By: Duncan  S.B. No. 1812
         (In the Senate - Filed March 9, 2007; March 22, 2007, read
  first time and referred to Committee on Jurisprudence;
  April 19, 2007, reported favorably by the following vote:  Yeas 6,
  Nays 0; April 19, 2007, sent to printer.)
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
 
  relating to electronic publication of legal notice.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Subtitle G, Title 10, Government Code, is
  amended by adding Chapter 2311 to read as follows:
  CHAPTER 2311.  ELECTRONIC PUBLICATION OF LEGAL NOTICE
         Sec. 2311.001.  DEFINITIONS.  In this chapter:
               (1)  "Legal notice" or "notice" means any matter that,
  pursuant to law or rule, is required to be officially advertised.
               (2)  "Public notice website" means an Internet website
  that is maintained by a third party under contract with the state,
  which electronically publishes legal notices.
         Sec. 2311.002.  OFFICE OF COURT ADMINISTRATION AUTHORITY TO
  CREATE AN ELECTRONIC PUBLIC NOTICE WEBSITE.  (a)  The Office of
  Court Administration of the Texas Judicial System shall enter into
  an agreement with a website service provider to maintain a public
  notice website.
         (b)  Any legal notice that is required to be published may be
  published on the public notice website.
         Sec. 2311.003.  PERMISSIVE ELECTRONIC PUBLICATION OF LEGAL
  NOTICE.  (a)  Notwithstanding any other provision of law and in
  addition to other public or legal notice requirements, when public
  or legal notice is required by law to be posted in a newspaper
  publication or at a courthouse, notice also may be made in the same
  form on the Internet through a public notice website meeting the
  requirements of this chapter.
         (b)  The submission of the public or legal notice may be made
  at the courthouse, if possible, or may be made from a private or
  public access computer terminal.  A reasonable fee, not to exceed
  $10, may be charged for the provision of this service and the
  maintenance of the public notice website to compensate the provider
  of the public notice website.  The state is not responsible for
  funding the operation or maintenance of a public notice website.
         (c)  A public notice website provider shall submit a status
  report twice yearly to the director of the Office of Court
  Administration of the Texas Judicial System indicating compliance
  with statutory requirements governing the posting of public or
  legal notices as applicable to an Internet-based website.  In
  addition, a public notice website shall submit to a quality review
  by the director of the Office of Court Administration if, in his or
  her discretion, he or she finds a quality review necessary.  If a
  quality review is requested, full access to the technical and
  informational operations of the public notice website provider must
  be provided.
         Sec. 2311.004.  DUTIES OF AN ELECTRONIC PUBLIC NOTICE
  WEBSITE PROVIDER.  In addition to other requirements contained in
  this chapter, a public notice website provider also shall do all of
  the following:
               (1)  Establish and operate the public notice website at
  no cost to the Office of Court Administration of the Texas Judicial
  System or other governmental entity.
               (2)  Maintain the public notice website without
  interruption 24 hours per day, seven days a week, each day of the
  year; and the public notice website, including all its features,
  must be fully publicly accessible at all times.
               (3)  Maintain adequate systematic protection, back-up,
  and contingency planning in the event of power outages, systemic
  failures, or other unforeseen difficulties.
               (4)  Have the right to hold and use a domain name which
  is easily recognizable and understandable by the citizens of the
  state.  The domain name should indicate both functionality and
  geography.  The right to use the domain name and Internet location
  must be maintained at the expense of the public notice website
  provider.
               (5)  Not infringe on a legally protected right such as a
  federal provisional patent application, registered patent, or
  prior invention to operate a website of this nature, and its right
  to operate without infringement must be clear and without the
  possibility of causing subsequent interruption to the site by
  virtue of legal process.
               (6)  Possess appropriate hardware infrastructure and
  intellectual property for feasible processes to deploy a state and
  national website with proper methodology for communication with the
  court systems of the state.
               (7)  Have sufficient minimal capital requirements to
  ensure its smooth and uninterrupted ongoing operation and shall
  certify this to the director of the Office of Court Administration
  of the Texas Judicial System upon request.
               (8)  Provide a reasonable plan for the implementation
  of the public notice website where public or legal notices may be
  posted with reasonable ease onto the public notice website directly
  from the courts of this state and must be ready to reasonably
  demonstrate and implement the technology necessary at no cost to
  the state.  The public notice website provider shall provide the
  necessary personnel to ensure ongoing communication with the
  various courts of the state concerning the smooth flow of data
  transmission and posting at no cost to the state.
               (9)  Not raise the cost for providing the website
  without prior reasonable consultation with the director of the
  Office of Court Administration of the Texas Judicial System and not
  seek, in any event, to raise the cost of posting a notice for the
  first two years of operation.
               (10)  Ensure that individual notices shall include at
  least the same information and are displayed on the public notice
  website using similar display and print standards as are
  established for newspaper postings made pursuant to other
  applicable public notice statutory requirements.
               (11)  Ensure that individual notices are displayed for
  not less than the length of time requested by the posting entity.  
  At the end of the posting time, the public notice website provider,
  with prior approval of the person or entity that arranged for the
  posting and for a reasonable fee, may send a reminder to the entity
  that the notice is due to expire.
               (12)  Include an archives feature, accessible, free of
  charge, as a public service at all times and also shall include a
  function which allows the public to determine which notices have
  been posted in a given county.
               (13)  Provide that legal notices, both current and
  archived, are publicly searchable by keyword, by either party to a
  lawsuit, by courthouse file number, and by publication area.
               (14)  Not charge a fee to a person accessing,
  searching, or using a public notice website function, except for
  the posting of a notice as allowed by this chapter.
               (15)  Post a bond of reasonable amount sufficient to
  insure the public interest as may be required by the Office of Court
  Administration of the Texas Judicial System.
         SECTION 2.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2007.
 
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