Bill Text: MA S1845 | 2009-2010 | 186th General Court | Introduced
Bill Title: For legistlation to regulate notaries public to protect consumers
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2010-07-29 - Read; and referred to the House Committee On Ways and Means [S1845 Detail]
Download: Massachusetts-2009-S1845-Introduced.html
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
_______________
PRESENTED BY:
Susan C. Tucker
_______________
To the
Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts in General
Court assembled:
The undersigned legislators and/or citizens respectfully petition for the passage of the accompanying bill:
An Act regulating notaries public to protect consumers .
_______________
PETITION OF:
Name: |
District/Address: |
Susan C. Tucker |
Second Essex and Middlesex |
The Commonwealth of
Massachusetts
_______________
In the Year Two Thousand and Nine
_______________
An Act regulating notaries public to protect consumers.
Be
it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court
assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:
SECTION 1. Chapter 222 of the General Laws is hereby amended by striking section 1 and inserting in place thereof the following section: Section 1. Justices of the peace and notaries public shall be appointed, and their commissions shall be issued for the commonwealth. They shall have jurisdiction throughout the commonwealth when acting under the sole authority of such a commission, and shall perform their duties subject to the provisions of sections 8 through 27. Unless otherwise expressly provided, they may administer oaths or affirmations in all cases in which an oath or affirmation is required, and take acknowledgments of deeds and other instruments.
SECTION 2. Said chapter 222 of the General Laws
is hereby amended by striking sections 8 and 8A and inserting in place thereof
the following section:
Section 8. (a) A justice of the peace, notary public, or other person duly
authorized, when taking acknowledgment of any instrument, or administering an
oath with relation to an instrument filed in court,, shall print or type his
name directly below his signature and affix thereto the date of the expiration
of his commission in the following language: “My commission expires ______.”
(b) A notary shall keep an official notarial seal or stamp that is the
exclusive property of the notary, may not be used by any other person, and
shall meet the following requirements:
(1) A notary public shall obtain a new seal or stamp if the notary public
renews his or her commission, receives a new commission, or changes his or her
name.
(2) The notarial seal or stamp shall include: the notary public's name exactly
as indicated on the commission; the words "notary public,"
"Commonwealth of Massachusetts" or "Massachusetts", the
date of the expiration of his commission in the following language: “My
commission expires ____”; and a facsimile of the great seal of the
commonwealth.
(3) Each new notarial seal that uses ink shall use black ink.
(4) A notary public may satisfy the requirements of subsection (a) by using a
stamp and a seal that together include all of the information required thereby.
(5) Failure to comply with this section shall not affect the validity of any
instrument, or the record thereof.
SECTION 3. Section 11 of said chapter 222 of the General Laws is hereby amended by inserting after the word “dependents,” in line 1, the following words: or members of the Massachusetts National Guard or other Reserve Component Commands when conducting mobilization exercises and Soldier Readiness Processing.
SECTION 4. Said chapter 222 of the General Laws
is hereby amended by striking section 12 and inserting in place thereof the
following section:
Section 12. Notwithstanding the provisions of section 23 or any other general
law, rule, regulation or order to the contrary, a notary public who is an
attorney or who is employed by an attorney shall not be required to maintain a
journal of notary transactions.
SECTION 5. Chapter 222 of the General Laws is
hereby amended by adding the following fifteen sections:
Section 13. For the purposes of this chapter the following words shall have the
following meanings:
"Acknowledgment" shall mean a notarial act in which an individual, at
a single time and place appears in person before the notary public and presents
a document; is identified by the notary public through satisfactory evidence of
identity; and indicates to the notary public that the signature on the document
was voluntarily affixed by the individual for the purposes stated within the
document and, if applicable, that the individual had authority to sign in a
particular representative capacity.
"Affirmation" shall mean a notarial act, or part thereof, that is
legally equivalent to an oath, and in which an individual, at a single time and
place appears in person before the notary public; is identified by the notary
public through satisfactory evidence of identity; and makes a vow of
truthfulness or fidelity under the penalties of perjury without invoking a
deity.
