9781911507321.pdf

This book explores the judicial development of the concept of the signature from the thirteenth century to the age of the facsimile transmission. It puts the concept of the signature into a broad legal context to set out the purposes that can be attributed to a signature, and to explain the function...

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Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: University of London Press 2023
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spelling oapen-20.500.12657-862942024-04-19T09:25:37Z The Signature in Law Mason, Stephen signature authentication facsimile transmission common law adapting technological developments This book explores the judicial development of the concept of the signature from the thirteenth century to the age of the facsimile transmission. It puts the concept of the signature into a broad legal context to set out the purposes that can be attributed to a signature, and to explain the functions a signature is capable of performing. Drawing on cases from common law jurisdictions across the world, the book demonstrates that judges expanded the meaning of a signature as technologies developed and were used in unanticipated ways. Following an overview of the methods used to demonstrate proof of intent and authentication, the book considers the judicial response to the array of variations in the form that manuscript signatures have been subject over the past two hundred years, from initials, partial signatures and fingerprints, to rubber stamps and typewriting. Past judicial decision-making not only demonstrates the flexibility of the form a signature can take, but also confirms that judges had the flexibility of mind to accept the first forms of electronic signature (telex, facsimile transmission) as merely one further development without the aid of special legislation. 2023-12-21T16:36:01Z 2023-12-21T16:36:01Z 2022 book ONIX_20231221_9781911507321_13 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/86294 eng OBserving Law application/pdf n/a 9781911507321.pdf University of London Press University of London Press 10.14296/zbwc8919 10.14296/zbwc8919 4af45bb1-d463-422d-9338-fa2167dddc34 University of London Press 122 London open access
institution OAPEN
collection DSpace
language English
description This book explores the judicial development of the concept of the signature from the thirteenth century to the age of the facsimile transmission. It puts the concept of the signature into a broad legal context to set out the purposes that can be attributed to a signature, and to explain the functions a signature is capable of performing. Drawing on cases from common law jurisdictions across the world, the book demonstrates that judges expanded the meaning of a signature as technologies developed and were used in unanticipated ways. Following an overview of the methods used to demonstrate proof of intent and authentication, the book considers the judicial response to the array of variations in the form that manuscript signatures have been subject over the past two hundred years, from initials, partial signatures and fingerprints, to rubber stamps and typewriting. Past judicial decision-making not only demonstrates the flexibility of the form a signature can take, but also confirms that judges had the flexibility of mind to accept the first forms of electronic signature (telex, facsimile transmission) as merely one further development without the aid of special legislation.
title 9781911507321.pdf
spellingShingle 9781911507321.pdf
title_short 9781911507321.pdf
title_full 9781911507321.pdf
title_fullStr 9781911507321.pdf
title_full_unstemmed 9781911507321.pdf
title_sort 9781911507321.pdf
publisher University of London Press
publishDate 2023
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