Florida Senate - 2015                                     SB 436
       
       
        
       By Senator Soto
       
       
       
       
       
       14-00028-15                                            2015436__
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to notaries public; creating s.
    3         117.055, F.S.; requiring a notary public to record
    4         specified information in a notarial journal when
    5         performing certain notarial acts; providing that
    6         notarial journals are the exclusive property of a
    7         notary public; requiring a notary public to secure a
    8         notarial journal; requiring that a notary public
    9         retain a notarial journal for a specified period;
   10         requiring a notary public to notify the Notary Section
   11         of the Executive Office of the Governor if a notarial
   12         journal is lost, stolen, misplaced, destroyed, erased,
   13         compromised, rendered unusable, or becomes otherwise
   14         inaccessible during the retention period; requiring a
   15         notary public employed by a law firm to maintain a
   16         separate notarial journal for certain notarial acts
   17         pertaining to the law firm and its clients; providing
   18         that such a notarial journal is the exclusive property
   19         of the law firm; requiring the law firm to comply with
   20         notarial journal security, retention, and reporting
   21         requirements; providing that failure to comply with
   22         notarial journal requirements does not invalidate a
   23         lawful notarization; providing that failure to comply
   24         with the notarial journal requirements constitutes
   25         grounds for suspension, nonrenewal, or denial of a
   26         notary public commission; providing applicability;
   27         amending s. 117.10, F.S.; exempting certain acts of
   28         specified law enforcement and correctional officers
   29         from the notarial journal requirements; providing an
   30         effective date.
   31   
   32  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   33  
   34         Section 1. Section 117.055, Florida Statutes, is created to
   35  read:
   36         117.055 Notarial journal.—
   37         (1) When performing a notarial act upon any mortgage,
   38  mortgage-related document, loan modification, power of attorney,
   39  last will and testament, codicil to a last will and testament,
   40  trust agreement, amendment to a trust agreement, certification
   41  of trust, or deed conveying real property, including, but not
   42  limited to, a quitclaim deed, a notary public shall record the
   43  following information in a bound, sequential paper journal or an
   44  electronic journal that creates sequential and nonmodifiable
   45  records:
   46         (a) The date and time of the notarial act.
   47         (b) The type of notarial act.
   48         (c) The type, title, name, or description of the document,
   49  proceeding, or transaction requiring the notarial act.
   50         (d) The signer’s printed name and signature or, in the case
   51  of an electronic journal, the signer’s name and electronic
   52  signature as defined in s. 668.50(2).
   53         (e) The signer’s complete residence address.
   54         (f) Whether the signer is personally known to the notary
   55  public or presented satisfactory evidence of his or her identity
   56  pursuant to s. 117.05(5). The notary public shall record the
   57  type, last four digits of the unique identification number, and
   58  expiration date of any form of identification relied upon by the
   59  notary public as satisfactory evidence of identity.
   60         (g) The names of witnesses to the notarial act, if any.
   61         (2) Except as specifically provided in subsection (5), a
   62  notarial journal is the exclusive property of the notary public.
   63         (3) A notarial journal must be kept in a locked and secure
   64  area, under the direct and exclusive control of the notary
   65  public. Access to an electronic notarial journal must be further
   66  protected by a password or other secure means of authentication.
   67         (4) A notary public shall retain a notarial journal for at
   68  least 5 years after the date of the last recorded notarial act
   69  in the journal. If the notarial journal is lost, stolen,
   70  misplaced, destroyed, erased, compromised, rendered unusable, or
   71  becomes otherwise inaccessible during the retention period, the
   72  notary public shall immediately notify the Notary Section of the
   73  Executive Office of the Governor in writing of the circumstances
   74  of the incident.
   75         (5)A notary public employed by a law firm shall maintain a
   76  separate notarial journal to record notarial acts subject to the
   77  requirements of this section which pertain to the law firm and
   78  its clients. Such notarial journal is the exclusive property of
   79  the law firm and must remain in the law firm’s custody upon the
   80  termination of the employment of the notary public. A law firm
   81  shall comply with the security, retention, and reporting
   82  requirements of subsections (3) and (4) for such notarial
   83  journals.
   84         (6)Failure of a notary public to comply with this section
   85  does not invalidate an otherwise lawful notarization.
   86         (7) Failure of a notary public to comply with this section
   87  constitutes grounds for suspension or nonrenewal of the notary
   88  public’s commission and for the denial of a subsequent
   89  commission to the notary public by the Governor.
   90         (8)This section does not apply to a notary public employed
   91  by a law enforcement agency, an office of state attorney, or the
   92  Office of the Attorney General when he or she is acting within
   93  the scope of such employment.
   94         Section 2. Section 117.10, Florida Statutes, is amended to
   95  read:
   96         117.10 Law enforcement and correctional officers.—Law
   97  enforcement officers, correctional officers, and correctional
   98  probation officers, as defined in s. 943.10, and traffic
   99  accident investigation officers and traffic infraction
  100  enforcement officers, as described in s. 316.640, are authorized
  101  to administer oaths when engaged in the performance of official
  102  duties. Sections 117.01, 117.04, 117.045, 117.05, 117.055, and
  103  117.103 do not apply to the provisions of this section. An
  104  officer may not notarize his or her own signature.
  105         Section 3. This act shall take effect January 1, 2016.