1 SB247 2 216509-1 3 By Senator Whatley 4 RFD: Judiciary 5 First Read: 22-FEB-22 Page 0 1 216509-1:n:02/16/2022:KMS/cr LSA2022-210 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 SYNOPSIS: Under existing law, notaries public may 9 administer oaths, take the acknowledgment or proof 10 of instruments of writing relating to commerce or 11 navigation and certify the same, and demand 12 acceptance and payment of bills of exchange, 13 promissory notes, and all other writings which are 14 governed by commercial law. 15 This bill would provide that a tangible copy 16 of an electronic record that has been certified by 17 a notary public is a certified copy for the 18 purposes of recording certain documents affecting 19 title to property and would authorize a notary 20 public to certify to the accuracy of certain 21 electronic records. 22 This bill would provide a process for the 23 remote notarization of documents, would require a 24 notary public to maintain a journal of notarial 25 acts, and would require a notary public to notify 26 the Secretary of State of the technology he or she Page 1 1 will use for performing notarial acts with respect 2 to electronic records. 3 This bill would also provide for notarial 4 acts performed by a notary public outside of this 5 country. 6 Amendment 621 of the Constitution of Alabama 7 of 1901, as amended by Amendment 890, now appearing 8 as Section 111.05 of the Official Recompilation of 9 the Constitution of Alabama of 1901, as amended, 10 prohibits a general law whose purpose or effect 11 would be to require a new or increased expenditure 12 of local funds from becoming effective with regard 13 to a local governmental entity without enactment by 14 a 2/3 vote unless: it comes within one of a number 15 of specified exceptions; it is approved by the 16 affected entity; or the Legislature appropriates 17 funds, or provides a local source of revenue, to 18 the entity for the purpose. 19 The purpose or effect of this bill would be 20 to require a new or increased expenditure of local 21 funds within the meaning of the amendment. However, 22 the bill does not require approval of a local 23 governmental entity or enactment by a 2/3 vote to 24 become effective because it comes within one of the 25 specified exceptions contained in the amendment. 26 27 A BILL Page 2 1 TO BE ENTITLED 2 AN ACT 3 4 Relating to notary publics, to amend Sections 5 35-4-66, 36-20-73, and 36-20-74, Code of Alabama 1975, and to 6 add Sections 36-20-73.2, 36-20-73.3, 36-20-76, and 36-20-77 to 7 the Code of Alabama 1975; to provide that a tangible copy of 8 an electronic record certified by a notary public is a 9 certified copy for the purposes of recording certain documents 10 affecting title to property; to authorize a notary public to 11 certify to the accuracy of certain electronic records; to 12 provide a process for the remote notarization of documents; to 13 require a notary public to maintain a journal of notarial 14 acts; to require a notary public to notify the Secretary of 15 State of the technology he or she will use for performing 16 notarial acts with respect to electronic records; to provide 17 for notarial acts performed by a notary public outside of this 18 country; and to repeal Section 36-20-73.1, as added to the 19 Code of Alabama 1975 by Act 2021-319, 2021 Regular Session, 20 relating to attestations and remote notarizations; and in 21 connection therewith would have as its purpose or effect the 22 requirement of a new or increased expenditure of local funds 23 within the meaning of Amendment 621 of the Constitution of 24 Alabama of 1901, as amended by Amendment 890, now appearing as 25 Section 111.05 of the Official Recompilation of the 26 Constitution of Alabama of 1901, as amended. 27 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF ALABAMA: Page 3 1 Section 1. Sections 35-4-66, 36-20-73, and 36-20-74 2 of the Code of Alabama 1975, are amended to read as follows: 3 "§35-4-66. 4 "(a) For the purposes of this section, a certified 5 copy includes a tangible copy of an electronic record that has 6 been certified by a notary public. 7 "(b) It shall be lawful to record certified copies 8 of deeds, mortgages, maps, and other papers affecting the 9 title to property in any probate office in this state in which 10 the same should have been recorded when such the mortgages, 11 deeds, maps, or other papers have heretofore been or may 12 hereafter be recorded in any probate office in this state. 13 "(c) When a certified copy of any deed, mortgage, 14 map, or other paper affecting title to property has been 15 recorded as provided for in this section, such the recording 16 shall in all things be considered as and shall be given the 17 effect of the original paper if so recorded. 18 "§36-20-73. 19 "Notaries public may do all of the following: 20 "(1) Administer oaths in all matters incident to the 21 exercise of their office. 22 "(2) Take the acknowledgment or proof of instruments 23 of writing relating to commerce or navigation and certify the 24 same and all other of their official acts under their seal of 25 office. 26 "(3) Demand acceptance and payment of bills of 27 exchange, promissory notes, and all other writings which are Page 4 1 governed by the commercial law as to days of grace, demand, 2 and notice of nonpayment and protest the same for 3 nonacceptance or nonpayment and to give notice thereof as 4 required by law. 5 "(4) Certify that a tangible copy of an electronic 6 record is an accurate copy of the electronic record. 