Supplementary
to the Federal Trade Commission
and
Department
of Commerce
National
Telecommunications and Information Administration
Electronic
Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act
E-SIGN Study – Comment P004102
Introduction
On behalf of its low income clients, the National
Consumer Law Center
submits these supplementary comments to address a number of
questions which arose during the workshop conducted on April 3, 2001.
I.
The three distinct benefits of the electronic consent
requirement.
The electronic consent requirement was included in
the E-Sign legislation to protect consumers in a number of ways.
Clearly, one reason was to protect consumers from the use of
electronic commerce to facilitate fraud on consumers.
However, it is clear from the Congressional record that the
electronic consent is also intended to create a type of electronic
handshake between the parties – a means to ensure that the electronic
communication will in fact be successful.
It is also apparent that the electronic consent is meant to
emphasize to the parties the significance of the agreement to receive
records electronically and to ensure that there is actually a meeting of
the minds.
The three distinct but related protections afforded
by the requirement for a consumer to electronically consent are:
-
To
ensure that the consumer has reasonable access to a computer and the
Internet to be able to access information provided electronically.
-
To
ensure that the consumer’s means of access to electronically
provided information includes the software to read the electronic
records provided.
-
To
underscore to the consumer the fact that by electronically
consenting, the consumer is agreeing to receive the described
information electronically in the future.
Senator Leahy emphasized
these differences when he said on the floor of the Senate, regarding the
passage of E-Sign:
[This bill] avoids
facilitating predatory or unlawful practices. . . . [It] will ensure
informed and effective consumer consent to replacement of paper notices
and disclosures with electronic notices and disclosures, so that
consumers are not forced or tricked into receiving notices and
disclosures in an electronic form that they cannot access or decipher.
. . . I maintained that
any standard for affirmative consent must require consumers to consent
electronically to the provision of electronic notices and disclosures
in a manner that verified the consumer’s capacity to access the information
in the form in which it would be sent.
Such a mechanism provides a check against coercion, and additional
assurance that the consumer actually has an operating e-mail address
and the other technical means for accessing the information.
(Emphasis added)
II. The
meaning of the statutory mandate that the electronic consent be executed
“in a manner that reasonably demonstrates” that the consumer can access
electronic information.
At the workshop there were
some questions raised regarding the extent of the legislative
requirement in E-Sign that the electronic consent be accomplished “in
a manner that reasonably demonstrates that the consumer can access
information in the electronic form that will be used to provide the
information . . .” E-Sign,
section 101(c)(1)(C)(ii).
The issue is whether the
consent process itself must electronically indicate that the consumer
can access the electronic records provided, or whether this requirement
is satisfied by allowing the consumer the opportunity to test his
capacity to access the electronic records. The example used to test this
question was whether the requirement for an electronic consent was
accompished when an email that included an attachment in PDF format
simply required the consumer provided to respond by email and affirm
that the consumer could access the PDF attachment.
The answer is unequivocal: unless the consumer’s email response
contains some information that necessitated the consumer’s actual
opening of the PDF attachment, this electronic consent would not satisfy
the statutory requirement.
The statutory language itself
is clear: “in a manner which demonstrates that the consumer can
access” does not permit the consumer to simply affirm that access.
The operation of consenting itself must provide the
demonstration. This was a
matter of considerable debate during the passage of E-Sign.
Consumer advocates insisted that the electronic consent process
test the consumer’s computer’s capacity to access the electronically
provided information. We did not want to leave it to the consumer’s subjective
understanding of his or her computer’s capacity. Every person who has ever received e-mail with attachments
has found themselves unable to open some of those attachments.
The electronic consent requirement mandates an electronic
handshake – whereby the two computers communicating are assured that
they can each open and read the electronic information to be shared
between them.
This issue itself was the
matter of extensive comment by Members of Congress involved in the
passage of E-Sign. Consider
the following excerpts from the Congressional Record regarding the
language in 101(c)(1)(C)(ii).
