HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
2294 |
THIRTIETH LEGISLATURE, 2020 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO NOTARIES PUBLIC.
BE IT
ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The purpose of this Act is to update the laws regarding notaries public including the following: to conform to the Revised Uniform Law on Notarial Acts (2018) (RULONA), the Hawaii Uniform Electronic Transactions Act, other state notary laws, and current notary practices.
SECTION 2. Chapter 456, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding new sections to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§456- Authority to refuse to perform notarial act. (a) A notary public may refuse to perform a notarial act if the notary public is not satisfied that:
(1) The person executing the document is
competent or has the capacity to execute the document; or
(2) The person's signature is knowingly and voluntarily made.
(b) A notary public may refuse to perform a
notarial act unless refusal is prohibited by law other than this chapter.
§456-
Notarial act performed
for remotely located individual.
(a) For purposes of this section, the following
definitions shall apply:
"Communication
technology" means an electronic device or process that:
(1) Allows a notary public and a remotely
located individual to communicate with each other simultaneously by sight and
sound; and
(2) When necessary and consistent with other
applicable law, facilitates communication with a remotely located individual
who has a vision, hearing, or speech impairment.
"Foreign
state" means a jurisdiction other than the
"Identity
proofing" means a process or service by which a third person provides a
notary public with a means to verify the identity of a remotely located individual
by a review of personal information from public or private data sources.
"Outside
the
"Remotely
located individual" means an individual who is not in the physical
presence of the notary public who performs a notarial act under this section.
(b)
A remotely located individual may comply
with any requirement of law of this State to appear personally before or be in
the presence of a notary public at the time of the performance of a notarial
act by using communication technology to appear before a notary public.
(c)
A notary public located in this State
may perform a notarial act using communication technology for a remotely
located individual if:
(1) The notary public:
(A) Has
personal knowledge of the identity of the individual;
(B) Has
satisfactory evidence of the identity of the remotely located individual by
oath or affirmation from a credible witness appearing before the notary public
under this chapter or this section; or
(C) Has
obtained satisfactory evidence of the identity of the remotely located individual
by using at least two different types of identity proofing;
(2) The notary public is reasonably able to
confirm that a document before the notary public is the same document in which
the remotely located individual made a statement or on which the individual executed
a signature; and
(3) The notary public, or a person acting on
behalf of the notary public, creates an audiovisual recording of the
performance of the notarial act.
(d) For a remotely located individual located
outside the
(1) The document:
(A) Is
to be filed with or relates to a matter before a public official or court,
governmental entity, or other entity subject to the jurisdiction of the United
States; or
(B) Involves
property located in the territorial jurisdiction of the United States or involves
a transaction substantially connected with the United States; and
(2) The act of making the statement or signing
the record is not prohibited by the foreign state in which the remotely located
individual is located.
(e)
If a notarial act is performed under
this section, any certificate of notarial act required by this chapter or other
law of the State must indicate that the notarial act was performed using
communication technology.
(f)
A form of certificate of notarial act
subject to this section and authorized by law of the State, including a
certificate of acknowledgment provided in section 502-41, is sufficient if it:
(1) Complies with rules adopted under this
section; or
(2) Is in the form authorized by law of the
State and contains a statement substantially as follows: "This notarial
act involved the use of communication technology."
(g)
A notary public, guardian,
conservator, or agent of a notary public, or a personal representative of a
deceased notary public shall retain the audiovisual recording created under
this section or cause the recording to be retained by a repository designated
by or on behalf of the person required to retain the recording. Unless a different period is required by rule
adopted under this section, the recording must be retained for a period of at
least ten years after the recording is made.
(h)
Before a notary public performs the
notary public's initial notarial act under this section, the notary public
shall notify the attorney general that the notary public will be performing
notarial acts with respect to remotely located individuals and identify the
technologies that the notary public intends to use. The technology selected by a remote online
notary public for remote online notarizations must conform to the attorney
general's standards developed for this chapter.
