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What is a Notary?
Public officer who certifies and
attests to the authenticity of writings (e.g., deeds)
and takes affidavits, depositions, and protests of
negotiable instruments. The
notary is commissioned by the state and may act only
within the territory authorized by state statutes. Most
states set maximum fees for notarial services and
require that a notarial seal or stamp be impressed on
documents authenticated by a notary public. In the
civil-law countries of western Europe and in Latin
American and French areas of North America, the role of
the notary is more significant, being roughly equivalent
to that of a lawyer who specializes in real estate,
sales, mortgages, and the settlement of estates but who
may not appear in court.
also
called Notary Public, public official
whose chief function in common-law countries is to
authenticate contracts, deeds, and other documents by an
appropriate certificate with a notarial seal. In Roman
law the notarius was originally a slave or
freedman who took notes of judicial proceedings. The
work of the modern notary, however, corresponds more to
that of the Roman tabularius, who took and
preserved evidence. In medieval times the notary was an
ecclesiastical officer who preserved evidence, but his
duties were mainly secular.
The modern
notary is appointed, after making application, by a
secular official; the appointment usually becomes
effective on payment of a fee, on the taking of an oath
of office, and, in many parts of the United States, on
the deposit of a bond to assure the proper performance
of duties.
In the United States, qualifications for the position
vary little from state to state, and, in general, a
notary must be a citizen of legal age and a resident of
the area in which he desires appointment. The
jurisdiction of the notary's office is limited to the
state or, in some states, only the county in which he
resides. In countries such as France and Italy, however,
and in the Canadian province of Quebec, which follow the
civil-law tradition, there are educational requirements
for notaries similar to those for lawyers.
In the civil-law countries of western Europe, and in
Latin American and French areas of North America, the
office of notary is a much more important position than
in the United States and England. The civil-law notary
may be roughly described as a lawyer who specializes in
the law relating to real estate, sales, mortgages, and
the settlement of estates but who is not allowed to
appear in court. Documents prepared by him or
authenticated in the proper manner are, in these
countries, admissible in court without further proof of
their authenticity; the notary guarantees the identity
of the parties.
In the Anglo-American–law countries, on the other hand,
courts will not accept as true the facts certified by a
notary except in the case of a bill of exchange
protested abroad. Nor may a notary draw up legal
documents such as wills, contracts, mortgages, and deeds
for a fee, for such work constitutes the practice of
law. Nevertheless, many statutes require that the
authenticity of specified documents be certified by a
notary; the most common of these in the United States
are deeds conveying land. In these cases the notary must
not take the acknowledgment of a person who does not
appear before him or who is not known to him unless
evidence of identification is presented.
Certain other officials may be given notarial functions
by statute, such as justices of the peace, consular
officials, certain military officers, and various court
officials.
MLA style:
"notary."
Encyclopædia Britannica.
2006. Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.
25
Aug.
2006 <http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9056330>.
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