http://ipkitten.blogspot.com/2019/12/the-uk-government-sheds-light-on-status.html

Following several rounds of consultation, The UK Jurisdiction Taskforce (UKJT) has issued a legal statement on the status of cryptoassets and smart contracts under the English and Welsh law. [The IPKat has previously written about the potential challenges of smart contracts here].


Cryptoassets as property


UKJT has concluded that cryptoassets are to be treated in principle as property, based on the following reasoning:

– They have all the indicia of property; 
– Any novel or distinctive features, such as intangibility, cryptographic authentication, use of a distributed ledger, decentralisation, consensual governance,  or  that they are “pure information”, do not disqualify cryptoassets from being classified as property.
Ownership analysis


The term “property” describes a legal relationship rather than an object, as follows:


“It is a way of describing a power recognised in law as permissibly exercised over the thing”. The fundamental proprietary relationship is ownership. The UKJT has pointed out that “a cryptoasset cannot meaningfully be treated as property unless it is possible in principle to determine who owns it, and how ownership is transferred.”


A cryptoasset is typically represented by two data parameters, one public and one private. The public parameter contains or references encoded information about the asset, such as its ownership, value and transaction history. The private parameter (the private key) permits transfers or other dealings in the cryptoasset to be cryptographically authenticated by digital signature.


Knowledge of the private key confers practical control over the asset. Therefore, a person who has acquired knowledge and control of a private key by some lawful means would generally be treated as the owner of the associated cryptoasset. However, specific circumstances and the rules of the relevant system may alter such determination.


In order to make a transfer within the cryptoasset system, the transferor typically modifies the public parameter, or generates a new one, so as to create a record of the transfer. The transferor then authenticates the record by digitally signing it with the private key.


At that point, the cryptoasset becomes linked to the private key of the transferee and is therefore under the transferee’s exclusive control. Once the transaction is recorded in the ledger, it becomes irreversible and any attempts by the transferor to transfer the cryptoasset again should not be accepted by the consensus (see below).This so-called on-chain transfer is not really analogous to the delivery of a tangible object or the assignment of a legal right, where the same thing passes, unchanged, from one person to another. Instead, the transferor typically brings into existence a new cryptoasset, with a new pair of data parameters: a new or modified public parameter and a new private key. The data representing the “old” cryptoasset persists in the network, but it ceases to have any value or function because the cryptoasset is treated by the consensus as spent or cancelled, so that any further dealings in it would be rejected.


A transferor may also transfer the knowledge of the private key (an off-chain transfer). In this case, no new key is generated and the transaction is not recorded in the ledger.  Such transfers may be more complicated, because they may give rise to a situation where more than one person knows the private key and so can exercise practical control over a cryptoasset.


UKJT then discusses how cryptoassets align with the indicia of property that have been established in National Provincial Bank v Ainsworth:

“Before a right or an interest can be admitted into the category of property, or of a right affecting property, it must be definable, identifiable by third parties, capable in its nature of assumption by third parties, and have some degree of permanence or stability”.

Certainty, exclusivity, control and assignability have also been identified in case law as characteristics of property rights (see Fairstar Heavy Transport NV v Adkins). Here is what UKJT has  to say: 

– The public parameter of a cryptoasset, interpreted in accordance with the rules of the relevant system, is sufficient in principle both to define the asset and to identify it to any person having access to the system network; 
– The requirement for control and exclusivity is satisfied by the cryptographic authentication process, which allows the holder of a private key to deal in the cryptoasset, and therefore to control it to the exclusion of others. 
– There is no reason to doubt that cryptoassets are by their nature capable of assumption by third parties. In that sense, they are also assignable, even if: (i) some of the methods of assumption and assignment may be novel and  (ii) identifying the legal owner in particular cases may not always be straightforward. 
– Cryptoassets are clearly designed with the aim of being transferable between system participants. Cryptoassets appear to be as permanent as  conventional financial assets, which may exist only until they are, for example, cancelled, redeemed, repaid or exercised. 
– The consensus mechanism raises two issues relating to stability: (i) the time required for the consensus to form and (ii) system forking. However, even without resolving those issues, cryptoassets are sufficiently stable to be treated as property, at least for a commercial cryptoasset system with a significant number of participants, an established history of transactions, and a generally stable set of rules.

Disqualifying features discussion


The courts have historically been reluctant to treat informationper se (as opposed to the medium on which it is recorded) as property. This is  based on the rationale that information is not exclusive in nature, i.e. it can be easily duplicated, used simultaneously by different people, and cannot be alienated, which makes it difficult to exercise control and determine an ownership interest. However, in UKTJ’s view, the transaction ledger and consensus mechanisms preclude such difficulties by preventing double-spending or simultaneous control.


Such reasoning applies to the cryptoasset viewed as a conglomeration of public data, private key and system rules. It does not apply to the private key viewed in isolation, which is “no more than an item of pure information and, like a password or a telephone number, it cannot in itself be treated as property”.


Another potential difficulty might arise from the fact that the law has traditionally recognised two distinct types of personal property: things in possession and things in action. A cryptoasset is not a thing in possession because it not tangible and so cannot be possessed. Does it mean that since an intangible thing is not in action, it may not be a property at all?


This Kat barely contains his excitement while exploring the new depths of the property concept
A cryptoasset does not itself embody any right capable of being enforced by action, such as a debt or contractual right. This is because, in a fully decentralised system with consensus rules, such as Bitcoin, the participants do not undertake any legal obligations to one another.


UKJT concludes as follows:   

 “[T]he fact that a cryptoasset might not be a thing in action on the narrower definition of that term does not in itself mean that it cannot be treated as property. Our view is that if a cryptoasset does not embody a legally-enforceable right or obligation then it is neither necessary nor useful to classify it as a thing in action. If it is necessary to classify it at all, then a cryptoasset is best treated as being another, third, kind of property”.

Image Credits: Critical Shots

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