(i)
In addition to adopting, amending, or
repealing rules under section 456-1.5 and section 456-8, the attorney general
may adopt, amend, or repeal rules pursuant to chapter 91 regarding the
performance of notarial acts under this section, including:
(1) Prescribing the means of performing a
notarial act involving a remotely located individual using communication
technology;
(2) Establishing standards for communication
technology and identity proofing;
(3) Establishing requirements and procedures to
approve providers of communication technology and the process of identity
proofing; and
(4) Establishing standards and a period of
retention of an audiovisual recording created under this section.
(j)
Before adopting, amending, or
repealing a rule governing the performance of a notarial act with respect to a
remotely located individual, the attorney general shall consider:
(1) The most recent standards regarding the performance
of a notarial act with respect to a remotely located individual promulgated by
national standard-setting organizations and the recommendations of the National
Association of Secretaries of State;
(2) The standards, practices, and customs of
other jurisdictions that have laws substantially similar to this section; and
(3) The views of governmental officials and
entities and other interested persons.
§456- Application;
qualifications. (a) A notary public or an applicant for commission
as a remote online notary public may apply to the attorney general to be
commissioned as a remote online notary public in the manner provided by this section.
(b) A person qualifies to be commissioned as a
remote online notary public by:
(1) Satisfying the qualification requirements
for commission as a notary public under this chapter;
(2) Paying the application fee; and
(3) Submitting to the attorney general an
application in the form prescribed by the attorney general that satisfies the
attorney general that the applicant is qualified.
(c) The attorney general may charge a fee for
an application submitted under this section in an amount necessary to administer
this section.
(d) The technology selected by a remote online
notary public for remote online notarizations must conform to the attorney
general's standards developed under this section.
(e) The remote online notary public under this chapter
shall forthwith file a literal or photostatic copy of the person's commission
with the clerk of the circuit court of the circuit in which the notary public
resides.
§456-
Notification regarding
performance of notarial act on electronic record; selection of technology;
acceptance of tangible copy of electronic record.
(a) A notary
public may select one or more tamper-evident technologies to perform notarial
acts with respect to electronic documents. A person may not require a notary public to perform
a notarial act with respect to an electronic document with a technology that
the notary public has not selected.
(b) Before a notary public performs the notary
public's initial notarial act with respect to an electronic document, a notary
public shall notify the attorney general that the notary public will be
performing notarial acts with respect to electronic documents and identify the
technology the notary public intends to use. The technology
selected by a remote online notary public for remote online notarizations must
conform to the attorney general's standards developed for this chapter.
(c) The
registrar may accept for recording under chapter 502 a tangible copy of an
electronic document containing a notarial certificate as satisfying any requirement
that a document accepted for recording be an original, if the notary public
executing the notarial certificate certifies that the tangible copy is an
accurate copy of the electronic document.
§456-
Validity of notarial acts.
Except as otherwise provided in section 456-14(b), the failure of
a notary public to perform a duty or meet a requirement specified in this chapter
does not validate or invalidate a notarial act performed by the notary public. The validity of a notarial act under this chapter
does not prevent an aggrieved person from seeking to invalidate the document or
transaction that is the subject of the notarial act or from seeking other
remedies based on law of the State other than this chapter or based on law of
the United States. This section does not
validate a purported notarial act performed by a person who does not have the
authority to perform notarial acts.
§456-
Relation to federal
Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act. This chapter modifies, limits, and
supersedes the federal Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce
Act, 15 United States Code section 7001, et seq., but does not modify, limit,
or supersede section 101(c) of that Act, or authorize electronic delivery of
any of the notices described in section 103(b) of that Act."
SECTION 3.
