In New Castle, Delaware, a historical marker at the landing place of William Penn reads:
“Near here October 27, 1682, William Penn first stepped on American soil. He proceeded to the fort and performed livery of seisen.‘He took the key thereof.… We did deliver unto him turf with a twig-upon it, a porringer with river water and soil, in part ofall.’”
The common-law ceremony of “livery of seisen” referred to on the historical marker served the dual purpose of providing certainty to ownership in the context of a paperless society (in which the old sheepskin bestowed at graduation was written on a sheep’s skin) and introducing some quaint French words into the legal system. The terms “livery,” “feoffor,” and “feoffee” and the ceremony itself have become institutionalized in real estate practice in the terms delivery, offeror, and offeree as well as the requirements of the statute of frauds and the statutes related to eligibility for recording.
The Middle Ages ceremony consisted of the feoffor and the feoffee and their witnesses standing on or near the property. Conveyance was accomplished by a declaration by the feoffor and the transfer of an object such as a piece of turf or the ring of a door.
This method of conveying real estate continued to be legal in England until 1925, when it was abolished, presumably because the register of deeds offices were becoming cluttered with too many clumps of dirt.
Statutory Provisions for Delivery
In Wisconsin, Wis. Stat. section 706.02 replaces the common-law ceremony and recites the elements that are required for a valid real estate transfer. The statute provides that certain real estate transfers are only valid if there is a conveyance (a written instrument) that contains seven elements:
Michael W. Tobin, Marquette 1980, practices in Wauwatosa with attorney Doug Rebholz. He is also a continuing education instructor with the Wisconsin Realtors Association.
Formal requisites.
(1) Transactions under s. 706.001 (1) shall not be valid unless evidenced by a conveyance that satisfies all of the following:
(a) Identifies the parties; and
(b) Identifies the land; and
(c) Identifies the interest conveyed, and any material term, condition, reservation, exception or contingency upon which the interest is to arise, continue or be extinguished, limited or encumbered; and
(d) Is signed by or on behalf of each of the grantors; and
(e) Is signed by or on behalf of all parties, if a lease or contract to convey; and
(f) Is signed, or joined in by separate conveyance, by or on behalf of each spouse, if the conveyance alienates any interest of a married person in a homestead under s. 706.01 (7) except conveyances between spouses, but on a purchase money mortgage pledging that property as security only the purchaser need sign the mortgage; and
(g) Is delivered. Except under s. 706.09, a conveyance delivered upon a parol limitation or condition shall be subject thereto only if the issue arises in an action or proceeding commenced within 5 years following the date of such conditional delivery; however, when death or survival of a grantor is made such a limiting or conditioning circumstance, the conveyance shall be subject thereto only if the issue arises in an action or proceeding commenced within such 5-year period and commenced prior to such death.
Wisconsin Statutes section 706.05 provides additional elements in order to record the document, including authentication or acknowledgement of signatures (the witness) and a full legal description.
The elements of the statute, while relatively simple, nonetheless invite compliance issues related to delivery, which is not separately defined. Most of the relevant case law involves estate planning situations, in which a deed intended to take effect at death was properly executed but left in the decedent’s estate planning file. Often, the grantee in such situations was unaware of the transfer, and other beneficiaries who would be prejudiced if the deed was effective were able to overcome the transfer, arguing lack of delivery.
A typical fact situation is recited in the Pennsylvania case of Fiore v. Fiore, 405 Pa. 303 (1961). Fiore involved a deed prepared at the direction of the grantor, properly executed, and left in the care of the drafting attorney. Seventeen years later, the deed was “discovered” by the attorney, recorded by the grantor’s widow (15 years after his death), and contested by a son. In holding in favor of the son, the court noted two indispensible requisites – donative intent and delivery – and concluded that the record did not support a conclusion that the grantor had ever intended delivery.
The standard form offer to purchase in Wisconsin (required for use by real estate licensees) provides that a real estate contract must include two events to be enforceable. The first is “acceptance” and the second is “binding acceptance.” Acceptance is defined as physically signing the document, while binding acceptance is the act of delivering it to the other party. Curiously, many dates in the contract are predicated on the date of acceptance, which could be well before the document is delivered.
The offer to purchase form provides for five methods of delivery:
- personal delivery;
- mail;
- commercial delivery;
- faxing to a fax number; or
- email.
The default choice on the offer to purchase is personal delivery. Use of any of the remaining options requires first that the box next to the method be checked, and second that the appropriate data for the method be included. Failure to check the box next to a method results in that method not being available as the result of the language at line 31 of the offer to purchase form even if the data is included.
In addition to the five delivery methods the offer to purchase form provides, technology has developed additional delivery methods that are not contemplated by the approved form. Texting pictures of executed pages, faxing to an email address, or delivery by drone could be contractual delivery methods, but would require a separate provision on the offer to purchase.
Wisconsin decisions consistently require compliance with the contractual delivery method. In Stubbe v. Hamland, No. 2012AP469, 2012 WL 4872116 (Wis. Ct. App. Oct. 16, 2012) (unpublished), the court addressed the delivery of a financing commitment. The standard Wisconsin offer requires that delivery of the commitment letter be accompanied by the buyer’s written direction to deliver it. Because that direction was not included, the delivery of the commitment letter was ineffective.
Wisconsin Realtors® Association
Consent for Use of Electronic Documents and Signatures in Consumer Real Estate Transactions
If you want the option of sending and receiving real estate transaction documents by email, federal law requires certain safeguards to ensure that consumers like you have the capability to receive such disclosures and are fully aware of the consequences of agreeing to receive documents electronically. Federal law requires your consent to use email and electronic versions of information, disclosures, contracts, and other documents and records (“electronic documents”) that would otherwise be legally effective only if provided to you in a printed/written paper document.
