Electronic Form Over Substance - eSignature Laws Need Upgrades

L. Determann
{"title":"Electronic Form Over Substance - eSignature Laws Need Upgrades","authors":"L. Determann","doi":"10.2139/ssrn.3436327","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Most professionals and others generally favor substance over form. Yet, with respect to form itself, more and more favor electronic form over substantive media and signatures: Companies, consumers and governments increasingly use electronic communications, documents and signatures instead of ink and paper. At the same time, many remain unsure about the legality or effectiveness of different forms of electronic signatures and find laws on the subject confusing. \n \nPart of the confusion stems from the fact that lawmakers have not differentiated clearly enough between transactions, documents and signatures in current legislation. These are separate concepts. Only documents and signatures, not transactions, can be in electronic form. Transactions and other legally relevant actions, decisions and declarations can be recorded in documents and effectuated with signatures. Documents and signatures can be created or copied electronically or in other formats. Transactions on the other hand exist in the abstract and independent of the electronic or other form in which they may be documented or signed. \n \nIn practice, people commonly ask whether electronic signatures are legal. But, the more relevant questions to ask are whether electronic signatures are effective and binding, whether they meet statutory form requirements, whether they protect interests as well as handwritten signatures on paper documents, and whether one is required to create, obtain or retain paper documents with handwritten signatures in addition to electronic records and signatures. To better answer these and other questions, one has to consult not only newer laws specifically regulating electronic signatures and documents, but also older laws prescribing form requirements. Many older laws do not contemplate modern technologies and therefore do not give clear answers as to whether one can satisfy form requirements electronically. \n \nNumerous different form requirements apply in myriad use cases and jurisdictions with respect to particular transactions, documents and signatures. Legal and political uncertainties hinder adoption of electronic signatures and global harmonization of applicable laws. Existing laws are complex, confusing and diverse due to historic factors: When electronic signatures and documents were first adopted more widely, lawmakers were uncertain regarding the purposes of existing form requirements, how well electronic signatures can address purposes of form requirements, which technologies will be adopted by businesses and consumers, and what legal problems could arise from forgeries. Additionally, lawmakers had reason to be concerned that businesses and consumers would need some time to adapt to new technologies and realize and handle the binding effect of electronically issued declarations. These considerations may have provided a valid excuse in the mid-1990s for somewhat timid, complex and consciously incomplete and experimental legislation, but twenty years later, they no longer do. It is time for change. \n \nLawmakers can and should improve electronic signature laws and harmonize them internationally with: \n clearer default rules favoring electronic form; at a minimum, Congress should adopt UETA's default rule in ESIGN so it applies in all U.S. states \n whitelists enumerating transactions that can be effected with electronic documents and signatures  blacklists enumerating transactions that require different forms based on compelling needs; Congress should reconsider, reduce, and render more detailed, the existing exceptions in ESIGN and UETA, as Singapore is considering according to a request for public comments in June 2019 \n uniform terminology and simple definitions \n clear conflicts of law rules, ideally permissive ones, possibly paired with bilateral or multilateral recognition or adequacy arrangements to drive international harmonization. \n \nAt the same time, lawmakers should abandon overly prescriptive regulations that require qualified electronic signatures certified by nationally licensed providers, because such constructs hinder international harmonization, have not been widely adopted in the past and show little chance or need of being adopted going forward. \n \nThis Article analyzes the current landscape, applicable legislation and options for change. Following an introduction, this Article clarifies terms and definitions in Part I, reviews the history and rationale of form requirements outside the electronic sphere in Part II, compares the advantages and disadvantages of electronic signatures and documents in Part III, examines basic approaches for legislation and their potential impact on public and individual interests in Part IV, describes and compares current electronic signature legislation based on research of more than 60 jurisdictions in Part V, examines effects of international divergence in Part VI, proposes policy arguments for changes in Part VII, and concludes with a summary.","PeriodicalId":126321,"journal":{"name":"UC Hastings Law Legal Studies Research Paper Series","volume":"67 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-08-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"UC Hastings Law Legal Studies Research Paper Series","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3436327","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2