Section 456-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§456-1 [Appointment;]
Commission; renewal. (a) The attorney general may, in the attorney
general's discretion, [appoint and] commission such number of notaries
public for the State as the attorney general deems necessary for the public
good and convenience. The term of [office] commission of a
notary public shall be four years from the date of the notary's commission,
unless sooner removed by the attorney general for cause after [due] the
opportunity for hearing; provided that after [due] the opportunity
for hearing the commission of a notary public may be revoked or the
notary public may be otherwise disciplined by the attorney general in any
case where any change occurs in the notary's [office,] commission,
occupation, residence, or employment [which] that in the attorney
general's judgment renders the holding of such commission by the notary no
longer necessary for the public good and convenience. Each notary shall, upon any change in the
notary's [office,] commission, occupation, residence, or employment,
forthwith report the same to the attorney general.
(b) Each notary public shall be
responsible for renewing the notary public's commission on a timely basis and
satisfying the renewal requirements provided by law. The failure to renew
a commission in a timely manner [may] shall cause the commission
to be forfeited[, if the attorney general finds that the failure was done knowingly];
provided that a forfeited commission may be restored by the attorney general
within one year after the date of forfeiture upon compliance with the
commission renewal requirements provided by law and upon written application
and payment of all applicable fees."
SECTION
4. Section 456-1.6, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§456-1.6 Definitions.
As used in this chapter, unless the context requires otherwise:
"Acknowledgment" means a declaration by a person
before a notary public that the person has signed a document for the purpose
stated in the document and, if the document is signed in a representative
capacity, that the person signed the document with proper authority and signed
it as the act of the person or entity identified in the document.
"Alter" means to change by means
of erasure, obliteration, deletion, insertion of new content, or transposition
of content.
"Document"
means information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or that is stored in
an electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable form.
"Electronic"
means relating to technology having electrical, digital, magnetic, wireless,
optical, electromagnetic, or similar capabilities.
"Electronic
signature" means an electronic symbol, sound, or process attached to or
logically associated with a document and executed or adopted by a person with
the intent to sign the document.
"In
a representative capacity" means acting as:
(1) An authorized officer, agent, partner,
trustee, or other representative for a person other than an individual;
(2) A public officer, personal representative,
guardian, or other representative, in the capacity stated in a document;
(3) An agent or attorney-in-fact for a
principal; or
(4) An authorized representative of another in
any other capacity.
"Notarial
act" means an act, whether performed with respect to a tangible or
electronic document, that a notary public may perform under the law of this
State. The term includes taking an
acknowledgment, administering an oath or affirmation, taking a verification
upon oath or affirmation, witnessing or attesting a signature, certifying or attesting
a copy, and noting a protest of a negotiable instrument.
"Notary
public" means an individual commissioned to perform a notarial act by the attorney
general under this chapter.
["Personally
knowing" or "personal knowledge" means having an acquaintance,
derived from association with the individual, which establishes the
individual's identity with at least a reasonable certainty.]
"Proof of the signer's signature and
identity" means [proof evidenced by production of a current identification
card or document issued by the United States, this State, any other state, or a
national government that contains the bearer's photograph and signature.] satisfactory
evidence of the identity of an individual appearing before the notary public if
the notary public can identify the individual:
(1) By
means of:
(A) Having
personal knowledge of the identify of an individual before the officer if the
individual is personally know to the notary public through dealings sufficient
to provide reasonable certainty that the individual has the identity claimed;
or
(B) A
passport, driver's license, or government issued nondriver identification card that
is valid or expired not more than three years before the performance of the
notarial act and contains the signature and photograph of the individual; or
(C) Another
form of government identification issued to an individual that is valid or
expired not more than three years before performance of the notarial act,
contains the signature and photograph of the individual, and is satisfactory to
the notary public; or
(D) By
verification on oath or affirmation of a credible witness personally appearing
before the notary public and known to the notary public or whom the notary
public can identify on the basis of a passport, drivers license, or government
issued nondriver identification card that is valid or expired not more than
three years before performance of the notarial act; or
(2) By requiring an individual to provide additional
information or identification credentials necessary to assure the notary public
of the identify of the individual.
