Research and development in private law

Research and development in private law

A critique of the legal nature and performance of the Electronic Card Payment Network Company (Shaparak)

Document Type : Original Article

Authors
1 University of Science and Culture
2 Associate professor, Faculty of Law, University of Science and Culture, Tehran, Iran
Abstract
AbstractShaparak, or the Electronic Card Payment Network, is a key institution in the country’s electronic payment system, established with the aim of coordinating and standardizing banking and payment service providers’ activities. Although the company is privately owned, its role in monitoring, regulating, and enforcing governance standards has made it a quasi-governmental entity. Shaparak’s legal nature, in terms of its shareholder structure, statute, and method of establishment, has always been a source of doubt and debate, and many of its practical actions do not fully align with the existing legal framework. With the establishment of Shaparak, the card payment industry became independent of banks and the company became a central player in the field, able to impose binding regulations, disciplinary regulations, and even financial penalties directly on stakeholders, although these actions have in many cases conflicted with legal and statutory restrictions. Shaparak's contracts with payment service providers are mostly unilateral and based on the company's dominant economic position, so that the other party is practically unable to change the terms of the contract; this has led to the emergence of unfair terms, violation of contractual freedom, and conflict of interest between the position of the rule-maker and the executor. On the other hand, incomplete observance of the principles of the rule of law, limited transparency in decision-making, and lack of complete supervision have complicated Shaparak's legal position and created numerous practical and legal problems for stakeholders. The present study, using a descriptive-analytical method, examines Shaparak's history, legal nature, scope of jurisdiction, and performance, and analyzes its weaknesses and legal gaps, emphasizing the need for legal reform, clarification of duties, and redefining the legal nature of the company to ensure justice, healthy competition, and balance of power in the country's electronic payment system. The findings show that without structural review and strengthening operational transparency, Shaparak will not be able to fully comply with legal, economic, and competitive principles and will not sustainably establish its position.
Keywords
Subjects

