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Indemnity and Exculpatory Clauses

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Title: Click Wrap Contracts Author: Richard Last modified by: Richard Created Date: 2/6/2004 9:25:14 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Indemnity and Exculpatory Clauses


1
Indemnity and Exculpatory Clauses
  • Richard Warner

2
Patco v. Peoples United Bank
  • The eBanking agreement stated that Ocean Bank
    did not assume any responsibilities with
    respect to Patco's use of eBanking, that
    electronic transmission of confidential business
    and sensitive personal information was at
    Patco's risk, and that Ocean Bank was liable only
    for its gross negligence, limited to six months
    of fees.

3
Patco v. Peoples United Bank
  • Use of Ocean National Bank's eBanking for
    Business by any one owner of a joint account or
    by an authorized signor on an account, shall be
    deemed an authorized transaction on an account
    unless you provide us with written notice that
    the use of Ocean National Bank's eBanking for
    Business is terminated or that the joint account
    owner or authorized signor has been validly
    removed form sic the account.
  • Are these provisions enforceable?

4
Patcos Facts
  • Patco used eBanking for weekly payroll.
  • A key logger stole passwords and answers to
    security questions.
  • Six withdrawals totaling 588,851.26.
  • If the banks security procedures were
    commercially reasonable, the bank has no
    liability.
  • This is the effect of UCC 4A.

5
Risk Profiling
  • Risk Profiling The system entailed the building
    of a risk profile for each customer . . . based
    on a number of different factors, including the
    location from which a user logged in, when/how
    often a user logged in, what a user did while on
    the system, and the size, type, and frequency of
    payment orders normally issued by the customer to
    the bank. The Premium Product noted the IP
    address that the customer typically used to log
    into online banking and added it to the customer
    profile.

6
Precautions Patco Did Not Use
  • In May 2009, bank personnel did not monitor the
    risk-scoring reports received as part of the
    Premium Product package, nor did the bank conduct
    any other regular review of transactions that
    generated high risk scores. In May 2009, the bank
    had the capability to conduct manual review of
    high-risk transactions through its
    transaction-profiling and risk-scoring system,
    but did not do so. The bank also had the ability
    to call a customer if it detected fraudulent
    activity, but did not do so.

7
The Withdrawals
  • May 7 56,594. The risk-scoring engine
    generated a risk score of 790 for the
    transaction, a significant departure from Patco's
    usual risk scores, which generally ranged from 10
    to 214.
  • (1) Very high risk non-authenticated device
    (2) High risk transaction amount (3) IP
    anomaly and (4) Risk score distributor per
    cookie age.
  • May 8 115,620.26, from the same IP address.
  • May 11 99,068 / 720
  • May 12 91,959 / 563
  • May 13 113,647 / 785

8
The Holding
  • (1) Ocean Bank did substantially increase the
    risk of fraud by asking for security answers for
    every 1 transaction . . . (2) When it had
    warning that such fraud was likely occurring in a
    given transaction, Ocean Bank neither monitored
    that transaction nor provided notice to customers
    . . . (3) Because it had the capacity to do all
    of those things, yet failed to do so, we cannot
    conclude that its security system was
    commercially reasonable. (4) . . . it was these
    collective failures taken as a whole, rather than
    any single failure, which rendered Ocean Bank's
    security system commercially unreasonable.

9
Enforceability of the Provisions
  • It is unclear, however, what, if any,
    obligations a commercial customer has when a
    bank's security system is found to be
    commercially unreasonable.
  • Why?

10
Types of Clauses
  • Exculpatory clause immunizes a person from the
    consequences of his/her negligence.
  • The type of clause in Patco.
  • Indemnity clause holds the indemnitee harmless
    from liability by requiring the indemnitor to
    bear the cost of any damages for which the
    indemnitee is held liable.
  • Waiver of liability protects a beneficiary from
    liability under certain conditions when services
    he or she received are found to be not as
    promised.

11
Comment of the Drafters of UCC 4A
  • Funds transfers involve competing intereststhose
    of the banks that provide funds transfer services
    and the commercial and financial organizations
    that use the services, as well as the public
    interest. These competing interests were
    represented in the drafting process and they were
    thoroughly considered.

12
Comment of the Drafters of UCC 4A
  • The rules that emerged represent a careful and
    delicate balancing of those interests and are
    intended to be the exclusive means of determining
    the rights, duties and liabilities of the
    affected parties in any situation covered by
    particular provisions of the Article.
    Consequently, resort to principles of law or
    equity outside of Article 4A is not appropriate
    to create rights, duties and liabilities
    inconsistent with those stated in this Article.

13
The Public Policy Question
  • Given the clear public policy behind 4A, should
    the bank be able to avoid liability through the
    exculpatory clause?

14
Damage Waivers
  • Consequential (indirect) damages generally may be
    waived.
  • Direct damages generally may not be waived.
  • Liability for reckless or intentional actions
    cannot be waived.
  • Liability for a defective product cannot be
    waived.

15
Exculpatory and Indemnity Clauses
  • General rule the clause is enforceable if
    reasonable.
  • It must not contravene public policy.
  • This is the question in Patco.
  • It must be clear and understandable.
  • The releasing party must know and understand the
    risk released.
  • There must be no unacceptable disparity in
    bargaining power.

16
UCC 2-719. Contractual Modification or
Limitation of Remedy.
  • (1) . . . (a) the agreement may provide for
    remedies in addition to or in substitution for
    those provided in this Article and may limit or
    alter the measure of damages recoverable under
    this Article, as by limiting the buyer's remedies
    to return of the goods and repayment of the price
    or to repair or replacement of non-conforming
    goods or parts and, (b) resort to a remedy as
    provided is optional unless the remedy is
    expressly agreed to be exclusive, in which case
    it is the sole remedy.

17
UCC 2-719
  • (2) Where circumstances cause an exclusive or
    limited remedy to fail of its essential purpose,
    remedy may be had as provided in this Act.
  • (3) Consequential damages may be limited or
    excluded unless the limitation or exclusion is
    unconscionable. Limitation of consequential
    damages for injury to the person in the case of
    consumer goods is prima facie unconscionable but
    limitation of damages where the loss is
    commercial is not.
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