By Senator Leahy:
Section 101(c) of the conference
report requires the use of a technological check, while leaving companies
with ample flexibility to develop their own procedures.
The critical language, which Senator Wyden and I developed and
proposed, provides that a consumer’s consent to the provision of information
in electronic form must involve a demonstration that the consumer
can actually receive and read the information.
Section 101(c) also provides that if there is a material
change in the hardware or software requirements needed to access or
retain the information, the company must again verify that the consumer
can receive and read the information, or allow the consumer to withdraw
his or her consent without the imposition of any conditions, consequences
or fees.
A joint statement by Senators
Hollings, Wyden and Sarbanes, confirms this:
Today, many different technologies
can be used to deliver information – each with its own hardware and
software requirements. An
individual may not know whether the hardware and software on his or
her computer will allow a particular technology to operate.
(All of us have had the experience of being unable to open an
e-mail attachment.) Most
individuals lack the technological sophistication to know the exact
technical specifications of their computer equipment and software.
It is appropriate to require companies to establish an “electronic
connection” with their customers in order to provide assurance that
the consumer will be able to access the information in the electronic
form in which it will be sent. This one-time “electronic check”
can be as simple as an e-mail to the customer asking the customer to
confirm that the or she was able to open the attachment (if the
company plans to send notices to the customer via e-mail attachments)
and a reply from the customer confirming that he or she was able
to open the attachment. (Emphasis added.)
By Mr. Tauzin:
S.
761, I must also mention, provides for extensive consumer
protection. Not only are
existing state and federal consumer protection laws unaffected, bu the
provisions regarding consent afford consumers with the greatest possible
safeguards against fraud imaginable.
Consumers must opt-in to electronic transactions, receive full
disclosure of terms and conditions, and ultimately prove that they
can electronically access and retain the information that is the subject
of the consent. I
submit that in all my time in Congress, I have never seen a more
involved statutory framework for purposes of manifesting consent.
(Emphasis added.)
III. The
legal consequences of a failure to obtain properly the consumer’s electronic
consent on records delivered electronically, in light of the savings
provision in E-Sign section 101(c)(3).
There was some confusion
among participants on the panels at the workshop about the legal
consequences of the failure to obtain electronic consent.
One participant insisted on referring to the whole electronic
consent provision as simply a safe harbor.
This participant argued that a failure to comply fully with the
consent provision did not, by itself, mean that the electronic
delivery of records otherwise required to be in writing was not
accomplished.
We could not disagree with
this more strongly. Unequivocally,
the consumer consent provision in E-Sign establishes an “opt-in”
regime. No records required
to be in writing can be considered to be provided to a consumer if they
were provided electronically, unless the consumer consented
properly according to the requirements of 101(c).
The consequences of that lack of consent are whatever
consequences there are in the underlying law for the failure to deliver
documents required to be in writing to the consumer.
For example, if a state law states that a particular fee cannot
be charged unless the consumer has been notified in writing that it will
be charged, then the electronic delivery of that notice is invalid if
the consumer’s consent did not comply with all of the requirements of
101(c). In this instance,
that would mean that the imposition of the fee would be illegal.
E-Sign specifically
distinguishes between its treatment of contracts and other records
required to be in writing. There
is a very limited, but clear, difference in the treatment of electronic
contracts and other records provided electronically to consumers in
section 101(c)(3), which says:
The legal effectiveness,
validity, or enforceability of any contract executed by a consumer shall
not be denied solely because of the failure to obtain electronic consent
or confirmation of consent by that consumer in accordance with paragraph
(1)(C)(ii).
This section indicates that
the contract itself shall not be considered invalid just because the
consumer did not electronically consent in conformance with the
requirements of the statutory requirement.
So, for example, a contract which was delivered electronically
despite the fact that the consumer did not electronically consent, may
still be fully enforceable. The
effect of the failure to electronically consent has the same effect as
failing to provide a copy of the contract to the consumer.
In some cases, there may be no consequences from this.