"Sign"
means, with present intent to authenticate or adopt a document:
(1) To execute or adopt a tangible symbol; or
(2) To attach or logically associate with the
document an electronic symbol, sound, or
process.
"Signature"
means a tangible symbol or an electronic signature that evidences the signing
of a document.
"Stamping
device" means:
(1) A physical device capable of stamping or
impressing upon a tangible document a notary seal; or
(2) An electronic device or process capable of
attaching to or logically associating with an electronic document a notary seal.
"Tamper-evident" means any changes to an electronic
document that display evidence of the change.
"Verification
on oath or affirmation" means a declaration, made by a person on oath or
affirmation before a notary public, that a statement in a document is true."
SECTION 5. Section 456-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is
amended to read as follows:
"§456-2 Qualifications; oath.
Every person [appointed] commissioned as a notary public shall,
at the time of the person's [appointment,] commission, be a
resident of the State, possess the other qualifications required of public
officers and be at least eighteen years of age. Every person [appointed to that office]
before being commissioned as a notary public, shall[, before entering
thereon,] take and subscribe an oath for the faithful discharge of the
person's duties, which oath shall be filed in the department of the attorney general."
SECTION 6. Section 456-3, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§456-3
Seal. Every notary public shall constantly keep [an
engraved seal of office or] a rubber stamp [facsimile] notary seal
which shall clearly show, when [embossed,] stamped[,] or
impressed upon a tangible document[,] or when attached to or
logically associated with an electronic document, only the notary's name,
the notary's commission number, and the words, "notary public" and
"State of Hawaii". The notary seal must be capable of being
copied together with the document to which it is stamped, impressed, or attached,
or with which it is logically associated. The notary public shall authenticate all the
notary's official acts, attestations, certificates, and instruments therewith,
and shall always add to an official signature the typed or printed name of the
notary and a statement showing the date that the notary's commission expires. Upon resignation, death, expiration of term of
[office] commission without [reappointment,] renewal,
or [removal from] revocation, or abandonment of [office,] commission,
the notary public shall immediately deliver the notary's seal to the attorney
general who shall deface or destroy the same. [If any notary fails to comply with this
section within ninety days of the date of the notary's resignation, expiration
of term of office without reappointment, or removal from or abandonment of
office or if the notary's personal representative fails to comply with this
section within ninety days of the notary's death, then the notary public or the
notary's personal representative shall forfeit to the State not more than $200,
in the discretion of the court, to be recovered in an action to be brought by
the attorney general on behalf of the State.] If a notary public has used an electronic
stamping device, upon resignation, death, expiration of term of commission
without renewal, or revocation or abandonment of commission, the notary public
shall disable the electronic stamping device by destroying, defacing, damaging,
erasing, or securing it against use in a manner that renders it unusable and
shall submit a declaration to the attorney general that the electronic stamping
device was disabled and state the date and manner in which the device was
disabled."
SECTION 7. Section 456-4, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§456-4
Filing copy of commission;
authentication of acts. (a)
Each person [appointed and] commissioned
as a notary public under this chapter shall forthwith file a literal or
photostatic copy of the person's commission, an impression of the person's tangible
seal, and a specimen of the person's official signature with the clerk of the circuit
court of the circuit in which the notary public resides. Each person [appointed and] commissioned
a notary public under this chapter may also, at the person's option, file the
above-named documents with the clerk of any other circuit court. Thereafter
any clerk, when [thereunto] requested, shall certify to the official
character and acts of any such notary public whose commission, impression of tangible
seal, and specimen of official signature [is] are so filed in the
clerk's office. A notary public's
electronic seal is not subject to the requirements of this section.
(b) All documents filed under this section may be maintained in tangible or electronic format."
SECTION 8. Section 456-5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§456-5
Official bond. Each notary public forthwith and before entering
upon the duties of the notary's [office] commission shall
execute, at the notary's own expense, an official surety bond which shall be in
the sum of $1,000. Each bond shall be
approved by a judge of the circuit court.
