Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 2004 )


Menu:
  •                                 ATTORNEYGENERAL                     OF TEXAS
    GREG        ABBOTT
    August 5,2004
    The Honorable Eugene D. Taylor                            Opinion No. GA-0228
    Williamson County Attorney
    Williamson County Courthouse Annex                        Re: Whether a county clerk must accept for
    Second Floor                                              recording a paper copy, containing printed images
    405 Martin Luther King Boulevard                          of signatures or a printed image of a notary seal,
    Georgetown, Texas 78626                                   of an electronic record of a real estate transaction
    (RQ-0186-GA)
    Dear Mr. Taylor:
    You ask whether a county clerk must accept for recording a paper copy, containing printed
    images of signatures or a printed image of a notary seal, of an electronic record of a real estate
    transaction.’ You. focus your inquiry on the effects of the Federal Electronic Signatures in Global
    and National Commerce Act (the “E-Sign Act”), 15 United States Code chapter 96 (2000); the
    Uniform Electronic Transactions Act (the “UETA”), found in Texas Business and Commerce Code
    chapter 43, as adopted by Act of May 24,2001,77th     Leg., R.S., ch. 702, $ 1,200l Tex. Gen. Laws
    1341, 1341-47; and various state laws relating to a county clerk’s duties as county recorder. See
    Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2.
    I.       Factual Background
    You state that the Williamson County Clerk’s Office is unable to accept electronically filed.
    documents at this time and, consequently, accepts only paper documents for filing. 
    Id. at l-2.
    The
    Clerk’s Office requires real estate filings “to contain original signatures and notary stamps or seals
    rather than photocopied or faxed documents.” 
    Id. at 1.
    Nonetheless, you state, some people have
    submitted as real estate filings “paper versions of documents which were ‘electronically generated.“’
    
    Id. at 2.
    These paper copies contain “printed representations of signatures captured as digital
    images” instead of“original,pen and ink signatures.” 
    Id. “Likewise,” you
    continue, “the notary seals
    on these documents are computer generated rather than stamped or embossed.” 
    Id. As support
    for
    their position that the clerk must accept these copies, the persons attempting to file “point to” the
    UETA and subchapter I of the E-Sign Act, providing for electronic records and signatures in
    commerce. 
    Id. at 2;
    TEX.Bus. & COMM. CODE ANN. ch. 43 (Vernon 2002 & Supp. 2004); 15 U.S.C.
    ch. 96, subch. I (2000). The persons further “claim that a County Clerk can be charged with a civil
    ‘See Letter from Honorable Eugene D. Taylor, Williamson County Attorney, to Honorable Greg Abbott, Texas
    Attorney General (Feb. l&2004) (on file with the Opinion Committee, also available at http://www.oag.state.ti.us)
    [hereinafter Request Letter].
    The Honorable Eugene D. Taylor - Page 2                  (GA-0228)
    penalty’ under section 11.004(b) of the Property Code, which sets out the county clerk’s duties with
    respect to real property instruments, “if the [cllerk refuses to accept” the paper copies. Request
    Letter, supra note 1, at 2; see TEX.PROP.CODEANN. 5 11.004(Vernon 2004).
    In light of this situation, you ask four questions about a clerk’s obligation      to accept paper
    copies of real estate transaction documents:
    1. Does [the UETA] or [the E-Sign Act] require a County Clerk to
    accept real estate filings which contain printed images of signatures
    rather than original pen and ink signatures?
    2. Does [the UETA] and/or Government Code 3 406.013 [pertaining
    to a notary public’s seal] require a County Clerk to accept real estate
    filings which contain a printed image of a notary seal rather than an
    original stamped or embossed seal?
    3. Does [the     UETA] and/or Government Code 3 406.013 require a
    County Clerk      to accept real estate filings which are faxed? Is this
    requirement      limited to paper documents          purporting   to be
    electronically   generated or may any real estate filing be faxed?
    4. Is a County Clerk subject to the civil penalty provisions of
    Property Code 9 11.004(b) for refusing to accept an “electronically
    generated’ real estate filing?
    Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2.
