for the prevention
or correction of the error and, at the time the individual learns of the error,
the individual:
(A) promptly notifies the other person of the error and that
the individual did not intend to be bound by the electronic record received
by the other person;
(B) takes reasonable steps, including steps that conform to
the other person's reasonable instructions, to return to the other person or,
if instructed by the other person, to destroy the consideration received, if
any, as a result of the erroneous electronic record; and
(C) has not used or received any benefit or value from the
consideration, if any, received from the other person.
(3) If neither paragraph (1) nor paragraph (2) applies, the
change or error has the effect provided by other law, including the law of mistake,
and the parties' contract, if any.
(4) Paragraphs (2) and (3) may not be varied by agreement.
Source: Restatement 2d Contracts, Sections
152-155.
Comment
1. This section is limited to changes and errors occurring
in transmissions between parties - whether person-person (paragraph 1)
or in an automated transaction involving an individual and a machine (paragraphs
1 and 2). The section focuses on the effect of changes and errors occurring
when records are exchanged between parties. In cases where changes and errors
occur in contexts other than transmission, the law of mistake is expressly made
applicable to resolve the conflict.
The section covers both changes and errors. For example, if
Buyer sends a message to Seller ordering 100 widgets, but Buyer's information
processing system changes the order to 1000 widgets, a "change" has occurred
between what Buyer transmitted and what Seller received. If on the other hand,
Buyer typed in 1000 intending to order only 100, but sent the message before
noting the mistake, an error would have occurred which would also be covered
by this section.
2. Paragraph (1) deals with any transmission where the parties
have agreed to use a security procedure to detect changes and errors. It operates
against the non-conforming party, i.e., the party in the best position to have
avoided the change or error, regardless of whether that person is the sender
or recipient. The source of the error/change is not indicated, and so both human
and machine errors/changes would be covered. With respect to errors or changes
that would not be detected by the security procedure even if applied, the parties
are left to the general law of mistake to resolve the dispute.
3. Paragraph (1) applies only in the situation where a security
procedure would detect the error/change but one party fails to use the procedure
and does not detect the error/change. In such a case, consistent with the law
of mistake generally, the record is made avoidable at the instance of the party
who took all available steps to avoid the mistake. See Restatement 2d Contracts
Sections 152-154.
Making the erroneous record avoidable by the conforming party
is consistent with Sections 153 and 154 of the Restatement 2d Contracts because
the non-conforming party was in the best position to avoid the problem, and
would bear the risk of mistake. Such a case would constitute mistake by one
party. The mistaken party (the conforming party) would be entitled to avoid
any resulting contract under Section 153 because s/he does not have the risk
of mistake and the non-conforming party had reason to know of the mistake.
4. As with paragraph (1), paragraph (2), when applicable, allows
the mistaken party to avoid the effect of the erroneous electronic record. However,
the subsection is limited to human error on the part of an individual when dealing
with the electronic agent of the other party. In a transaction between individuals
there is a greater ability to correct the error before parties have acted on
it. However, when an individual makes an error while dealing with the electronic
agent of the other party, it may not be possible to correct the error before
the other party has shipped or taken other action in reliance on the erroneous
record.
Paragraph (2) applies only to errors made by individuals. If
the error results from the electronic agent, it would constitute a system error.
In such a case the effect of that error would be resolved under paragraph (1)
if applicable, otherwise under paragraph (3) and the general law of mistake.
5. The party acting through the electronic agent/machine is
given incentives by this section to build in safeguards which enable the individual
to prevent the sending of an erroneous record, or correct the error once sent.
For example, the electronic agent may be programed to provide a "confirmation
screen" to the individual setting forth all the information the individual initially
approved. This would provide the individual with the ability to prevent the
erroneous record from ever being sent. Similarly, the electronic agent might
receive the record sent by the individual and then send back a confirmation
which the individual must again accept before the transaction is completed.
This would allow for correction of an erroneous record. In either case, the
electronic agent would "provide an opportunity for prevention or correction
of the error," and the subsection would not apply. Rather, the affect
of any error is governed by other law.
6. Paragraph (2) also places additional requirements on the
mistaken individual before the paragraph may be invoked to avoid an erroneous
electronic record. The individual must take prompt action to advise the other
party of the error and the fact that the individual did not intend the electronic
record. Whether the action is prompt must be determined from all the circumstances
including the individual's ability to contact the other party. The individual
should advise the other party both of the error and of the lack of intention
to be bound (i.e., avoidance) by the electronic record received. Since this
provision allows avoidance by the mistaken party, that party should also be
required to expressly note that it is seeking to avoid the electronic record,
i.e., lacked the intention to be bound.
Second, restitution is normally required in order to undo a
mistaken transaction. Accordingly, the individual must also return or destroy
any consideration received, adhering to instructions from the other party in
any case. This is to assure that the other party retains control over the consideration
sent in error.
Finally, and most importantly in regard to transactions involving
intermediaries which may be harmed because transactions cannot be unwound, the
individual cannot have received any benefit from the transaction. This section
prevents a party from unwinding a transaction after the delivery of value and
consideration which cannot be returned or destroyed. For example, if the consideration
received is information, it may not be possible to avoid the benefit conferred.
While the information itself could be returned, mere access to the information,
or the ability to redistribute the information would constitute a benefit precluding
the mistaken party from unwinding the transaction. It may also occur that the
mistaken party receives consideration which changes in value between the time
of receipt and the first opportunity to return. In such a case restitution cannot
be made adequately, and the transaction would not be avoidable. In each of the
foregoing cases, under subparagraph (2)(c), the individual would have received
the benefit of the consideration and would NOT be able to avoid the erroneous
electronic record under this section.