The obligee of each bond, or bond continuation
certificate, shall be the State and the
condition contained therein shall be that the notary public will well, truly,
and faithfully perform all the duties of the notary's [office] commission
which are then or may thereafter be required, prescribed, or defined by law or
by any rule made under the express or implied authority of any statute, and all
duties and acts undertaken, assumed, or performed by the notary public by
virtue or color of the notary's [office.] commission. The surety on any such bond, or bond
continuation certificate, shall be a surety company authorized to do
business in the State. After approval
the bond, or bond continuation certificate, shall be deposited and kept
on file in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of the judicial circuit
in which the notary public resides. The
clerk shall keep a book to be called the "bond record", in which the
clerk shall record such data in respect to each of the bonds or bond
continuation certificates deposited and filed in the clerk's office as the
attorney general may direct."
SECTION
9. Section 456-7, Hawaii Revised Statutes,
is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) A person commits the offense of unauthorized
practice as a notary public if the person knowingly engages in or offers to
engage in any duties of [the office of] a notary public without first
complying with all of the following:
(1) Being [appointed and] commissioned as a
notary public by the attorney general;
(2) Filing a copy of the person's commission, an impression of the person's seal, and a specimen of the person's official signature with the clerk of the circuit court of the circuit in which the person resides; and
(3) Executing an official surety bond pursuant to section 456-5."
SECTION
10. Section 456-8, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§456-8 Rules. The attorney general, subject to chapter 91,
may prescribe such rules as the attorney general deems advisable concerning the
administration of this chapter, the [appointment] commission and
duties of notaries public, [the duties of other officers thereunder,]
and such measures as may be necessary to prevent the fraudulent use of a
notarized document after placement of the notary's seal. The rules shall have the force and effect of
law."
SECTION
11. Section 456-9, Hawaii Revised Statutes,
is amended to read as follows:
"§456-9 Fees and administrative
fines. (a) The attorney general shall charge and collect the
following fees for:
(1) Issuing the original commission, $40; [and]
(2) Renewing the commission, $40[.]; and
(3) Electronic processing service fees of up to
ten percent of the amount of the transaction.
These fees may be adjusted, and any other
fees may be established and adjusted, by adopting rules pursuant to chapter 91.
(b) The
court fees for filing a copy of a commission and for each certificate of
authentication shall be specified by the supreme court.
(c) The
attorney general may impose and collect the following administrative fines for a
notary public's failure to:
(1) Maintain an official seal of [one type, either
a single engraved seal or] a single rubber stamp [facsimile] seal,
on which shall be inscribed the name of the notary public, the commission
number of the notary public, and the words "notary public" and
"State of Hawaii" only, $20;
(2) Surrender the notary public's [seal] physical
stamping device and certificate to the attorney general within ninety days
of resignation, [removal from office,] revocation of commission,
or the expiration of a term without renewal, $200;
(3) Disable
the notary public's electronic stamping device within ninety days of resignation,
revocation of commission, or the expiration of a term without renewal, $200;
[(3)] (4) Authenticate every acknowledgment or jurat
with a certificate that shall be signed and dated by the notary, include the
printed name and official stamp or seal of the notary, identify the
jurisdiction in which the notarial act is performed, [describe in close
proximity to the acknowledgment or jurat the document being notarized, and
state the number of pages and date of the document,] $500;
[(4)] (5) Record all of the notary public's transactions
as prescribed by section 456-15 and applicable rules, $200;
[(5)] (6) Surrender the notary public's [record
books] journals to the attorney general within ninety days of the
end date of the [commission,] resignation, [or removal from office,]
revocation of commission, or expiration of term without renewal, $500;
and
[(6)] (7) Notify the attorney general within ten days
after loss, misplacement, or theft of the notary public's [seal, stamp,]
stamping device or any [record book,] journal, inform the
appropriate law enforcement agency in the case of theft, and deliver a copy of
the law enforcement agency's report of the theft to the attorney general, $20.
