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WHAT HAPPENS
TO YOUR E-MAIL AFTER YOU DIE?
When a young Marine died in Iraq and
his parents wanted to retrieve his e-mail as a memorial to him, they came
up against the privacy policy of the Internet service provider (ISP), which
declined to provide the information. Ultimately, a probate court ordered
that the parents be allowed to retrieve the e-mails.
When a prominent poet died without leaving
the password for his e-mail account, where he kept virtually every significant
piece of personal information, his daughter had no means of gaining access
to that information so that she could notify others of her father's death.
Citing privacy concerns, the ISP for the account refused to divulge the
information to the daughter.
These real-life stories are the leading
edge of what may become a wave of litigation concerning ownership of e-mail
information upon the death of the account holder. The competing interests
are the privacy of the account holder, coupled with the ISP's interest
in preserving that privacy, and the survivors' rights to the property of
the deceased.
Most of us think of e-mail as the modern
equivalent of a box of letters belonging to us, when, technically, e-mail
is an intangible form of property owned by the ISP. Nonetheless, if it
is possible to spot an early trend on the issue, that tendency is to treat
e-mail information as the account holder's property upon his or her death.
In most states, the issue is still unresolved and without clear case precedents.
At least one state has passed a law directing ISPs to turn over the e-mail
of a decedent to the personal representative for the decedent's estate.
Steps
to Take Now
It will be some time before legislatures
and courts catch up with the reality that millions of people use their
e-mail accounts as repositories for all sorts of information having sentimental,
historical, or economic value. In the meantime, there is some practical
advice for facilitating access to e-mail information "left behind":
* Read your ISP's privacy policy to determine
what your survivors may have to contend with to get access to your e-mails.
The policies run the gamut from providing e-mails to next of kin upon showing
a power of attorney over the account and a death certificate, to treating
e-mail accounts as non-transferable and with no right of survivorship.
* As strange as it may sound, consider
dealing directly with the issue in your estate planning by including e-mails
specifically in your will, especially if they have monetary value. In connection
with this, you should archive the information to your hard drive and be
sure that your survivors have any necessary passwords. Conversely, if you
want to take your e-mails with you, in effect, stipulate in your will that
no one is to have access to your account.
* Get good legal advice, including information
as to whether there are any new laws in your state on the subject. They
could trump, or at least affect, whatever arrangements you have made or
may be considering for disposing of your e-mails after your death.
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BEWARE
OF FAKE CHECKS
You have responded to a work-at-home
offer in which you will be an account manager for a foreign company,
depositing checks from its U.S. customers. It seems simple: You deposit
the checks, take your pay out of them, and send the remainder to the
foreign company. Or . . . you have reason to believe you have won a sweepstakes
or lottery prize. You receive a check for your winnings, with instructions
to cash it, then return a portion of the money to cover taxes or other
fees. Or . . . having sold something through a newspaper ad or online, you
receive a check for much more than the purchase price. Calling it an accounting
error, the buyer apologizes for the mistake and asks that you return the
excess amount.
If these scenarios activate your fraud
antennae, there is a good reason for that. Each is a typical example of
circumstances in which people are victimized by fake checks. This is a growing
problem, perhaps because of the ways in which strangers are brought together
for transactions by new technologies and the Internet. If there is a single
best piece of advice for not becoming a victim, it is to accept no check
if it is accompanied by a request that you return some of the money.
Of course, the sting from the scam occurs
when the victim deposits the check he receives, then withdraws funds and
sends off money or merchandise before his bank discovers that the deposited
check is fraudulent. Even when the bank is vigilant, that discovery could
take days, or even weeks. Your first reaction might be to blame the bank,
but, generally, the depositor is on the hook, as he is considered to have
taken responsibility for the funds spent or sent before the fraud is discovered.
In addition to the big red flag in the
form of being asked to return part of the money sent by check to you, here
are some more warning signs and protective measures:
* Upon receiving a check from a stranger,
explain the situation to your bank manager and ask the manager when the
check is likely to be considered "good." Then wait until you get the go-ahead
before using the funds. If, in the meantime, the check writer pesters you
about the delay, that may just be one more sign that you were targeted to
be a fake check victim.
* Scam artists are often clever and skillful,
making it difficult to detect a false check from the check itself. This
makes it all the more important to pay attention to, and to be guided by,
suspicious circumstances. Some of these include offers that defy common sense
(if you really won a prize, wouldn't they just deduct taxes or fees from
the check for your winnings?); being asked to send money outside of the
U.S. (thus making it harder to find the culprit and the money); and being
warned not to discuss the transaction with anyone else.
* Consider accepting payment not by personal
check, but only in the form of a money order or a cashier's check drawn
on a local bank, so that you can take it there to ensure that it is legitimate.
Another option is a money order from the U.S. Postal Service.
* Especially when dealing with a stranger
over the Internet, try to confirm the person's name, address, home phone
number, and work number through some independent means, such as directory
assistance or an online database.
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DOES THE ADA APPLY TO WEBSITES?
Recently a federal trial court became
the first court to find that a commercial website must be accessible to
the disabled, and to blind customers in particular, because of the prohibition
against disability discrimination by places of public accommodation contained
in the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Whether the retailer would,
in fact, be liable on the particular facts of the case remained to be
decided, but the court declined to dismiss the class action complaint.