7. In all cases not covered by paragraphs (1) or (2), where
error or change to a record occur, the parties contract, or other law, specifically
including the law of mistake, applies to resolve any dispute. In the event that
the parties' contract and other law would achieve different results, the construction
of the parties' contract is left to the other law. If the error occurs in the
context of record retention, Section 12 will apply. In that case the standard
is one of accuracy and retrievability of the information.
8. Paragraph (4) makes the error correction provision in paragraph
(2) and the application of the law of mistake in paragraph (3) non-variable.
Paragraph (2) provides incentives for parties using electronic agents to establish
safeguards for individuals dealing with them. It also avoids unjustified windfalls
to the individual by erecting stringent requirements before the individual may
exercise the right of avoidance under the paragraph. Therefore, there is no
reason to permit parties to avoid the paragraph by agreement. Rather, parties
should satisfy the paragraph's requirements.
SECTION 11. NOTARIZATION AND ACKNOWLEDGMENT.
If a law requires a signature or record to be notarized, acknowledged, verified,
or made under oath, the requirement is satisfied if the electronic signature
of the person authorized to perform those acts, together with all other information
required to be included by other applicable law, is attached to or logically
associated with the signature or record.
Comment
This section permits a notary public and other authorized officers
to act electronically, effectively removing the stamp/seal requirements. However,
the section does not eliminate any of the other requirements of notarial laws,
and consistent with the entire thrust of this Act, simply allows the signing
and information to be accomplished in an electronic medium.
For example, Buyer wishes to send a notarized Real Estate Purchase
Agreement to Seller via e-mail. The notary must appear in the room with the
Buyer, satisfy him/herself as to the identity of the Buyer, and swear to that
identification. All that activity must be reflected as part of the electronic
Purchase Agreement and the notary's electronic signature must appear as a part
of the electronic real estate purchase contract.
As another example, Buyer seeks to send Seller an affidavit
averring defects in the products received. A court clerk, authorized under state
law to administer oaths, is present with Buyer in a room. The Clerk administers
the oath and includes the statement of the oath, together with any other requisite
information, in the electronic record to be sent to the Seller. Upon administering
the oath and witnessing the application of Buyer's electronic signature to the
electronic record, the Clerk also applies his electronic signature to the electronic
record. So long as all substantive requirements of other applicable law have
been fulfilled and are reflected in the electronic record, the sworn electronic
record of Buyer is as effective as if it had been transcribed on paper.
SECTION 12. RETENTION OF ELECTRONIC RECORDS; ORIGINALS.
(a) If a law requires that a record be retained, the requirement
is satisfied by retaining an electronic record of the information in the record
which:
(1) accurately reflects the information set forth in the record
after it was first generated in its final form as an electronic record or otherwise;
and
(2) remains accessible for later reference.
(b) A requirement to retain a record in accordance with subsection
(a) does not apply to any information the sole purpose of which is to enable
the record to be sent, communicated, or received.
(c) A person may satisfy subsection (a) by using the services
of another person if the requirements of that subsection are satisfied.
(d) If a law requires a record to be presented or retained
in its original form, or provides consequences if the record is not presented
or retained in its original form, that law is satisfied by an electronic record
retained in accordance with subsection (a).
(e) If a law requires retention of a check, that requirement
is satisfied by retention of an electronic record of the information on the
front and back of the check in accordance with subsection (a).
(f) A record retained as an electronic record in accordance
with subsection (a) satisfies a law requiring a person to retain a record for
evidentiary, audit, or like purposes, unless a law enacted after the effective
date of this [Act] specifically prohibits the use of an electronic record for
the specified purpose.
(g) This section does not preclude a governmental agency of
this State from specifying additional requirements for the retention of a record
subject to the agency's jurisdiction.
Source: UNCITRAL Model Law On Electronic Commerce
Articles 8 and 10.
Comment
1. This section deals with the serviceability of electronic
records as retained records and originals. So long as there exists reliable
assurance that the electronic record accurately reproduces the information,
this section continues the theme of establishing the functional equivalence
of electronic and paper-based records. This is consistent with Fed.R.Evid. 1001(3)
and Unif.R.Evid. 1001(3) (1974). This section assures that information stored
electronically will remain effective for all audit, evidentiary, archival and
similar purposes.
2. In an electronic medium, the concept of an original document
is problematic. For example, as one drafts a document on a computer the "original"
is either on a disc or the hard drive to which the document has been initially
saved. If one periodically saves the draft, the fact is that at times a document
may be first saved to disc then to hard drive, and at others vice versa. In
such a case the "original" may change from the information on the disc to the
information on the hard drive. Indeed, it may be argued that the "original"
exists solely in RAM and, in a sense, the original is destroyed when a "copy"
is saved to a disc or to the hard drive. In any event, in the context of record
retention, the concern focuses on the integrity of the information, and not
with its "originality."
3. Subsection (a) requires accuracy and the ability to access
at a later time. The requirement of accuracy is derived from the Uniform and
Federal Rules of Evidence. The requirement of continuing accessibility addresses
the issue of technology obsolescence and the need to update and migrate information
to developing systems. It is not unlikely that within the span of 5-10 years
(a period during which retention of much information is required) a corporation
may evolve through one or more generations of technology. More to the point,
this technology may be incompatible with each other necessitating the reconversion
of information from one system to the other.
For example, certain operating systems from the early 1980's,
e.g., memory typewriters, became obsolete with the development of personal computers.
The information originally stored on the memory typewriter would need to be
converted to the personal computer system in a way meeting the standards for
accuracy contemplated by this section. It is also possible that the medium on
which the information is stored is less stable. For example, information stored
on floppy discs is generally less stable, and subject to a greater threat of
disintegration, that information stored on a computer hard drive. In either
case, the continuing accessibility issue must be satisfied to validate information
stored by electronic means under this section.
