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What is the primary purpose of a notary public?
- To provide legal advice
- To serve as an impartial witness to the signing of documents, verifying the signer's identity and willingness, deterring fraud ✓
- To draft contracts
- To represent clients in court
A notary public is a state-commissioned official who serves as an impartial, neutral witness to the signing of important documents. The notary's core duties are: (1) verifying the signer's identity through reasonable means; (2) confirming the signer's willingness (free of duress or coercion); (3) co…
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What is the difference between an acknowledgment and a jurat?
- They are the same
- Acknowledgment: signer acknowledges they signed the document of their own free will (no oath); Jurat: signer takes an oath/affirmation that the contents of the document are true, AND signs in the notary's presence ✓
- Only acknowledgments require ID
- Jurats are not real notarial acts
These are the two most common notarial acts. Acknowledgment: the signer appears before the notary, presents identification, and acknowledges (admits) that they signed the document of their own free will. The signer may have signed the document before the appointment — the signature does not need to …
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What is the most common acceptable identification for a notarial act?
- Any document with the signer's name
- Current, government-issued photo ID such as a driver's license, state ID, passport, or military ID, with the signer's photograph, signature, and physical description ✓
- A utility bill
- Personal recognition only
Most state notary laws require 'satisfactory evidence' of identity, defined as: (1) a current (not expired) government-issued photo ID; (2) bearing the signer's photograph, signature, and physical description; (3) issued by a federal or state government entity. Standard acceptable IDs: state driver'…
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What is a 'credible witness' in notarial identification?
- Someone who provides expert testimony
- A third person, personally known to the notary OR identified by satisfactory evidence, who personally knows the signer and can verify their identity when the signer lacks acceptable ID ✓
- An attorney
- Anyone present
Credible witness identification is the alternative method when a signer cannot produce satisfactory ID. The procedure varies by state but typically requires: one credible witness who is personally known to the notary AND personally knows the signer, OR two credible witnesses who personally know the …
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What information must a notary record in their journal for each notarial act?
- Just the date
- Date and time, type of notarial act, type of document and date, signer's name and address, type of ID presented and ID number, signer's signature, fee charged, and any unusual circumstances ✓
- Only the signer's name
- Nothing — journals are optional
Notary journals are required by most state laws and are the notary's primary defense against fraud claims and legal challenges. Standard journal entry information: (1) Date and time of the notarial act; (2) Type of notarial act (acknowledgment, jurat, etc.); (3) Type and date of the document being n…
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Why is a notary journal important even when not required by state law?
- It is decorative
- It serves as a permanent record that protects the notary in case of legal challenge, helps reconstruct facts about past notarizations, and supports the notary's professional credibility ✓
- It is only for tax records
- It has no purpose
The notary journal is one of the notary's most important tools. Benefits: (1) Legal protection — if a notarized document is later challenged (claim of fraud, forgery, lack of capacity), the journal provides the notary's contemporaneous record of what occurred. Detailed journal entries can be the dif…
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Can a notary notarize a document if they have a personal financial interest in the transaction?
- Yes, always
- No — a notary cannot notarize any document in which they have a direct financial or beneficial interest, due to conflict of interest ✓
- Yes, but only with disclosure
- Only with court approval
Notaries must be impartial; financial or beneficial interest creates a conflict that disqualifies the notary from acting. Prohibited examples: notarizing a deed where you are buying or selling the property; notarizing a will or trust where you are a beneficiary; notarizing a loan document where you …
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Can a notary notarize a document for a family member?
- Always allowed
- Most states discourage or prohibit notarizing for spouse, parents, children, or close family members; some states allow it but it creates conflict-of-interest appearance — best practice is to refuse and refer ✓
- Only for spouses
- Only with court order
State laws vary on notarizing for family members, but the best practice is universally to refuse and refer the family member to another notary. Reasons: (1) Conflict of interest is presumed when notarizing for close family members; (2) Many states specifically prohibit notarizing for spouses, parent…
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Can a notary notarize a blank document or one with blank spaces?
- Yes, to save time
- No — the document must be complete (all blanks filled in) before notarization, except for the notarial certificate itself; notarizing blanks invites fraud through later additions ✓
- Only with a written promise to complete it later
- Always allowed
A notary should never notarize a document with blank spaces that affect the content. The reasoning: blank spaces can be filled in after notarization to alter the document's meaning, transferring property or commitments the signer never intended. The notary's certification creates a presumption of au…
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Can a notary notarize a document if the signer does not understand the language it is written in?
