Florida
State Notary Agency Information:
CHAPTER 117
NOTARIES PUBLIC
117.107 Prohibited acts. by a Notary
(1) A
notary public may
not use a name or initial in signing certificates other than that by
which the notary public is commissioned.
(2) A
notary public may
not sign notarial certificates using a facsimile signature stamp unless
the notary public has a physical disability that limits or prohibits
his or her ability to make a written signature and unless the notary
public has first submitted written notice to the Department of State
with an exemplar of the facsimile signature stamp.
(3) A
notary public may
not affix his or her signature to a blank form of affidavit or
certificate of acknowledgment and deliver that form to another person
with the intent that it be used as an affidavit or acknowledgment.
(4) A
notary public may
not take the acknowledgment of or administer an oath to a person whom
the notary public actually knows to have been adjudicated mentally
incapacitated by a court of competent jurisdiction, where the
acknowledgment or oath necessitates the exercise of a right that has
been removed pursuant to s. 744.3215(2) or (3), and where the person
has not been restored to capacity as a matter of record.
(5) A
notary public may
not notarize a signature on a document if it appears that the person is
mentally incapable of understanding the nature and effect of the
document at the time of notarization.
(6) A
notary public may
not take the acknowledgment of a person who does not speak or
understand the English language, unless the nature and effect of the
instrument to be notarized is translated into a language which the
person does understand.
(7) A
notary public may not change anything in a written instrument after it
has been signed by anyone.
(8) A
notary public may not amend a notarial certificate after the
notarization is complete.
(9) A
notary public may
not notarize a signature on a document if the person whose signature is
being notarized is not in the presence of the notary public at the time
the signature is notarized. Any notary public who violates this
subsection is guilty of a civil infraction, punishable by penalty not
exceeding $5,000, and such violation constitutes malfeasance and
misfeasance in the conduct of official duties. It is no defense to the
civil infraction specified in this subsection that the notary public
acted without intent to defraud. A notary public who violates this
subsection with the intent to defraud is guilty of violating s.
117.105.
(10) A
notary public may
not notarize a signature on a document if the document is incomplete or
blank. However, an endorsement or assignment in blank of a negotiable
or nonnegotiable note and the assignment in blank of any instrument
given as security for such note is not deemed incomplete.
(11) A
notary public may
not notarize a signature on a document if the person whose signature is
to be notarized is the spouse, son, daughter, mother, or father of the
notary public.
(12) A notary public may
not notarize a signature on a document if the notary public has a
financial interest in or is a party to the underlying transaction;
however, a notary public who is an employee may notarize a signature
for his or her employer, and this employment does not constitute a
financial interest in the transaction nor make the notary a party to
the transaction under this subsection as long as he or she does not
receive a benefit other than his or her salary and the fee for services
as a notary public authorized by law. For purposes of this subsection,
a notary public who is an attorney does not have a financial interest
in and is not a party to the underlying transaction evidenced by a
notarized document if he or she notarizes a signature on that document
for a client for whom he or she serves as an attorney of record and he
or she has no interest in the document other than the fee paid to him
or her for legal services and the fee authorized by law for services as
a notary public.