This section permits parties to convert original written records
to electronic records for retention so long as the requirements of subsection
(a) are satisfied. Accordingly, in the absence of specific requirements to retain
written records, written records may be destroyed once saved as electronic records
satisfying the requirements of this section.
The subsection refers to the information contained in an electronic
record, rather than relying on the term electronic record, as a matter of clarity
that the critical aspect in retention is the information itself. What information
must be retained is determined by the purpose for which the information is needed.
If the addressing and pathway information regarding an e-mail is relevant, then
that information should also be retained. However if it is the substance of
the e-mail that is relevant, only that information need be retained. Of course,
wise record retention would include all such information since what information
will be relevant at a later time will not be known.
4. Subsections (b) and (c) simply make clear that certain ancillary
information or the use of third parties, does not affect the serviceability
of records and information retained electronically. Again, the relevance of
particular information will not be known until that information is required
at a subsequent time.
5. Subsection (d) continues the theme of the Act as validating
electronic records as originals where the law requires retention of an original.
The validation of electronic records and electronic information as originals
is consistent with the Uniform Rules of Evidence. See Uniform Rules of Evidence
1001(3), 1002, 1003 and 1004.
6. Subsection (e) specifically addresses particular concerns
regarding check retention statutes in many jurisdictions. A Report compiled
by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston identifies hundreds of state laws which
require the retention or production of original canceled checks. Such requirements
preclude banks and their customers from realizing the benefits and efficiencies
related to truncation processes otherwise validated under current law. The benefits
to banks and their customers from electronic check retention are effectuated
by this provision.
7. Subsections (f) and (g) generally address other record retention
statutes. As with check retention, all businesses and individuals may realize
significant savings from electronic record retention. So long as the standards
in Section 12 are satisfied, this section permits all parties to obtain those
benefits. As always the government may require records in any medium, however,
these subsections require a governmental agency to specifically identify the
types of records and requirements that will be imposed.
SECTION 13. ADMISSIBILITY IN EVIDENCE. In
a proceeding, evidence of a record or signature may not be excluded solely because
it is in electronic form.
Source: UNCITRAL Model Law on Electronic Commerce
Article 9.
Comment
Like Section 7, this section prevents the nonrecognition of
electronic records and signatures solely on the ground of the media in which
information is presented.
Nothing in this section relieves a party from establishing
the necessary foundation for the admission of an electronic record. See Uniform
Rules of Evidence 1001(3), 1002,1003 and 1004.
SECTION 14. AUTOMATED TRANSACTION. In an automated
transaction, the following rules apply:
(1) A contract may be formed by the interaction of electronic
agents of the parties, even if no individual was aware of or reviewed the electronic
agents' actions or the resulting terms and agreements.
(2) A contract may be formed by the interaction of an electronic
agent and an individual, acting on the individual's own behalf or for another
person, including by an interaction in which the individual performs actions
that the individual is free to refuse to perform and which the individual knows
or has reason to know will cause the electronic agent to complete the transaction
or performance.
(3) The terms of the contract are determined by the substantive
law applicable to it.
Source: UNICTRAL Model Law on Electronic Commerce
Article 11.
Comment
1. This section confirms that contracts can be formed by machines
functioning as electronic agents for parties to a transaction. It negates any
claim that lack of human intent, at the time of contract formation, prevents
contract formation. When machines are involved, the requisite intention flows
from the programing and use of the machine. As in other cases, these are salutary
provisions consistent with the fundamental purpose of the Act to remove barriers
to electronic transactions while leaving the substantive law, e.g., law of mistake,
law of contract formation, unaffected to the greatest extent possible.
2. The process in paragraph (2) validates an anonymous click-through
transaction. It is possible that an anonymous click-through process may simply
result in no recognizable legal relationship, e.g., A goes to a person's website
and acquires access without in any way identifying herself, or otherwise indicating
agreement or assent to any limitation or obligation, and the owner's site grants
A access. In such a case no legal relationship has been created.
On the other hand it may be possible that A's actions indicate
agreement to a particular term. For example, A goes to a website and is confronted
by an initial screen which advises her that the information at this site is
proprietary, that A may use the information for her own personal purposes, but
that, by clicking below, A agrees that any other use without the site owner's
permission is prohibited. If A clicks "agree" and downloads the information
and then uses the information for other, prohibited purposes, should not A be
bound by the click? It seems the answer properly should be, and would be, yes.
If the owner can show that the only way A could have obtained
the information was from his website, and that the process to access the subject
information required that A must have clicked the "I agree" button after having
the ability to see the conditions on use, A has performed actions which A was
free to refuse, which A knew would cause the site to grant her access, i.e.,
"complete the transaction." The terms of the resulting contract will be determined
under general contract principles, but will include the limitation on A's use
of the information, as a condition precedent to granting her access to the information.
3. In the transaction set forth in Comment 2, the record of
the transaction also will include an electronic signature. By clicking "I agree"
A adopted a process with the intent to "sign," i.e., bind herself to a legal
obligation, the resulting record of the transaction. If a "signed writing" were
required under otherwise applicable law, this transaction would be enforceable.
If a "signed writing" were not required, it may be sufficient to establish that
the electronic record is attributable to A under Section 9. Attribution may
be shown in any manner reasonable including showing that, of necessity, A could
only have gotten the information through the process at the website.
SECTION 15. TIME AND PLACE OF SENDING AND RECEIPT.
(a) Unless otherwise agreed between the sender and the recipient,
an electronic record is sent when it:
(1) is addressed properly or otherwise directed properly to
an information processing system that the recipient has designated or uses for
the purpose of receiving electronic records or information of the type sent
and from which the recipient is able to retrieve the electronic record;
(2) is in a form capable of being processed by that system;
and
(3) enters an information processing system outside the control
of the sender or of a person that sent the electronic record on behalf of the
sender or enters a region of the information processing system designated or
used by the recipient which is under the control of the recipient.