"Copy certification" shall mean a notarial act in which a notary
public is presented with a document; copies or supervises the copying of the
document using a photographic or electronic copying process; compares the
document to the copy; and determines that the copy is accurate and complete.
"Credible witness" means an honest, reliable, and impartial person
who personally knows an individual appearing before a notary and takes an oath
or affirmation from the notary to vouch for that individual's identity.
"Journal of notarial acts" or "journal" shall mean a
permanently bound book that creates and preserves a chronological record of
notarizations performed by a notary public.
"Jurat" means a notarial act in which an individual, at a single time
and place appears, in person before the notary public and presents a document;
is identified by the notary public through satisfactory evidence of identity;
signs the document in the presence of the notary public; and takes an oath or
affirmation before the notary vouching for the truthfulness or accuracy of the
signed document.
"Notarial act" and "notarization" shall mean any act that a
notary public is empowered to perform.
"Notary public" or "notary" shall mean any person
commissioned to perform official acts pursuant to Article IV of the Articles of
Amendment of the Constitution of the commonwealth.
"Oath" shall mean a notarial act, or part thereof, that is legally
equivalent to an affirmation, and in which an individual, at a single time and
place, appears in person before the notary; is identified by the notary through
satisfactory evidence of identity; and makes a vow of truthfulness or fidelity
under the penalties of perjury by invoking a deity.
"Official misconduct" shall mean a notary’s performance of any act
prohibited, or failure to perform any act mandated, by sections 14 through 25,
or by any other law, in connection with a notarial act; or a notary’s
performance of an official act in a manner found to be grossly negligent or
against the public interest.
"Personal knowledge of identity" shall mean familiarity with an
individual resulting from interactions with that individual over a period of
time sufficient to ensure beyond doubt that the individual has the identity
claimed.
"Principal" shall mean a person whose signature is notarized, or a
person making an oath or affirmation before a notary.
"Regular place of work or business" shall mean a place where one
spends a substantial portion of one’s working or business hours.
"Satisfactory evidence of identity" shall mean identification of an
individual based on at least one current document issued by a Federal or state
government agency bearing the photographic image of the individual’s face and
signature; or on the oath or affirmation of a credible witness unaffected by
the document or transaction who is personally known to the notary and who
personally knows the individual; or identification of an individual based on
the notary public's personal knowledge of the identity of the principal. For a
person who is not a United States citizen, "satisfactory evidence of
identity" shall mean identification of an individual based on a valid
passport, or another government-issued document evidencing the individual's
nationality or residence, that bears a photographic image of the individual's
face and signature.
“Signature witnessing” shall mean a notarial act in which an individual, at a
single time and place, appears in person before the notary public and presents
a document; is identified by the notary public through satisfactory evidence of
identity; and signs the document in the presence of the notary public.
Section 14. (a) A person qualified for a notary public commission shall be at
least 18 years of age; reside legally or have a regular place of work or
business within the commonwealth, and be a United States citizen or have
permanent residency status.
(b) In the Governor's discretion, an application for appointment, reappointment
or renewal of a commission may be denied based on:
(1) submission of an official application containing a material misstatement or
omission of fact;
(2) the applicant's felony conviction or misdemeanor conviction that resulted
in a prison sentence;
(3) the applicant's conviction of a misdemeanor with probation or a fine, or
conviction for drunk driving;
(4) the applicant's admission of facts sufficient to warrant a finding of guilt
of any crime;
(5) a finding or admission of liability against the applicant in a civil
lawsuit based on the applicant’s deceit;
(6) revocation, suspension, restriction, or denial of a notarial commission or
professional license by this or any other state; or
(7) any other reason, including for official misconduct as defined in section
13, that, within the Governor's discretion, would make the applicant unsuitable
to hold the commission as a notary public.
