AffectsAmends Sections 2C:21-22, 2C:21-31, 52:7-11, 52:7-13, 52:7-14, 52:7-18, 52:7-19, and 52:7-21 of the New Jersey Statutes Annotated.
AnalysisAssembly 1423 is the latest legislation enacted to address the confusion unscrupulous Notaries cause an unwary immigrant public by falsely representing that they can provide immigration-related services that only licensed attorneys can offer. Assembly 1423 is intended to enhance the provisions of a recently enacted 2011 law which upgraded the offense of engaging in the unauthorized practice of law. The disclaimer required to be included in English and non-English advertisements is designed to avoid any confusion among immigrants from countries where a Notary has considerably greater credentials and authority than Notaries in New Jersey. Persons applying for a commission will receive a notice warning them against misrepresenting their authority as New Jersey Notaries and requiring them to post a prescribed notice in any advertisement offering Notary services at two key points in the commissioning process: on the Notary Public application and again when they appear before a county clerk to take the oath of office. The notice and advertising disclaimer will also be written into the state’s Notary Public Manual. Assembly 1423 also makes technical changes to the law correcting references to the Secretary of State as having jurisdiction over New Jersey Notaries. In 1998, jurisdiction over Notaries was transferred from the Secretary of State to the State Treasurer.
Read Assembly 1423.