Requiring businesses to make their websites
fully accessible by the blind will likely involve adding computer code
for "alternative text" that permits screen-reading software used by blind
individuals to vocalize the text and describe the contents of the webpage.
Using this code when the site is initially designed is less expensive than
retrofitting a website later.
The retailer argued to no avail that
the demands of the ADA do not apply, because a website, since it is not
really a physical place at all, is not a "place of public accommodation"
within the meaning of the ADA. The court reasoned that the ADA requires
full and equal enjoyment of the services "of" any place of public accommodation,
not services "in" a place of public accommodation. The ADA is not only
about physical access to places.
The court found that the retailer's
many brick-and-mortar stores constituted the "places" of public accommodation.
The retailer's website serves as a "gateway" to such stores, especially
for blind customers. If the website is not fully accessible to them, it
impedes those customers from coming through the gateway, that is, from
having the "full and equal enjoyment" of the stores' goods and services
that the ADA mandates. The court drew an analogy to a case in which a telephone
screening process for prospective contestants for a television game show
violated the ADA by discriminating against the hearing disabled, even
though the discrimination took place away from the studio where the show
was produced.
Although the decision broke new ground
in ADA jurisprudence, the court's "gateway" reasoning relied on the connection
between the business's website and its many retail stores. The court did
not have occasion to address the variation on the same issue posed by the
websites of retailers who have no brick-and-mortar stores. Such a situation
presents a closer question as to whether the ADA applies. For a website-only
business to come within the ADA, a court would have to find that a "place
of public accommodation" does not have to include a physical place at
all, but can, instead, be the virtual world in which website transactions
occur.
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ZONING
LAWS AND THE EXERCISE OF RELIGION
The federal Religious Land Use and Institutionalized
Persons Act of 2000 (RLUIPA) provides that the government may not implement
a land use regulation in a manner that imposes a substantial burden on
the religious exercise of a person, including a religious assembly or institution,
unless the government demonstrates two things: that imposition of the burden
on that person, assembly, or institution is both in furtherance of a compelling
governmental interest, and is the least restrictive means of furthering
that interest.
In applying the standards of the Act,
courts have held that various activities, whether or not central to an
individual's belief system, are a "religious exercise" within the meaning
of the RLUIPA. If individuals are forced to modify the religious exercise,
courts have tended to find that the governmental regulation has created a
substantial burden within the meaning of the Act. Nevertheless, where an
individual is still left with the ability to choose another method that will
not seriously affect the religious practice, or the action taken only tangentially
impacts the religious exercise, courts have held that there is no substantial
burden.
Compelling
Interest?
In deciding whether or not to uphold
the governmental regulation, courts have analyzed the interest the governmental
unit had in creating the regulation to see if it is a compelling one. For
example, significant health and safety considerations may be found to
be compelling public interests. Even a finding of a compelling interest
does not end the analysis. The regulation employed must be the least restrictive
means to meet that interest, as required by the Act.
The governmental entity may change its
regulations to alleviate the burden on religious exercise and thereby avoid
the prohibitory effects of the Act. For example, the government may escape
the prohibitions by retaining most of its land use policies or practices,
but adding exemptions for applications that substantially burden the exercise
of religion. In addition, the RLUIPA will not apply in the first place
if the governmental unit acted pursuant to some authority other than a
law on zoning or the designation of landmarks.
In
the Courts
A recent case demonstrates that it is
not enough to invoke the protections of the RLUIPA that a proposed land
use is connected in some way with a church or religious group. A church
brought an action under the RLUIPA challenging a municipality's refusal
to permit it to operate a day-care facility with a component of religious
instruction in a low-density residential neighborhood.
According to the federal court that decided
the case, the RLUIPA does not require the religious activity that was substantially
burdened by the land use regulation at issue to be "fundamental" to a religion.
Still, the church's claim failed because the jury found that the church
did not prove that it was engaged in a "sincere exercise of religion" in
seeking a variance to operate the day-care center.
The church's case was hurt by its bishop's
admissions, in a letter responding to the church pastor's request for help,
that the day-care center appeared to be more of a traditional commercial
venture and less of a religious function.
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UNSIGHTLY
APPEARANCES
A property owner operated a business
variously described as a flea market, a second-hand store, and a repair
service for lawnmowers and tillers. After the city inspected his property,
it cited him for violating a public nuisance ordinance, listing a variety
of items ranging from baby strollers to automobile seats. The property owner
argued that the city ordinance against an "unsightly appearance" was so
hard to pin down as to be unenforceable. The state supreme court, however,
rejected his argument.
The challenge to the ordinance rested
on the contention that the term "unsightly" is so vague that a reasonable
person could not know which conditions were prohibited and which were
not. The city's winning response to this argument was that the court was
not to look at the ordinance section on "unsightly appearance" in a vacuum,
but was required to consider it in the context of the entire public nuisance
ordinance.
The city had the power to prohibit conditions
that debase the appearance and character of its neighborhoods. An ordinance
regulating aesthetic conditions must use some general terms because it
is impossible to describe every conceivable circumstance that the ordinance
is meant to address.
Ugliness, like beauty, is in the eye
of the beholder.
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