Section 15. As set forth in Article IV of the Articles of Amendment to the
Constitution of the commonwealth, a person commissioned as a notary public may
perform notarial acts in any part of the commonwealth for a term of seven
years, unless the commission is earlier revoked or the notary resigns.
Section 16 (a) A notary public may perform the following notarial acts:
acknowledgments; oaths and affirmations; jurats; signature witnessings; copy
certifications; issuance of summonses for witnesses as set forth in section 1
of chapter 233; issuance of subpoenas; and witnessing the opening of a bank
safe, vault, or box as set forth in section 32 of chapter 167.
(b) A notary shall take the acknowledgment of the signature or mark of persons
acknowledging for themselves or in any representative capacity by using
substantially the following form:
On this ____ day of ___________, 20__, before me, the undersigned notary
public, personally appeared ________________________ (name of document signer),
proved to me through satisfactory evidence of identification, which were
_______________________, to be the person whose name is signed on the preceding
or attached document, and acknowledged to me that (he) (she) signed it
voluntarily for its stated purpose.
(as partner for ____________, a partnership)
(as ____________ for ______________, a corporation)
(as attorney in fact for ________________, the principal)
(as ___________ for _______________, (a) (the) _________________)
_________________ (official signature and seal of notary)
(c) A notary shall use a jurat certificate in substantially the following form
in notarizing a signature or mark on an affidavit or other sworn or affirmed
written declaration:
On this ____ day of ___________, 20__, before me, the undersigned notary
public, personally appeared ________________________ (name of document signer),
proved to me through satisfactory evidence of identification, which were
_______________________, to be the person who signed the preceding or attached
document in my presence, and who swore or affirmed to me that the contents of
the document are truthful and accurate to the best of (his) (her) knowledge and
belief.
_________________ (official signature and seal of notary)
(d) A notary shall witness a signature in substantially the following form in
notarizing a signature or mark to confirm that it was affixed in the notary's
presence without administration of an oath or affirmation:
On this ____ day of ___________, 20__, before me, the undersigned notary
public, personally appeared ________________________ (name of document signer),
proved to me through satisfactory evidence of identification, which were
_______________________, to be the person whose name is signed on the preceding
or attached document in my presence.
_________________ (official signature and seal of notary)
(e) A notary shall certify a copy by using substantially the following form:
On this ____ day of ___________, 20__, I certify that the (preceding)
(following) (attached) document is a true, exact, complete, and unaltered copy
made by me of __________________ (description of the document), presented to me
by ______________________.
_________________ (official signature and seal of notary)
(f) A notary public may certify the affixation of a signature by mark on a
document presented for notarization if:
(1) the principal affixes the mark in the presence of the notary public and of
two witnesses unaffected by the document;
(2) both witnesses sign their own names beside the mark;
(3) the notary writes below the mark: “Mark affixed by (name of signer by mark)
in the presence of (names and addresses of witnesses) and undersigned notary;
and
(4) the notary public notarizes the signature by mark through an
acknowledgment, jurat, or signature witnessing.
(g) The notary public may sign the name of a principal who is physically unable
to sign or make a mark on a document presented for notarization if:
(1) the principal directs the notary to do so in the presence of two witnesses
who are unaffected by the document;
(2) the principal does not have a demeanor that causes the notary public to
have a compelling doubt about whether the principal knows the consequences of
the transaction requiring the notarial act;
(3) in the notary public’s judgment, the principal is acting of his or her own
free will;
(4) the notary public signs the principal’s name in the presence of the
principal and the witnesses;
(5) both witnesses sign their own names beside the signature;
(6) the notary public writes below the signature: “Signature affixed by notary
public in the presence of (names and addresses of principal and two
witnesses)"; and
(7) the notary public notarizes the signature through an acknowledgment, jurat,
or signature witnessing.
