Comments of the National Consumer Law Center, Consumer Action,
Consumer Federation of America, Consumer Law Center of the South, National Consumers
League, and U.S. Public Interest Research Groups on
Truth in Lending - Regulation Z; Docket No. R-1005
Introduction
On behalf of our low-income clients, the National Consumer Law
Center, as well as Consumer Action, the Consumer Federation of America, the
Consumer Law Center of the South, the National Consumers League, and the U.S.
Public Interest Research Groups provide the following comments regarding the
Federal Reserve Board's proposals to allow disclosures required under the Truth
in Lending Act to be made electronically so long as the consumer agrees. Electronic
disclosures are not warranted in almost all consumer credit transactions. The
extent to which consumers will actually choose, and will truly benefit from,
receiving TILA disclosures electronically is very unclear at this point in time.
The Board must move cautiously because of the acute dangers to consumers that
will result from allowing TILA disclosures to be made in such a way that they
become effectively impossible to access, retrieve, and store. The proposed rule
does not contain the necessary consumer protections to assure that consumers
will actually receive and be able to retain their TILA disclosures.
This proposed rule goes beyond the Federal Reserve Board's
authority to implement regulations under this basic federal consumer protection
law. Allowing these essential disclosures to be made electronically only so
long as the parties agree, is tantamount to a repeal of the consumer protection
requirements of the Truth in Lending Act. As written this proposed rule undermines
the requirements of TILA.
The consumer protection disclosures required under the TILA
should be permitted electronically only pursuant to the following guidelines:
Disclosures relating to the financing of a home should always be made in
writing. Electronic disclosures may accompany paper disclosures, but paper
disclosures should always be required to meet the timing requirements for
loans secured by the home. This rule is necessary because of the paramount
importance of ensuring full information is provided to consumers in transactions
secured by the home. Further, the relatively small costs of providing the
paper disclosures, as compared to the risks to the consumer if the consumer
does not receive full disclosure of the costs and terms of credit dictate
that the current paper approach to providing disclosures be followed
to ensure consumers receive TILA disclosures on these loans.
Electronic disclosures should only be permitted for closed end transactions,
not secured by the home, under the following circumstances:
When the consumer initiates the transaction with the creditor
electronically from his home; and
When the consumer affirmatively agrees -- via a separate signed and
dated agreement -- that he wishes to receive the disclosures electronically
(and this could be accomplished electronically); and
When the creditor provides the electronic disclosures using a method
that ensures the integrity of the document; and
When the creditor provides a paper copy of the disclosures after they
are made electronically.
Electronic disclosures should only be permitted for open end transactions,
not secured by the home, under all of the same conditions described in subparagraphs
a through c above for closed end transactions, as well as the following requirements:
When the creditor provides a paper copy of the initial disclosures
after they are made electronically, and provides paper copies upon the request
of the consumer for the periodic statements; and
For the ongoing disclosures required for monthly statements for open end
credit, creditors should have the obligation to test the consumers' continuing
capacity to receive the disclosures electronically. If the test fails, the
obligation to make disclosures by paper should automatically apply; and
Consumers' obligations to correspond with the creditor regarding billing
rights should be considered met if the consumer corresponds electronically.
Explanation for Proposed Guidelines:
Disclosures relating to the financing of a home should always
be required to be made on paper.
Electronic disclosures may accompany paper disclosures, but
paper disclosures should always be required for loans secured by the home.
Historically, Congress has recognized that financial transactions
secured by the home warrant special scrutiny, additional disclosures, and heightened
remedies. This assumption is based upon the well-entrenched and entirely justified
belief that the purchase or refinance of a home is the single largest financial
transaction in which most Americans will be involved in their lifetimes. In
addition, the consumer's most valuable possession, the family home, is on the
line. Congress's recognition of these facts is evident in the Truth In Lending
Act which requires additional disclosures, provides for a right to cancel, and
grants higher statutory penalties for the failure to abide by the disclosure
rules. Congress did not stop there. It later enacted the Real Estate Settlement
Procedures Act to protect consumers from unnecessarily high settlement charges
and certain abusive practices that occur when borrowers finance the purchase
of their homes, refinance their mortgages, escrow their taxes and insurance,
and deal with entities who service their loans.