(b) Unless otherwise agreed between a sender and the recipient,
an electronic record is received when:
(1) it enters an information processing system that the recipient
has designated or uses for the purpose of receiving electronic records or information
of the type sent and from which the recipient is able to retrieve the electronic
record; and
(2) it is in a form capable of being processed by that system.
(c) Subsection (b) applies even if the place the information
processing system is located is different from the place the electronic record
is deemed to be received under subsection (d).
(d) Unless otherwise expressly provided in the electronic record
or agreed between the sender and the recipient, an electronic record is deemed
to be sent from the sender's place of business and to be received at the recipient's
place of business. For purposes of this subsection, the following rules apply:
(1) If the sender or recipient has more than one place of business,
the place of business of that person is the place having the closest relationship
to the underlying transaction.
(2) If the sender or the recipient does not have a place of
business, the place of business is the sender's or recipient's residence, as
the case may be.
(e) An electronic record is received under subsection (b) even
if no individual is aware of its receipt.
(f) Receipt of an electronic acknowledgment from an information
processing system described in subsection (b) establishes that a record was
received but, by itself, does not establish that the content sent corresponds
to the content received.
(g) If a person is aware that an electronic record purportedly
sent under subsection (a), or purportedly received under subsection (b), was
not actually sent or received, the legal effect of the sending or receipt is
determined by other applicable law. Except to the extent permitted by the other
law, the requirements of this subsection may not be varied by agreement.
Source: UNCITRAL Model Law on Electronic Commerce
Article 15.
Comment
1. This section provides default rules regarding when and from
where an electronic record is sent and when and where an electronic record is
received. This section does not address the efficacy of the record that is sent
or received. That is, whether a record is unintelligible or unusable by a recipient
is a separate issue from whether that record was sent or received. The effectiveness
of an illegible record, whether it binds any party, are questions left to other
law.
2. Subsection (a) furnishes rules for determining when an electronic
record is sent. The effect of the sending and its import are determined by other
law once it is determined that a sending has occurred.
In order to have a proper sending, the subsection requires
that information be properly addressed or otherwise directed to the recipient.
In order to send within the meaning of this section, there must be specific
information which will direct the record to the intended recipient. Although
mass electronic sending is not precluded, a general broadcast message, sent
to systems rather than individuals, would not suffice as a sending.
The record will be considered sent once it leaves the control
of the sender, or comes under the control of the recipient. Records sent through
e-mail or the internet will pass through many different server systems. Accordingly,
the critical element when more than one system is involved is the loss of control
by the sender.
However, the structure of many message delivery systems is
such that electronic records may actually never leave the control of the sender.
For example, within a university or corporate setting, e-mail sent within the
system to another faculty member is technically not out of the sender's control
since it never leaves the organization's server. Accordingly, to qualify as
a sending, the e-mail must arrive at a point where the recipient has control.
This section does not address the effect of an electronic record that is thereafter
"pulled back," e.g., removed from a mailbox. The analog in the paper world would
be removing a letter from a person's mailbox. As in the case of providing information
electronically under Section 8, the recipient's ability to receive a message
should be judged from the perspective of whether the sender has done any action
which would preclude retrieval. This is especially the case in regard to sending,
since the sender must direct the record to a system designated or used by the
recipient.
3. Subsection (b) provides simply that when a record enters
the system which the recipient has designated or uses and to which it has access,
in a form capable of being processed by that system, it is received. Keying
receipt to a system accessible by the recipient removes the potential for a
recipient leaving messages with a server or other service in order to avoid
receipt. However, the section does not resolve the issue of how the sender proves
the time of receipt.
To assure that the recipient retains control of the place of
receipt, subsection (b) requires that the system be specified or used by the
recipient, and that the system be used or designated for the type of record
being sent. Many people have multiple e-mail addresses for different purposes.
Subsection (b) assures that recipients can designate the e-mail address or system
to be used in a particular transaction. For example, the recipient retains the
ability to designate a home e-mail for personal matters, work e-mail for official
business, or a separate organizational e-mail solely for the business purposes
of that organization. If A sends B a notice at his home which relates to business,
it may not be deemed received if B designated his business address as the sole
address for business purposes. Whether actual knowledge upon seeing it at home
would qualify as receipt is determined under the otherwise applicable substantive
law.
4. Subsections (c) and (d) provide default rules for determining
where a record will be considered to have been sent or received. The focus is
on the place of business of the recipient and not the physical location of the
information processing system, which may bear absolutely no relation to the
transaction between the parties. It is not uncommon for users of electronic
commerce to communicate from one State to another without knowing the location
of information systems through which communication is operated. In addition,
the location of certain communication systems may change without either of the
parties being aware of the change. Accordingly, where the place of sending or
receipt is an issue under other applicable law, e.g., conflict of laws issues,
tax issues, the relevant location should be the location of the sender or recipient
and not the location of the information processing system.
Subsection (d) assures individual flexibility in designating
the place from which a record will be considered sent or at which a record will
be considered received. Under subsection (d) a person may designate the place
of sending or receipt unilaterally in an electronic record. This ability, as
with the ability to designate by agreement, may be limited by otherwise applicable
law to places having a reasonable relationship to the transaction.
5. Subsection (e) makes clear that receipt is not dependent
on a person having notice that the record is in the person's system. Receipt
occurs when the record reaches the designated system whether or not the recipient
ever retrieves the record. The paper analog is the recipient who never reads
a mail notice.
6. Subsection (f) provides legal certainty regarding the effect
of an electronic acknowledgment. It only addresses the fact of receipt, not
the quality of the content, nor whether the electronic record was read or "opened."
7. Subsection (g) limits the parties' ability to vary the method
for sending and receipt provided in subsections (a) and (b), when there is a
legal requirement for the sending or receipt. As in other circumstances where
legal requirements derive from other substantive law, to the extent that the
other law permits variation by agreement, this Act does not impose any additional
requirements, and provisions of this Act may be varied to the extent provided
in the other law.