Understanding electronic “lingo:” “Electronic documents” include the documents you may save on your computer or attach to email. They can typically be printed out, but exist independently in an electronic form on your computer.
“Electronic signatures” are sometimes hard to conceptualize. An “electronic signature” includes any mark, symbol, sound, or process that is written, stamped, engraved, attached to, or logically associated with an electronic document and executed by a person with the intent to sign. Just like you can legally “sign” a printed document by making your mark, whether that be your cursive signature in ink or an “X,” so you can “sign” an electronic document by making your mark, whether that be a high-tech encrypted or digital signature or just typing your name in the signature line or space on an email or document on the computer – these are all electronic signatures. If you sign a paper document in ink and then scan the document and save it on your computer, the image of the cursive signature on the stored electronic document on your computer is also an electronic signature.
1) Right to receive paper document: You have the right to have any document provided in paper form. If you want a paper copy of any document sent to you by email, send your request to the broker at the mail or email address provided below. Paper copies will be provided at no charge.
2) Right to withdraw consent: You have the right to withdraw your consent to receive electronic documents by email by contacting the broker by mail or email at the address provided below. The legal validity and enforceability of the electronic documents, signatures, and deliveries used prior to withdrawal of consent will not be affected.
3) Changes to your email address: You should keep the broker informed of any change in your electronic or emailing address. Please contact the broker as promptly as possible by mail or email at the address provided below regarding any such changes.
4) Minimum hardware and software requirements: The following hardware and software are required to access (open and read) and retain (save) the electronic documents:
- Operating Systems: Windows Vista or higher; or Macintosh OS 8.1 or higher
- Browsers: Internet Explorer 5.01 or above or equivalent
- Needed Software/Electronic Document Formats: Adobe Acrobat Reader or equivalent for PDF files; Word program for Word files
- Sample Files (make sure you can open and save):
Word document: Word sample file
PDF document: PDF sample file
5) Your ability to access disclosures: By completing and emailing this consent to the broker, you acknowledge that you can access and retain the electronic documents in sample files above.
6) Consent to electronic signatures and documents: By completing and emailing this consent form to the broker at the email address specified below you are providing electronic consent to the use of electronic documents and signatures in your real estate transaction. Specifically, you are acknowledging receipt of this form and consenting to the use of electronic documents, email delivery of documents, and electronic signatures in any real estate transactions involving you, the broker identified below, and other parties. If you prefer instead to limit this consent to the transaction relative to a specific property, provide the property address or description below.
Specific property:
CONTACT INFORMATION:
Broker name:
Agent’s name (optional):
Address:
Email address:
Party signature (sign or type in name):
Email address:
© Copyright 1998 – 2016
Wisconsin REALTORS® Association.
Used with permission.
This form is freely available.
Electronic Delivery
The electronic option for delivery at lines 51-52 of the offer to purchase form provides “each consumer providing an e-mail address below has first consented electronically to the use of electronic documents, e-mail delivery and electronic signatures in the transaction, as required by federal law.”
Wisconsin’s rules related to electronic transactions are contained in Wis. Stat. chapter 137. Those rules are applicable except when superseded by federal law. A commercial real estate transaction is covered under Wisconsin law, while a consumer real estate transaction must comply with federal law.
The federal e-consent law is the “Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act,” which applies when information relating to a transaction is required to be made in writing. For electronic transactions to be valid, the parties are required to receive an electronic form, sign it electronically, and return it to the originating computer. The purpose of the law is to confirm the consent and ability of the parties to send and receive electronic documents. Obsolete hardware and software may satisfy an owner’s needs but result in an inability to open files delivered electronically by a more modern computer.
The Wisconsin Realtors Association (WRA) has developed a form that complies with the e-consent requirements. WRA forms are available to Wisconsin lawyers who purchase a legal section membership from the association.
Delivery Problems
In reviewing offers submitted by clients suffering buyer’s remorse, a first line of evaluation is to determine whether the contract has been properly accepted. Failure to comply with e-consent or otherwise properly deliver often presents itself as the first argument for asserting the absence of a valid contract. (A second item, often overlooked, is the applicability of the requirement for a lead-based paint disclosure – and delivery of a pamphlet – also required under federal law.)
In addition to the possibility a party will argue the contract is unenforceable, lawyers using electronic delivery should also be aware that lenders exercising the “best practices” now required by federal law (the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act) are requiring receipts confirming electronic consent was accomplished. Inability to produce the receipt will be not only embarrassing but also contractually problematic, especially if it is a condition at closing and the lawyer is unable to produce it.
Conclusion
Paperless transactions were the norm in real estate for many centuries. Then, for a few hundred years, paper transactions were the acceptable method of transferring real estate in the United States. In the last decade, the industry has been returning to a paperless format. Whether to participate in that model is a decision not to be made lightly. If the choice is to engage in the business of real estate law electronically, compliance with the rules of livery of seisen is still required, and caution must be exercised to apply those rules to the new law and technology affecting real estate transactions today.
Meet Out Contributors
What do you do for fun?
In addition to helping people solve problems, I particularly like seeing young people learn to enjoy the activities I’ve had the blessings to enjoy. Pictured right is my 8-year-old grandson Kosta with his first big fish, caught on a family outing this August.
Michael W. Tobin, Law Offices of Michael W. Tobin, S.C., Wauwatosa.
Become a contributor! Are you working on an interesting case? Have a practice tip to share? There are several ways to contribute to Wisconsin Lawyer. To discuss a topic idea, contact Managing Editor Karlé Lester at (800) 444-9404, ext. 6127, or email klester@wisbar.org. Check out our writing and submission guidelines.