    II.     ADplicable Statutes
    A.      Texas Statutes Relating to the Recording Process Generally
    “A conveyance of an estate of inheritance, a freehold, or an estate for more than one
    year. . . must be in writing . . . .” TEX.PROP.CODEANN. $5.021 (Vernon 2004). A county clerk
    may record an instrument concerning real or personal property if the instrument (1) “has been
    acknowledged, sworn to with a proper jurat, or proved according to law,” 
    id. 3 12.001
    (a), and (2) “is
    signed and acknowledged        or sworn to by the grantor in the presence of . . . witnesses or
    acknowledged or sworn to before and certified by an officer authorized to take acknowledgments
    or oaths,” 
    id. 9 12.001(b).
    An “officer authorized to take acknowledgments        or oaths” includes a
    notary public, whose seal must comply with section 406.013 of the Government Code. See id.; see
    also TEX.GOV’T CODEANN. 9 406.013(c) (Vernon Supp. 2004). Under section 406.013, a notary
    public must affix to the sworn document a seal of office “by a seal press or stamp that embosses or
    prints a seal that legibly reproduces the required elements of the seal under photographic methods.”
    TEX.GOV’T CODEANN. 9 406.013(c) (Vernon Supp. 2004). This requirement does not apply,
    however, “to an electronically transmitted authenticated document,” although the electronically
    transmitted authenticated document “must legibly reproduce” the seal’s required elements. 
    Id. 0 406.013(d).
    The Honorable Eugene D. Taylor - Page 3                 (GA-0228)
    Under section 11.004(a) of the Property Code, a county clerk must “correctly record . . . any
    instrument authorized or required to be recorded in that clerk’s office, ” including real estate filings.
    TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. 5 11.004(a) (Vernon 2004). A clerk who violates section 11.004 is liable
    for damages and “for a civil penalty of not more than $500” under subsection (b). 
    Id. $ 11.004(b).
    Finally, a clerk must be vigilant with respect to the authenticity of documents relating to real
    property interests, and if the clerk reasonably suspects that such a document filed, recorded, or
    submitted for filing or recording is fraudulent, the clerk must notify the parties listed in the
    document. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. 0 5 1.901(a) (Vernon 1998); see also 
    id. 0 5
    1.901(c) (setting
    out circumstances in which a document is presumed to be fraudulent).
    B.      The Federal E-Sign Act
    Subchapter I of the E-Sign Act, 15 United States Code sections 7001 through 7006,
    governs electronic records and signatures in or affecting interstate or foreign commerce. See 15
    U.S.C. $7001(a) (2000); Michael J. Hays, Note, The E-Sign Act of 2000: The Triumph ofFunction
    over Form in American Contract Law, 76 NOTRE DAME L. F&V. 1183, 1193 (2001). Neither
    subchapter II, which pertains to transferable records, nor subchapter III, which pertains to
    international electronic commerce, applies here. See 15 U.S.C. $9 7021,703l (2000).
    Under the “general rule of validity” that section 7001 (part of subchapter I) articulates, with
    respect to a transaction affecting interstate or foreign commerce, the electronic form of a signature,
    contract, or other transaction-related       record “may not be denied legal effect, validity, or
    enforceability solely because it is in electronic form, ” notwithstanding any other law. 
    Id. $7001 (a).
    A transaction, for the E-Sign Act’s purposes, is “an action or set of actions relating to the conduct
    of business, consumer, or commercial affairs between two or more persons, including . . . the sale,
    lease, exchange, or other disposition of any interest in real property.” 
    Id. 9 7006(13)(B).
    Subchapter
    I does not require a person, “other than a governmental agency with respect to a record other than
    a contract to which it is a party,” to use or accept electronic records or electronic signatures. 
    Id. $ 7001(b)(2).
    And nothing in subchapter I “limits or supersedes” a state regulatory agency’s rule
    “that records be filed with [the] agency. . . in accordance with specified standards or formats.” 
    Id. 5 7004(a).
    But see 
    id. $ 7004(b)(2)