(d) The foregoing moneys collected by the attorney general pursuant to this section shall be deposited into the notaries public revolving fund established by section 456-9.5, except that if that fund is terminated, the foregoing moneys shall thereafter be deposited with the director of finance to the credit of the general fund.
(e) All
unpaid fees, fines, and forfeitures shall constitute a debt due and owing to
the State."
SECTION
12. Section 456-14, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§456-14 [Notary] Authority to
perform notarial act; notary connected with a corporation or trust
company[; authority to act].
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b):
(1) A notary public may perform a notarial act
authorized by this chapter or by law of the State other than this chapter; and
(2) It shall be lawful for any notary public,
although an officer, employee, shareholder, or director of a corporation or trust
company to take the acknowledgment of any party to any written instrument
executed to or by the corporation or trust company, or to administer an oath to
any shareholder, director, officer, employee, or agent of the corporation or
trust company, or to protest for nonacceptance or nonpayment of bills of
exchange, drafts, checks, notes, and other negotiable instruments [which]
that may be owned or held for collection by the corporation or trust company[;
provided it shall be unlawful for any notary public to take the acknowledgment
of any party to an instrument, or to protest any negotiable instrument, where
the notary is individually a party to the instrument].
(b)
A notary public may not perform a notarial act with respect to a
document to which the notary public or the notary public's spouse or civil
partner is a party or in which either of them has a direct beneficial interest. A
notarial act performed in violation of this section is voidable.
(c) A
notary public may certify that a tangible copy of an electronic document is an
accurate copy of the electronic document."
SECTION 13. Section 456-15, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§456-15 [Record;] Journal;
copies as evidence. [Every notary public shall record at length
in a book of records all acts, protests, depositions, and other things, by the
notary noted or done in the notary's official capacity. For each official act, the notary shall enter
in the book:] (a) A notary public
shall maintain a journal in which the notary public chronicles all notarial
acts that the notary public performs. The notary public shall retain the
journal for ten years after the performance of the last notarial act chronicled
in the journal.
(b)
A journal may be created on a tangible
medium or in an electronic format. A
notary public shall maintain only one tangible journal at a time to chronicle
all notarial acts performed regarding tangible documents and one electronic
journal at a time to chronicle all notarial acts performed regarding electronic
documents. If the journal is maintained
on a tangible medium, it must be a permanent, bound register with numbered
pages. If the journal is maintained in an
electronic format, it must be in a permanent, tamper-evident electronic format
complying with the rules of the attorney general.
(c)
A notary public having the care and
custody of the journal may cause the same to be photographed, microphotographed,
reproduced on film, or copied to an electronic format. Any device or electronic storage system used
to copy or reproduce the journal shall accurately reflect the information in
the original thereof in all details.
(d)
A photograph, microphotograph, reproduction
on film, or electronic copy of a journal shall be deemed to be an original
record for all purposes, including introduction in evidence in all courts or
administrative agencies. A transcript, exemplification, facsimile, or
certified copy thereof, for all purposes recited in this section, shall be
deemed to be a transcript, exemplification, facsimile, or certified copy of the
original record.
(e)
An entry in a journal must be made
contemporaneously with performance of the notarial act and contain the following
information:
(1) The type, date, and time of day of the notarial act;
(2) The title or type and date of the document or proceeding and the nature of the act, transaction, or thing to which the document relates;
(3) The [signature,] full printed
name[,] and address of each person whose signature is notarized and of
each witness[;] and, if the journal is maintained in a tangible
medium, the signature of each such person;
(4) [Other parties to the instrument; and] If identity of the person is based on personal
knowledge, a statement to that effect;
(5) [The manner in which the signer was identified.]
If identity of the person is based on
satisfactory evidence, a brief description of the method of identification and
the identification credential presented, if any, including the identification
number and date of expiration of any identification credential; and
(6) The fee, if any, charged by the notary
public.
(f)
If a notary public's journal is lost
or stolen, the notary public shall promptly notify the attorney general on
discovering that the journal is lost or stolen.