SECTION 16. TRANSFERABLE RECORDS.
(a) In this section, "transferable record" means an electronic
record that:
(1) would be a note under [Article 3 of the Uniform Commercial
Code] or a document under [Article 7 of the Uniform Commercial Code] if the
electronic record were in writing; and
(2) the issuer of the electronic record expressly has agreed
is a transferable record.
(b) A person has control of a transferable record if a system
employed for evidencing the transfer of interests in the transferable record
reliably establishes that person as the person to which the transferable record
was issued or transferred.
(c) A system satisfies subsection (b), and a person is deemed
to have control of a transferable record, if the transferable record is created,
stored, and assigned in such a manner that:
(1) a single authoritative copy of the transferable record
exists which is unique, identifiable, and, except as otherwise provided in paragraphs
(4), (5), and (6), unalterable;
(2) the authoritative copy identifies the person asserting
control as:
(A) the person to which the transferable record was issued;
or
(B) if the authoritative copy indicates that the transferable
record has been transferred, the person to which the transferable record was
most recently transferred;
(3) the authoritative copy is communicated to and maintained
by the person asserting control or its designated custodian;
(4) copies or revisions that add or change an identified assignee
of the authoritative copy can be made only with the consent of the person asserting
control;
(5) each copy of the authoritative copy and any copy of a copy
is readily identifiable as a copy that is not the authoritative copy; and
(6) any revision of the authoritative copy is readily identifiable
as authorized or unauthorized.
(d) Except as otherwise agreed, a person having control of
a transferable record is the holder, as defined in [Section 1-201(20) of the
Uniform Commercial Code], of the transferable record and has the same rights
and defenses as a holder of an equivalent record or writing under [the Uniform
Commercial Code], including, if the applicable statutory requirements under
[Section 3-302(a), 7-501, or 9-308 of the Uniform Commercial Code] are satisfied,
the rights and defenses of a holder in due course, a holder to which a negotiable
document of title has been duly negotiated, or a purchaser, respectively. Delivery,
possession, and indorsement are not required to obtain or exercise any of the
rights under this subsection.
(e) Except as otherwise agreed, an obligor under a transferable
record has the same rights and defenses as an equivalent obligor under equivalent
records or writings under [the Uniform Commercial Code].
(f) If requested by a person against which enforcement is sought,
the person seeking to enforce the transferable record shall provide reasonable
proof that the person is in control of the transferable record. Proof may include
access to the authoritative copy of the transferable record and related business
records sufficient to review the terms of the transferable record and to establish
the identity of the person having control of the transferable record.
Source: Revised Article 9, Section 9-105.
Comment
1. Paper negotiable instruments and documents are unique in
the fact that a tangible token - a piece of paper - actually embodies
intangible rights and obligations. The extreme difficulty of creating a unique
electronic token which embodies the singular attributes of a paper negotiable
document or instrument dictates that the rules relating to negotiable documents
and instruments not be simply amended to allow the use of an electronic record
for the requisite paper writing. However, the desirability of establishing rules
by which business parties might be able to acquire some of the benefits of negotiability
in an electronic environment is recognized by the inclusion of this section
on Transferable Records.
This section provides legal support for the creation, transferability
and enforceability of electronic note and document equivalents, as against the
issuer/obligor. The certainty created by the section provides the requisite
incentive for industry to develop the systems and processes, which involve significant
expenditures of time and resources, to enable the use of such electronic documents.
The importance of facilitating the development of systems which
will permit electronic equivalents is a function of cost, efficiency and safety
for the records. The storage cost and space needed for the billions of paper
notes and documents is phenomenal. Further, natural disasters can wreak havoc
on the ability to meet legal requirements for retaining, retrieving and delivering
paper instruments. The development of electronic systems meeting the rigorous
standards of this section will permit retention of copies which reflect the
same integrity as the original. As a result storage, transmission and other
costs will be reduced, while security and the ability to satisfy legal requirements
governing such paper records will be enhanced.
Section 16 provides for the creation of an electronic record
which may be controlled by the holder, who in turn may obtain the benefits of
holder in due course and good faith purchaser status. If the benefits and efficiencies
of electronic media are to be realized in this industry it is essential to establish
a means by which transactions involving paper promissory notes may be accomplished
completely electronically. Particularly as other aspects of such transactions
are accomplished electronically, the drag on the transaction of requiring a
paper note becomes evident. In addition to alleviating the logistical problems
of generating, storing and retrieving paper, the mailing and transmission costs
associated with such transactions will also be reduced.
2. The definition of transferable record is limited in two
significant ways. First, only the equivalent of paper promissory notes and paper
documents of title can be created as transferable records. Notes and Documents
of Title do not impact the broad systems that relate to the broader payments
mechanisms related, for example, to checks. Impacting the check collection system
by allowing for "electronic checks" has ramifications well beyond the ability
of this Act to address. Accordingly, this Act excludes from its scope transactions
governed by UCC Articles 3 and 4. The limitation to promissory note equivalents
in Section 16 is quite important in that regard because of the ability to deal
with many enforcement issues by contract without affecting such systemic concerns.
Second, not only is Section 16 limited to electronic records
which would qualify as negotiable promissory notes or documents if they were
in writing, but the issuer of the electronic record must expressly agree that
the electronic record is to be considered a transferable record. The definition
of transferable record as "an electronic record that...the issuer of the electronic
record expressly has agreed is a transferable record" indicates that the electronic
record itself will likely set forth the issuer's agreement, though it may be
argued that a contemporaneous electronic or written record might set forth the
issuer's agreement. However, conversion of a paper note issued as such would
not be possible because the issuer would not be the issuer, in such a case,
of an electronic record. The purpose of such a restriction is to assure that
transferable records can only be created at the time of issuance by the obligor.
