Call the MINA hotline: (313) 444-0614
Call the MINA hotline: (313) 444-0614
Confidentiality is the most basic principle of notarial practice. By focusing on your core duties of verifying identity, awareness, and willingness, and by avoiding any unnecessary reading of the documents, notaries can maintain the highest standards of privacy and trust. This not only protects their clients but also preserves the integrity and reputation of the notarial profession.
Confidentiality is not just a professional courtesy—it's an ethical obligation. Notaries serve as impartial witnesses in the signing of important documents, but their role extends beyond mere verification. One of the cornerstones of their duty is to ensure the privacy and confidentiality of their clients' information.
Confidentiality is a non-negotiable principle. Your clients trust you with paperwork that contains their sensitive personal and financial information, and it is imperative that this trust is not breached. The easiest way to not breach this trust is to not read the document, ever. Remember, the contents of the document are not your concern. You will never be asked, in court or otherwise, to tell anyone what the paperwork said. You will be asked if you issued an oath, if and how you verified the signer’s identity, if your signers were aware of what they signed, and if they were signing willingly or under duress.
It is not the duty of the notary to guarantee any of the information in the document. There was a trend for a while where the notary fanned the document and stamped or embossed across all pages. In the State of Michigan’s handbook, it states that a notary Cannot apply their notary stamp or notary embosser pages to show a page belongs within the document. Every stamp or embossing is considered a notarization and requires witnessing a signature and having all the elements of a proper notarization.
Notaries must resist the temptation to delve into the specifics of the documents they notarize. Reading the contents of a document is not only unnecessary but also inappropriate. The notary's role is strictly to authenticate the signing process, not to read or know the details of the document. By maintaining this boundary, notaries uphold the integrity of their profession and the confidentiality of their clients.
Leslie Hocker is a contributing editor for the Michigan Notary Association blog. Leslie is the President and co-Founder of the Michigan Notary Association, and runs her own mobile notary business, Mobile Notary of Macomb, in Chesterfield Michigan.
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