Abstract

Most professionals and others generally favor substance over form. Yet, with respect to form itself, more and more favor electronic form over substantive media and signatures: Companies, consumers and governments increasingly use electronic communications, documents and signatures instead of ink and paper. At the same time, many remain unsure about the legality or effectiveness of different forms of electronic signatures and find laws on the subject confusing. Part of the confusion stems from the fact that lawmakers have not differentiated clearly enough between transactions, documents and signatures in current legislation. These are separate concepts. Only documents and signatures, not transactions, can be in electronic form. Transactions and other legally relevant actions, decisions and declarations can be recorded in documents and effectuated with signatures. Documents and signatures can be created or copied electronically or in other formats. Transactions on the other hand exist in the abstract and independent of the electronic or other form in which they may be documented or signed. In practice, people commonly ask whether electronic signatures are legal. But, the more relevant questions to ask are whether electronic signatures are effective and binding, whether they meet statutory form requirements, whether they protect interests as well as handwritten signatures on paper documents, and whether one is required to create, obtain or retain paper documents with handwritten signatures in addition to electronic records and signatures. To better answer these and other questions, one has to consult not only newer laws specifically regulating electronic signatures and documents, but also older laws prescribing form requirements. Many older laws do not contemplate modern technologies and therefore do not give clear answers as to whether one can satisfy form requirements electronically. Numerous different form requirements apply in myriad use cases and jurisdictions with respect to particular transactions, documents and signatures. Legal and political uncertainties hinder adoption of electronic signatures and global harmonization of applicable laws. Existing laws are complex, confusing and diverse due to historic factors: When electronic signatures and documents were first adopted more widely, lawmakers were uncertain regarding the purposes of existing form requirements, how well electronic signatures can address purposes of form requirements, which technologies will be adopted by businesses and consumers, and what legal problems could arise from forgeries. Additionally, lawmakers had reason to be concerned that businesses and consumers would need some time to adapt to new technologies and realize and handle the binding effect of electronically issued declarations. These considerations may have provided a valid excuse in the mid-1990s for somewhat timid, complex and consciously incomplete and experimental legislation, but twenty years later, they no longer do. It is time for change. Lawmakers can and should improve electronic signature laws and harmonize them internationally with:  clearer default rules favoring electronic form; at a minimum, Congress should adopt UETA's default rule in ESIGN so it applies in all U.S. states  whitelists enumerating transactions that can be effected with electronic documents and signatures  blacklists enumerating transactions that require different forms based on compelling needs; Congress should reconsider, reduce, and render more detailed, the existing exceptions in ESIGN and UETA, as Singapore is considering according to a request for public comments in June 2019  uniform terminology and simple definitions  clear conflicts of law rules, ideally permissive ones, possibly paired with bilateral or multilateral recognition or adequacy arrangements to drive international harmonization. At the same time, lawmakers should abandon overly prescriptive regulations that require qualified electronic signatures certified by nationally licensed providers, because such constructs hinder international harmonization, have not been widely adopted in the past and show little chance or need of being adopted going forward. This Article analyzes the current landscape, applicable legislation and options for change. Following an introduction, this Article clarifies terms and definitions in Part I, reviews the history and rationale of form requirements outside the electronic sphere in Part II, compares the advantages and disadvantages of electronic signatures and documents in Part III, examines basic approaches for legislation and their potential impact on public and individual interests in Part IV, describes and compares current electronic signature legislation based on research of more than 60 jurisdictions in Part V, examines effects of international divergence in Part VI, proposes policy arguments for changes in Part VII, and concludes with a summary.
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电子形式胜于实质——签名法需要升级
大多数专业人士和其他人通常更喜欢实质而不是形式。然而,就形式本身而言,越来越多的人青睐电子形式,而不是实体媒体和签名:公司、消费者和政府越来越多地使用电子通信、文件和签名,而不是墨水和纸张。与此同时,许多人仍然不确定不同形式的电子签名的合法性或有效性,并发现有关该主题的法律令人困惑。造成这种混淆的部分原因是,立法者在现行立法中没有足够清楚地区分交易、文件和签名。这些是不同的概念。只有文件和签名,而不是交易,可以采用电子形式。交易和其他与法律有关的行为、决定和声明可以记录在文件中,并通过签名生效。文件和签名可以以电子或其他格式创建或复制。另一方面,交易是抽象存在的,独立于电子形式或其他可以记录或签署的形式。在实践中,人们通常会问电子签名是否合法。但是,更相关的问题是,电子签名是否有效和具有约束力,是否符合法定形式要求,它们是否像保护纸质文件上的手写签名一样保护利益,以及除了电子记录和签名之外,是否需要创建、获取或保留带有手写签名的纸质文件。为了更好地回答这些问题和其他问题,人们不仅要查阅专门规范电子签名和文件的新法律,还要查阅规定表格要求的旧法律。许多旧的法律没有考虑到现代技术,因此没有给出明确的答案,一个人是否可以满足电子形式的要求。针对特定的事务、文档和签名,在无数的用例和管辖范围中应用许多不同的表单需求。法律和政治的不确定性阻碍了电子签名的采用和适用法律的全球协调。由于历史因素,现有的法律是复杂的、令人困惑的和多样化的:当电子签名和文件第一次被更广泛地采用时,立法者不确定现有形式要求的目的,电子签名能在多大程度上满足形式要求的目的,哪些技术将被企业和消费者采用,以及伪造可能产生哪些法律问题。此外,立法者有理由担心,企业和消费者将需要一些时间来适应新技术,并认识和处理电子发布声明的约束力。在20世纪90年代中期,这些考虑可能为有些胆怯、复杂、有意识地不完整和实验性的立法提供了一个有效的借口,但20年后,它们不再是这样了。是时候做出改变了。立法者可以而且应该改进电子签名法律,并在国际上与之协调一致:至少,国会应该采用UETA在ESIGN中的默认规则,使其适用于美国所有州。白名单列举了可以通过电子文档和签名进行的交易。黑名单列举了根据迫切需要需要不同形式的交易。国会应该重新考虑、减少和提供更详细的ESIGN和UETA现有的例外情况,正如新加坡根据2019年6月的公众意见征询所考虑的那样。统一的术语和简单的定义。明确的法律冲突规则,理想情况下是允许的,可能与双边或多边承认或适当安排相结合,以推动国际协调。与此同时,立法者应该放弃要求由国家许可的供应商认证的合格电子签名的过于规定性的规定,因为这种结构阻碍了国际协调,过去没有被广泛采用,并且几乎没有机会或需要被采用。本文分析了目前的情况,适用的立法和改变的选择。在引言之后,本文在第一部分中澄清了术语和定义,在第二部分中回顾了电子领域之外的形式要求的历史和基本原理,在第三部分中比较了电子签名和文件的优缺点,在第四部分中考察了立法的基本方法及其对公共和个人利益的潜在影响。第五部分基于对60多个司法管辖区的研究,描述和比较了当前的电子签名立法,第六部分考察了国际分歧的影响,第七部分提出了变化的政策论据,并以总结结尾。
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