The possibility that a paper note might be converted to an electronic record
and then intentionally destroyed, and the effect of such action, was not intended
to be covered by Section 16.
The requirement that the obligor expressly agree in the electronic
record to its treatment as a transferable record does not otherwise affect the
characterization of a transferable record (i.e., does not affect what would
be a paper note) because it is a statutory condition. Further, it does not obligate
the issuer to undertake to do any other act than the payment of the obligation
evidenced by the transferable record. Therefore, it does not make the transferable
record "conditional" within the meaning of Section 3-104(a)(3) of the Uniform
Commercial Code.
3. Under Section 16 acquisition of "control" over an electronic
record serves as a substitute for "possession" in the paper analog. More precisely,
"control" under Section 16 serves as the substitute for delivery, indorsement
and possession of a negotiable promissory note or negotiable document of title.
Section 16(b) allows control to be found so long as "a system employed for evidencing
the transfer of interests in the transferable record reliably establishes [the
person claiming control] as the person to which the transferable record was
issued or transferred." The key point is that a system, whether involving third
party registry or technological safeguards, must be shown to reliably establish
the identity of the person entitled to payment. Section 16(c) then
sets forth a safe harbor list of very strict requirements for such a system.
The specific provisions listed in Section 16(c) are derived from Section 105
of Revised Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code. Generally, the transferable
record must be unique, identifiable, and except as specifically permitted, unalterable.
That "authoritative copy" must (i) identify the person claiming control as the
person to whom the record was issued or most recently transferred, (ii) be maintained
by the person claiming control or its designee, and (iii) be unalterable except
with the permission of the person claiming control. In addition any copy of
the authoritative copy must be readily identifiable as a copy and all revisions
must be readily identifiable as authorized or unauthorized.
The control requirements may be satisfied through the use of
a trusted third party registry system. Such systems are currently in place with
regard to the transfer of securities entitlements under Article 8 of the Uniform
Commercial Code, and in the transfer of cotton warehouse receipts under the
program sponsored by the United States Department of Agriculture. This Act would
recognize the use of such a system so long as the standards of subsection (c)
were satisfied. In addition, a technological system which met such exacting
standards would also be permitted under Section 16.
For example, a borrower signs an electronic record which would
be a promissory note or document if it were paper. The borrower specifically
agrees in the electronic record that it will qualify as a transferable record
under this section. The lender implements a newly developed technological system
which dates, encrypts, and stores all the electronic information in the transferable
record in a manner which lender can demonstrate reliably establishes lender
as the person to which the transferable record was issued. In the alternative,
the lender may contract with a third party to act as a registry for all such
transferable records, retaining records establishing the party to whom the record
was issued and all subsequent transfers of the record. An example of this latter
method for assuring control is the system established for the issuance and transfer
of electronic cotton warehouse receipts under 7 C.F.R. section 735 et seq.
Of greatest importance in the system used is the ability to
securely and demonstrably be able to transfer the record to others in a manner
which assures that only one "holder" exists. The need for such certainty and
security resulted in the very stringent standards for a system outlined in subsection
(c). A system relying on a third party registry is likely the most effective
way to satisfy the requirements of subsection (c) that the transferable record
remain unique, identifiable and unalterable, while also providing the means
to assure that the transferee is clearly noted and identified.
It must be remembered that Section 16 was drafted in order
to provide sufficient legal certainty regarding the rights of those in control
of such electronic records, that legal incentives would exist to warrant the
development of systems which would establish the requisite control. During the
drafting of Section 16, representatives from the Federal Reserve carefully scrutinized
the impact of any electronicization of any aspect of the national payment system.
Section 16 represents a compromise position which, as noted, serves as a bridge
pending more detailed study and consideration of what legal changes, if any,
are necessary or appropriate in the context of the payment systems impacted.
Accordingly, Section 16 provides limited scope for the attainment of important
rights derived from the concept of negotiability, in order to permit the development
of systems which will satisfy its strict requirements for control.
4. It is important to note what the section does not provide.
Issues related to enforceability against intermediate transferees and transferors
(i.e., indorser liability under a paper note), warranty liability that would
attach in a paper note, and issues of the effect of taking a transferable record
on the underlying obligation, are NOT addressed by this section. Such matters
must be addressed, if at all, by contract between and among the parties in the
chain of transmission and transfer of the transferable record. In the event
that such matters are not addressed by the contract, the issues would need to
be resolved under otherwise applicable law. Other law may include general contract
principles of assignment and assumption, or may include rules from Article 3
of the Uniform Commercial Code applied by analogy.
For example, Issuer agrees to pay a debt by means of a transferable
record issued to A. Unless there is agreement between issuer and A that the
transferable record "suspends" the underlying obligation (see Section 3-310
of the Uniform Commercial Code), A would not be prevented from enforcing the
underlying obligation without the transferable record. Similarly, if A transfers
the transferable record to B by means granting B control, B may obtain holder
in due course rights against the obligor/issuer, but B's recourse against A
would not be clear unless A agreed to remain liable under the transferable record.
Although the rules of Article 3 may be applied by analogy in an appropriate
context, in the absence of an express agreement in the transferable record or
included by applicable system rules, the liability of the transferor would not
be clear.
5. Current business models exist which rely for their efficacy
on the benefits of negotiability. A principal example, and one which informed
much of the development of Section 16, involves the mortgage backed securities
industry. Aggregators of commercial paper acquire mortgage secured promissory
notes following a chain of transfers beginning with the origination of the mortgage
loan by a mortgage broker. In the course of the transfers of this paper, buyers
of the notes and lenders/secured parties for these buyers will intervene. For
the ultimate purchaser of the paper, the ability to rely on holder in due course
and good faith purchaser status creates the legal security necessary to issue
its own investment securities which are backed by the obligations evidenced
by the notes purchased. Only through their HIDC status can these purchasers
be assured that third party claims will be barred. Only through their HIDC status
can the end purchaser avoid the incredible burden of requiring and assuring
that each person in the chain of transfer has waived any and all defenses to
performance which may be created during the chain of transfer.