(h) This section does not require a notary public to use the forms set forth
above if another form of acknowledgment, jurat, signature witnessing, or copy
certification is required or allowed by the provisions of any court rule or
court form; any provision of the general laws, including but not limited to,
section 42 of chapter 183, or the forms set forth in the appendix thereto, or
section 2 of chapter 192; any Federal statute; or any regulation adopted pursuant
to any such provision or statute.
(i) This section does not require a notary public to use the forms set forth
above if the form of acknowledgment, jurat, signature witnessing, or copy
certification if a document contains an alternative form from another state if
the document is to be filed or recorded in, or governed by the laws of, that
other state.
(j) This section does not require a notary public to use the forms set forth
above if the form of acknowledgment, jurat, signature witnessing, or copy certification
appears on a printed form that contains an express prohibition against altering
that form.
Section 17. (a) A notary public shall not perform a notarial act if:
(1) the principal is not in the notary’s presence at the time of notarization;
(2) the principal is not identified by the notary through satisfactory evidence
of identity;
(3) the principal has a demeanor that causes the notary public to have a
compelling doubt about whether the principal knows the consequences of the
transaction or document requiring the notarial act;
(4) in the notary public’s judgment, the principal is not acting of his or her
own free will;
(5) the notary public is a party to or is named in the document that is to be
notarized, except that a notary public may notarize a document if the notary
public is named in the document for the sole purpose of receiving notices
relating to the document and except that a notary public who is licensed as an
attorney in the commonwealth and is named as an executor, trustee or in any fiduciary
capacity in a document, or is employed by an attorney so licensed, may perform
notarial acts concerning such document;
(6) the notary public will receive as a direct result of the notarial act any
commission, fee, advantage, right, title, interest, cash, property, or other
consideration exceeding the maximum fees provided for in section 24, or has any
financial interest in the subject matter of the document. This section shall
not preclude a notary public who is licensed as an attorney in the commonwealth,
or is employed by an attorney so licensed, from notarial acts concerning any
document in connection with which the attorney receives a legal fee for
professional legal services.
(7) the notary public is a spouse, domestic partner, parent, guardian, child,
or sibling of the principal, including in-law, step, or half relatives, except
where a principal witnesses a will or other legal document prepared by the
notary public who is an attorney licensed in the commonwealth.
(b) A notary public shall not refuse to perform a notarial act solely based on
the principal's race, advanced age, gender, sexual orientation, religion,
national origin, health, disability, or status as a non-client or non-customer
of the notary public or the notary public’s employer.
(c) A non-attorney notary public shall not influence a person either to enter
into or avoid a transaction involving a notarial act by the notary public,
except that the notary public may provide assistance relating to that
transaction, if he or she is duly qualified, trained, or acting pursuant to a
standard or practice recognized in a particular industry or professional field
in selecting, drafting or completing a certificate or other document related to
a matter within that industry or field.
(d) A notary public shall not execute a certificate containing information
known or believed by the notary public to be false.
(e) A notary public shall not affix an official signature or seal on a notarial
certificate that is incomplete.
(f) A notary public shall not provide or send a signed or sealed notarial
certificate to another person with the understanding that it will be completed
or attached to a document outside of the notary public’s presence, provided
that in connection with a commercial, non-consumer transaction, a notary public
may deliver a signed, sealed, or signed and sealed notarial certificate to an
attorney with the understanding that: (i) the attorney will attach the
certificate to a document outside of the notary’s presence; (ii) the attorney
will hold such notarial certificate in escrow; and (iii) the attorney informs
the notary public that the attorney will obtain the approval of the principal,
or principals, involved before attaching the certificate to the document.
(g) A notary public shall not notarize a signature on a blank or incomplete
document, except as provided in subsection (f) above.
(h) A notary public shall not perform any official act with the intent to
deceive or defraud.
(i) A notary public shall not use the term "notario" or "notario
publico" or any equivalent non-English term in any business card,
advertisement, notice, or sign.