- Yes, regardless of language understanding
- Most states require that the signer and notary communicate directly without a third-party interpreter; if they cannot communicate, the notary should refuse ✓
- Always — language is not the notary's concern
- Only with court approval
The notary's duty includes verifying that the signer understands what they are signing — at least in a basic capacity sense (the signer knows it is a document they are signing willingly). Most state laws require direct communication between the notary and signer, without an interpreter. The reasonin…
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Must the signer be physically present before the notary at the time of notarization?
- No, mail notarizations are fine
- Yes — traditional notarization requires the signer to be physically present (or virtually present in states with Remote Online Notarization) for the notary to verify identity, willingness, and (for jurats) witness signing ✓
- Only for jurats
- Only for acknowledgments
Physical presence is a fundamental requirement of traditional in-person notarization. The signer must appear before the notary at the time of the notarial act — not before, not after, not by phone or video (unless authorized under specific Remote Online Notarization laws). Reasons: (1) The notary mu…
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Are notary fees set by state law?
- No, notaries can charge whatever they want
- Yes — most states set maximum fees for each type of notarial act; notaries cannot charge more than the legal maximum but can charge less or waive fees ✓
- Set by federal law
- Notaries cannot charge fees
State law sets maximum notary fees for each type of notarial act. Fees vary widely by state — from a few dollars to $25+ per signature, depending on the state and the act. Common fee structures: per signature for acknowledgments and jurats; per signature for oaths/affirmations; per signature for cer…
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Where can a notary perform notarial acts?
- Anywhere in the world
- Within the state where they are commissioned — some states allow border-county acts in neighboring states, but generally a notary's authority is limited to their commissioning state ✓
- Only in their county
- Only in courthouses
Notary commissions are granted by states, and a notary's authority is limited to the state of commission. A California notary cannot notarize a document in Texas; a New York notary cannot notarize while visiting Florida. Within the state of commission, the notary can perform acts anywhere — at home,…
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What is Remote Online Notarization (RON)?
- Notarization by email
- A notarization performed using audio-video technology where the notary and signer are in different physical locations but interact in real time, with electronic signatures and digital seal — authorized by specific state laws with strict requirements ✓
- Notarization without identity verification
- Not a legitimate form of notarization
Remote Online Notarization (RON) allows a notary and signer to complete a notarial act remotely via audio-video conference. Authorized by specific state laws — most states now allow some form of RON, but rules vary significantly. Requirements typically include: (1) Real-time, two-way audio-video com…
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What is 'errors and omissions' (E&O) insurance for notaries?
- A type of life insurance
- Professional liability insurance that protects the notary financially against claims of negligence or unintentional mistakes in performing notarial acts — not required by most states but strongly recommended ✓
- Insurance for the document
- Federal insurance
E&O insurance is professional liability coverage protecting notaries against claims arising from notarial errors. What it covers: unintentional mistakes — improper identification, defective certificate wording, failing to require signer presence, journal errors, and similar negligence. Typical cover…
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What is an 'affidavit' and what notarial act does it typically require?
- A type of contract requiring acknowledgment
- A written statement of fact made under oath or affirmation — typically requires a jurat, where the affiant swears or affirms the statements are true and signs in the notary's presence ✓
- A criminal complaint
- A type of identification
An affidavit is a written statement of fact (the 'affiant' is the person making the statement) signed under oath or affirmation before a notary. Common uses: affidavits of identity, residence, debt, single status, lost stock certificate, military service. The notarial act for an affidavit is a jurat…
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What is a 'certified copy' notarial act?
- Notarizing the original document
- A notarial act where the notary certifies that a photocopy is a true and exact copy of an original document — limited in many states to specific document types (NOT for vital records like birth certificates, marriage certificates, or deeds, which must come from issuing agencies) ✓
- Translating a document
- Authenticating a signature
Certified copies are a specific notarial act where the notary attests that a photocopy is a true and complete reproduction of an original document. Restrictions vary significantly by state: (1) Many states prohibit certified copies of public records — birth certificates, marriage certificates, death…
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What should a notary do if they suspect the signer is being coerced or is not signing willingly?
- Notarize anyway
- Refuse the notarization, since willingness is required; ask the signer questions privately to assess; document concerns in the journal; if appropriate, report to authorities ✓
- Ask the suspected coercer
- Notarize but add a note
Willingness — the signer signing freely without coercion — is a fundamental notarization requirement. Signs of possible coercion or duress: signer is hesitant, frightened, or confused; another person is answering for the signer or pressuring them; signer indicates they don't understand the document;…
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Can a notary draft legal documents or give legal advice?