7 "(4)(5) Exercise such other powers, according to 8 commercial usage or the laws of this state, as may belong to 9 notaries public. 10 "§36-20-74. 11 "Notaries public are entitled to the sum of five 12 dollar dollars ($5) for carrying out any of the enumerated 13 powers in Section 36-20-73, and a sum not to exceed 14 twenty-five dollars ($25) for carrying out any of the 15 enumerated powers in Section 36-20-73 pursuant to Section 16 36-20-73.2." 17 Section 2. Sections 36-20-73.2, 36-20-73.3, 18 36-20-76, and 36-20-77, are added to the Code of Alabama 1975, 19 to read as follows: 20 §36-20-73.2. 21 (a) For the purposes of this section, the following 22 terms shall have the following meanings: 23 (1) COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY. An electronic device 24 or process that does both of the following: 25 a. Allows a notary public and a remotely located 26 individual to communicate with each other simultaneously by 27 sight and sound. Page 5 1 b. When necessary and consistent with other 2 applicable law, facilitates communication with a remotely 3 located individual who has a vision, hearing, or speech 4 impairment. 5 (2) FOREIGN STATE. A jurisdiction other than the 6 United States, a state, or a federally recognized Native 7 American tribe. 8 (3) IDENTITY PROOFING. A process or service by which 9 a third person provides a notary public with a means to verify 10 the identity of a remotely located individual by a review of 11 personal information from public or private data sources. 12 (4) NOTARIAL ACT. An act, whether performed with 13 respect to a tangible or electronic record, that a notary 14 public may perform under the laws of this state. 15 (5) OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES. A location outside 16 the geographic boundaries of the United States, Puerto Rico, 17 the United States Virgin Islands, and any territory, insular 18 possession, or other location subject to the jurisdiction of 19 the United States. 20 (6) REMOTELY LOCATED INDIVIDUAL. An individual who 21 is not in the physical presence of the notary public who 22 performs a notarial act under this section. 23 (b) If a law requires an individual to appear 24 personally before a notary public, the requirement is 25 satisfied by that individual using communication technology to 26 appear before a notary public. Page 6 1 (c) A notary public located in this state may use 2 communication technology to perform a notarial act for a 3 remotely located individual if all of the following are 4 satisfied: 5 (1) The notary public has any of the following: 6 a. Personal knowledge of the identity of the 7 remotely located individual. 8 b. Satisfactory evidence of the identity of the 9 remotely located individual by oath or affirmation from a 10 credible witness appearing before the notary public pursuant 11 to this section. 12 c. Satisfactory evidence of identity of the remotely 13 located individual by using at least two different types of 14 identity proofing. 15 (2) The notary public is able to reasonably confirm 16 that a record before the notary public is the same record in 17 which the remotely located individual made a statement or on 18 which the individual executed a signature. 19 (3) The notary public, or a person acting on behalf 20 of the notary public, creates an audiovisual recording of the 21 performance of the notarial act. 22 (4) For a remotely located individual located 23 outside the United States, both of the following: 24 a. The record satisfies either of the following: 25 1. Is to be filed with or relates to a matter before 26 a public official or court, governmental entity, or other 27 entity subject to the jurisdiction of the United States. Page 7 1 2. Involves property located in the territorial 2 jurisdiction of the United States or involves a transaction 3 substantially connected with the United States. 4 b. The act of making the statement or signing the 5 record is not prohibited by the foreign state in which the 6 remotely located individual is located. 7 (d) If a notarial act is performed under this 8 section, the certificate of notarial act shall indicate that 9 the notarial act was performed using communication technology. 10 (e) A notary public, a guardian, conservator, or 11 agent of a notary public, or a personal representative of a 12 deceased notary public shall retain the audiovisual recording 13 created under subdivision (c)(3) or cause the recording to be 14 retained by a repository designated by or on behalf of the 15 person required to retain the recording. The recording shall 16 be retained for at least 10 years. 17 (f) Before a notary public performs his or her 18 initial notarial act under this section, the notary public 19 shall notify the Secretary of State that the notary public 20 will be performing notarial acts with respect to remotely 21 located individuals and identify the technologies the notary 22 public intends to use. The communication technology and 23 identity proofing shall conform to the standards adopted by 24 the Secretary of State pursuant to this section. 25 (g) The Secretary of State shall adopt rules 26 regarding performance of a notarial act under this section and Page 8 1 to implement Sections 36-20-73.3 and 36-20-76. The rules shall 2 do all of the following: 3 (1) Prescribe the means of performing a notarial act 4 involving a remotely located individual using communication 5 technology. 