(g)
On resignation from, or the expiration,
revocation, or suspension of, a notary public's commission, the notary public
shall retain the notary public's journal in accordance with this section and
inform the attorney general where the journal is located.
(h) On the death or adjudication of
incompetency of a current or former notary public, the notary public's personal
representative or guardian or any other person knowingly in possession of the
journal shall transmit it to the attorney general or a repository approved by
the attorney general.
(i)
All copies or certificates granted by
the notary shall be under the notary's hand and notary seal and shall be
received as evidence of such transactions.
(j)
The journals are subject to such
reasonable periodic, special, or other audits or inspections by the department
of the attorney general, within or without this State, as the attorney general
considers necessary or appropriate. An
audit or inspection may be made at any time and without prior notice. The department of the attorney general may copy,
and remove for audit or inspection copies of, all records the department of the
attorney general reasonably considers necessary or appropriate to conduct the
audit or inspection. If any notary fails
to comply with this section, then the notary shall be subject to an
administrative fine of not less than $50 nor more than $500. All unpaid fees, fines, and forfeitures shall
constitute a debt due and owing to the State."
SECTION 14. Section 456-17, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§456-17 Fees. Subject
to section 456-18, every notary public is entitled to demand and receive the
following fees:
For noting the protest of mercantile paper, $5;
For each notice and certified copy of protest, $5;
For noting any other protest, $5;
For every notice thereof, and certified copy of protest, $5;
For every deposition, or official certificate, $5;
For the administration of oath, including the certificate of the oath, $5; for affixing the certificate of the oath to every duplicate original instrument beyond four, $2.50;
For taking
any acknowledgment, $5 for each party signing; for affixing to every duplicate
original beyond one of any instrument acknowledged before the notary, the
notary's certificate of the acknowledgment, $2.50 for each person making the
acknowledgment[.];
For
any of the foregoing notarial acts performed for a remotely located individual
under section 456- , other than affixing
a notary's certificate to a duplicate original, $25."
SECTION
15. Section 456-19, Hawaii Revised Statutes,
is amended to read as follows:
"[[]§456-19[]] Notary
signing for disabled person. A
notary may sign the name of a person physically unable to sign or to make a mark
on a document presented for notarization; provided that the notary is satisfied
that the person has voluntarily given consent for the notary to sign on the
person's behalf, if the notary writes, in the presence of the person:
"Signature affixed by notary pursuant to section 456-19, Hawaii Revised Statutes."
Beneath the signature, and if a doctor's written certificate is provided to the
notary certifying that the person is unable to physically sign or make a mark
because of the disability, which certificate shall be attached to the
document, and that the person is capable of communicating the person's
intentions."
SECTION
16. Section 456-20, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"[[]§456-20[]] Failure to verify identity and signature. (a) A person commits the offense of failure to
verify identity and signature if the person is a commissioned notary public
and knowingly notarizes a document and[:
(1) If] if a witness to the signing of
the instrument, fails to verify the identity of the signer by [personally knowing
the signer or by comparing the personal appearance of the signer with
satisfactory proof of the signer's identity; or] proof of the signer's
signature and identity, or by obtaining satisfactory evidence of identity under
section 456‑ of a remotely located individual.
[(2) If not a witness to the signing of the
instrument, fails to verify the identity of the signer by personally knowing
the signer or by comparing the personal appearance of the signer with
satisfactory proof of the signer's identity; or fails to verify the signature
of the signer by recognizing the signature of the signer by personal
familiarity with the signature, or by comparing the signature with satisfactory
proof of the signer's signature.]
(b) Any person who violates this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be sentenced in accordance with chapter 706.
(c) A conviction under this section shall result
in the automatic revocation of the notary public's commission."
