Title: Developing Law on eMortgages Including Electronic Evidence Considerations
1Developing Law on eMortgages Including Electronic
Evidence Considerations
- Margo H.K. Tank
- Buckley Kolar LLP
- mtank_at_buckleykolar.com
- 202-349-8050
2Current eMortgage Legal Infrastructure
- Legal Framework for eSignatures and eRecords
ESIGN and UETA provide the legal basis to use of
electronic records and signatures. - eRecording and eNotarization Uniform Real
Property Electronic Recordation Act (URPERA) and
other state laws authorize electronic
notarization and recording by county clerks and
recorders. - Other federal and state laws e.g., GLBA, state
record retention laws - Regulator Acceptance The federal agencies who
have regulatory oversight over financial
institutions have issued guidance on electronic
transactions (FRB, HUD, OCC). - FHA eMortgage Requirements In process.
3Uniform Electronic Transactions Act (UETA)
- Current Adoption 48 jurisdictions
- Section 7 of UETA provides basic rules
- A record or signature may not be denied legal
effect or enforceability because it is in
electronic form. - A contract may not be denied legal effect or
enforceability because solely because an
electronic record was used in its formation. - Any law that requires a writing will be
satisfied by an electronic record. - Any signature requirement in the law will be
met if there is an electronic signature. - Electronic Record A record, created, generated,
sent, communicated, received or stored by
electronic means and is retrievable in
perceivable form. - Electronic Signature
- Any sound, symbol or process
- Attached to or logically associated with an
electronic record and - Executed or adopted with the intent to sign the
electronic record. - May be accomplished through technology, through
process and procedures, or through a combination
of both.
4Federal eCommerce Law - ESIGN
- ESIGN A federal solution
- Applies to state and federal laws
- Sets boundaries for regulatory authority
- Technology neutral
- Same definition of electronic record and
signature - ESIGNs Relationship to UETA
- If state adopts uniform UETA, ESIGN may be
superceded in whole or in part. - If there are non-uniform amendments to UETA that
conflict with the main provisions in ESIGN, ESIGN
would preempt UETA. - State alternative needs to be consistent with
ESIGN or preempted - Main differences between ESIGN and UETA
Consumer consent provision and send and receipt
provisions.
5Consent Provisions under ESIGN and UETA
- UETA and ESIGN provide that
- A party must agree to use electronic records
and/or signatures with respect to a specific
transaction or group of transactions. - The borrower must expressly agree to treat an
electronic record as a transferable record. - ESIGN requires businesses to obtain from
consumers their electronic consent to receive
information electronically that the law requires
to be delivered in writing (e.g., TILA and RESPA
disclosures, etc.). - Disclosures must inform consumer of the option to
receive disclosures in paper form, the right to
withdraw consent, how to obtain paper copies, and
the hardware/software requirements for access and
retention. - Consent must be obtained electronically in a
manner that reasonably demonstrates that the
consumer will be able to access required notices
or disclosures electronically.
6eMortgage Transaction Issues
- Authentication and attribution risk Thats
someone elses signature, not mine! - Repudiation risk Thats my signature, but Ive
never seen this document! - Alteration or retention risk Thats my
signature, but this is not the same document I
signed. - All of the above risks can be mitigated by
process and technology. - Identification and verification
- Business process document was not bypassable
- Audit logs
- Tamper-evident digital signatures
7Electronic Format and Delivery of Consumer
Disclosures
- ESIGN and UETA do not supercede or affect any
laws that specify content, proximity and format
of any warning, notice, disclosure or other
record to be posted, displayed or publicly
affixed. - For disclosures that are required to be in
writing, ESIGN does not consider oral disclosures
to be a valid form of electronic delivery.
8Federal Reserve Boards Rules
- Federal Reserve Boards Interim Final Rules
Provides uniform guidance for the electronic
delivery of disclosures required by consumer
protection laws. - Disclosures can be provided in electronic form,
provided that creditor complies with consumer
consent and other applicable provisions of ESIGN - No ESIGN consent required for shopping
disclosures under Reg Z or application-related
disclosures under Reg B. - HUD Rules now specifically allow for RESPA
disclosures to be provided electronically.
9Regulation Z Amendments
- Continues to allow creditor to deliver one
electronic copy of notice of right to rescind to
each entitled consumer. - Expanded and flexible guidance for determining
how to present disclosures that are required to
be on or with the application - Automatic presentation on screen when application
appears - Presenting disclosures on same page as
application, if application clearly and
conspicuously indicates location of the
disclosures and that they contain rate, fee and
other cost information - Providing a link to the electronic disclosures
that cannot be bypassed by the consumer before
submitting the application or - Locating disclosures on same web page as the
application, not necessarily on initial screen,
immediately before the submit button.
10Deleted Provisions from 2001 Interim Final Rules
- No requirement to deliver disclosures via email
nor send an alert to the consumer of their
availability on a specific website - No requirement to attempt redelivery of an email
disclosure that has been returned undeliverable
and - No requirement to keep disclosures posted on a
website for at least 90 days.
11ESIGN / UETA Treatment for eNotes
- An electronic record that would otherwise be a
negotiable promissory note under UCC Article 3
may be a transferable record. - The transferable record concept creates a
structure that allows for the creation, storage
and transfer of an electronic promissory note.
12Establishing Control of an Transferable Record
- ESIGN and UETA establish a parallel structure for
the transfer and negotiability of an electronic
promissory note. - Control can be thought of as equivalent to
possession of a paper note plus delivery and
endorsement. - A person has control of a transferable record,
meaning the exclusive right to enforce or
transfer ownership of the underlying debt
obligation, 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.
13Safe Harbor for Meeting Control Requirement
- Six safe harbor elements
- Single authoritative copy exists that is unique,
identifiable and unalterable without detection. - Authoritative copy identifies the person
asserting control as either to whom the
transferable record was issued or the issuer. - Authoritative copy is communicated to and
maintained by the person asserting control or its
designated custodian. - 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. - Each copy of the authoritative copy and any copy
of a copy is readily identifiable as a copy that
is not the authoritative copy. - Any revision of the authoritative copy is readily
identifiable as authorized or unauthorized.
14- ESIGN and UETA Record Retention Requirements
- ESIGN and UETA allow copies of contracts and
state and federal disclosures to be retained
electronically so long as the contract or other
record - Accurately reflects the information set forth in
the contract or record - Remains accessible to all persons who are
entitled to access by statute, regulation or rule
of law for the period of time required by law in
a form that is capable of being accurately
reproduced for later reference, whether by
transmission, printing or otherwise. - Electronic records meeting these requirements can
meet original requirements. - Consequences of failure to retain appropriately
- May not satisfy regulatory writing, delivery or
signing requirements - May not be admissible in court
15High Level Identification of Risks and Mitigation