Thus, the Federal Reserve Board should continue to recognize
that credit transactions secured by the home deserve extra protections,
and special precautions should be taken to ensure that
consumers receive meaningful disclosures, clearly and conspicuously,
in a manner they can be assured that they can really keep.
The paperwork provided in a credit transactions secured by the
home is an essential benchmark against the behavior of the creditor can be measured
and evaluated. It is absolutely critical to the protection of all consumers
involved in home secured credit transactions that they actually receive full
disclosure of the terms of the credit. The disclosures provided in a home secured
transaction provide the consumer not only with information to facilitate shopping
for credit, but also with basic information about the terms of the contract
to which the consumer agreed. In other words, the consumer needs the information
both before and after the contract is consummated. Given the significant number
of problems and issues with assuring that authenticated disclosures actually
reach the consumer in a form which the consumer can keep and use in the future,
and given the amount of money involved in most home secured transactions, there
is no reason not to require paper disclosures for all TILA purposes. Electronic
disclosures can be made for the convenience of the parties. But paper disclosures
should be required to comply with the mandates of the statute.
To allow electronic disclosures in lieu of paper ones is to
extend a golden invitation to those elements of the lending and brokering industry
whose business is to take advantage of unwitting homeowners. Potential
abuses which would be permitted under this Proposed Rule could involve: body-dragging
(brokers taking homeowners to a lender who gives the TILA disclosures on a computer
which the homeowner is expected to read and understand on the spot); brokers
who solicit business door-to-door and bring a lap top computer to make the "early"
TILA and RESPA disclosures electronically; lenders who change important dates
or other contract terms which the homeowner could only cursorily scan when trying
to read a computer screen at the lender's office. The Board cannot underestimate
the predatory elements of in the home lending industry which would undoubtedly
take advantage of the loopholes created by allowing electronic disclosures.
These elements have been the subject of many Congressional and Board hearings
over the years, as well as numerous exposes and court cases.
II. Allowing disclosures to be made electronically so long as
the "parties agree" effectively repeals the requirements for disclosures.
The single requirement imposed on creditors in Proposed Regulation
§226.5(a)(5) for providing electronic disclosures -- that the consumer "agrees"
-- is completely inadequate to assure an actual and meaningful meeting of the
minds on the question of whether electronic disclosures are appropriate in each
consumer transaction. Allowing disclosures to be made electronically so long
as the "parties agree" effectively repeals the requirements for disclosures.
Congress' insistence that the disclosures required under TILA be made clearly
and conspicuously could not be clearer. Creditors will effectively avoid the
requirements of all this basic consumer protection law simply by hiding an agreement
to receive electronic disclosures in the fine print of a contract. This must
not be allowed. Contracts between creditors and consumers are, by definition,
adhesion contracts. Adhesion contracts include provisions which cannot be negotiated
by the party with less bargaining power. In the extremely rare instance where
a consumer might be able to negotiate over the terms -- the interest rate or
the up-front charges -- consumers are never able to negotiate over the pre-printed
language in the contract. Requiring "agreement" between the parties,
without ensuring actual meeting of the minds is a meaningless protection.
Punting the issue of whether there is an actual agreement between
the parties to a question of state law is completely inadequate. Never before
has the issue of the adequacy of providing federally required disclosures been
subject to a question of state law.
Creditors must have the affirmative duty of ensuring that
consumers have the capacity to receive electronic disclosures.
Initial Disclosures. Creditors must only be allowed to provide
disclosures electronically when they have a reasonable basis for assuming that
the consumer not only consents to the electronic medium, but also can access
and retain the electronic disclosures.
Even if consumers affirmatively agrees to receive disclosures
electronically, they may do so for several reasons which will not reasonably
assure the ability to receive and retain the disclosures:
The price for a credit product may be lower if all disclosures are provided
electronically. The consumer who has not seen these disclosures before, will
not understand their importance. Consumers will be bargaining away an essential
right -- the right to receive federally required disclosures -- without understanding
the value of what is being given up.