    (requiring that a state agency’s regulation be consistent with
    15 United States Code section 7001).
    Section 7002(a) expressly permits a state to supersede section 7001 by adopting the UETA:
    A State statute, regulation, or other rule of law may modify, limit, or
    supersede the provisions of section 7001 of this title with respect to State law only
    if such statute, regulation, or rule of law-
    (1) constitutes an enactment or adoption of the [UETA] as
    approved and recommended for enactment in all the States by the
    National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in
    1999, except that any exception to the scope of such Act enacted by
    a State under section 3(b)(4) of such Act [authorizing a state to
    exempt from UETA transactions governed by (1) law governing the
    execution of wills; (2) certain parts of the Uniform Commercial
    The Honorable .Eugene D. Taylor - Page 4                     (GA-0228)
    Code; (3) [the Uniform Computer Information Transactions Act]; and
    (4) [other laws, if any, identified by the State]] shall be preempted to
    the extent such exception is inconsistent with this subchapter or
    subchapter II of this chapter, or would not be permitted under
    paragraph (2)(A)(ii) of this subsection; or
    (2)(A) specifies the alternative procedures or requirements for
    the use or acceptance (or both) of electronic records or electronic
    signatures to establish the legal effect, validity, or enforceability of
    contracts or other records, if-
    (i) such alternative procedures or requirements
    are consistent with this subchapter and subchapter II
    of this chapter; and
    (ii)   such      alternative      procedures       or
    requirements do not require, or accord greater legal
    status or effect to, the implementation or application
    of a specific technology or technical specification for
    performing     the functions         of creating,    storing,
    generating,      receiving,         communicating,         or
    authenticating     electronic      records- or electronic
    signatures; and
    (B) if enacted or adopted after June 30,2000, makes specific
    reference to this chapter.
    
    Id. $j 7002(a).
    C.       The Texas UETA
    In 2001 Texas adopted the UETA, a uniform act promulgated by the National
    Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in 1999: as chapter 43 of the Business and
    Commerce Code. See Act of May 24,2001, 77th Leg., R.S., ch. 702, 5 1,200l Tex. Gen. Laws
    1341,1341-47. The UETA applies generally to electronic records and electronic signatures relating
    to a transaction (defined as “an action or set of actions occurring between two or more persons
    relating to the conduct ofbusiness, commercial, or governmental affairs,” TEX.Bus. &Corn. CODE
    ANN. 5 43.002( 15) (Vernon 2002)), although a transaction subject to the UETA remains “subject to
    other applicable substantive law.” 
    Id. 9 43.003(a),
    (d). An electronic record is “a record created,
    generated, sent, communicated, received, or stored by electronic means.” 
    Id. 8 43.002(7);
    see also
    
    id. 5 43.002(5),
    (12) (defining the terms “electronic” and “record”). An electronic signature is “an
    *See Letter from JohnM. McCabe, Legal Counsel/Legislative Director, National Conference of Commissioners
    on Uniform State Laws, to Honorable Greg Abbott, Texas Attorney General, at 1 (rec’d Apr. 9,2004) (on file with the
    Opinion Committee) [hereinafter NCCUSL Briefl.
    The Honorable Eugene D. Taylor - Page 5                 (GA-0228)
    electronic sound, symbol, or process attached to or logically associated with a record and executed
    or adopted by a person with the intent to sign the record.” 
    Id. 5 43.002(8).
    While the UETA must be construed “to facilitate electronic transactions consistent with other
    applicable law,” 
    id. 9 43.006(l),
    it does not require the creation, receipt, or use of an electronic
    record or signature in any circumstance, and the UETA applies only to “transactions between parties
    each of which has agreed to conduct transactions by electronic means.” 
    Id. 9 43.005(a)-(b).
    Section
    43.007 recognizes electronic records and electronic signatures:
    (a) A record or signature may not be denied legal effect or
    enforceability solely because it is in electronic form.
    (b) A contract may not be denied legal effect or enforceability
    solely because an electronic record was used in its formation.
    (c) If a law requires a record to be in writing, an electronic
    record satisfies the law.
    (d) If a law requires   a signature,   an electronic   signature
    satisfies the law.
    
    Id. 5 43.007.
    Section 43.019 explicitly “modifies, limits, or supersedes” the E-Sign Act, as 15 United
    States Code section 7002(a) authorizes a state to do. 
    Id. $43.019; see
    15 U.S.C.,§ 7002(a) (2000).
    Section 6(a) of the 2001 enacting legislation appears to limit section 43.019’s effect, however:
    Notwithstanding Section 43.019 . . . Chapter 43 . . . does not
    modify, limit, or supersede the provisions of. . . 15 U.S.C. [§§I 7001
    r‘Genera1 rule of validity”] and 7003 [“Specific exceptions”] . . . and
    specifically does not authorize the electronic delivery of any notice of
    the type described by. . . 15 U.S.C. [§J 7003[(b)]. . . .