- Yes, as part of their notarial duties
- No — only attorneys can practice law; notaries who draft documents or give legal advice (e.g., what type of notarial act to choose for a complex situation) commit the unauthorized practice of law (UPL), which is criminal in most states ✓
- Only with state approval
- Yes, for simple documents
Notaries are NOT attorneys and cannot practice law. The unauthorized practice of law (UPL) is criminal in most states and a serious threat to consumers. Specific prohibitions: (1) Drafting legal documents (deeds, contracts, wills, powers of attorney) — must be done by the signer or an attorney; (2) …
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What are the typical consequences of notarial misconduct?
- No consequences
- Civil liability (lawsuit by harmed parties), commission revocation by the state, criminal charges for serious offenses, professional disrepute, and potentially personal financial ruin ✓
- Only a warning
- Suspension from the state
Notarial misconduct has serious consequences. (1) Civil liability — signers, third parties, and others harmed by notarial errors can sue the notary personally for damages. Common claims: improper identification leading to identity theft losses, defective notarization that voids real estate transacti…
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What is required to administer an oath or affirmation as a notarial act?
- Just say the word 'oath'
- The signer must be present, identified, and must verbally make an affirmative response (e.g., 'I do' or 'I swear') to the notary's oath/affirmation; the notary then completes the notarial certificate documenting the act ✓
- Written agreement only
- Notary signs alone
Administering an oath or affirmation is itself a notarial act (distinct from jurats, which include both an oath and a signed document). Common uses: oaths for testimony at depositions, swearing in officials, oaths required for licensing applications, sworn statements without a written document. Proc…
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What is a notary commission, and what are typical eligibility requirements?
- A federal license
- A state-granted authorization to act as a notary public — typical requirements include being 18+, US citizen or legal resident, resident of the state (or employed in the state), no disqualifying criminal history, completion of any required training, passing any required exam, and obtaining a bond ✓
- Automatic upon high school graduation
- Granted by employers
A notary commission is granted by the state (typically the Secretary of State) and authorizes the holder to perform notarial acts. Typical requirements (vary by state): (1) At least 18 years old; (2) US citizen or legal permanent resident; (3) Resident of the state (some states require state employm…
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What must a notarial certificate include?
- Just a signature
- Venue (state and county), the notary's wording stating what was certified (acknowledgment, jurat, etc.), date of notarization, signer's name, notary's signature, notary's official seal/stamp, notary's commission expiration date ✓
- Only the date
- Only the notary's name
The notarial certificate is the formal written record of the notarial act, attached to or appearing on the document. Required elements (vary by state): (1) Venue — the state and county where the notarization occurred ('State of California, County of Los Angeles'); (2) Notarial wording — the specific…
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If a signer has been the notary's neighbor for ten years, can the notary skip ID verification based on personal knowledge?
- Yes, always
- Some states allow personal knowledge as identification, but the modern best practice is to require ID even from personally-known signers because it protects the notary against later challenges and is required for journal documentation ✓
- Never allowed
- Only with witnesses
Personal knowledge is legally accepted in many states as a means of identification: 'the notary personally knows the signer.' However, best practice is to require ID even from familiar signers. Reasons: (1) Documentation — the journal entry needs ID information to be defensible; 'I personally know h…
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What should a notary do if they discover they have made an error on a notarial certificate?
- Leave the error
- If discovered before delivery: line through with a single line, write the correction, initial and date — never erase or use whiteout. If discovered later: contact the signer and properly redo the entire notarization, do not alter the original certificate without the signer present ✓
- Use whiteout
- Tear up the document
Notarial certificate errors should be addressed carefully and transparently. If discovered before delivery (still in the notary's presence): line through the error with a single line so the original remains readable, write the correction nearby, initial and date the change. Never erase or whiteout —…
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What is an 'acknowledgment' as a notarial act?
- The notary personally witnesses the signature
- The signer personally appears before the notary and declares (acknowledges) that they signed the document willingly — the notary verifies identity but does NOT need to watch them sign ✓
- The notary certifies the document is legally valid
- The notary swears in the signer to tell the truth
An ACKNOWLEDGMENT is the most common notarial act for real estate and legal documents. What happens: the signer APPEARS IN PERSON before the notary; the notary verifies identity; the signer ACKNOWLEDGES (declares) that they signed voluntarily; the notary completes an acknowledgment certificate ('Bef…
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What is a 'jurat' and how does it differ from an acknowledgment?