The creditor may verbally indicate that if the consumer does not agree to
receive disclosures electronically adverse action might be taken in some way.
The historical problems of credit insurance provide an apt illustration of
the reasons why assuring even, extra affirmative acceptance of electronic
disclosures would not be adequate to assure that the consumer can actually
receive the disclosures.
There may be a misunderstanding over what technological capacity is necessary
to access the disclosures. For example, the disclosures may only be provided
in Word Perfect 6.0, and the consumer might only have Word software. Or, the
consumer might believe he knew how to download information from the creditor's
web site, only to find that his computer did not have the "reader"
necessary.
Consumers may initiate the relationship from a publicly accessible computer,
such as from one in a public library where the consumer cannot store the document
on the hard drive, only to find that no floppy disc is available and the library
printer is not working. The result would be that the consumer would be completely
unable to retain the disclosures.
Proposed Remedy. The remedy for this problem is to allow
electronic disclosures to be made only when the consumer has initiated the electronic
correspondence with the creditor from the consumer's home.
Periodic Statements. Another, related problem arises when continuing
disclosures must be provided under the Truth in Lending Act for open end credit.
Consumers who may have had the initial capacity to receive disclosures when
the contractual relationship was established, may nevertheless lose it at some
point. Computers break, telephone lines become disconnected, access to one's
e-mail or the Internet may no longer be affordable.
Creditors should assure that consumers actually have this capacity
when the initial disclosures are provided, as well as the ongoing capability
to receive disclosures throughout the term of the contract required for open
end credit under the Truth in Lending Act and periodic statements under the
Electronic Funds Transfer Act.
Proposed Remedy. For the ongoing disclosures required
under open end credit, creditors should have the obligation to test the consumers'
continuing capacity to receive the disclosures electronically. If the test fails,
the obligation to make disclosures by paper should automatically apply.
Electronic disclosures should only be permitted when the
creditor can assure the authenticity and integrity of the disclosures.
There are many cases in which the consumer and the creditor
disagree on the issue of the validity of TILA documents. One side to the dispute
will say the papers were said one thing before the contract was consummated;
the other side will say the papers said something. Both parties may have paper
writings which purport to support their view of the events. In the paper based
world, the party with the burden of proof will have to "authenticate"
their documents. The process of authentication takes place under the applicable
rules of evidence, including both the "authenticity" and the "best
evidence" of the document in question. Both issues go to the integrity
of the document: assurance that the information on the electronic recording
accurately reflects what was originally on the document and that it was not
altered, or even subject to alteration. Surprisingly, the Board would allow
electronic disclosures without requiring that they be provided in a manner which
assures their authenticity, their integrity, or the ability of either party
to prove these issues in a court.
The Proposed Regulation would allow disclosure of crucial consumer
information without any requirement that the method of disclosure assure
that the electronic document is complete and unaltered between the time it was
provided to the consumer and time it is being offered as proof. While a
number of states have addressed the issue of authenticating electronic documents
by amending their rules of evidence, or providing other rules to assure the
integrity of electronic documents to be used as proof, the Proposed Regulation
would allow the disclosure of essential consumer information to be provided
electronically without assuring that a) the parties could not tamper with the
date, the content, or proof of receipt of the disclosures, or b) that both parties
would be able to meet the evidentiary burden under state or federal law of entering
the electronic disclosures into evidence.
The issue of being able to prove the authenticity of a certain
document under federal or state rules of evidence is very important. In the
paper based world, whoever has the burden of proof on the underlying issue,
has the burden of proving the authenticity and best evidence of the document
in question. If the creditor has provided the disclosures to the consumer, and
the creditor has control over the electronic method of disclosure, the creditor
will likely be able to meet that burden. However, if the consumer has the burden
of proof (as will be the case when the consumer must prove that a disclosure
was not provided as required, or included different information from that which
the creditor maintains), it will be impossible for a consumer to prove the best
evidence and authenticity of a document downloaded on to a personal computer.
