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E-signatures – a Scottish perspective

In a rapidly changing world, where agile and remote working has become the norm and face-to-face meetings and the signing of documents in wet ink have declined, the business world has had to adapt. Some process changes aren’t glamorous but they can save cost, improve compliance and auditability, and simply make what would otherwise be time-consuming tasks much easier. The use of e-signatures is a good example.

Types of electronic signature

An electronic signature is defined as “data in electronic form which is attached to or logically associated with other data in electronic from and which is used by the signatory to sign”. The three main types of electronic signature are:

  1. Simple electronic signatures – the most basic form, but most widely used, includes using a finger or stylus to sign on a pad when accepting a delivery, clicking an on-screen button which says “I agree” or ticking a box which says “I accept the terms and conditions”;
  2. Advanced electronic signatures (AES) – more secure, as they are uniquely linked to the signatory, capable of identifying them and are created using means that the signatory can maintain under their sole control; and
  3. Qualified electronic signatures (QES) – the highest standard and most secure. This involves the signatory’s identity being verified by a qualified trust service provider before the signatory is issued with a QES. Under Scots law, a QES is the only type of electronic signature that is self-proving (ie probative). The Law Society of Scotland smartcard enables Scottish solicitors to apply a QES to documents, but the smartcard scheme has not proven popular with the legal profession, and cloud-based e-signing platforms such as Docusign and Adobe Sign are being more widely adopted – albeit at an additional cost.

Legal validity and admissibility

In 2012, the Requirements of Writing (Scotland) Act 1995 was amended to explicitly allow certain documents, which had to be written tangibly under section 1(2), to take electronic form as an alternative to a paper document. The amended 1995 Act did not contain an express statement of validity for electronic signatures; but it did give legal effect to documents signed electronically where they meet certain requirements.

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