Incredibly, I overlooked World Emoji Day. Although late, in honor of yesterday’s World Emoji Day, itās worth pointing out that my new article on emojis and legal ambiguity in agreements, which was recently published in the Florida Bar Family Law Section Commentator, will make anyone ????.
Emojis
I’ve written about emojis before. Originating in Japan in 1998, emojis are small digital images used to express an idea or an emotion in electronic communications.
Today, roughly 70 percent of the public uses some type of social media.Ā Social media has changed many of the ways in which we communicate. For one thing, social media has increased our use of emojis.
One report found more than 92 percent of people use emojis on social media. Emojis have spread to the business world, where nearly half of workers add emojis to professional communications, and companies use them to increase sales and brand awareness.
Emojis in CourtĀ ????āāļø
Emojis are increasingly turning up in court, especially in agreements, and ignoring them would be like calling a witness to the stand and ignoring their facial expressions.
Emojis fail the āduck testā: if it looks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it is probably a duck. Thatās because emoji meanings can be so puzzling, a āduckā emoji, may mean anything but a duck.
For example, a U.S. federal court recently held that a āSmileyā emoticon =) converted an email into a joke, the email meant the opposite of what it said, and a criminal defendantās lawyer did not violate the Sixth Amendment by sending the prosecutor an email joking: āstipulate that my client is guilty. :)ā
An Israeli court awarded damages based on emojis after a prospective tenant sent a landlord a text about a lease agreement saying: āGood morningĀ ????Ā we want the house????????Ā ????āĀ āĀ āĀ ????Ā ????Ā just need to go over the details. . .ā The landlord removed his ad, then the tenant disappeared. The court awarded the landlord 8,000 shekels.
Ambiguity: What doesĀ ????Ā Mean?
There are unique issues with emojis, rendering them hard to interpret. For one thing, thereās no definitive source as to what emojis mean.
That unknown can make agreements in an email, a text or an actual marital contract, ambiguous. Marital agreements are interpreted like any other contract. Basic interpretation begins with the plain language of the contract, because the contract language is the best evidence of intent.
Courts are not supposed to rewrite terms of an agreement if they are clear and unambiguous. Anyone seeking to show a court any evidence outside a fully integrated contract, must first establish that a contract is ambiguous.
A contract is ambiguous when its language is reasonably susceptible to more than one interpretation. Thatās where emojis come in, they can be very ambiguous.Ā Emojis are also small, making them hard to read. Interpreting an emoji can depend on what kind of device they appear in. For example, a 24-inch computer monitor displays thing differently than a 4-inch phone screen.
Emojis donāt always mean the same thing universally, so there can be many different meanings depending on which country you are in. For example:
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The āFolded Handsā emoji symbolize āpleaseā and āthank youā in Asia. However, in the U.S. it means: āIām praying,ā and frequently, āhigh-fiveā!
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The āPile of Pooā emoji is a pun on the Japanese word for excrement (unko), which starts with the same āoonā sound as the word for āluckā and is complimentary in Japan. But, in the U.S. the emoji is used to express contempt. Strangely, Canadians use the emoji the most.
Information on World Emoji Day is available here.