6. This section is a stand-alone provision. Although references
are made to specific provisions in Article 3, Article 7, and Article 9 of the
Uniform Commercial Code, these provisions are incorporated into this Act and
made the applicable rules for purposes of this Act. The rights of parties to
transferable records are established under subsections (d) and (e). Subsection
(d) provides rules for determining the rights of a party in control of a transferable
record. The subsection makes clear that the rights are determined under this
section, and not under other law, by incorporating the rules on the manner of
acquisition into this statute. The last sentence of subsection (d) is intended
to assure that requirements related to notions of possession, which are inherently
inconsistent with the idea of an electronic record, are not incorporated into
this statute.
If a person establishes control, Section 16(d) provides that
that person is the "holder" of the transferable record which is equivalent to
a holder of an analogous paper negotiable instrument. More importantly, if the
person acquired control in a manner which would make it a holder in due course
of an equivalent paper record, the person acquires the rights of a HIDC. The
person in control would therefore be able to enforce the transferable record
against the obligor regardless of intervening claims and defenses. However,
by pulling these rights into Section 16, this Act does NOT validate the wholesale
electrification of promissory notes under Article 3 of the Uniform Commercial
Code.
Further, it is important to understand that a transferable
record under Section 16, while having no counterpart under Article 3 of the
Uniform Commercial Code, would be an "account," "general intangible," or "payment
intangible" under Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code. Accordingly, two
separate bodies of law would apply to that asset of the obligee. A taker of
the transferable record under Section 16 may acquire purchaser rights under
Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code, however, those rights may be defeated
by a trustee in bankruptcy of a prior person in control unless perfection under
Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code by filing is achieved. If the person
in control also takes control in a manner granting it holder in due course status,
of course that person would take free of any claim by a bankruptcy trustee or
lien creditor.
7. Subsection (e) accords to the obligor of the transferable
record rights equal to those of an obligor under an equivalent paper record.
Accordingly, unless a waiver of defense clause is obtained in the electronic
record, or the transferee obtains HDC rights under subsection (d), the obligor
has all the rights and defenses available to it under a contract assignment.
Additionally, the obligor has the right to have the payment noted or otherwise
included as part of the electronic record.
8. Subsection (f) grants the obligor the right to have the
transferable record and other information made available for purposes of assuring
the correct person to pay. This will allow the obligor to protect its interest
and obtain the defense of discharge by payment or performance. This is particularly
important because a person receiving subsequent control under the appropriate
circumstances may well qualify as a holder in course who can enforce payment
of the transferable record.
9. Section 16 is a singular exception to the thrust of this
Act to simply validate electronic media used in commercial transactions. Section
16 actually provides a means for expanding electronic commerce. It provides
certainty to lenders and investors regarding the enforceability of a new class
of financial services. It is hoped that the legal protections afforded by Section
16 will engender the development of technological and business models which
will permit realization of the significant cost savings and efficiencies available
through electronic transacting in the financial services industry. Although
only a bridge to more detailed consideration of the broad issues related to
negotiability in an electronic context, Section 16 provides the impetus for
that broader consideration while allowing continuation of developing technological
and business models.
[SECTION 17. CREATION AND RETENTION OF ELECTRONIC RECORDS
AND CONVERSION OF WRITTEN RECORDS BY GOVERNMENTAL AGENCIES. [Each governmental
agency] [The [designated state officer]] of this State shall determine whether,
and the extent to which, [it] [a governmental agency] will create and retain
electronic records and convert written records to electronic records.]
Comment
See Comments following Section 19.
[SECTION 18. ACCEPTANCE AND DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRONIC
RECORDS BY GOVERNMENTAL AGENCIES.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in Section 12(f), [each governmental
agency] [the [designated state officer]] of this State shall determine whether,
and the extent to which, [it] [a governmental agency] will send and accept electronic
records and electronic signatures to and from other persons and otherwise create,
generate, communicate, store, process, use, and rely upon electronic records
and electronic signatures.
(b) To the extent that a governmental agency uses electronic
records and electronic signatures under subsection (a), the [governmental agency]
[designated state officer], giving due consideration to security, may specify:
(1) the manner and format in which the electronic records must
be created, generated, sent, communicated, received, and stored and the systems
established for those purposes;
(2) if electronic records must be signed by electronic means,
the type of electronic signature required, the manner and format in which the
electronic signature must be affixed to the electronic record, and the identity
of, or criteria that must be met by, any third party used by a person filing
a document to facilitate the process;
(3) control processes and procedures as appropriate to ensure
adequate preservation, disposition, integrity, security, confidentiality, and
auditability of electronic records; and
(4) any other required attributes for electronic records which
are specified for corresponding nonelectronic records or reasonably necessary
under the circumstances.
(c) Except as otherwise provided in Section 12(f), this [Act]
does not require a governmental agency of this State to use or permit the use
of electronic records or electronic signatures.]
Source: Illinois Act Section 25-101; Florida
Electronic Signature Act, Chapter 96-324, Section 7 (1996).
Comment
See Comments following Section 19.
[SECTION 19. INTEROPERABILITY. The [governmental
agency] [designated officer] of this State which adopts standards pursuant to
Section 18 may encourage and promote consistency and interoperability with similar
requirements adopted by other governmental agencies of this and other States
and the federal government and nongovernmental persons interacting with governmental
agencies of this State. If appropriate, those standards may specify differing
levels of standards from which governmental agencies of this State may choose
in implementing the most appropriate standard for a particular application.]
