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Missouri Notary Law
New
Notary
Public
Provisions
Become State
Law on
August 28
JEFFERSON
CITY -
Changes
enacted by
the Missouri
General
Assembly in
state notary
public
statutes
will take
effect on
Aug. 28,
2004, it was
announced
today by the
office of
Missouri
Secretary of
State Matt
Blunt.
"These
changes in
the law are
intended to
strengthen
and simplify
the work of
our 73,000
notaries in
serving the
people of
Missouri,"
Blunt said.
The
principal
purposes of
the
legislative
changes,
enacted as
House Bill
1193, are to
clarify and
add
requirements
for the
minimum
required
clerical
entries for
each
notarial act
recorded in
the notary's
official
permanently
bound
journal, to
ensure all
new notary
applicants
comply with
the law by
requiring
approved
training
prior to
being
commissioned
as a notary,
to assign
commission
numbers to
all new
notary
applicants
and to
require the
number to be
part of a
new notary
seal, which
will assist
in tracking
stolen seals
and
detecting
fraudulent
use of a
seal by
someone who
is posing as
a notary and
to specify
an allowable
travel fee
for notaries
who may
travel to
perform
notary
services.
A
principal
effect of
the law will
be different
standards
for new
notary
applications.
Existing
notaries
need not
address many
of the
changes
until they
reapply at
the
expiration
of their
present
commission.
For example,
existing
notaries
need not
secure new
training,
change their
notarial
seal, or
secure a
commission
number.
The
secretary of
state's
Commissions
office will
have written
training
questions
available
for mail, or
printing
from the
Internet,
for new
applicants,
to be
answered and
submitted
with new
applications.
In the
near future,
an Internet
training
course will
be available
online from
the
secretary of
state
Internet
site. Once
online
training is
completed,
the notary
applicant
will print a
certificate
online, to
send with
their
application.
All
secretary of
state
training is
available
without
charge to
the
applicant.
In addition,
several
notary
associations
have
received
office
approval for
their
training
courses, and
these may be
offered in
the near
future, as
well.
It is
important to
remember
that the
training
course is
required for
new
applicants
only, and
for notaries
whose
commissions
expire after
Aug. 28,
2004.
Here are
some of the
key changes
for new
notary
applicants,
effective
Aug. 28:
- no
social
security
number
required
- no
endorsers
on the
new
applications
-
completion
of
notary
training
course
prescribed
by
secretary
of state
-
commission
number
will be
issued
by
secretary
of
state,
to track
lost or
stolen
seals
and
detect
fraudulent
use of
seal by
non-notary
-
notary
stamps
and
seals
must be
no
smaller
than
eight
point
type
New and
existing
notaries are
to follow
new minimum
required
entries for
each
notarial act
recorded in
the notary's
official
permanently
bound
journal. The
minimum
requirements
are month,
day and year
of the
notarization,
type of
notarization,
type of
document,
name and
address of
signer,
identification
uses, fee
charged and
the
signature of
the signer.
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