    Act ofMay24,2001,77th      Leg., R.S., ch. 702,s 6(a), 2001 Tex. Gen. Laws 1341, 1347-48. Section
    7003(b), 15 United States Code, provides that section 7001, the “general rule of validity,” does not
    apply to court documents; notices of the cancellation or termination ofutility services; certain notices
    regarding debt on and possession of an individual’s primary residence; cancellation or termination
    of health insurance or benefits or life insurance benefits (excluding annuities); notices of product
    recalls; and certain documents that accompany toxic or dangerous materials, such as hazardous
    materials. See 15 U.S.C. 9 7003(b) (2000).
    C.       Preemption   Issues
    It is not clear, from the E-Sign Act or from the Texas UETA, whether or to what
    extent the Texas UETA modifies, limits, or supersedes the E-Sign Act. Commentators have found
    the E-Sign Act’s “exemption to preemption” confusing and suggest that it may be subject to multiple
    The Honorable Eugene D. Taylor - Page 6                       (GA-0228)
    interpretations. See Nathan A. Huey, Note, E-Mail and Iowa ‘s Statute of Frauds: Do E-Sign and
    UETA Really Matter. 7, 88 IOWA L. REV. 68 1,695-99 (2003); Patricia Brumfield Fry, A Preliminary
    Analysis of Federal and State Electronic Commerce Laws (2001), available at www.nccusl.orgf
    nccusl/whatsnew-article1   asp) (last visited July 5,2004) [hereinafter Fry]; Robert A. Wittie & Jane
    K. Winn, Electronic Records and Signatures Under the Federal E-Sign Legislation and the UETA,
    56Bus. LAW. 293,324-33 (2000) [hereinafter Wittie & Winn]. No court has considered the E-Sign
    Act’s preemptive effect. With respect to Texas’s version of the UETA in particular, section 43.019
    of the Business and Commerce Code purports to modify, limit, or supersede the E-Sign Act in full,
    but section 6 of the enacting legislation restricts section 43.019’s effect and specifically does not
    supersede 15 United States Code sections 7001 and 7003. See TEX.Bus. & COMM. CODE ANN.
    0 43.019 (Vernon 2002); Act of May 24,2001,77th Leg., R.S., ch. 702, § 6(a), 2001 Tex. Gen. Laws
    1341, 1347-48.
    Given this uncertainty, we are reluctant to determine which act prevails in Texas. To the
    extent your questions concern section 7001 or 7003 of the federal statute, we assume that the federal
    law preempts the relevant portions of the UETA. To the extent your questions involve sections other
    than sections 7001 or 7003, we assume the UETA prevails.
    III.     Relevant National Conference of Commissioners                 on Uniform State Laws Comments
    and Attornev General Opinions
    Your questions generally involve a county recording officer’s duty to accept documents
    resulting from electronic transactions under the E-Sign Act and the UETA. See Request Letter,
    supra note 1, at 2. The National Conference of Commissioners        on Uniform State Laws (the
    “NCCUSL”), which drafted the UETA, has noted the general uncertainty as to whether either act
    requires local recording officers to accept electronic documents:
    [E]ven though documents that result from electronic transactions
    are valid and enforceable between the parties [under the E-Sign Act
    and the UETA], there is no broad agreement about whether those
    documents may be recorded in the various local land records offices
    in the several states. Laws and regulations in many states frequently
    limit a recordable document to one that is in writing or on paper.
    They may also require that the recorded document be an original
    document. Similar laws and regulations may require signatures to be
    in writing and acknowledgments to be signed. Being electronic and
    not on paper, being an electronic version of an original paper
    document, or having an electronic signature or acknowledgment
    instead of a handwritten one, an electronic document might not be
    recordable under the laws of these states . . . .3
    3National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, Uniform Real Property Electronic Recording
    Act at 1, available at http://www.law.upenn.edu.bll/ulc/urpera/URPERA2OO4AnnMtgDrafi.htm(last visited July 5,2004)
    [hereinafter NCCUSL Draft] (citation omitted).
    The Honorable Eugene D. Taylor - Page 7                           (GA-0228)
    The NCCUSL currently is drafting a Uniform Real Property Electronic Recording Act “to assist state
    and local government[s] in making a full transition to electronic media.‘* The draft’s prefatory note
    describes the UETA and the E-Sign Act as giving “legal effect to real estate transactions that are
    executed electronically and allow[ing] them to be enforced between the parties thereto.” NCCUSL
    Draft, supra note 3, at 1. Presumably, the new Uniform Real Property Electronic Recording Act,
    will, if adopted, further clarify a local recording officer’s duties with respect to electronic
    transactions.5
    No courts have considered issues analogous to those you raise.6                         Attorneys    general in
    California and New York have considered analogous issues, however.