6 (2) Establish standards for communication technology 7 and identity proofing. 8 (3) Establish requirements or procedures to approve 9 providers of communication technology and the process of 10 identity proofing. 11 (4) Include provisions to ensure that any change to 12 or tampering with a record bearing a certificate of a notarial 13 act is self-evident. 14 (5) Include provisions to ensure integrity in the 15 creation, transmittal, storage, and authentication of 16 electronic records or signatures. 17 (6) Prescribe the process of notification under 18 subsection (f). 19 (7) Prescribe the manner of performing notarial acts 20 pursuant to this section. 21 (h) Before adopting, amending, or repealing a rule 22 governing performance of a notarial act with respect to a 23 remotely located individual, the Secretary of State shall 24 consider all of the following: 25 (1) The most recent standards regarding the 26 performance of a notarial act with respect to a remotely 27 located individual adopted by national standard-setting Page 9 1 organizations and the recommendations of the National 2 Association of Secretaries of State. 3 (2) Standards, practices, and customs of other 4 jurisdictions that have laws substantially similar to this 5 section. 6 (3) The views of governmental officials and entities 7 and other interested persons. 8 (i) Any action taken before July 1, 2021, allowing 9 for the remote notarization of signatures under the Emergency 10 Management Act of 1955, Chapter 9 of Title 31, is ratified and 11 confirmed. 12 (j) Remote notarization may not be used to notarize 13 an absentee ballot application or an absentee ballot 14 affidavit, or for any purpose related to voting. 15 (k) A notary who intentionally or fraudulently 16 violates this section shall be guilty of a Class C 17 misdemeanor. 18 §36-20-73.3. 19 (a) A notary public shall maintain a journal in 20 which the notary public chronicles all notarial acts that the 21 notary public performs pursuant to Section 36-20.73.2. The 22 notary public shall retain the journal for 10 years after the 23 performance of the last notarial act chronicled in the 24 journal. 25 (b) A journal may be created on a tangible medium or 26 in an electronic format. A notary public shall maintain only 27 one tangible journal at a time, but may maintain multiple Page 10 1 electronic journals. If the journal is maintained on a 2 tangible medium, it shall be a permanent, bound register with 3 numbered pages. If the journal is maintained in an electronic 4 format, it shall be in a permanent, tamper-evident electronic 5 format complying with the rules of the Secretary of State. 6 (c) An entry in a journal shall be made 7 contemporaneously with the performance of the notarial act and 8 shall contain all of the following information: 9 (1) The date and time of the notarial act. 10 (2) A description of the record, if any, and type of 11 notarial act. 12 (3) The full name and address of each individual for 13 whom the notarial act is performed. 14 (4) A statement as to the method of identification 15 under subdivision 36-20-73.2(c)(l). 16 (5) The fee charged by the notary public, if any. 17 (d) A notary public shall promptly notify the 18 Secretary of State upon discovering his or her journal is lost 19 or stolen. 20 (e) On resignation from, or the revocation or 21 suspension of, the commission of a notary public, the notary 22 public shall retain his or her journal in accordance with 23 subsection (a) and shall inform the Secretary of State of the 24 location of the journal. 25 (f) In lieu of retaining a journal pursuant to 26 subsections (a) and (e), a current or former notary public may Page 11 1 transmit the journal to the Secretary of State or a repository 2 approved by the Secretary of State. 3 (g) On the death or adjudication of incompetency of 4 a current of former notary public, his or her personal 5 representative or guardian, or any other person knowingly in 6 possession of his or her journal, shall transmit the journal 7 to the Secretary of State or a repository approved by the 8 Secretary of State. 9 §36-20-76. 10 (a) A notary public may select one or more 11 tamper-evident technologies to perform notarial acts with 12 respect to electronic records. A person may not require a 13 notary public to perform a notarial act with respect to an 14 electronic record with a technology that the notary public has 15 not selected. 16 (b) Before a notary public performs his or her 17 initial notarial act with respect to an electronic record, a 18 notary public shall notify the Secretary of State that the 19 notary public will be performing notarial acts with respect to 20 electronic records and identify the technology the notary 21 public intends to use. The technology shall conform to the 22 standards adopted by the Secretary of State pursuant to 23 Section 36-20-73.2. If the technology conforms to the 24 standards, the Secretary of State shall approve the use of the 25 technology. 26 (c) A probate office in this state shall accept for 27 recording a tangible copy of an electronic record containing a Page 12 1 notarial certificate as satisfying any requirement that a 2 record accepted for recording be an original, if the tangible 3 copy is certified as an accurate copy of the electronic 4 record. 5 §36-20-77. 6 (a) For the purposes of this section, the following 7 terms shall have the following meanings: 8 (1) FOREIGN STATE. A government other than the 9 United States, a state, or a federally recognized Native 10 American tribe. 