A contract enforced under the statute of frauds, for example,
must be in writing and signed by the person against whom enforcement is
sought. But this contract does not need to have been provided to
the person against whom it is being enforced.
If a contract governed only by the statute of frauds were entered
into electronically by a consumer and a business, and the consumer had not
electronically consented, then the contract would not be deemed unenforceable
just because of the failure to obtain the consumer’s consent.
(However, the fact that the consumer had not electronically consented
could be raised to show that there had not been a meeting of the minds,
or that the electronic signature did not actually belong to the
consumer. There would be no bar against the consumer making some other
argument to show that the contract could not be enforced against him.)
However, in many states, the
failure to provide a copy of a small loan contract to a consumer carries
the statutory consequence that the contract may be unenforceable against
the consumer.
Assume a consumer is
provided with a copy of a contract governed by such a law only
electronically, even though the consumer has not electronically
consented to receive electronic records in a manner which complies with
the requirements of section 101(c)(1)(C)(ii). In that case, the
electronically delivered contract is not denied legal effect solely
because of the failure to obtain electronic consent.
Instead it is denied because it was not delivered to the consumer
as was required by the underlying law, because the consumer’s lack of
electronic consent meant that the contract was not provided to
the consumer.
There need not be such
complex analysis applied to the situation where a consumer has failed to
electronically consent to receive records which are not contracts. The
legal requirement in E-Sign for a consumer’s consent is only triggered
by the requirement of another law for a document to be in writing.
Therefore, if the consumer has not properly consented to the receipt of
that writing electronically – by electronically consenting pursuant to
section 101(c)(1)(C)(ii) – the document cannot be considered to have
been provided to the consumer. The consequences for not providing the
document to the consumer are those that are specified in the underlying
law.
To sum up, pursuant to
section 101(c)(3), the electronic consent requirement does not
invalidate the contract, but it can invalidate the delivery of
that contract. But if delivery
is required by the other law governing the contract then the
repercussions flowing from the failure to deliver, including
invalidation of the contract, should result if electronic delivery is
not secured in compliance with E-Sign’s requirements.
Conclusion
On behalf of our low income
clients, we appreciate this opportunity to provide the Federal Trade
Commission and the Department of Commerce with our views on the very
important issues considered. Please
feel free to call on us for further clarification, at any time.
The National Consumer
Law Center is a
nonprofit organization specializing in consumer issues on behalf of
low-income people. We
work with thousands of legal services, government and private
attorneys, as well as community
groups and organizations, from all states who represent
low-income and elderly individuals on consumer issues. As a result
of our daily contact with these advocates, we have seen examples of
predatory practices against low-income people in almost every state
in the union. It is
from this vantage point – many years of dealing with the abusive
transactions thrust upon the less sophisticated and less powerful in
our communities – that we supply these comments. We publish and
annually supplement twelve practice treatises which describe the law
currently applicable to all types of consumer transactions. These
comments are written by Margot Saunders, Managing Attorney of
NCLC’s Washington office.
146
Cong. Rec. S5219-5222 (daily ed. June 15, 2000) (statement of Sen.
Leahy).
146
Cong. Rec. S 5229-5230 (daily ed. June 15, 2000) (statement of Sens.
Hollings, Wyden and Sarbanes).
146
Cong. Rec. H4360 (daily
ed. June 14, 2000) (statement of Mr.
Tauzin).
See e.g. U.C.C. § 2-201. Formal Requirements; Statute of
Frauds
(1) . . .A contract for
the sale of goods for the price of $500 or more is not enforceable
by way of action or defense unless there is some writing sufficient
to indicate that a contract for sale has been made between the
parties and signed by the party against whom enforcement has been
sought . . . .
See e.g. the law in North Carolina governing small
consumer loans:
“(a) At the time a loan
is made, the licensee shall deliver to the borrower . . a copy of
the loan contract . . . “ N.C.G.S. § 53-181.
The consequences under
state law for failure to deliver the loan contract to the borrower
is voiding of the loan. N.C.G.S. § 166(d).
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