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139 lines
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Plaintext
139 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
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ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS REQUIRE CHANGES IN LAW
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by Benjamin Wright
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August 7, 1989
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Copyright 1989 by Network World Publishing/Inc.,
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375 Cochituate Rd., Framingham, MA 01701.
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Reprinted from _Network World_.
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Commerce is going paperless, but commercial law is stuck in the
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days of pulp and ink.
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Many companies now contract and bill for goods and services with
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electronic data interchange (EDI) purchase orders, bills of
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lading and invoices. Consumers often buy products through
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videotex. Securities traders also buy and sell via networks such
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as the Chicago Mercantile Exchange's forthcoming Globex system.
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But some statutes and regulations governing the enforceability
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and recording of business transactions speak of documents,
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writings and signatures rather than electronic messages, data
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logs and authorization codes.
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ELECTRONIC CONTRACTS
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The prime example is the Statute of Frauds, as rendered in
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Section 2-201 of the Uniform Commercial Code (in force in all
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states but Louisiana). It generally forbids the enforcement of a
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contract for the sale of goods worth more than $500 unless the
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contract is supported by a "signed writing." Unfortunately,
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lawyers are locked in debate over whether a recorded electronic
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message, authenticated with an electronic code, is a signed
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writing.
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A similar statute appears in the law of federal government
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procurement. Public Law 97-258, codified at 31 USC 1501,
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requires that contracts with the federal government be
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"supported by documentary evidence . . . that is . . . in
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writing, in a way and form . . . authorized by law."
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This suggests that, to bind the government to an electronic
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contract, an applicable law must specifically bless computer-to-
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computer communication as an appropriate form of writing. The
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government is making a large commitment to use EDI for
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procurement, but Public Law 97-258 appears to require enactment
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of special laws first.
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A third example: Businesses must keep records of transactions
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for Internal Revenue Service auditors. Revenue Ruling 71-20 and
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Revenue Procedure 86-19 provide guidelines for taxpayers keeping
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accounting records on computers. But these assume that _hard
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copy_ detail documents (invoices, vouchers and the like) are kept
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to support the information in the accounting systems. The
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guidelines are confusing -- to both taxpayers and IRS agents --
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when applied to EDI and other paperless transaction systems.
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GOOD EVIDENCE
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Laws such as these were not written to prohibit electronic
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transactions, but rather to require the accumulation of good
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evidence. Although computers can generate good evidence (often
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better than paper schemes), the laws were enacted before the
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widespread adoption of computer transaction technology.
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Lawmakers simply did not take the technology into account.
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This is not to say that transacting business electronically is
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today illegal or unusually risky. Business law is always fraught
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with some uncertainty and open questions. That is why companies
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hire lawyers to minimize risk with contracts and advice. It is
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also why there occasionally are commercial lawsuits.
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Companies using EDI today often try to skirt problems with
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antiquated laws by entering special agreements with trading
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partners or obtaining government waivers. Such contrivances
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usually serve more or less satisfactorily, but they are only
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stopgaps. Changes in law are needed.
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Knowing precisely how to change the laws will require wisdom and
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foresight. The best changes will accommodate not only today's
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applications but also tomorrow's.
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Much of the work to be done will be educational in nature. We
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have been using paper and handwritten signatures to create and
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store legal evidence for so long that some lawyers and auditors
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regard them with almost holy reverence.
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The immediate objection will be that electronic information can
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be altered and forged. But paper documents too can be, and
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sometimes are, altered and forged.
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TAKING CONTROL
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The key to successful evidence creation in both the paper and
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electronic environments is the imposition of controls over
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information. We use controls such as notary seals to make paper-
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written information more reliable, and we can use controls such
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as passwords and secure data logs to do the same for computer
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information.
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The user and vendor communities, represented by organizations
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such as the EDI Council of the USA, should identify troublesome
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laws and petition for change. Specific industry groups, such as
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the Aerospace Industry Association, which has a keen interest in
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government procurement law, should press for change in their
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fields of interest.
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The American Bar Association, which can also play an important
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role, has begun identifying some suspect laws.
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Electronic transactions would enjoy substantially more certainty
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if Congress, regulatory agencies and state legislatures would
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clarify some choice laws.
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Some movement in this direction is already underway. In April
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the General Services Administration amended its regulations at 42
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CFR 101-41 to specifically permit federal agencies to use EDI
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bills of lading and freightbills.
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Now agencies can electronically exchange bills with private
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transporation carriers, provided that the bills are authenticated
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with discrete codes, certified electronic records of transactions
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are kept and appropriate controls are used to prevent abuse of
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the billing and payment process.
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The process of reviewing and modifying laws would win the
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technology the legitimacy it now lacks in the eyes of some
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skeptical lawyers and auditors. Plus, the public attention would
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be a boost to the industry.
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* * *
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Wright, a Dallas-based attorney, is author of _EDI and American
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Law: A Practical Guide_, introduced this week by its publisher,
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The Electronic Data Interchange Association of Alexandria, Va.,
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at the International Congress of EDI Users in Vancouver.
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