Dear Associates:
This bulletin is being issued to update a prior bulletin.
The Michigan Notary Public Act (2003 PA 238) (MCL
55.261 et seq.) went into effect on April 1, 2004. At the time, the
Michigan Department of State published a Summary of Changes to theMichigan notary law. Public Act 155 of 2006 amended the Michigan Notary
Public Act (2003 PA 238) effective May 26, 2006. This act amends three sections
within the law, Sections 27, 29, and 47.
The Act requires the notary public to obtain and read a copy of all the
current statutes of this state that regulate notarial acts, prior to performing
any notarial act. The full Act is attached for your reference and
review.
Here are some key points from a title industry perspective to keep in
mind:
1. Required language
When performing a notarial act, the notary public is required toprint,
type, stamp, or otherwise imprint mechanically or electronically sufficiently
clear and legible to be read by the secretary and in a manner capable of
photographic reproduction all of the following in this format or in a similar
format that conveys all of the same information.:
(a) The name of the notary public exactly as it appears on his or her
application for commission as notary public.
(b) The statement: "Notary public, State of
Michigan
, County of __________.".
(c) The statement: "My commission expires __________.".
(d) If performing a notarial act in a county other than the
county of commission, the statement: "Acting in the County of
__________."
(e) The date the notarial act was performed.
Several notaries already have stamps which provide "Acting in the County of
_________." Those who do not have this language on their stamp must print
or type the language beneath their commission expiration information when acting
in a county other than the county of commission.
2. Notary authenticity
Confirmation that a notarial act is legitimate is one tool used by examiners
in reviewing suspect documents. Examiners analyze the execution date as it
relates to the notary commission expiration date. Formerly, the length of
the commission could be no less than 4 years and not longer than 5 years.
The Act expands this time period. The commission may last from the "date
of appointment until the notary's birthday occurring not less than 6 years and
not more than 7 years after the date of his or her appointment". Another
method available to verify the authenticity of a notarial act is to seek a
certification from the county clerk. The Act provides that the county
clerk may charge $10 for this service.
3. Restrictions
The Act contains several restrictions on the performance of notarial
acts. Three of the several restrictions are:
(1) "A notary public shall not perform a notarial act for a spouse, domestic
partner, descendant, or sibling including in-laws, steps, or
half-relatives."
(2) "A notary public shall not perform any notarial act on a record that
contains a blank space."
(3) "The fee charged by a notary public for performing a notarial act shall
not be more than $10.00 for any individual transaction or notarial act. A notary
public shall either conspicuously display a sign or expressly advise a person
concerning the fee amount to be charged for a notarial act before the notary
public performs the act. Before the notary public commences to travel in order
to perform a notarial act, the notary public and client may agree concerning a
separate travel fee to be charged by the notary public for traveling to perform
the notarial act."
The second mentioned restriction might require parties to change their
practices when handling transactions with relocation companies and notarizing
records referencing a simultaneously recorded document such as a deed with a
power of attorney.
The third mentioned restriction raises the legal notary fee from $ 2.00 per
acknowledgement or jurat to $10 per individual transaction or notarial
act. This issue often arises when the notary public refuses to increase
their notary fee at the request of a lender dealing with HELOC products.
4. Employer and Individual Liability
Notaries public should take their own personal civil and criminal liability
very seriously when being asked to notarize any document. Section 37 of
the Act permits a civil action to be brought against an employer if the notary
public/employee is acting within the employee's actual or apparent scope of
employment and if the employer had knowledge of and consented to or permitted
any "official misconduct". Pursuant to the Act, "official
misconduct" includes the performance of an action that is unauthorized,
unlawful, abusive, negligent, reckless, or injurious and the charging of a fee
that exceeds the maximum amount authorized by law.
Documents that are forged or fraudulent are a great area of concern for us as
an industry. If the notary public does not see the parties sign the
document AND carefully examine the identification, the notary public puts more
than the company at risk. The notary public's personal liability is also
at stake.
Please take ten minutes now to read the Act in its entirety.
If you have any questions regarding this Act, please contact Gary Kaiser,
John Tacia or me.