SECTION
17. Section 456-21, Hawaii Revised Statutes,
is amended to read as follows:
"[[]§456-21[]]
Failure to authenticate with a certification statement. (a)
A person commits the offense of failure to authenticate with a certification
statement if the person is a commissioned notary public and knowingly notarizes
a document and fails to include any of the following in the notary
certification:
(1) Date of notarization and signature of the notary public;
(2) The printed name, date of expiration,
and stamp or seal of the notary public; and
(3) Identification of the jurisdiction in which
the notarial act is performed[;
(4) Identification or description of the document
being notarized, placed in close proximity to the acknowledgment or jurat; and
(5) A
statement of the number of pages and date of the document.]
(b)
If a notarial act regarding a
tangible record is performed by a notary public, an official stamp must be
affixed to or embossed on the certificate. If a notarial act is performed regarding a
tangible record by a notary public and the certificate contains the information
specified in this section, an official stamp may be affixed to the certificate.
If a notarial act regarding an electronic
record is performed by a notarial public and the certificate contains the information
specified in this section, an official stamp may be attached to or logically
associated with the certificate.
[(b)]
(c) Any person who violates this
section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be sentenced in accordance with
chapter 706.
[(c)]
(d) A conviction under this section
shall result in the automatic revocation of the notary public's commission."
SECTION
18. Section 502-42, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§502-42 Certificate, contents. The
certificate of acknowledgment shall state in substance that the person who
executed the instrument appeared before the [officer] notary public
granting the certificate and acknowledged or stated that the person executed
the same, and that such person was personally known to the [officer] notary
public granting such certificate to be the person whose name is subscribed
to the instrument as a party thereto, or was proved to be such by the oath or
affirmation of a credible witness known to the [officer] notary
public whose name shall be inserted in the certificate[.] or by
other satisfactory evidence of identity under the law of this State. If the person who executed the instrument
appeared before a notary public as a remotely located individual under section
456- , then the certificate must
indicate that the notarial act was performed using communication technology in
a manner provided in section 456- . It shall not be ground for the rejection of
any such certificate, or for refusing to accept such instrument for record or
in evidence, that the certificate fails to state that the person making the
acknowledgment stated or acknowledged that the instrument was executed freely
or voluntarily by the person or as the person's free act and deed."
SECTION
19. Section 502-48, Hawaii Revised Statutes,
is amended to read as follows:
"§502-48 Identification of person making. No acknowledgment of any conveyance or other
instrument, except as provided by this chapter, whereby any real estate is
conveyed or may be affected, shall be taken, unless the person offering to make
the acknowledgment is personally known to the [officer] notary public
taking the acknowledgment to be the person whose name is subscribed to the
conveyance or instrument as a party thereto, or is proved to be such by the
oath or affirmation of a credible witness known to the [officer] notary
public, or by production of a [current] valid identification
card or document issued by the United States, [the] this State,
any other state, or a national government that contains the bearer's photograph
and signature[.], or by obtaining satisfactory evidence of identity
of a remotely located individual under section 456- ."
SECTION
20. Section 456-16, Hawaii Revised Statutes,
is repealed.
["§456-16
Disposition of records; penalty. The records of each notary
public shall be deposited with the office of the attorney general upon the
resignation, death, expiration of each term of office, or removal from or
abandonment of office. If any notary fails to comply with this section
within ninety days of the date of the resignation, expiration of any term of
office, or removal from or abandonment of office or if the notary's personal
representative fails to comply with this section within ninety days of the
notary's death, then the notary or the notary's personal representative shall
forfeit to the State not less than $50 nor more than $500, in the discretion of
the court, in an action brought by the attorney general on behalf of the State."]
SECTION
21. This Act does not affect rights and
duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun
before its effective date.
SECTION
22. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 23. This Act, upon its approval, shall take effect on July 1, 2021
INTRODUCED BY: |
_____________________________ |
|
BY REQUEST |
Report Title:
Notaries Public
Description:
Updates the laws regarding notaries public including the following: to conform to the Revised Uniform Law on Notarial Acts (2018) (RULONA), the Hawaii Uniform Electronic Transactions Act, other state notary laws, and current notary practices.
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.