    4NCCUSL Brief, supra note 2, at 3.
    ‘Our conclusion is consistent with the comments of the State Bar of Texas, Business Law Section, relating to
    the UETA. Seegenerally TEX.Bus. & COMM. CODE ANN.ch. 43 (Vernon Supp. 2004). In comments on section43.008,
    the Business Law Section states that, while an electronic real estate conveyance would be “effective between the parties,”
    it “would not be recordable in the deed records of the particular county until the county had adopted an electronic filing
    system in accordance with Chapter 195, Local Government Code. . . . Thus, until electronic filing of real estate
    conveyances in the proper records becomes possible, conveyances written on paper. . . will be preferable so that the
    purchaser’s rights against third parties can be protected through the filing system.” .Zd. 0 43.008 cmt. 2.
    6A lower New York court questioned the E-Sign Act’s constitutionality to the extent that it (1) attempts to
    “commandeer[] the activities of a state to achieve a federal purpose” and (2) goes “beyond issues of interstate
    commerce.” People v. McFarlan, 744 N.Y.S.2d 287,293 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 2002). The New York court considered the
    E-Sign Act’s applicability to a printout of a computer-generated photo array of possible suspects. See 
    id. at 289,293.
    The court felt that the E-Sign Act may well be unconstitutional, at least in part:
    While the thrust of E-Sign, that it relates to ‘transactions in or affecting interstate
    commerce,” when applied to the instant case, would seem to exclude the police
    records used in this case, as there is no transaction as defined by [ 151 U.S.C.A. Q
    7006( 13), the effect of preemption is much broader. E-Sign would, for example,
    purport to cover the same police record if it were used (or perhaps referred to) in
    a commercial transaction. The impact of imposing upon a State a rule as to such
    state’s records when used in a transaction, but not when the same records are not,
    is in the real world a rule imposing the rule on such state’s records for all purposes.
    . . . This effective imposition of a federal rule on State records thus may well
    constitute a violation against the rule against commandeering the activities of a state
    to achieve a federal purpose. [See] Printz v. U.S., 52 
    1 U.S. 898
    . . . (1997) (holding
    [under article I, section 8 of the United States Constitution] that the Brady Hand
    Gun Act provisions requiring the states to conduct background checks on gun
    purchases was unconstitutional).
    A second reason why E-Sign may not apply in New York, at least [with]
    respect to transactions not in interstate commerce, is the Tenth Amendment to the
    United States Constitution. The issue here is whether and to what extent the federal
    government may use the language of the interstate commerce clause to go beyond
    issues of interstate commerce to impose a better nationwide rule. While admittedly,
    life would be simpler and perhaps better if the same rule applied to all contracts,
    their formation and interpretation across the country, creating uniformity for
    commercial laws has generally been left to state action.
    
    Id. at 293-94
    (footnote omitted).
    The Honorable Eugene D. Taylor - Page 8                  (GA-0228)
    In 2002 the California attorney general implicitly determined that the E-Sign Act does not
    require a county recorder to accept electronic documents, which would include electronic signatures.
    See Op. Cal. Att’y Gen. No. 02-l 12 (2002). In that opinion, the California attorney general
    addressed whether county recorders may “implement electronic recordation of documents in their
    respective jurisdictions, ” analyzing whether “a conflict exists between” the state statutes governing
    the county recorder’s duties and responsibilities, the California version of the UETA, and the E-Sign
    Act. 
    Id. at 2.
    California law requires a county recorder to accept for recordation an instrument,
    paper, or notice that “contain[s] an original signature or signatures, except as otherwise provided by
    law, or [that is] a certified copy of the original.” 
    Id. (quoting CAL.
    GOV'T CODE9 27201 (b)( 1)). In
    certain limited circumstances, California law permits a county recorder to accept for recording a
    digitized image of a recordable instrument in lieu of a written paper if the “image conforms to all
    other applicable statutes that prescribe recordability, except the requirement of original signatures.”
    
    Id. at 3
    (quoting CAL. GOV'T CODE$27279(b)(l)).            The opinion notes that the California UETA
    provides that county recorders’ duties, “in respect to recording instruments,” are prescribed by the
    state statutes governing recorders’ duties and responsibilities.       