- They are the same thing
- A jurat requires the signer to SIGN IN THE PRESENCE OF the notary AND swear or affirm under oath that the document's contents are true — the certificate says 'Subscribed and sworn before me' ✓
- A jurat is used for property transfers only
- A jurat is less formal than an acknowledgment
JURAT vs ACKNOWLEDGMENT is the most tested notarial act distinction: JURAT: Signer must sign in front of the notary; notary watches the signing; signer takes an oath or affirmation that the statements in the document are true; used for sworn statements, affidavits, depositions, and verified pleading…
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Why do notaries keep a journal?
- To satisfy a federal law requirement
- To create a contemporaneous record of every notarial act that can later verify: the signer's identity was checked, the signer appeared voluntarily, and the specific act performed — providing protection in disputes and fraudulent document investigations ✓
- To track their income for tax purposes
- The journal is optional in all states
The NOTARY JOURNAL serves critical purposes: FRAUD DETECTION: If a document is later claimed to be forged or coerced, the journal entry provides evidence of what happened. LEGAL PROTECTION: If a notary is sued or investigated, the journal demonstrates they followed proper procedures. IDENTITY VERIFI…
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A notary certificate is complete and the document is ready for delivery, but the notary forgot to emboss or stamp their seal. Is the notarization valid?
- Yes — the certificate and signature are sufficient
- In most states, NO — the seal is a required component of a valid notarization; documents without a proper seal may be rejected by recording offices, courts, and institutions — the signer will need to return to have the seal added ✓
- The notary can mail the seal impression later
- Valid in all states regardless
The NOTARY SEAL is a required element of notarization in virtually all states. It typically must include: notary's name; the word 'Notary Public'; the state of commission; commission number; commission expiration date. The seal authenticates the certificate — without it, recording offices (for real …
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A relative asks their notary family member to notarize a document where the relative is the signer and stands to benefit financially. What should the notary do?
- Notarize it as a family courtesy
- Refuse to notarize — most states prohibit notarizing documents where the notary has a financial or personal interest, or where the notary is a named party, grantee, or has a conflict of interest ✓
- Notarize but add a note of the relationship
- Ask a supervisor's permission first
CONFLICT OF INTEREST is a universal prohibition in notary law. Notaries must be DISINTERESTED PARTIES — they cannot notarize documents in which they have a direct financial interest or are a named party. This includes: being the grantor or grantee in a real estate deed; being a beneficiary in a will…
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Can a notary charge more than the state-set fee for their notarial services?
- Yes — fees are always negotiable
- No — most states set a maximum fee per notarial act; charging more is a violation of notary law and can result in disciplinary action against the commission ✓
- Yes, if the client agrees in writing
- Only for remote online notarizations
STATE-SET FEE SCHEDULES limit what notaries can charge per notarial act. Examples: California — $15 per signature notarized; Texas — $6 per acknowledgment; Florida — $10 per act. These are MAXIMUM fees — notaries can charge less or nothing. Charging above the maximum is a violation of state notary l…
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A signer appears before the notary and seems confused, unsure why they're signing, and looks frightened. What should the notary do?
- Complete the notarization quickly to relieve the signer's anxiety
- Refuse to complete the notarization — a notary must be satisfied that the signer is signing voluntarily and with awareness; apparent coercion, confusion, or incapacity requires stopping the process ✓
- Ask the person who brought the signer to explain
- Notarize but note the unusual behavior in the journal
VOLUNTARY AND WILLING SIGNING is a fundamental notarial requirement. The notary must be satisfied that the signer: appears before them freely (not coerced or forced); understands what they are signing (appears mentally competent at the time of signing); is acting on their own volition. If the notary…
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A customer asks the notary to certify a copy of their birth certificate. Can the notary do this?
- Yes — copy certification is a standard notarial act
- It depends on the state — some states allow notaries to certify copies of documents that are NOT vital records; most states PROHIBIT notaries from certifying copies of vital records (birth certificates, death certificates, marriage certificates) because official copies must come from the issuing government office ✓
- Always prohibited nationwide
- Only if the customer needs it for immigration purposes
COPY CERTIFICATION is a notarial act in some states where the notary certifies that a photocopy is a true and complete copy of the original. However, virtually all states PROHIBIT notaries from certifying copies of VITAL RECORDS — birth certificates, death certificates, marriage certificates, divorc…
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A signer presents an expired driver's licence as identification. Can the notary accept it?