Section 18. (a) No notary public may advise clients, offer legal advice or
represent or advertise himself or herself as a lega1 specialist or consultant
unless the individual is an attorney licensed to practice law in the
commonwealth. No notary public shall state or imply in any communication that
he can or will obtain special favors from or has special influence with any
government agency. No notary public who is not licensed to practice law in the
commonwealth shall make a literal translation of his or her status as
“licensed” or as a “notary public” into a language other than English without
regard to the true meaning of the word or phrase in that language, or use any
other term that implies that the notary public is an attorney so licensed, in
any document, including an advertisement, stationery, letterhead, business
card, or other written or broadcast material describing the notary public or
his services.
(b) A notary public who is not an attorney licensed to practice law in the
commonwealth
(1) shall not offer legal advice or advise clients as to their immigration
status; secure or attempt to secure supporting documents, such as birth
certificates, necessary to complete a client’s immigration forms; or submit
completed immigration forms on a client’s behalf to any governmental agency;
(2) may translate questions presented on an immigration form for another person
and may complete those forms at the explicit direction of that other person
only where translation of that other person’s answers is necessary; and
(3) prior to providing services of any kind related to an immigration matter,
or any matter that that could influence or affect a person’s legal status under
immigration law, shall provide a client with a written statement that states “I
am not an attorney licensed to practice law. I may not give you legal advice or
advise you about immigration policies or procedures. You should seek the advice
of a qualified attorney to assist you with any legal questions or with
questions about legal status under immigration law.”
(c) The provisions of subsection (b) shall not apply to the following persons:
(1) An attorney licensed to practice law in any state or territory of the
United States, or of any foreign country when authorized by the supreme
judicial court, to the extent the attorney renders immigration assistance
service in the course of his or her practice as an attorney.
(2) A paralegal, legal intern or law student, employed by an attorney so
licensed and rendering immigration assistance in the course of the intern’s or
student’s employment.
(3) Any organization employing or desiring to employ any person not a citizen
of the United States, where the organization, its employees or agents provide
advice or assistance in immigration-related matters to non-citizen employees or
potential employees without compensation from the individuals to whom such
advice or assistance is provided.
(d) A non-attorney notary public shall not engage in the practice of law. This
subsection shall not preclude a notary public who is duly qualified, trained,
or experienced in a particular industry or professional field from selecting,
drafting or completing a certificate or other document related to a matter
within that industry or field.
(e) A notary public who is not an attorney licensed to practice law in the
commonwealth, or who is not employed by an attorney so licensed, shall not
conduct a real estate closing and shall not act as a real estate closing agent.
A notary public who is employed by an attorney so licensed may notarize a
document in conjunction with a real estate closing conducted by the attorney. A
notary public who is employed by a lender may notarize a document in
conjunction with the closing of his or her employer's real estate loans.
(f) The provisions of this section shall also apply to any person who employs,
contracts with or otherwise uses the services of a notary public with knowledge
or reason to know of conduct that is in violation of this section.
Section 18A (a) The attorney general may prosecute any person committing a
violation under this chapter. Any person convicted of committing such violation
shall be punished for a first offense by a fine of not more than $1,000 or by
imprisonment in a jail or house of correction for not more than six months, or
by both such fine and imprisonment, and for subsequent offenses by a fine of
not more than $5,000 or by imprisonment in a jail or house of correction for not
more than one year, or by both such fine and imprisonment. The attorney general
may file a petition for injunctive relief against any person who violates this
chapter. If the attorney general or the state secretary has cause to believe
that, as a result of official misconduct, a person holding the office of notary
public is unsuitable to hold that office, the attorney general or the state
secretary shall provide notice to the governor of such official misconduct.
Any conviction based on a violation of this chapter shall be grounds for the
revocation of a notary’s appointment. If the court finds that a person so
convicted either knew or should have known his conduct to be in violation of
this chapter, the court may require such person to pay to the commonwealth a
civil penalty of not more than five thousand dollars for each such violation
and also may require the said person to pay the reasonable costs of
investigation and litigation of such violation, including reasonable attorneys’
fees.
