Vol. 72, No. 2, February 1999
At Issue
Electronic Proxy Voting in Wisconsin
Would Benefit Corporations, Shareholders
Wisconsin would be well served by amending
its proxy appointment statute to specifically authorize electronic
proxy voting.
By Catherine S. Powell
Like other states whose corporate law is based upon the Revised
Model Business Corporation Act, Wisconsin's Business Corporation
Law requires a proxy appointment form to be signed by the shareholder
of record.1 The term "signed"2
currently does not clearly permit Wisconsin shareholders of record
to send an email to a proxy solicitation firm or use a personal
identification number to transmit a proxy appointment by touch-tone
telephone. Thus, the validity of electronically transmitted proxy
appointments is uncertain because such electronic identification,
or even an electronic signature, may not meet the requirement
for a signed proxy appointment.3
Wisconsin should amend its proxy appointment statute, as Delaware,
New York, and at least 22 other states have done, to specifically
authorize electronic proxy voting. Currently, electronic proxy
voting is not feasible if the validity of the electronic proxy
appointment is subject to question. Electronic means are already
used by ADP Investor Communications Services, a proxy solicitation
firm, for the transmission of voting instructions by the beneficial
owner of shares held in street name to the nominee that serves
as the record owner and is actually entitled to vote the shares.
State law concerns about electronic proxy cards and voting are
limited to shareholders of record and do not affect ADP's
street name program.
In the April 1998 Wisconsin Lawyer, Speaker of the
Assembly Scott Jensen (R - Waukesha) wrote about legislation
to allow the use of digital signatures in Wisconsin.4
Near the end of the 1997 legislative session, the Senate passed
AB 811 (1997 Wis. Act 306), with certain modifications from the
Assembly version, authorizing the use of electronic signatures
for documents submitted to a "governmental unit."5
The electronic signature law does not address electronic proxy
voting and was not enacted with the intent of authorizing electronic
proxy voting.
- Wisconsin would be well served by a proxy appointment statute
that recognizes the use of technology:
- Shareholders could use the Internet or a touch-tone telephone
to appoint a proxy - technology that is used by shareholders
in other states and that may enhance their participation in the
annual meeting process.
- Corporations would save money. For example, in the 1998 proxy
season, ADP charged its corporate clients $0.03 for an Internet
vote, $0.18 for a telephone vote, and $0.36 for a proxy returned
by mail.6
- Companies that take pride in innovation and the paperless
office should not be stymied in expanding such efforts to shareholder
relations.
- Wisconsin should continue to be an attractive corporate home
by having a statute that clearly provides for the use of technology
for proxy appointment.
For these reasons, among others, amendments are being proposed
to Wisconsin's proxy appointment statute to allow shareholders
to appoint a proxy by electronic transmission, including Internet
transmission and touch-tone telephone transmission. Corporations
incorporated in Wisconsin that wish to use electronic proxy voting
are encouraged to lend their support to the proposed changes.
Assembly Speaker Scott Jensen (R-Waukesha) and Rep. Jeff Plale
(D-South Milwaukee) are the lead authors of Assembly Bill 60,
the Assembly version of the legislation. Companion legislation
also will be introduced in the Senate; however, its authors are
not confirmed at this writing.
If you have any questions about the proposed changes, please
email or call Jennifer
Boese at the State Bar at (608) 250-6045.
Endnotes
1 Wis. Stat.
§ 180.0722, which is substantially
the same as section 7.22 of the Revised Model Business Corporation
Act (the RMBCA). As explained in Official Comment 1 to section
7.22 of the RMBCA, the word "proxy" often is used ambiguously,
sometimes referring to the grant of authority to vote, sometimes
to the document granting the authority, and sometimes to the
person to whom the authority is granted. In the RMBCA the word
"proxy" is used only in the last sense; the term "appointment
form" is used to describe the document appointing the proxy;
and the word "appointment" is used to describe the
grant of authority to vote.
2 Wis. Stat. §
180.0103(16).
3 See Friedman, Proxy Solicitations and
the Cyberspace Revolution, Insights, Dec. 1997.
4 AB 811 Regulates the Use of Digital Signatures
in Wisconsin, 71Wis. Law. 23-24 (April 1998).
5 Wis. Stat. §§ 137.05,
137.06.
6 Corp. Exec., Mar. - Apr. 1998, at 2.
Catherine S. Powell, William Mitchell
1990, practices general corporate and securities law with Quarles
& Brady LLP, Milwaukee.
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