THE OKLAHOMA BAR JOURNAL 42 | JANUARY 2025 Statements or opinions expressed in the Oklahoma Bar Journal are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Oklahoma Bar Association, its officers, Board of Governors, Board of Editors or staff. UNIFORM ELECTRONIC ESTATE PLANNING DOCUMENTS ACT AND THE UNIFORM ELECTRONIC WILLS ACT The Uniform Electronic Estate Planning Documents Act (UEEPDA)2 fills a gap in the law regarding the execution of certain estate planning documents, including trusts and powers of attorney. The Uniform Electronic Transactions Act (UETA),3 which was adopted in Oklahoma in 2000, authorizes the electronic execution of bilateral contracts if the parties to a transaction agree. The Uniform Electronic Wills Act (UEWA) authorizes the testator of a will and witnesses to execute a will in electronic form. However, trusts, powers of attorney and some other types of estate planning documents fell into a legal grey area where the law governing electronic execution was ambiguous. The UEEPDA clarifies that these documents may also be executed in electronic form. The UEEPDA was drafted to complement the UEWA and was adopted by Oklahoma simultaneously with that act to comprehensively authorize the electronic execution of wills, trusts, powers of attorney and several other types of common estate planning documents. UNIFORM FIDUCIARY ACCESS TO DIGITAL ASSETS ACT A fiduciary is a person appointed to manage the property of another person, subject to strict duties to act in the other person’s best interest. Common types of fiduciaries include executors of a decedent’s estate, trustees, conservators and agents under a power of attorney. The Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act (UFADA)4 extends the traditional power of a fiduciary to manage tangible property to include the management of a person’s digital assets. The UFADA allows fiduciaries to manage digital property – like computer files, web domains and virtual currency – but restricts a fiduciary’s access to electronic communications – such as emails, text messages and social media accounts – unless the original user consented in a will, trust, power of attorney or another record. UNIFORM SPECIAL DEPOSITS ACT A special deposit is an account at a bank that holds funds that may be paid upon the occurrence of one or more contingencies. Although such accounts are common, the legal protections afforded to them are uncertain and outdated in the context of modern banking. The Uniform Special Deposits Act (USDA)5 minimizes these legal uncertainties by providing clear and executable rules. First, the USDA sets forth several elements for when a deposit is considered a “special deposit.” Second, the USDA specifies that a special deposit is a debt owed to the beneficiary after the determination of a stated contingency. Third, the USDA clarifies that a special deposit is remote from a depositor’s bankruptcy estate unless the depositor has a determined right to the special deposit in its capacity as a beneficiary. Finally, the USDA reduces the vulnerability created by the prospect of the bank holding the special deposit, exercising a right of set off against the special deposit for a mature debt of the depositor or a beneficiary. The USDA gives banks and their customers legal certainty that the expectations of special deposit account users will be respected. AMENDMENTS TO THE UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE The 2022 amendments to the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)6 update and modernize the UCC to address emerging technologies. A new UCC Article 12, “Controllable Electronic Records,” governs transactions involving new types of digital assets (such as virtual currencies, electronic money and nonfungible tokens), and corresponding changes to UCC Article 9 address security interests in digital For more than a century, the ULC has helped secure uniformity of state law in legal areas where conflicting laws would obstruct the interests of United States citizens.
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