Source: Illinois Act Section 25-115.
See Legislative Note below - Following Comments.
Comment
1. Sections 17-19 have been bracketed as optional provisions
to be considered for adoption by each State. Among the barriers to electronic
commerce are barriers which exist in the use of electronic media by state governmental
agencies - whether among themselves or in external dealing with the private
sector. In those circumstances where the government acts as a commercial party,
e.g., in areas of procurement, the general validation provisions of this Act
will apply. That is to say, the government must agree to conduct transactions
electronically with vendors and customers of government services.
However, there are other circumstances when government ought
to establish the ability to proceed in transactions electronically. Whether
in regard to records and communications within and between governmental agencies,
or with respect to information and filings which must be made with governmental
agencies, these sections allow a State to establish the ground work for such
electronicization.
2. The provisions in Sections 17-19 are broad and very general.
In many States they will be unnecessary because enacted legislation designed
to facilitate governmental use of electronic records and communications is in
place. However, in many States broad validating rules are needed and desired.
Accordingly, this Act provides these sections as a baseline.
Of paramount importance in all States however, is the need
for States to assure that whatever systems and rules are adopted, the systems
established are compatible with the systems of other governmental agencies and
with common systems in the private sector. A very real risk exists that implementation
of systems by myriad governmental agencies and offices may create barriers because
of a failure to consider compatibility, than would be the case otherwise.
3. The provisions in Section 17-19 are broad and general to
provide the greatest flexibility and adaptation to the specific needs of the
individual States. The differences and variations in the organization and structure
of governmental agencies mandates this approach. However, it is imperative that
each State always keep in mind the need to prevent the erection of barriers
through appropriate coordination of systems and rules within the parameters
set by the State.
4. Section 17 authorizes state agencies to use electronic records
and electronic signatures generally for intra-governmental purposes, and to
convert written records and manual signatures to electronic records and electronic
signatures. By its terms the section gives enacting legislatures the option
to leave the decision to use electronic records or convert written records and
signatures to the governmental agency or assign that duty to a designated state
officer. It also authorizes the destruction of written records after conversion
to electronic form.
5. Section 18 broadly authorizes state agencies to send and
receive electronic records and signatures in dealing with non-governmental persons.
Again, the provision is permissive and not obligatory (see subsection (c)).
However, it does provide specifically that with respect to electronic records
used for evidentiary purposes, Section 12 will apply unless a particular agency
expressly opts out.
6. Section 19 is the most important section of the three. It
requires governmental agencies or state officers to take account of consistency
in applications and interoperability to the extent practicable when promulgating
standards. This section is critical in addressing the concern that inconsistent
applications may promote barriers greater than currently exist. Without such
direction the myriad systems that could develop independently would be new barriers
to electronic commerce, not a removal of barriers. The key to interoperability
is flexibility and adaptability. The requirement of a single system may be as
big a barrier as the proliferation of many disparate systems.
Legislative Note Regarding Adoption of Sections
17-19
1. Sections 17-19 are optional sections for consideration by
individual legislatures for adoption, and have been bracketed to make this clear.
The inclusion or exclusion of Sections 17-19 will not have a detrimental impact
on the uniformity of adoption of this Act, so long as Sections 1-16 are adopted
uniformly as presented. In some States Sections 17-19 will be unnecessary because
legislation is already in place to authorize and implement government use of
electronic media. However, the general authorization provided by Sections 17-19
may be critical in some States which desire to move forward in this area.
2. In the event that a state legislature chooses to adopt Sections
17-19, a number of issues must be addressed:
A. Is the general authorization to adopt electronic media,
provided by Sections 17-19 sufficient for the needs of the particular jurisdiction,
or is more detailed and specific authorization necessary? This determination
may be affected by the decision regarding the appropriate entity or person to
oversee implementation of the use of electronic media (See next paragraph).
Sections 17-19 are broad and general in the authorization granted. Certainly
greater specificity can be added subsequent to adoption of these sections. The
question for the legislature is whether greater direction and specificity is
needed at this time. If so, the legislature should not enact Sections 17-19
at this time.
B. Assuming a legislature decides to enact Sections 17-19,
what entity or person should oversee implementation of the government's use
of electronic media? As noted in each of Sections 17-19, again by brackets,
a choice must be made regarding the entity to make critical decisions regarding
the systems and rules which will govern the use of electronic media by the State.
Each State will need to consider its particular structure and administration
in making this determination. However, legislatures are strongly encouraged
to make compatibility and interoperability considerations paramount in making
this determination.
C. Finally, a decision will have to be made regarding the process
by which coordination of electronic systems will occur between the various branches
of state government and among the various levels of government within the State.
Again this will require consideration of the unique situation in each State.
3. If a State chooses not to enact Sections 17-19, UETA Sections
1-16 will still apply to governmental entities when acting as a "person" engaging
in "transactions" within its scope. The definition of transaction includes "governmental
affairs." Of course, like any other party, the circumstances surrounding a transaction
must indicate that the governmental actor has agreed to act electronically (See
Section 5(b)), but otherwise all the provisions of Sections 1-16 will apply
to validate the use of electronic records and signatures in transactions involving
governmental entities.
If a State does choose to enact Sections 17-19, Sections 1-16
will continue to apply as above. In addition, Sections 17-19 will provide authorization
for intra-governmental uses of electronic media. Finally, Sections 17-19 provide
a broader authorization for the State to develop systems and procedures for
the use of electronic media in its relations with non-governmental entities
and persons.
SECTION 20. SEVERABILITY CLAUSE. If any provision
of this [Act] or its application to any person or circumstance is held invalid,
the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of this [Act]
which can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and
to this end the provisions of this [Act] are severable.
SECTION 21. EFFECTIVE DATE. This [Act] takes
effect .........................