TEXAS STATUTES
TITLE 4. BUSINESS &
COMMERCE CODE
CHAPTER 46. ELECTRONIC MAIL SOLICITATION
Added by House
Bill 1282 (2003)
(approved June 20, 2003; effective September 1,
2003)
Sec. 46.001. DEFINITIONS. In this
chapter:
(1) "Commercial electronic mail message" means an
electronic mail message that advertises, offers for sale or lease, or
promotes any goods, services, business opportunity, property, or any other
article, commodity, or thing of value.
(2) "Electronic mail" means a message, file, or other
information that is transmitted through a local, regional, or global
computer network, regardless of whether the message, file, or other
information is viewed, stored for retrieval at a later time, printed, or
filtered by a computer program that is designed or intended to filter or
screen those items.
(3) "Electronic mail service provider" means a person that:
(A) is qualified to do business in this state;
(B) is an intermediary in sending or receiving electronic
mail; and
(C) provides an end user of an electronic mail service
the ability to send or receive electronic mail.
(4) "Established business relationship" means a prior or
existing relationship of a person formed by a voluntary two-way
communication between a person and another person, regardless of whether
consideration is exchanged, regarding products or services offered by one of
the persons, that has not been terminated by either party.
(5) "Internet domain name" refers to a globally unique,
hierarchical reference to an Internet host or service, assigned through a
centralized Internet naming authority and composed of a series of character
strings separated by periods with the right-most string specifying the top
of the hierarchy.
(6) "Obscene" has the meaning assigned by Section 43.21,
Penal Code.
(7) "Sender" means a person who initiates an electronic
mail message.
(8) "Sexual conduct" has the meaning assigned by Section
43.25, Penal Code.
(9) "Unsolicited commercial electronic mail message" means
a commercial electronic mail message sent without the consent of the
recipient by a person with whom the recipient does not have an established
business relationship. The term does not include electronic mail sent by an
organization using electronic mail for the purpose of communicating
exclusively with members, employees, or contractors of the
organization.
Sec. 46.002. CERTAIN ELECTRONIC MAIL
MESSAGES PROHIBITED. (a) A person may not intentionally transmit a commercial
electronic mail message that:
(1) falsifies electronic mail transmission information or
other routing information for an unsolicited commercial electronic mail
message; or
(2) contains false, deceptive, or misleading information in
the subject line.
(b) A person may not intentionally send a commercial
electronic mail message that uses another person's Internet domain name
without the other person's consent.
Sec. 46.003. UNSOLICITED ELECTRONIC
MAIL MESSAGES. (a) A person may not intentionally take any action to send an
unsolicited commercial electronic mail message unless:
(1) "ADV:" is used as the first four characters in the
subject line of the message or, if the message contains any obscene material
or material depicting sexual conduct, "ADV: ADULT ADVERTISEMENT" is used as
the first word in the subject line of the message; and
(2) the sender of the message or a person acting on behalf
of the sender provides a functioning return electronic mail address to which
a recipient may, at no cost to the recipient, send a reply requesting the
removal of the recipient's electronic mail address from the sender's
electronic mail list.
(b) A sender shall remove a person's electronic mail address
from the sender's electronic mail list not later than the 3rd day after the
date on which the sender receives a request for removal of that address under
Subsection (a)(2).
Sec. 46.004. SALE OR PROVISION OF
ADDRESS ON ELECTRONIC MAIL LIST PROHIBITED. A sender or a person acting on
behalf of the sender may not sell or otherwise provide the electronic mail
address of a person who requests the removal of that address from the sender's
electronic mail list under Section 46.003(a)(2), except as required by other
law.
Sec. 46.005. CRIMINAL PENALTY. A
person commits an offense if the person intentionally takes any action to send
a message containing obscene material or material depicting sexual conduct in
violation of Section 46.003(a)(1). An offense under this section is a Class B
misdemeanor.
Sec. 46.006. CIVIL PENALTY. (a) A
person who violates this chapter other than Section 46.009 is liable to the
state for a civil penalty in an amount not to exceed the lesser of:
(1) $10 for each unlawful message or action; or
(2) $25,000 for each day an unlawful message is received or
an action is taken.
(b) The attorney general or the prosecuting attorney in the
county in which the violation occurs may:
(1) bring suit to recover the civil penalty imposed under
Subsection (a); and
(2) seek an injunction to prevent or restrain a violation
of this chapter.