    Id. at 6.
    In addition, though the
    California version of the UETA-like           section 43.007 of the Texas Business and Commerce
    Code-stipulates      that electronic records and electronic signatures satisfy laws requiring written
    records or written signatures, the attorney general stated that this stipulation applies only to “the legal
    effect and enforceability of the transactions themselves . . . and not to the recordation of a document
    reflecting a transaction between two independent parties. ” 
    Id. at 7.
    The attorney general construed
    the E-Sign Act similarly:
    E-sign concerns the legal effect, validity and enforceability         of
    electronic records and electronic signatures relating to transactions
    between private parties. E-sign refers throughout to “a contract or
    other record relating to a transaction in or affecting interstate or
    foreign commerce.” Also similarly defined, the term “transaction”
    means “an action or set of actions relating to the conduct of business,
    consumer, or commercial affairs between two or more persons. . . .”
    (15 U.S.C. 3 7006(13).) E-sign contains no reference to the legal
    duty of a county recorder to record documents.
    Accordingly,    E-sign does not preempt the [relevant]
    provisions of [the California] Government Code . . . specifying the
    duties of county recorders. . . . Nothing in E-sign may be construed
    as a direct enactment positively impairing the public policy of this
    state relating to the recordation of documents.
    
    Id. at 10.
    Finding that neither the UETA nor the E-Sign Act requires a county recorder to accept
    electronic documents, the attorney general concluded that county recorders generally are not
    authorized under the state law prescribing their duties and responsibilities to implement electronic
    recordation of documents. See 
    id. at 12.
    In another opinion, the California attorney general determined that the UETA does not
    require the secretary of state to accept for filing a nonprofit organization’s certificate of voluntary
    dissolution containing facsimiles of the directors’ signatures rather than their original signatures.
    The Honorable Eugene D. Taylor - Page 9                   (GA-0228)
    See Op. Cal. Att’y Gen. No. 02-5 14 (2002). Focusing on the California statute analogous to section
    43.007 of the Texas Business and Commerce Code, which states that an electronic record or
    electronic signature satisfies a law requiring a written record or signature, the attorney general
    pointed out, first, that the UETA does not require the receipt of a record or signature by electronic
    means or in an electronic form. See 
    id. at 3
    (citing CAL. CORP.CODE9 1633.7). Moreover, this
    statute applies only to “the legal effect and enforceability of the transaction itself. . . and not to the
    filing or recordation of a document reflecting the transaction. ” 
    Id. Second, the
    UETA applies only
    “to transactions between” consenting parties, and the “filing or recordation of a document concerning
    the transaction does not render the act of filing or recordation itself a new ‘transaction’ or make the
    public agency a ‘party’ to the original transaction.” 
    Id. In 2001
    the New York attorney general similarly concluded that “there is a substantial
    possibility that” the E-Sign Act does not preclude “a county recording officer from rejecting a filing
    submitted for recordation that bears only an electronic signature but lacks an ‘original signature.“’
    Op. N.Y. Att’y Gen. No. 2001-3,200l          WL 1095069, *l (2001). Reviewing New York laws that
    prescribe a county recorder’s duties, the attorney general found that recording officers are barred “at
    the present time from accepting filings submitted for recordation that contain electronic signatures.”
    
    Id. at “2.
    The attorney general determined that, although the E-Sign Act covers activities relating
    to “the transfer of an interest in real property from one person . . . to another,” it “does not . . . cover
    the related but distinct activity of recordation of a private transaction, which is purely governmental
    in nature.” 
    Id. at *3.
    With respect to section 7004 of the E-Sign Act, which preserves a state
    regulatory agency’s authority to require “that records . . . filed with [the] agency” comply with
    “specified standards or formats, ” the attorney general found it “unclear” whether a county recording
    officer would be a state regulatory agency encompassed by section 7004. 
    Id. at “6.
    Ultimately,
    however, the attorney general concluded that the section was intended to “‘protect recording systems
    . . . from any obligation to immediately convert to electronic records.“’ 
    Id. (quoting Fry,
    supra
    p. 6, at 11). The attorney general also cites section 7001(e) of the E-Sign Act, which authorizes a
    state to enact a statute that denies validity of an electronic record if the electronic record “is not in
    a form that is capable of being retained and accurately reproduced,” 15 U.S.C. $7001(e) (2000), as
    evidence that Congress was reluctant to “force states to immediately adopt new standards and
    formats that accommodate electronic filings.” Op. N.Y. Att’y Gen. No. 2001-3,200l WL 1095069,
    *6 (2001). “If the integrity and authenticity of a paperless record cannot be assured over time
    because a state cannot, for example, properly store and retrieve filings that contain electronic
    signatures,” then section 7001(e) of the E-Sign Act permits the state to “refuse to accept such
    filings.” 