If the Proposed Regulation is allowed to stand as currently
written, the following absurd and unfair situations would be allowed:
If a consumer testifies that the consumer never received the TILA disclosures
by e-mail, and the creditor maintains they were downloaded from the creditor's
web site, who has the burden of proof, and how can the consumer prove a negative
- that he did not receive something? Contrast this question with the
situation in In re Pinder, in which the consumers testimony that she
never received a TILA disclosure statement, sufficed to place the burden on
the creditor to come forward with some evidence.. If the consumer had received
the disclosure electronically, and simply was unable to download the document
off the creditor's website, would that suffice to switch the burden and make
the creditor show it had provided the disclosure?
If a consumer testifies she received the cd-rom which included the disclosures
but they were in a format that were unreadable by the software on her computer,
how would the consumer meet the burden of proof of showing that the disclosures
were not clear and conspicuous to her, and how would a consumer meet this
burden? Contrast this question to the case of Cole v. Lovett, in which
the disclosures on the third carbon copy (creditor kept original and first
two) were illegible at the time of trial. Although the consumer had
not established that creditor had failed to make a clear and conspicuous disclosure,
the rebuttable presumption raised by signed acknowledgment of receipt was
overcome and the burden placed on the creditor. If the disclosures were originally
made electronically, who would have the burdens?
Where the consumer testified that the disclosures received at the consummation
of the contract showed that they only owed a certain amount, yet the creditor
produced an electronic disclosure showing a different amount, who would have
the burden of proof of showing what the documents said at the time the contract
was consummated and how would the consumer be able to even rebut expert testimony
on computer technology that was wholly within the control of the creditor?
Even in the paper based world, this was a difficult question for the court
in In re Underwood. In this case one consumer testified to a "hurried"
closing at which they had been required to sign blank forms and the paperwork
showed two different dates although consumers had been to creditor's office
only once. Yet, if the disclosure had all be provided electronically, without
some authentication requirement how could the consumer prove that the creditor's
electronically stored disclosures were not the same as those provided to the
consumer?
When the consumer says there were no disclosures e-mailed as promised and
as the creditor testifies, how does the consumer prove a negative under the
proposed rules? Would the burden switch to the creditor as in the case of
In re Herbert, in which an unsophisticated consumer produced the "stack
of papers" received at the closing, which contained no disclosure statement,
and testified that none had been provided? This shifted the burden to the
creditor to produce the statement.
The credit industry providing the electronic disclosures will
have full control over the technology used to provide the disclosures, store
the disclosures, and print out the disclosures for later use. Yet, the consumer
will have the requirement to authenticate the disclosure received by
the consumer in a court of law. This will be impossible for most, if not all
consumers.
Proposed Remedy: The Proposed Regulation should only
allow disclosures to be made electronically if they are provided via a technology
that is certified -- by an independent third party -- to ensure that the document
cannot be tampered with as to substance, date of receipt, and sending and receiving
parties.
V. Providing confirming paper copies is essential to meeting
the requirement to provided disclosures in a manner in which the consumer can
keep.
Paper copies must always be provided for closed end credit disclosures
and for the initial disclosures made for open end credit. Paper copies should
also be provided if requested by the consumer for open-end credit disclosures
after the initial disclosures.
There are so many issues which can arise to make it difficult
for consumers to experience difficulties to actually receive disclosures
made electronically:
does the consumer have a computer?
does the consumer have access to the Internet?
does the consumer know how to retrieve information from a website, or download
e-mail?
does the consumer's computer have the software to read the transmission
from the creditor? etc.
There are also many issues which might arise to make it difficult
for consumers to retain disclosures made electronically, in a format
which will be recognizable by a court as the disclosures that were received:
is there room on the consumer's hard drive?
does the consumer's printer work?
is the printer compatible with the format for the disclosures used by the
creditor?
will the consumer be able to prove that what he downloaded and printed out
was what the creditor provided?