(c) The attorney general or the prosecuting attorney may
recover reasonable expenses incurred in obtaining a civil penalty under this
section, including court costs, reasonable attorney's fees, investigative
costs, witness fees, and deposition expenses.
Sec. 46.007. DECEPTIVE TRADE
PRACTICES. A violation of this chapter is a false, misleading, or deceptive
act or practice under Subchapter E, Chapter 17, and any public or private
right or remedy prescribed by that subchapter may be used to enforce this
chapter, except as provided by Section 46.008(d).
Sec. 46.008. CIVIL LIABILITY. (a) A
person injured by a violation of this chapter may bring an action to recover
actual damages, including lost profits. A person who prevails in the action is
entitled to reasonable attorney's fees and court costs.
(b) In lieu of actual damages, a person injured by a
violation of this chapter arising from the transmission of an unsolicited or
commercial electronic mail message, other than an electronic mail service
provider, may recover the lesser of:
(1) $10 for each unlawful message; or
(2) $25,000 for each day the unlawful message is received.
(c) In lieu of actual damages, an electronic mail service
provider injured by a violation of this chapter arising from the transmission
of an unsolicited or commercial electronic mail message may recover the
greater of:
(1) $10 for each unlawful message; or
(2) $25,000 for each day the unlawful message is received.
(d) A court may not certify an action brought under this
chapter as a class action.
(e) At the request of a party to any action brought under
this chapter, the court, in its discretion, may conduct a legal proceeding in
such a manner as to protect the secrecy and security of the computer, computer
network, computer data, computer program, and computer software involved to
prevent a possible recurrence of the same or a similar act by another person
and to protect any trade secrets of a party to the action.
Sec. 46.009. NOTICE TO ATTORNEY
GENERAL. (a) A person who brings an action under Section 46.008 shall give
notice of the action to the attorney general by sending a copy of the petition
by registered or certified mail not later than the 30th day after the date the
petition was filed and at least 10 days before the date set for a hearing on
the action.
(b) The attorney general may intervene in the action by:
(1) filing a notice of intervention with the court in which
the action is pending; and
(2) serving each party to the action with a copy of the
notice of intervention.
(c) A person who violates Subsection (a) is liable to the
state for a civil penalty in an amount not to exceed $200 for each violation.
The attorney general may bring suit to recover the civil penalty imposed under
this subsection in the court in which the action is instituted.
Sec. 46.010. BLOCKING OF COMMERCIAL
ELECTRONIC MAIL MESSAGE. An electronic mail service provider may on its own
initiative block the receipt or transmission through its service of any
commercial electronic mail message that the provider reasonably believes is or
will be sent in violation of this chapter if the provider:
(1) provides a process for the prompt, good faith
resolution of disputes related to the blocking with senders of commercial
electronic mail messages; and
(2) makes contact information publicly accessible on its
Internet website for the purpose of dispute resolution.
Sec. 46.011. QUALIFIED IMMUNITY. (a)
In this section, "telecommunications utility" has the meaning assigned by
Section 51.002, Utilities Code.
(b) A telecommunications utility or an electronic mail
service provider may not be held liable under Section 46.002 or 46.003 and is
not subject to the penalties provided under this chapter.
(c) A person injured by a violation of this chapter does not
have a cause of action against a telecommunications utility or an electronic
mail service provider under this chapter solely because the utility or
provider:
(1) is an intermediary between the sender, or any person
acting on behalf of the sender, and the recipient in the transmission of
electronic mail that violates this chapter;
(2) provides transmission, routing, relaying, handling, or
storing, through an automatic technical process, of an unsolicited
commercial electronic mail message through the utility's or provider's
computer network or facilities; or
(3) provides telecommunications services, information
services, or other services used in the transmission of an electronic mail
message that violates this chapter.
(d) An electronic mail service provider that provides for a
dispute resolution process as described by Section 46.010 may not be held
liable for blocking the receipt or transmission through its service of any
commercial electronic mail message that the provider reasonably believes is or
will be sent in violation of this chapter.
(e) A person may not be held liable under this chapter for a
commercial electronic mail message that is sent as a result of an error or
accidental transmission.
(f) A sender may not be held liable for the transmission of
an electronic mail message that violates this chapter if the sender:
(1) contracts in good faith with an electronic mail service
provider to transmit electronic mail messages for the sender; and
(2) has no reason to believe the electronic mail service
provider will transmit any of the sender's messages in a manner that
violates this chapter.