(b) A person having an interest or right that is or may be adversely affected
by a violation of section 18 may initiate an action for private remedies and,
if the attorney general has not done so, for injunctive relief. Such person may
be awarded his actual damages and, if the court finds that person against whom
the action is brought either knew or should have known his conduct to be in
violation of section 18, punitive damages of not more than $5,000 per
violation, and attorney’s fees and court costs.
(c) It shall not be a defense in an action under this section that the conduct
that is the subject of the action, in whole or in part, occurred primarily or
substantially outside the commonwealth.
Section 19. (a) Any notary public who is not an attorney shall post signs at
his or her place of business, setting forth information in English and in every
other language the person provides or offers to provide services. Each language
shall be on a separate sign. Signs shall be posted in a conspicuous location
where the signs will be visible to customers. Each sign shall be at least 12
inches by 20 inches with boldface type or print that prominently states the
following information:
(1) The individual’s full name and address;
(2) The statement “I am not an attorney licensed to practice law and may not
give legal advice or accept fees for legal advice”; and
(3) The statement “I am not accredited to represent you before the United
States Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services and the Immigration Board
of Appeals.”
(b) Prior to providing services related to an immigration matter, a notary
public shall provide the client with written disclosure in English and the
client’s primary language. The disclosure shall include the notary public’s
full name, address and telephone number.
Section 20. A notary shall perform any notarial act for any person requesting
such an act who tenders the fee set forth in section 41 of chapter 262, unless:
(a) the notary public knows or has good reason to believe that the notarial act
or the associated transaction is unlawful;
(b) the principal has a demeanor that causes the notary public to have a
compelling doubt about whether the principal knows the consequences of the
transaction or document requiring the notarial act;
(c) the act is prohibited by any provision of this chapter or other applicable
law; or
(d) the number of notarial acts requested practicably precludes completion of
all acts at once, in which case the notary public shall arrange for later
completion of the remaining acts.
Section 21. (a) A notary public has neither the duty nor the authority to
investigate, ascertain, or attest to the lawfulness, propriety, accuracy, or
truthfulness of a document or transaction involving a notarial act.
(b) Failure of a document to contain the forms of acknowledgment, jurat,
signature witnessing, or copy certification set forth in section 16, or
otherwise to comply with the requirements set forth in sections 8 through 24
shall not have any effect on the validity of the underlying document, or the
recording thereof.
(c) Failure of a document to contain the forms of acknowledgment, jurat,
signature witnessing, or copy certification set forth in section 16 shall not
be the basis of a refusal to accept the document for filing, recordation,
registration, or acceptance by a third party.
Section 22.
A non-attorney notary public who advertises notarial services in a language
other than English shall include in the advertisement, notice, letterhead, or
sign the following, prominently displayed in the same language the statement:
“I am not an attorney and have no authority to give advice on immigration or
other legal matters.”
Section 23. (a) A notary who is not employed by a governmental entity shall
keep, maintain, protect, and provide for lawful inspection a chronological
official journal of notarial acts that is a permanently bound book with
numbered pages, except as otherwise provided in this section.
(b) A notary public shall keep no more than one active journal at the same
time.
(c) For every notarial act except for the issuance of summons or subpoenas, or
the administration of an oral oath, the notary public shall record in the
journal at the time of the notarization the following:
(1) the date and time of the notarial act, proceeding, or transaction;
(2) the type of notarial act;
(3) the type, title, or a description of the document, transaction, or
proceeding. If multiple documents are signed by the same principal in the
course of a transaction or during a single date (i.e. real estate closings,
mortgage discharges, state laboratory drug analysis certificates, etc.), a
single journal entry shall be sufficient;
(4) the signature, printed name, and address of each principal and witness,
except that if a principal or witness tells the notary that he or she is a
battered person, the notary shall make a note in the journal that the person's
address shall not to be subject to public inspection.