1.     Rabia Eskini; (2014); Commercial Law 'Commercial Companies', Vol. 2, SAMT Publications, First Edition, Tehran (In Persian)
2.     Amani Masoud, Hasani Mohammad Mahdi. (2017), Ethical, Legal, and Jurisprudential Foundations of the Unfair Clause, Qazavat Quarterly, 17(91), 61-88 (In Persian)
3.     Pasban Mohammad Reza; (2011); Commercial Companies Law, SAMT Publications; Sixth Edition, Tehran (In Persian)
4.     Pahlavanian Marsedeh, Shirkhodaei Meysam, Ghazi-Nouri Seyed Sepehr; (2023); Typology of the Transition Path to Financial Technology (FinTech) in Iran; Science and Technology Policy Journal, Volume 13, Issue 1, (42), pp. 5-25 (In Persian)
5.     Tafreshi, Mohammad Isa; Sho'arian, Satari, Ebrahim; (2002); Shares and the rights arising from them in joint-stock companies, Public Law, Volume 4, Issue 7 (January), pp. 21-49 (In Persian)
6.        Darvishzadeh, Mohammad (1404); The evolution of law in light of the evolution of contract technology (case study of electronic contract of legal representation); Bi-Quarterly Journal of Research and Development in Private Law; Volume 2; Issue 3; (Spring and Summer); pp. 90-114 doi: 10.22034/jpl.2025.721258 (In Persian)
7.     Rahmani, Zohreh; (2020); A Comparative Study of the Right to Good Administration in the European Code of Good Administrative Conduct and Iran's Legal System with Emphasis on the Two Principles of Legality and Proportionality; Journal of New Research in Administrative Law; Year 2, Issue 3 (Summer); pp. 167-194 (In Persian)
8.     Rezaeizadeh, Mohammad Javad; (2008); Characteristics of Administrative Contracts; Legal Quarterly, Faculty of Law and Political Science, University of Tehran, Volume 38, Issue 2 (Summer); pp. 135-151 (In Persian)
9.     Sotoudeh-Tehrani, Hassan; (1997); Commercial Law, Dadgostar; Volume 2, 2nd Edition, Tehran (In Persian)
10.  Sadeghi-Neshat, Amir; (2015); Electronic Commercial Law, Jangal, 1st Edition, Tehran (In Persian)
11.  Tabatabaei-Motameni, Manouchehr; (1975); Administrative Law, Vol. 2, University of Tehran (In Persian)
12.  Abbasi, Bijan; (2010); Administrative Law; Vol. 1; Tehran, Dadgostar (In Persian)
13.  Abdollahzadeh, Behzad, Hosseinzadeh, Javad, and Ghanad, Fatemeh. (2023). The Status of Conflict of Interest in the Card-Based Electronic Payment Industry in Iran's Legal System. Journal of New Technologies Law, 4(8), 135-148 (In Persian)
14.  Erfani, Mahmoud (2009); Commercial Law: Commercial Companies, Eternal Jungle, Tehran (In Persian)
15.  Gharibe, Ali, Pourrezaei, Ali; (2019); The Scope of Protection for Third Parties under the Rules Governing Transactions Outside the Company's Purpose (A Study in Iranian and English Law); Private Law Research, Year 8, No. 28 (Autumn); pp. 197-232 (In Persian)
16.  Ghasemi-Ahd, Vahid; (2019); Comparative Study of Methods to Protect Policyholders in Insurance Endorsement Contracts in Iranian and American Law; Comparative Law, Year 3, No. 4 (Spring and Summer); pp. 145-175. (In Persian)
17.  Katouzian, Nasser; (1995); General Principles of Contracts; Vol. 1; 4th Edition; Sherkat-e Sahami-ye Enteshar, Tehran. (In Persian)
18.   Karimi Abbas; Karimi Hedieh; (1403); Analysis of the intention and consent of the parties to the imposed conditions in contracts (a comparative study in Iranian and French law); Bi-Quarterly Journal of Research and Development in Private Law; Volume 1, No. 2; (March); pp. 157-179. doi: 10.22034/jpl.2025.2052141.1189 (In Persian)
19.  Garaji, Ali-Akbar, Mir Torabi, Hediyeh-Sadat; (2017); Explaining the Principles of Banking Regulation in Light of the Iranian Legal System, Legal Research, Vol. 16; Semester 2; No. 32; (Azar); pp. 7-36. (In Persian)
20.  Mojtahed, Ahmad; (2010); Examining Transparency, Accountability, and Information Disclosure of the Central Bank, Monetary and Banking Research; No. 3 (Spring); pp. 57-92. (In Persian)
21.  Hedavand, Mehdi, Aghaei-Tooq, Moslem; (2017); Special Administrative Courts; 3rd Edition, Khorsandi; Tehran. (In Persian)
22.  Mehdi, Yahyazadeh Javad; (2022); Transparency of Administration and The Bases and Justifying Sources of Its Limitation; Case Study: U.S. Sunshine Law; New Research in Administrative Law; Year 4, No. 11 (Summer), pp. 169-191 (In Persian)
23.  Hedayati-Chenani, Rahman; (2021); Examination of New Tricks in Committing Economic Crimes with the Approach of Legal Entities of Semi-Governmental (Apparently Private) Companies; Research and Studies in Islamic Sciences; Year 3, No. 22 (May), pp. 60-71 (In Persian)
24.  Maryam Hemmati; (2013); Central Bank Independence: The First Step in Advancing Monetary Policy Goals, Monetary and Banking Research Institute, 9227MBRI (In Persian)
25.  Yazdani-Zonur, Hormoz; (2009); Examining the Role of Transparency in Achieving Good Governance; Public Law; No. 5 (Summer), pp. 49-70 (In Persian)
26.  Rakoff Todd. D, (1983), Contracts of Adhesion: An Essay in Reconstruction, 96 Harvard Law school Review, Vol. 96, No. 6 (Apr), pp. 1173-1284 (112 pages), Cambridge. USA
27.  Ranjan Vivek, (2010), Rule of law and modern administrative law, RGSOIPL, IIT law School, SSRN electronic published in 15 Feb 2011, 20 pages, Kharagpur.
28.  Randall Susan & others, (2007), Freedom of contract in insurance law, Conecticut insurance law journal, University of Connecticut pub, Volume 14, Number 1, Hartford, Connecticut.