Given all of these potentially serious problems, any one of
which will impede consumers' ability to receive and retain TILA required disclosures,
and given the minimal costs to creditors of providing disclosures on paper,
there can be no good reason for not requiring confirming paper disclosures for
all initial disclosures. Even if the creditor and the consumer choose to conduct
their negotiations over the Internet, that does not mean that eventually there
will not be some meeting of people face to face. At the least, if there will
be no point in the transaction where human beings actually meet, the paper disclosures
can be mailed to the consumer. The costs of delivering a confirming paper copy
to the consumer is minimal.
In the preface to the proposed regulations, the Board says:
Creditors would satisfy the retention requirement if, for example,
disclosures can be printed or downloaded by the consumers. The requirements
for electronic delivery should be similar to the current paper requirements,
where creditors generally must mail or deliver the information to the consumer
but need not ensure that the consumer reads or retains it. Thus creditors would
not be required to monitor an individual consumer's ability to retain the information,
nor to take steps to find out whether the consumer has in fact retained it.
Providing a piece of paper to someone and not having to be sure
that they read it, is a vastly different standard from making information available
on website and allowing a consumer to take the following seven, separate and
distinct steps in order to receive and retain his TILA disclosures:
turn on the computer
use a telephone line to connect to the Internet
type in the correct website address
find the spot on the website where the consumer's personal
information is to be provided
click on that site and find the relevant disclosures
download the consumer's personal disclosure information and
save it to his hard drive
and print it out in a readable and recognizable format.
Proposed Remedy. For all initial disclosures the creditor
must provide a paper copy of the disclosures after they are made electronically.
Period Statements Required under Open End Credit. Were the Board
to decide that periodic disclosures should be made only electronically, it is
still essential that creditors have the obligation to ensure that consumers
have the capacity to receive these disclosures, and that consumers be able to
request and receive paper copies of the disclosures at a reasonable price. Further,
consumers should always be able to change the ongoing method of disclosures
from electronic to paper. Otherwise, a consumer whose computer has broken will
not receive federally mandated disclosures.
The Board proposes to satisfy the Regulation Z requirement that
the consumer be able to retain disclosures simply by requiring that creditors
provide disclosures which can be printed or downloaded. Yet "creditors
would not be required to monitor an individual consumer's ability to retain
the information" and
A creditor would provide special technical specifications for
receiving or retaining information before or at the time a consumer agrees
to receive information electronically.
What if after the consumer has agreed to receive disclosures
electronically, he finds that he is unable to download or print the disclosures,
despite extensive and explicit technical information on how to do so which is
provided by the creditor. After all, the makers of VCRs all provide excellent
information on how to program these ubiquitous machines. But how many members
of the Board, and how many of their staff can truly claim to knowing how to
program their VCR? Should the ability to retain essential TILA disclosures be
limited to those for whom the instructions actually work?
How can the Board justify not requiring creditors to provide
paper copies when requested to do so by the consumer? Reasonable fees could
be allowed if the basis for the pricing of the account includes the less expensive
provision of electronic disclosures. But, so long as the financial institution
could recover their reasonable expenses, why not allow consumers to request
their disclosures as paper copies?
It is the Board's mandate to encourage, facilitate and strengthen
the ability of consumers to receive the disclosures required by these federal
protection statutes. Providing a paper copy of essential disclosures seems a
minor task to assure consumer receipt.
Proposed Remedy. Creditors should be required to provide
paper copies of disclosures when requested to do so by the consumer within a
reasonable time from the provision of the electronic disclosures of periodic
statements required for open end credit. When the pricing of the account or
extension of credit was based on the assumption that disclosures required on
an ongoing basis would be provided electronically, reasonable fees equivalent
to the actual, additional costs incurred for providing paper copies would be
allowed.
Conclusion
Electronic disclosures should facilitate commerce; they should
facilitate communication between consumers, merchants and creditors. Making
disclosures electronically should not impede the ready access to the important
information included in the TILA disclosures. Paper disclosures should be the
method of complying with TILA's requirements in almost every situation that
electronic disclosures are contemplated. Electronic disclosures can supplement
the exchange of information, but they should not undermine the basic requirements
of TILA for clear and conspicuous disclosures in a form that the consumer is
able to retain. The Board's proposed regulations would allow electronic disclosures
which do not meet these basic requirements.