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67 Vand. L. Rev. 1697 (2014)
Probate Law Meets the Digital Age

handle is hein.journals/vanlr67 and id is 1731 raw text is: Probate Law Meets the Digital Age
Naomi Cahn*
This Article explores the impact of federal law on a state fiduciary's
management of digital assets. It focuses on the lessons from the Stored
Communications Act (SCA'), initially enacted in 1986 as one part of the
Electronic Communications Privacy Act. Although Congress designed the
SCA to respond to concerns that Internet privacy posed new dilemmas with
respect to application of the Fourth Amendment's privacy protections, the
drafters did not explicitly consider how the SCA might affect property
management and distribution. The resulting uncertainty affects anyone with
an email account.
While existing trusts and estates laws could legitimately be interpreted
to encompass the new technologies, and while the laws applicable to these new
technologies could be interpreted to account for wealth transfer, we are
currently in a transition period. To fulfill their obligations, however,
fiduciaries need certainty and uniformity. The article suggests reform to
existing state and federal laws to ensure that nonprobate-focused federal laws
ultimately effectuate the decedent's intent. The lessons learned from examining
the intersection of federal law focused on digital assets and of state fiduciary
law extend more broadly to show the unintended consequences of other
nonprobate-focused federal laws.
I.      INTRODUCTION                          ....................................... 1698
II.     DIGITAL ASSETS AND INHERITANCE .........                   ........... 1702
III.    DIGITAL ASSETS AND FEDERAL LAW                      ................... 1706
A.      Lawful Consent by Whom?            ...................      1710
*   Naomi Cahn is the Harold H. Greene Professor of Law, George Washington University
Law School. This essay has been prepared for the symposium, The Role of Federal Law in Private
Wealth Transfer (Vanderbilt 2014). Thanks to Jerome Borison, Brad Clark, Susan Gary, Adam
Hirsch, Orin Kerr, Jim Lamm, Paula Monopoli, Ben Orzeske, Jeff Schoenblum, Jon Siegel, Peter
Smith, Suzy Walsh, and Amy Ziettlow. I very much appreciate the pre-symposium careful review
by David Horton. I am deeply grateful to Suzy Walsh for her leadership of the ULC's Uniform
Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act Drafting Committee, to other members of the Committee
for their support, and to Jim Lamm and Gene Hennig for their vision. Thanks also to Jodi Lebolt
for research assistance and to Claire Duggan. I was the Reporter for the UFADAA; all views in
this article are my own and are not official (or unofficial) policy of the Conference. Thank you to
the staff of the Vanderbilt Law Review, and particularly to Daniel Hay, for its support of this
Article and the Symposium.
1697

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