N.C. Gen. Stat. § 10B-41

Notarial certificate for an acknowledgment

Find cases: SyfertCases citing this section NCLEGncleg.gov (official) JustiaChapter 10B CornellLII Search CasesGoogle Scholar

(a) When properly completed by a notary, a notarial certificate that substantially complies with the following form may be used and shall be sufficient under the law of this State to satisfy the requirements for a notarial certificate for the acknowledgment of a principal who is an individual acting in his or her own right or who is an individual acting in a representative or fiduciary capacity. The authorization of the form in this section does not preclude the use of other forms.

______________ County, North Carolina  

I certify that the following person(s) personally appeared before me this day, each acknowledging to me that he or she signed the foregoing document: name(s) of principal(s).

Date: ____________________ Official Signature of Notary

Notary's printed or typed name, Notary Public

(Official Seal) My commission expires: _____________

(b) Repealed by Session Laws 2006-59, s. 19, effective October 1, 2006, and except as otherwise set forth in the act, applicable to notarial acts performed on or after October 1, 2006.

(c) The notary's printed or typed name as shown in the form provided in subsection (a) of this section is not required if the legible appearance of the notary's name may be ascertained from the notary's typed or printed name near the notary's signature or from elsewhere in the notarial certificate or from the notary's seal if the name is legible. (2005-391, s. 4; 2006-59, s. 19.)

 

Notes of Decisions
Cited in 7 cases (6 in the last 5 years), 2019–2024 · leading case: Mullaney v. Bank of America, National Association, as successor by merger to Merrill Lynch Bank USA
Mullaney v. Bank of America, National Association, as successor by merger to Merrill Lynch Bank USA (2019) nced · cites it 5× “is sufficient and shall be accepted in this State if it is substantially in the form set forth in G.S. 10B-41, if it is substantially in a form otherwise prescribed by the laws of this state, or if it includes all of the following: .”
Bruton v. First Citizens Bank & Trust Company (2021) ncmb · cites it 3× “(b) A notarial certificate for the acknowledgment taken by a notary of a principal who is an individual acting in his or her own right or who is an individual acting in a representative or fiduciary capacity is sufficient and shall be accepted in this State if it is…”
Watkins v. Blackmon (2022) ncwd · cites it 2× “See generally N.C. Gen. Stat. § 10B-41 (describing notarial certificate of acknowledgement); Pratt v.”
Cliett v. Goins (2023) ncwd · cites it 2× “See generally N.C. Gen. Stat. § 10B-41 (describing notarial certificate of acknowledgement); Pratt v.”
Norman v. Brown (2023) ncwd · cites it 2× “See generally N.C. Gen. Stat. § 10B-41 (describing notarial certificate of acknowledgement).”
Williams v. Ishee (2024) ncwd · cites it 2× “See generally N.C. Gen. Stat. § 10B-41 (describing notarial certificate of acknowledgement); Pratt v.”
Watkins v. Goodwin (2023) ncwd “§ 10B-41 (describing notarial certificate of acknowledgement); Pratt v.”
— N.C. Gen. Stat. § 10B-41(a) — 2 cases
Mullaney v. Bank of America, National Association, as successor by merger to Merrill Lynch Bank USA (2019) nced “is sufficient and shall be accepted in this State if it is substantially in the form set forth in G.S. 10B-41, if it is substantially in a form otherwise prescribed by the laws of this state, or if it includes all of the following: .”
Bruton v. First Citizens Bank & Trust Company (2021) ncmb “(b) A notarial certificate for the acknowledgment taken by a notary of a principal who is an individual acting in his or her own right or who is an individual acting in a representative or fiduciary capacity is sufficient and shall be accepted in this State if it is…”
Annotations are extracted automatically from the opinions in the Syfert caselaw corpus and ranked by authority, recency, and treatment. Dots show Syfertize treatment of the citing case itself.