No.

CourtColorado Attorney General Reports
DecidedApril 13, 2005
StatusPublished

This text of No. (No.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
No., (Colo. 2005).

Opinion

QUESTIONS PRESENTED AND CONCLUSION
Questions: Does Colorado's Unclaimed Property Act, article 13 of title 38, C.R.S. (2004), apply to stored value cards and gift cards? If so, which section of the Act is applicable?

Answer: Pursuant to applicable principles of statutory interpretation, the broad provisions of §§ 38-13-103 and 104, C.R.S. (2004) of Colorado's Unclaimed Property Act encompass stored value cards, including gift cards. Therefore, the unused monetary value of cards held by a card issuer is subject to the provisions of the Act.

ANALYSIS
A. Introduction

Colorado's Unclaimed Property Act is found at article 13 of title 38, C.R.S. (2004) ("the Act") and is modeled after a Uniform Unclaimed Property Act.1 Unclaimed property laws are designed to transfer property that is presumed to have been abandoned or lost by its owner from the private entity that is in possession of the property ("the holder") to the custody of the State, so that the State may attempt to reunite the abandoned property with its owner, and so that the property may be used for the benefit of the public until it is claimed by its owner, rather than becoming a windfall to private holders. Generally the law covers intangible property, rather than real property. Under the Act, the Treasurer is responsible for enforcing its provisions and ensuring that holders of unclaimed or abandoned property are properly reporting such property to the State.2

In requesting this Opinion, the Treasurer's inquiry focuses on a kind of property known as gift cards or stored value cards. He asks whether such property is subject to the provisions of the Act. He notes that these forms of property have become increasingly common in recent years. Therefore, it is important that the Treasury determine the property's status under the Act, so that the Treasury office's statutory responsibilities can be fulfilled. The Treasurer also states that there is a divergence of opinion as to the answer to the question presented: some apparently take the position that the Act does not cover the property at all; others believe that it is covered by the provisions relating to gift certificates; and still others consider it to be subject to the Act's omnibus provisions making all intangible property subject to the Act unless otherwise excluded. The Treasurer believes that such property is subject to §§ 38-13-103 and 38-13-104 of the Act and asks whether that conclusion is legally correct.

Colorado's law does not contain the terms "stored value card" or "gift card" (collectively "SVC"). The Act does explicitly cover "gift certificates" in a section headed "Gift certificates and credit memos," although the term gift certificate is not defined in Colorado's law.3 § 38-13-108.4, C.R.S. (2004). Despite the superficial similarity of the terms "gift certificate" and "gift card," the Treasurer indicates that the kind of instrument referred to in his request for an opinion has certain characteristics that generally distinguish it from traditional gift certificates. For instance, according to the Treasurer's letter requesting this opinion, gift cards and stored value cards are purchased and used differently than gift certificates, e.g., they may be given as gifts or retained by the purchaser. Also, they are recorded and tracked by the issuer more like the way credit card or bank accounts are memorialized, with the issuer frequently maintaining a record of the method of payment, the name and address of the purchaser (or even of the recipient if it is to be used as a gift). Also unlike a gift certificate, an SVC is more likely to be retained over a period of time, with value added to it periodically.

On a practical level, the Treasurer correctly distinguishes between gift certificates and SVCs. SVCs are different in form than gift certificates, the first being a plastic card on which value is recorded electronically, and the latter being a paper without any electronic component. More significantly, SVCs function quite differently than gift certificates. The dictionary defines "gift certificate" as "a certificate entitling the recipient to purchase goods or services in the establishment of the issuer to the amount specified." Merriam-WebsterOnline (visited March 11, 2005)

http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?book=Dictionaryva=gift+certificatex=9y=7.
Thus a gift certificate generally represents a fixed value that can be exchanged for goods or services from only the merchant who issued it, and generally in a one-time transaction. On the other hand, SVCs, as discussed below, are electronic payment products that operate much more like currency, or like an on-going account with value periodically removed or enhanced. Also, SVCs may be issued by one entity, but may be redeemable at various other entities.

B. Electronic Payment Products

SVCs are a variety of electronic payment product or electronic cash technology, which has developed rapidly over the past fifteen years. This opinion necessarily deals only with the current state of development. SVCs are variously known as electronic gift cards, merchandise cards, smart cards, shopping cards, prepaid cards, student cards, etc., and the terms under which they are issued vary widely. For purposes of this opinion, SVCs include only those cards that are purchased, i.e., value has been transferred from the purchaser to the issuer, and exclude those for which no value has been exchanged (e.g., those issued as promotional benefits).

As used herein, SVCs operate as follows. When an individual buys an SVC from an issuer, "[m]onetary `value' is stored in the form of electronic signals . . . on a plastic card." Ellen d'Alelio and John T. Collins,Electronic Cash Under Current Banking Law (1996)

http://www.cla.org/RuhBook/chp8.htm.
The plastic card, which is similar in appearance to a credit card, is presented to a merchant in payment for goods or services. The merchant reads the electronic value of the card, and this value is reduced by the amount of the purchase. Value may be added to a card, or the card may be discarded once its value is exhausted.

As one commentator has noted, "These new technologies . . . do not necessarily fit neatly into the present framework" of unclaimed property laws. Anita Ramasastry, State Escheat Statutes and Possible Treatment ofStored Value, Electronic Currency, and Other New Payment Mechanisms, 57 BUS. LAW 475, 477 (2001). "Clearly the statutes at present do not readily fit the changing environment of electronic commerce." Id. at 478.

Nonetheless, this opinion concludes that, under traditional rules of statutory construction, Colorado's Act operates broadly to cover all intangible property unless specifically exempted by the Act or as otherwise provided in other statutes or local laws. Sections 38-13-103 and 38-13-104, C.R.S. (2004), are omnibus or "catch-all" provisions modeled after the Uniform Act, and SVCs are covered by these provisions.4

C. Operation and Purpose of Unclaimed Property Laws

No State court has ruled on whether SVCs are included within the meaning of "intangible property" in an unclaimed property act.

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