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RSA 554-A:12 · Disclosure of Contents of Electronic Communications Held in Trust When Trustee Not Original User

554-A:12 Disclosure of Contents of Electronic Communications Held in Trust When Trustee Not Original User. – Unless otherwise ordered by the court, directed by the user, or provided in a trust, a custodian shall disclose to a trustee that is not an original user of an account the content of an electronic communication sent or received by an original or successor user and carried, maintained, processed, received, or stored by the custodian in the account of the trust if the trustee gives the custodian:

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(a)

A written request for disclosure in physical or electronic form;

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(b)

A certified copy of the trust instrument or a certification of the trust under RSA 564-B:10-1013 that includes consent to disclosure of the content of electronic communications to the trustee;

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(c)

A certification by the trustee, under penalty of perjury, that the trust exists and the trustee is a currently acting trustee of the trust; and

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(d)

If requested by the custodian:

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(1)

A number, username, address, or other unique subscriber or account identifier assigned by the custodian to identify the trust's account; or

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(2)

Evidence linking the account to the trust. Source. 2019, 140:1, eff. June 25, 2019.

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Source note

Source. 2019, 140:1, eff. June 25, 2019.

Source history

  • 2019, 140:1, eff. June 25, 2019

Related materials

Bill relationships

  • 2026 HB639 reference

    sts created to hold cryptocurrency. Furthermore, it does not specify if a smart contract is governed by existing contract laws. The bill does not directly reference the existing RSA 554-A (Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act). These ambiguities could lead to more litigation and, consequently, increased costs. The Branch states this bill could possibly result in an increase in civi

  • 2026 HB639-FN reference

    sts created to hold cryptocurrency. Furthermore, it does not specify if a smart contract is governed by existing contract laws. The bill does not directly reference the existing RSA 554-A (Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act). These ambiguities could lead to more litigation and, consequently, increased costs. The Branch states this bill could possibly result in an increase in civi