Walter is guilty of taking an acknowledgment to a deed, as a notary public, when he never saw the grantor of the deed. The act was a violation of the statutes relating to the function of a notary public and was a misdemeanor. ORS 194.990.
The deed involved was one in which an office associate of Walter was the grantee. The sale of the land to Walter’s associate, for which the deed was given, became the subject of civil litigation.
Vocu v. Eells,
1965,
When a notary, most particularly when the notary is a lawyer, officially certifies that the grantor of a deed has personally appeared before the notary and acknowledged that the deed has been voluntarily and knowingly executed it must be a meaningful certification. It is possible that the deed in question would not have been executed if the proper notarial procedure had been followed.
The statutes, ORS 194.010 et seq. make careful and detailed provisions to safeguard the notarial function and to give all of the assurance that law can give that the notary’s function will be properly performed. *15 The validity of a real property transaction is frequently dependent on the notary’s performance of duty. A lawyer may violate his oath as an attorney and as a notary when he fails to rigidly adhere to his duty as a notary. A lawyer need not be told that when he acts as a notary in a blind acknowledgment, or if he participates in its doing by others, he easily becomes an accessory to fraud and chargeable with it.
Walter is reprimanded. This must be considered a minimum penalty.
In re Richard R. Morris,
1958,