- Yes — the photo still identifies the person
- Generally NO — most states require ID to be CURRENT (not expired); an expired licence may be a sign of identity fraud and the notary should request a valid current ID ✓
- Yes, if expired less than one year
- Only if notarized for a family member
EXPIRED IDENTIFICATION is not acceptable as a primary identification document in most states. The requirement for 'current' ID is explicit in most notary statutes and administrative rules. Why? An expired ID: may have been stolen from someone whose licence later expired; may represent a person whose…
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What technology must a platform provide for Remote Online Notarization (RON)?
- Only a phone call
- Real-time two-way audio-visual communication, identity proofing through knowledge-based authentication (KBA) and/or credential analysis, tamper-evident technology applied to the electronic document, and recording of the entire session ✓
- A fax machine
- Only email confirmation
REMOTE ONLINE NOTARIZATION (RON) requires specific technology beyond a simple video call. REQUIRED COMPONENTS per most state RON laws: AUDIO-VISUAL: Real-time, synchronous two-way communication where the notary and signer can see and hear each other simultaneously; IDENTITY PROOFING: Dynamic Knowled…
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Which form of ID may a notary generally NOT accept to identify a document signer?
- A current US passport
- A state driver's licence
- A credit card or debit card — these are financial instruments, not identity documents; most states specify that acceptable ID must be government-issued with a photograph and signature; credit cards lack photos and are not issued by a government authority ✓
- A current US military ID
ACCEPTABLE ID FOR NOTARISATION: GENERAL REQUIREMENTS: Government-issued; contains photograph; contains signature; unexpired; COMMONLY ACCEPTABLE: Current driver's licence or state ID; US passport or passport card; US military ID; Permanent resident card (Green Card); Tribal ID in some states; Foreig…
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A signer refuses to sign the notary journal. Can the notary proceed with the notarisation?
- Yes — journal entries are optional
- No — in states that require journal signatures, the signer's signature in the journal is a required component of the notarial act; in states where journal signatures are not required, the notary should document the refusal ✓
- The notary can forge the signature
- Only if the document is not important
JOURNAL SIGNATURE REFUSAL: STATE-SPECIFIC: Some states (California is the notable example) REQUIRE the signer to sign or place a thumbprint in the notary's journal as part of the notarial act; if the signer refuses, the notary CANNOT complete the notarisation — it would be incomplete; Other states d…
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A notary is asked to notarise a document but the signer is not present in person. Can the notary proceed using audio-video technology?
- Yes — any video call is acceptable
- Only in states that have enacted Remote Online Notarisation (RON) laws, and only using a platform and technology that complies with that state's specific requirements — traditional notarisation requires physical presence ✓
- No — video calls are never acceptable
- Only if the signer is in another country
REMOTE ONLINE NOTARISATION (RON): NEW TECHNOLOGY: Most states have enacted RON laws (accelerated by COVID-19); traditional notarisation requires PHYSICAL PRESENCE; RON REQUIREMENTS (where legal): Specific state authorisation; use of an approved RON platform (with multi-factor identity verification, …
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After completing a notarisation, the notary realises they made an error in the notarial certificate (wrong date). What is the correct procedure?
- Cross out the error, initial it, and write the correct information — common for minor certificate errors
- Use correction fluid (whiteout) to cover the error and retype
- Complete an entirely new notarial certificate with the correct information — the original document can have the incorrect certificate removed and a new, correct loose certificate attached; do not use correction fluid on official certificates ✓
- Ignore the error if the signer already left
CORRECTING NOTARIAL CERTIFICATE ERRORS: MINOR ERRORS (before the signer leaves): If the document has the certificate incorporated: line through the error, initial adjacent to the change — NOT on the signature or seal area; all parties should initial changes; AFTER THE DOCUMENT IS COMPLETED: Complete…
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What is a 'jurat' (as opposed to an acknowledgment) and when is it used?
- A jurat is the same as an acknowledgment
- A jurat certifies that the signer appeared before the notary, signed the document IN THE NOTARY'S PRESENCE, and took an oath or affirmation that the contents of the document are true — used for affidavits, sworn statements, and any document requiring an oath ✓
- A jurat is used only for real property documents
- A jurat is only for corporate documents
JURAT vs ACKNOWLEDGMENT: JURAT REQUIREMENTS: Signer must be PHYSICALLY PRESENT and sign the document IN FRONT OF the notary; Signer takes an OATH OR AFFIRMATION that the document's contents are true; Notary witnesses the signing; JURAT CERTIFICATE LANGUAGE: 'Subscribed and sworn (or affirmed) before…
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A notary's client is a real estate closing where the notary will receive a 2% referral fee from the title company for each signing they bring. Is this arrangement permitted?