(5) description of the satisfactory evidence of identity of each person
including:
(A) a notation of the type of identification document, the issuing agency, its
serial or identification number, and its date of issuance or expiration,
provided that if the identification number on the document is the person's
Social Security number, instead of including the number, the notary shall write
in the words "Social Security number" or the acronym "SSN";
or
(B) a notation if the notary identified the individual on the oath or
affirmation of a credible witness or based on the notary's personal knowledge
of the individual;
(6) the fee, if any, charged for the notarial act; and
(7) the address where the notarization was performed.
(d) A notary public shall not record a Social Security or credit card number in
the journal.
(e) A notary public shall record in the journal the circumstances for not
completing a notarial act that was requested by the principal.
(f) A journal shall not be required for a notary public who is an attorney
admitted to practice law in any jurisdiction or who is employed by such
attorney. If such attorney or person so employed elects to maintain such
journal, the provisions of this section shall not be construed in any way to
impair or infringe on the attorney-client privilege or the attorney work
product doctrine.
(g) Except as provided in subsection (f), the journal may be examined without
restriction by a law enforcement officer in the course of an official
investigation, subpoenaed by court order, or surrendered at the direction of
the secretary of the commonwealth. Nothing in this section shall prevent a
notary public from seeking appropriate judicial protective orders.
(h) A notary public shall safeguard the journal and all other notarial records
and surrender or destroy them only by rule of law, by court order, or at the
direction of the secretary of the commonwealth.
(i) When not in use, the journal shall be kept in a secure area under the
exclusive control of the notary public, and shall not be used by any other
notary nor surrendered to an employer upon termination of employment.
Section 24. Fees charged by a notary public for the following services shall
not exceed the amounts specified herein until July 1, 2009, after which time
maximum fees shall be set by the secretary of the commonwealth:
(a) For taking an acknowledgment or proof of a deed, or other instrument, to
include the seal and the writing of the certificate, the sum of $10 for each
signature taken.
(b) For administering an oath or affirmation to one person and executing the
jurat, including the seal, the sum of $10.
(c) For all services rendered in connection with the taking of any deposition,
the sum of $20, and in addition thereto, the sum of $5 for administering the
oath to
the witness and the sum of $5 for the certificate to the deposition.
(d) For every protest for the nonpayment of a promissory note or for the
nonpayment or non- acceptance of a bill of exchange, draft, or check, the sum
of $10.
(e) For serving every notice of nonpayment of a promissory note or of
nonpayment or non-acceptance of a bill of exchange, order, draft, or check, the
sum of $5.
(f) For recording every protest, the sum of $5.
(g) For certifying a copy of a power of attorney under chapter 201B, the sum of
$10.
No fee may be charged to notarize signatures on absentee ballot identification
envelopes or other voting materials.
No fee may be charged to a United States military veteran for notarization of
an application or a claim for a pension, allotment, allowance, compensation,
insurance, or any other veteran’s benefit.
Section 25. When a notary commission expires, is resigned, or is revoked, the
notary shall as soon as reasonably practicable, destroy or deface all notary
seals and stamps so that they may not be used, and retain the notarial journal
and records for seven years after the date of expiration, resignation, or revocation.
Section 26. Within ten days after the change of a notary public's residence,
business or mailing address, or name, the notary shall send to the secretary of
the commonwealth a signed notice of the change, giving both the old and new
information.
Section 27. A notary public's commission may be revoked for official misconduct
as defined in section 13, or for other good cause, as determined by the
Governor with the consent of the Governor's Council as set forth in Article
XXXVII of the Articles of Amendments to the Massachusetts Constitution.
SECTION 6. Chapter 262 of the General Laws is
hereby amended by striking section 41 and inserting in place thereof the
following section:
Section 41. The maximum fees of notaries public shall be as provided in section
24 of chapter 222.
SECTION 7. The provisions of this act shall apply to all commissions of notary public or justice of the peace authorized by chapter 222 of the General Laws, including commissions received or renewed before the effective date of this act.