    Id. “In sum,”
    the New York attorney general concluded, “although the issue ultimately may
    be decided by the courts, it is our estimation . . . that there is a substantial possibility that E-SIGN
    does not . . . obligate county recording officers to accept for recordation a filing that contains only
    an electronic signature but lacks an . . . ‘original signature.“’ 
    Id. at *7.
    IV.     Analvsis
    A.       The First Question
    Having set out the. relevant law and attorney general opinions, we turn to your
    questions.   You ask first whether, under the UETA or the E-Sign Act, a county clerk must accept real
    The Honorable Eugene D. Taylor - Page         10       (GA-0228)
    estate filings that contain printed images of signatures rather than original pen and ink signatures.
    See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2.
    We conclude, like our counterparts in California and New York, first, that the E-Sign Act
    does not require a county clerk to accept real estate filings that contain printed images of signatures
    rather than original pen and ink signatures. While section 7001 of the E-Sign Act is not clearly
    limited to transactional documents, we-believe that a court probably would construe it to be so.
    The New York attorney general cited a pre-enactment statement by Congressman Dingell that
    recording of real property documents is “precisely the type of ‘uniquely governmental’ transaction
    unaffected by the preemptive sweep of’ section 7001 (a)( 1). Op. N.Y. Att’y Gen. No. 2001-3,200l
    WL 1095069, *5 (2001). Section 7001 ofthe E-Sign Act states that “with respect to any transaction
    in or affecting interstate or foreign commerce,” an electronic signature by itself does not render a
    contract or other record “relating to such transaction” invalid. 15 U.S.C. 3 7001 (a)( 1) (2000). A real
    property filing is not a “transaction” for purposes of the E-Sign Act, see 
    id. $7006( 13)
    (defining the
    term “transaction”), but a document intended for filing among a clerk’s real property records may
    be a record “relating to” a real property conveyance. See 
    id. 8 700
    1(a)( 1); see Wittie & Winn, supra
    p. 6, at 320-21 (stating that the phrase “relating to” extends the E-Sign Act’s reach “beyond actual
    transaction documents to include all ancillary records, such as applications, filings, notices, and
    similar documentation”).     The E-Sign Act defines the term “transaction,” but it does not define the
    phrase “relating to,” and no court has yet defined the term. See 15 U.S.C. $7006(13) (2000).
    Second, the UETA does not require a county clerk to accept electronically transmitted
    documents or signatures. See TEx. Bus. & COMM.CODEANN. 443.005(a) (Vernon 2002); see also
    13 TEX.ADMIN. CODE$5 7.141(4), 7.142(a)-(b) (2004). The UETA applies only to transactions
    between consenting parties. See TEX.Bus. & COMM. CODEANN. 9 43.005(b) (Vernon 2002). Third,
    and finally, you do not ask about an electronic signature; you ask about a paper copy of an electronic
    signature. Nothing in the E-Sign Act or the UETA applies to such a record. See generally 
    id. ch. 43.
    We accordingly conclude that a county clerk is not required to accept real estate filings that
    contain copies of electronic signatures.
    B.      The Second Question
    You ask second whether the UETA or section 406.013 of the Government Code
    requires a county clerk to accept real estate filings containing a copy of an electronically transmitted
    notary public seal. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2. Although you do not ask about the E-Sign
    Act, we believe, for the reasons cited by the California and New York attorneys general and the
    reasons cited in answer to your first question, that the E-Sign Act does not require a county clerk to
    accept real estate filings containing a copy of an electronically transmitted notary public seal.
    Additionally, nothing in the UETA requires a clerk to accept documents for filing, any portion of
    which is transmitted electronically. Moreover, as we have pointed out, neither the E-Sign Act nor
    the UETA pertains to copies of electronic documents. Section 406.013 of the Government Code,
    which excepts from the requirement that a notary public seal be affixed to a document an
    “electronically transmitted authenticated document,” does not thereby require a clerk to accept for
    The Honorable Eugene D. Taylor       - Page 11           (GA-0228)
    filing a document containing a copy of an electronically      transmitted   notary public seal. See TEX.