11 (2) NOTARIAL ACT. An act, whether performed with 12 respect to a tangible or electronic record, that a notary 13 public may perform under the laws of the commissioning 14 jurisdiction. 15 (b)(1) A notarial act performed in another state has 16 the same effect under the law of this state as if performed by 17 a notary public of this state, if the act performed in that 18 state is performed by any of the following: 19 a. A notary public of that state. 20 b. A judge, clerk, or deputy clerk of a court of 21 that state. 22 c. Any other individual authorized by the law of 23 that state to perform the notarial act. 24 (2) The signature and title of an individual 25 performing a notarial act in another state are prima facie 26 evidence that the signature is genuine and that the individual 27 holds the designated title. Page 13 1 (3) The signature and title of a notarial officer 2 described in paragraph (b)(l)a. or (b)(1)b. conclusively 3 establish the authority of the officer to perform the notarial 4 act. 5 (c)(1) A notarial act performed under the authority 6 and in the jurisdiction of a federally recognized Native 7 American tribe has the same effect as if performed by a notary 8 public of this state, if the act performed in the jurisdiction 9 of the tribe is performed by any of the following: 10 a. A notary public of the tribe. 11 b. A judge, clerk, or deputy clerk of a court of the 12 tribe. 13 c. Any other individual authorized by the law of the 14 tribe to perform the notarial act. 15 (2) The signature and title of an individual 16 performing a notarial act under the authority of and in the 17 jurisdiction of a federally recognized Native American tribe 18 are prima facie evidence that the signature is genuine and 19 that the individual holds the designated title. 20 (3) The signature and title of a notarial officer 21 described in paragraph (c)(1)a. or (c)(1)b. conclusively 22 establish the authority of the officer to perform the notarial 23 act. 24 (d)(1) A notarial act performed under federal law 25 has the same effect under the law of this state as if 26 performed by a notary public of this state, if the act Page 14 1 performed under federal law is performed by any of the 2 following: 3 a. A judge, clerk, or deputy clerk of a court. 4 b. An individual in military service or performing 5 duties under the authority of military service who is 6 authorized to perform notarial acts under federal law. 7 c. An individual designated a notarizing officer by 8 the United States Department of State for performing notarial 9 acts overseas. 10 d. Any other individual authorized by federal law to 11 perform the notarial act. 12 (2) The signature and title of an individual acting 13 under federal authority and performing a notarial act are 14 prima facie evidence that the signature is genuine and that 15 the individual holds the designated title. 16 (3) The signature and title of an officer described 17 in paragraph (d)(l)a., (d)(1)b., or (d)(1)c. conclusively 18 establish the authority of the officer to perform the notarial 19 act. 20 (e)(1) If a notarial act is performed under 21 authority and in the jurisdiction of a foreign state or 22 constituent unit of the foreign state or is performed under 23 the authority of a multinational or international governmental 24 organization, the act has the same effect under the law of 25 this state as if performed by a notarial public of this state. 26 (2) If the title of office and indication of 27 authority to perform notarial acts in a foreign state appears Page 15 1 in a digest of foreign law or in a list customarily used as a 2 source for that information, the authority of an officer with 3 that title to perform notarial acts is conclusively 4 established. 5 (3) The signature and official stamp of an 6 individual holding an office described in this subsection are 7 prima facie evidence that the signature is genuine and the 8 individual holds the designated title. 9 (4) An apostille certification in the form 10 prescribed by the Hague Convention of October 5, 1961, and 11 issued by a foreign state party to the convention conclusively 12 establishes that the signature of the notarial officer is 13 genuine and that the officer holds the indicated office. 14 (5) A consular authentication issued by an 15 individual designated by the United States Department of State 16 as a notarizing officer for performing notarial acts overseas 17 and attached to the record with respect to which the notarial 18 act is performed conclusively establishes that the signature 19 of the notarial officer is genuine and that the officer holds 20 the indicated office. 21 Section 3. Section 36-20-73.1, as added to the Code 22 of Alabama 1975 by Act 2021-319, 2021 Regular Session, 23 relating to attestations and remote notarizations, is 24 repealed. 25 Section 4. Although this bill would have as its 26 purpose or effect the requirement of a new or increased 27 expenditure of local funds, the bill is excluded from further Page 16 1 requirements and application under Amendment 621, as amended 2 by Amendment 890, now appearing as Section 111.05 of the 3 Official Recompilation of the Constitution of Alabama of 1901, 4 as amended, because the bill defines a new crime or amends the 5 definition of an existing crime. 6 Section 5. This act shall become effective on July 7 1, 2022, following its passage and approval by the Governor, 8 or its otherwise becoming law. Page 17