- Yes — notaries can receive referral fees from any source
- This depends on state law and circumstances — many states prohibit notaries from receiving any undisclosed financial interest or kickback tied to the documents they notarise; arrangements creating financial incentives to notarise specific documents raise significant conflicts of interest and ethics concerns ✓
- Referral fees are permitted as long as they are kept secret
- Only permitted for signings worth over $100,000
NOTARY CONFLICTS OF INTEREST: BASIC RULE: A notary should not notarise documents in which they have a direct financial interest; the notary's impartiality is the foundation of the role's legal value; REFERRAL ARRANGEMENTS: A 2% referral fee creates a direct financial incentive to steer signers towar…
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A document was signed three days ago, and the signer is asking the notary to backdate the notarial certificate to the date of signing. Should the notary comply?
- Yes — backdating is a courtesy to the signer
- Yes if the signer insists
- No — backdating a notarial certificate is falsification of a public record; the certificate date must reflect the actual date the notary performed the notarial act, not the date the document was signed; backdating is illegal and can result in criminal charges and licence revocation ✓
- Only if it benefits the signer's legal case
BACKDATING PROHIBITION: The notarial certificate date certifies when the notary performed the notarial act — it is a sworn statement that the signer appeared before the notary on that specific date. BACKDATING: Creates a false official record; constitutes fraud and falsification of a public document…
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A notary commission expires next week. The notary continues to notarise documents for one month after the expiration without renewing. What are the consequences?
- No consequences — the notary's experience makes up for the technical lapse
- Notarisations performed after commission expiration are void or voidable; the notary has been performing notarial acts without legal authority; documents notarised during this period may be legally defective; the notary may face civil liability and criminal charges for acting without authority ✓
- Only the last few days matter
- The renewal can be backdated to cover the lapse
EXPIRED COMMISSION CONSEQUENCES: LEGAL STATUS: A notary's commission is a specific grant of state authority with defined dates; after the expiration date, that authority ends; notarisations performed after expiration are performed WITHOUT LEGAL AUTHORITY; LEGAL EFFECT: Documents notarised by an expi…
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A notary is approached to notarise a document for a signer who appears mentally confused and may not understand what they are signing. What should the notary do?
- Proceed — mental state is the attorney's concern, not the notary's
- Notarise the document to avoid conflict
- Decline the notarisation — the notary has a responsibility to assess whether the signer appears to understand what they are signing and appears to be signing voluntarily; a notary who notarises for a clearly incapacitated signer may face serious legal consequences ✓
- Only notarise if a family member is present to consent
SIGNER COMPETENCY AND AWARENESS: A notary's role includes assessing whether the signer: APPEARS TO UNDERSTAND what they are signing; APPEARS TO BE SIGNING VOLUNTARILY (not under duress or undue influence); APPEARS TO BE ACTING OF THEIR OWN FREE WILL; NOTARY OBLIGATION: The notary is not required to …
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A notary's close friend asks them to notarise documents for a real estate transaction in which the notary will benefit financially (the sale will pay off a joint loan). Should the notary proceed?
- Yes — helping friends is the ethical thing to do
- Yes if the friend insists
- No — the notary has a direct financial interest in the transaction (the sale pays off a loan they are party to); this creates a conflict of interest that disqualifies the notary from performing impartial notarial acts for this document; refer to an impartial notary ✓
- Only if the notary discloses the interest verbally
FINANCIAL INTEREST DISQUALIFICATION: A notary who has a direct financial interest in the outcome of a transaction cannot serve as an impartial witness for that transaction's documents. EXAMPLES OF DISQUALIFYING INTERESTS: You are a named party in the document; you will receive or pay money that depe…
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What is the essential difference between an acknowledgment and a jurat?
- They are the same notarial act
- In an acknowledgment the signer declares they signed willingly (and may have signed earlier), while in a jurat the signer swears or affirms the truth of the document and must sign in the notary's presence ✓
- An acknowledgment requires an oath; a jurat does not
- Only a jurat verifies identity
An acknowledgment and a jurat are the two most common notarial acts, and they serve different purposes. In an acknowledgment, the signer appears before the notary and acknowledges that they signed the document willingly for its stated purpose; the signer may have signed it beforehand. In a jurat, th…
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When performing a jurat, what must the notary administer to the signer?
