The Lawletter Vol. 49 No. 3
Matthew McDavitt, Senior Attorney
ESTATES: Enactments of the Uniform Electronic Wills Act
Traditionally, to be valid, a last will and testament had to be executed on paper with the requisite will execution formalities, with the testator and the dual attesting will witnesses physically signing the instrument together at the will execution ceremony. In recent years, however, an increasing proportion of contracts and instruments nationally are executed wholly electronically, wherein the requisite signatures and witness attestations are now often made via digital means. Similarly, in states exacting the Uniform Electronic Wills Act, the testator, attesting witnesses, and notary may now appear via video conference in the “electronic presence” of each other, rather than in person. The Uniform Electronic Wills Act thus empowers testators in jurisdictions that have enacted this model statutory text to execute wills electronically, with the attesting witnesses able to appear and witness the will execution via video conference. Additionally, a valid electronic will under the Act must be a “tamper-evident electronic record” to guard against fraudulent tampering with such digital testamentary instrument post execution. Also, under the model Act, an electronic will, once validly executed, may be revoked via (1) a subsequent inconsistent will, or (2) by “physical act,” which, though not defined, may mean deletion of the authenticated, executed digital will file.
In its summary of its model Uniform Electronic Wills Act, the Uniform Law Commission explains that the purpose of this model electronic will statutory text is to bring wills into the computer age, empowering states to authorize the digital drafting, execution, and archiving of wills:
These requirements for executing wills are still important, but in the internet age paper is no longer necessary. Electronic documents can also be securely signed, witnessed, and archived until needed. Moreover, people who use the internet to communicate, shop, and transact business also expect to find legal services online. The Uniform Electronic Wills Act (“E-Wills Act”) brings estate planning into the digital age by allowing the online execution of wills while preserving the legal safeguards to ensure a will’s authenticity.
The E-Wills Act requires a testator to make a will that is readable as text at the time the testator electronically signs the document. The testator’s signature must be witnessed by two people who add their own electronic signatures. Adopting states can opt for a version of the E-Wills Act that requires the witnesses to be physically present with the testator at the time of signing, or for a version that allows remote witnessing.
Uniform Law Commission, Electronic Wills Act, Summary (2019).[1] To date, a total of eight U.S. states, districts, and territories have enacted iterations of the Uniform Electronic Wills Act:
- Colorado Uniform Electronic Wills Act (§§ 15-11-1301 to 15-11-1311)
- District of Columbia Uniform Electronic Wills Act (§§ 18-901 to 18-911)
- Idaho Uniform Electronic Wills Act (§§ 15-2-1101 to 15-2-1111)
- North Dakota Uniform Electronic Wills Act (§§ 30.1-37-01 to 30.1-37-07)
- Oklahoma Uniform Electronic Estate Planning Documents Act (§§ 911–927)
- Utah Uniform Electronic Wills Act (§§ 75-2-1401 to 75-2-1411)
- Virgin Islands Uniform Electronic Wills Act (§§ 51–62)
- Washington Uniform Electronic Estate Planning Documents Act (§§ 11.135.005–11.135.902)
As a result, in the listed eight jurisdictions that have enacted iterations of the Uniform Electronic Wills Act, testators and their attorneys now have the option to create a valid last will and testament via solely electronic means.
[1] https://www.uniformlaws.org/committees/community-home?communitykey=a0a16f19-97a8-4f86-afc1-b1c0e051fc71.