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Guarantees signed in wet ink had been delivered electronically

Several legal requirements must be satisfied for a document to constitute a deed. The document must be in writing and it must be clear that it is intended to be a deed, which is usually achieved by describing it as such – at the very outset, or somewhere within it, or in the testimonium clause. The document must also be properly executed. And it must be delivered.

Once upon a time, the requirement for “delivery” was fulfilled by the physical act of delivering possession of the document to the other party. But physical delivery is no longer a necessity. Nowadays, a deed is delivered when a party indicates an intention to be bound by it. Consequently, a deed may be delivered even though the maker retains possession of it, so long as it is clear that the maker intended the deed to become effective and to bind him.

Umrish Ltd v Gill [2020] EWHC 1513 (Ch) raised an intriguing question. Mr Gill signed four guarantees in 2016. The signature blocks against which he signed his name stated “EXECUTED and DELIVERED as a DEED (the day and year first above written) by BOBBY GILL” – and they appeared immediately above a space for the name, signature, address and occupation of a witness (all of which were completed by his wife). After this was done, the defendant scanned the signature pages and forwarded them by e-mail to the parties to whom the guarantees were being given. Did this constitute “delivery” so as to bind him to the guarantees?

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