    GOV’T CODE ANN. 3 406.013(d) (Vernon Supp. 2004).
    We consequently conclude that neither the UETA nor section 406.013, Government Code,
    requires a county clerk to accept for filing a document containing a copy of an electronically
    transmitted notary public seal.
    C.      The Third Question
    You ask third whether the UETA or section 406.013 of the Government Code
    requires a county clerk to accept faxed.real estate filings. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2.
    A fax is an electronic record for purposes of the UETA. See TEX. Bus. & COMM. CODE ANN.
    § 43.002(5), (7) W emon 2002) (defining the terms “electronic” and “electronic record”); see also
    Madden v. Hegadom, 565 A.2d 725,728 (N.J. Super. Ct. Law Div.), affiz, 
    571 A.2d 296
    (N.J.
    Super. Ct. App. Div. 1989) (per curiam) (explaining the “common knowledge that ‘fax’ machines
    electronically scan documents, reduce the documents to a series of digital signals and transmit them
    over telephone lines to a receiving machine which reassembles the signals and then reproduces
    the original documents”); Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. JC-0471 (2002) at 4 (describing how a fax
    machine works). The UETA does not require a clerk to receive faxes, or other electronic records,
    in any circumstances.   See TEX. Bus. & COMM. CODE ANN. 9 43.005(a) (Vernon 2002). Nor does
    section 406.013, which serves only to except documents that are permitted to be electronically
    transmitted from the embossed or printed notary public seal requirement.      See TEx. GOV’T CODE
    ANN. 5 406.013(c)-(d) (Vernon Supp. 2004).
    We thus conclude that neither the UETA nor section 406.013 of the Government                Code
    requires a county clerk to accept faxed real estate tilings.
    D.      The Fourth Question
    Finally, you ask whether a county clerk who refuses to accept an electronically
    generated real estate filing may be liable for civil penalties under section 11.004(b) of the Property
    Code. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2. Under section 11.004(b), a county clerk who fails to
    correctly record an instrument that is “authorized or required to be filed in that clerk’s office” is
    liable “for a civil penalty of not more than $500.” TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. 9 11.004(a)(l), (b)
    (Vernon 2004). A county clerk has no duty to accept and record a paper copy of an electronically
    generated real estate filing. Indeed, the State Library and Archives Commission’s rules make this
    clear: a county clerk may choose to participate in an electronic filing system. See 13 TEX. ADMIN.
    CODE $8 7.141(4), 7.142(a), (b) (2004). Moreover, because an electronically generated document
    does not comply with statutory requirements for real estate filings, see TEX. PROP. CODE ANN.
    $0 5.021,12.001(a)    (Vernon 2004), a county clerk is prohibited from recording such a document.
    Consequently, a county clerk does not violate section 11.004 by refusing to record an
    electronically generated real estate filing, and the clerk is not liable for civil penalties under section
    11.004(b).
    The Honorable Eugene D. Taylor - Page        12        (GA-0228)
    SUMMARY
    Nothing in the E-Sign Act, 15 United States Code chapter 96,
    or the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act (the “UETA”), chapter 43
    of the Texas Business and Commerce Code, requires a county clerk
    to accept real estate filings that contain copies of electronic
    signatures. Similarly, nothing in the UETA, nor in section 406.013
    of the Government Code, requires a county clerk to accept real estate
    filings containing a copy of an electronically transmitted notary public
    seal. Neither the UETA nor section 406.013 requires a county clerk
    to accept faxed real estate filings. Furthermore, current statutory
    requirements in the Property Code appear to prohibit a county clerk’s
    recording of an electronically generated record or a copy of such a
    record, including an electronically generated signature or notary
    public seal or a faxed document. Finally, a county clerk who refuses
    to accept an electronically generated real estate filing is not liable for
    civil penalties under section 11.004(b) of the Property Code.
    Very91~ YOU
    Attom&$neral        of Texas
    BARRY R. MCBEE
    First Assistant Attorney General
    DON R. WILLETT
    Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
    NANCY S. FULLER
    Chair, Opinion Committee
    Kymberly K. Oltrogge
    Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
    

Document Info

Docket Number: GA-0228

Judges: Greg Abbott

Filed Date: 7/2/2004

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017