- Nothing additional
- An oath or affirmation, in which the signer swears or affirms the truthfulness of the document's contents ✓
- A fingerprint scan
- A credit check
A jurat requires the notary to administer an oath or affirmation to the signer, who swears (oath) or affirms (a non-religious solemn promise) that the statements in the document are true. The signer must also sign in the notary's presence and prove their identity. This contrasts with an acknowledgme…
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What is the standard requirement for satisfactory evidence of a signer's identity?
- The signer's verbal statement of who they are
- A current, government-issued photo identification with a signature and physical description, or other forms of identification permitted by state law (such as credible witnesses) ✓
- A utility bill
- A social media profile
Satisfactory evidence of identity typically means a current (unexpired, or recently expired where state law allows) government-issued identification document that bears the signer's photograph, signature, and physical description — such as a driver's license, state ID, or passport. When the signer l…
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If a signer's only identification is expired, what is the general guidance for a notary?
- Always accept it
- Generally do not accept expired identification unless state law specifically permits it within a certain time frame, because current ID is the standard ✓
- Accept it if the signer seems honest
- Identification is never required
The general standard is that identification must be current (unexpired). An expired ID should generally not be accepted as satisfactory evidence of identity unless the notary's state specifically permits IDs expired within a defined period (some states allow, for example, IDs expired within the last…
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Why should a notary keep a journal of notarial acts, even when the state does not strictly require one?
- It is only for tax purposes
- Because the journal is the notary's permanent record and primary evidence that an act was performed properly, protecting the notary if a notarization is later questioned or challenged in court ✓
- Journals are decorative
- To track personal appointments
A notary journal is a chronological record of each notarial act — typically including the date and time, type of act, type of document, the signer's name and how they were identified, the fee charged, and the signer's signature. Even where not legally required, keeping a journal is strongly recommen…
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What information is typically recorded for each entry in a notary journal?
- Only the date
- Details such as the date and time of the act, the type of notarial act and document, the signer's name and method of identification, the fee charged, and the signer's signature ✓
- Just the notary's name
- The weather
A complete journal entry generally records: the date and time of the notarization; the type of notarial act performed (acknowledgment, jurat, etc.); the type or title of the document; the name and address of each signer; the method used to identify the signer (such as the type and details of the ID,…
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May a notary notarize a document in which the notary has a personal financial or beneficial interest?
- Yes, always
- No — a notary generally must not notarize a document in which they have a direct financial or beneficial interest, because it is a conflict of interest ✓
- Only on weekends
- Yes, if the fee is waived
A notary must remain an impartial witness, so notarizing a document in which the notary has a direct financial or beneficial interest is a prohibited conflict of interest. For example, a notary should not notarize a document if they are a party to it, would gain financially from the transaction beyo…
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Can a notary notarize a document for a signer who is not physically present before the notary (in a traditional notarization)?
- Yes, if the notary knows them
- No — in a traditional (in-person) notarization the signer must personally appear before the notary at the time of the notarization ✓
- Yes, over the phone
- Only family members
Personal appearance is a foundational requirement: in a traditional notarization, the signer must physically appear before the notary at the time of the act. This lets the notary verify the signer's identity, confirm the signer is acting willingly and appears competent, and administer any required o…
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What should a notary do if a signer appears confused, coerced, or unable to understand the document they are signing?
- Notarize it quickly
- Decline to notarize, because the signer must appear to understand the act and be signing willingly and competently ✓
- Sign it for them
- Call the police immediately in all cases
A notary must be reasonably satisfied that the signer is acting willingly and appears to understand what they are signing. If the signer seems confused, appears not to comprehend the document, or shows signs of being coerced or under duress, the notary should decline to perform the notarization. The…
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How are the maximum fees a notary may charge for notarial acts generally determined?
- The notary sets any fee they want
- By state law, which sets the maximum fee a notary may charge per act; the notary may charge up to that limit ✓
- By the federal government
- Fees are always free
The maximum fee a notary may charge for each notarial act is set by state law, and these limits vary widely from state to state. A notary may charge up to the state maximum (and may charge less or nothing), but charging more than the legal limit is a violation. Some states also regulate travel fees …
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Within what geographic area may a notary generally perform notarial acts?
- Anywhere in the country
- Within the state that commissioned the notary (the notary's jurisdiction), subject to that state's rules ✓
- Only in their home county, never elsewhere in the state
- Anywhere in the world
A notary's authority is generally limited to the state that commissioned them; the notary may perform notarial acts throughout that state but not outside it. The document being notarized may be intended for use in another state or country, which is fine, but the act itself must be performed within t…
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What is remote online notarization (RON)?
- Mailing documents to a notary
- A notarization performed using audio-video technology that allows the signer to appear before the notary remotely, where authorized by state law ✓
- Notarizing without verifying identity
- A notarization done by phone call only
Remote online notarization (RON) allows a signer to appear before a notary using two-way audio-video technology instead of being physically present, where state law authorizes it. The notary verifies the signer's identity through methods specified by law — often a combination of credential analysis …
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In remote online notarization, how is the audio-video session typically handled afterward?
- It is deleted immediately
- The recording of the session is generally retained for a period required by state law, as part of the notary's records ✓
- It is posted publicly
- It is never recorded
In remote online notarization, the two-way audio-video session is generally recorded, and the notary (or the platform on the notary's behalf) must retain that recording for a period set by state law — often several years. The recording, along with the electronic journal entry, serves as evidence tha…
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What can happen to a notary who performs a notarization improperly, such as notarizing without the signer present?
- Nothing, notaries are immune
- The notary can face consequences including civil liability for damages, disciplinary action against the commission (suspension or revocation), and in serious cases criminal charges ✓
- Only a warning, always
- The signer is solely responsible
A notary who performs an act improperly can face serious consequences. Civilly, the notary (and possibly their employer or surety bond) may be liable for damages caused by the misconduct, such as losses from a fraudulent document. Administratively, the commissioning authority can discipline the nota…
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What is the purpose of a notary surety bond, where required?
- To pay the notary's salary
- To protect the public by providing a source of compensation if the notary's misconduct or negligence causes financial harm ✓
- To insure the notary's personal property
- To pay the notary's commission fees
A notary surety bond, required in many states, protects the public — not the notary. If a notary's improper act, negligence, or misconduct causes financial harm to a member of the public, the injured party can make a claim against the bond up to its amount. The surety company that pays a claim can t…
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What is a copy certification, and an important limitation on it?
- Certifying a copy of any document, including vital records
- A notarial act certifying that a copy is a true and complete reproduction of an original — but notaries generally may not certify copies of vital or public records such as birth or death certificates ✓
- Notarizing a signature
- Translating a document
A copy certification is a notarial act (where authorized) in which the notary certifies that a photocopy is a true, accurate, and complete reproduction of an original document presented to them. An important limitation is that notaries generally may not certify copies of vital records (such as birth…
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What are 'credible witnesses' in the context of identifying a signer?
- Witnesses who sign the document
- One or more impartial individuals who personally know the signer and swear to the signer's identity when the signer lacks satisfactory identification documents ✓
- Notaries from another state
- The signer's attorney only
Credible witnesses are individuals used to establish a signer's identity when the signer does not have acceptable identification documents. A credible witness personally knows the signer and appears before the notary to swear (under oath) to the signer's identity. State rules govern how many witness…
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May a notary give advice about which notarial certificate or document a signer should use, or how to complete a legal document?
- Yes, that is part of the job
- No — unless the notary is also an attorney, giving legal advice or selecting legal documents for others is the unauthorized practice of law ✓
- Only for simple documents
- Yes, for a higher fee
A notary who is not an attorney must not give legal advice or make legal decisions for a signer — doing so is the unauthorized practice of law. This includes advising which type of notarial certificate to use when the document doesn't specify, drafting or selecting legal documents, or explaining the…
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What should a notary do when their commission is about to expire?
- Keep notarizing indefinitely
- Stop performing notarial acts once the commission expires, and complete any required renewal process before continuing to act as a notary ✓
- Ignore the expiration date
- Transfer the commission to someone else
A notary's authority ends when the commission expires. Performing notarial acts on an expired commission is unauthorized and can carry penalties. Before the expiration date, the notary should follow their state's renewal process — which may include reapplying, paying a fee, retaking an exam or cours…
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If a notary makes an error in a completed notarial certificate, what is the appropriate way to handle it?
- Use correction fluid to cover the mistake
- Follow proper correction procedures — such as lining through the error, entering the correction, and initialing and dating it, or completing a new certificate — rather than concealing the mistake ✓
- Ignore the error
- Have the signer fix it later without the notary
When a notary discovers an error in a certificate, it must be corrected openly and properly, never hidden. Acceptable practice generally involves drawing a single line through the incorrect information so it remains legible, writing the correct information, and initialing and dating the change — or,…