Notary Knowledge by Derrick Spruill
"Notary Knowledge by Derrick Spruill," created by Derrick Spruill and hosted by Eddie Montes Travis and Marylyn Lee Trotter, is the definitive podcast resource for navigating the multifaceted world of notarization. This show transcends the typical notary discussion, offering a comprehensive look at the industry from both sides of the signing table.
For notaries, whether seasoned veterans or those just embarking on their professional journey, "Notary Knowledge by Derrick Spruill" provides invaluable insights into the ever-evolving landscape. The hosts delve into the latest legislative changes, industry trends, and best practices, equipping notaries with the knowledge and tools necessary to excel. They explore effective marketing strategies, business development techniques, and the nuances of building a thriving notary practice. The show also addresses the challenges and opportunities notaries face daily, offering practical advice on handling diverse situations and maintaining compliance.
However, "Notary Knowledge by Derrick Spruill" goes beyond simply serving notaries. It also aims to demystify the notarization process for individuals seeking notary services. By examining real-life scenarios and discussing the events that necessitate notary involvement, the podcast provides a clearer understanding of why notarization is essential and what to expect during a signing. Listeners gain insight into the responsibilities of a notary, the importance of proper identification, and the legal implications of notarized documents.
Derrick, Eddie, and Marylyn bring a wealth of knowledge and expertise to the table, fostering engaging discussions and sharing practical wisdom. They feature expert interviews, dissect complex legal issues, and offer life lessons gleaned from years of navigating the notary field. This podcast is a vital resource for anyone seeking to stay informed, understand the notary process, and navigate the intricacies of notarization with confidence. "Notary Knowledge by Derrick Spruill" is a must-listen for notaries looking to elevate their careers and for individuals seeking to understand the critical role notaries play in legal and business transactions.
Check out the "Notary Knowledge Reference Guide and Notary Bible" by Derrick Spruill on Amazon.
Contact Information:
Email us at MobileNotary@DerrickSpruill.com
Give us a call: 1-833-462-4632
Disclaimer: The podcast Notary Knowledge by Derrick Spruill does not provide legal advice. Eddie Montes Travis, Derrick Spruill, and Marylyn Lee Trotter are not lawyers or part of any law firm. This podcast is for informational purposes only.
Notary Knowledge by Derrick Spruill
Foundational Fridays: Loose Certificates
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Have you ever encountered a document that lacks a proper notary block or has no space for your seal? In this episode, Eddie Montes Travis and Marylyn Lee Trotter guide you through the essentials of using loose certificates correctly to ensure your notarizations remain legally compliant and professional.
• When to Use: Learn how to identify documents that require an attachment when the pre-printed wording is missing, outdated, or incorrect for your state's specific laws.
• Proper Attachment: Discover the step-by-step process for securely stapling the certificate to the left-hand margin of the main document to prevent unauthorized removal or tampering.
• Document Identification: Understand why it is vital to describe the underlying document on the certificate itself, including the document date and the total number of pages.
• Form Selection: Find out how to select the right Acknowledgment or Jurat form that matches your jurisdiction's requirements while staying within your scope of practice.
Mastering the use of additional forms is a core skill for every successful professional in the field. Join us as we simplify these technical steps to help you handle your next appointment with total confidence. If you found this information helpful, please subscribe and like the podcast!
Show Notes:
• Criteria for deciding when to use a loose certificate.
• Techniques for secure physical attachment to documents.
• Essential information to record on the certificate for security.
• Tips for maintaining state law compliance with form wording.
Buy Becoming a Notary on Amazon
Notary Knowledge Reference Guide and Notary Bible on Amazon
Your Sunday Notary Reading:
Notary Public Foundation: Essential Guide to Core Duties, Ethics, and Commissioning on Amazon
Your Monday Notary Reading:
Notary Operational Excellence: Mastering Certificates, Journals, Ink, and Copy Certification on Amazon
Your Tuesday Notary Reading:
Notary Fraud Shield: Real-World Tactics, Red Flags, and Refusal Strategies on Amazon
Your Wednesday Notary Reading:
The Mobile Notary Blueprint: Launching and Managing Your On-Demand Business on Amazon
Your Thursday Notary Reading:
Notary Niche Navigator: Your Guide to Loan Signings, Apostilles, I-9s, and More on Amazon
Your Friday Notary Reading:
Notary Law & Liability: Understanding State Regulations, Insurance, and Avoiding UPL
Your Saturday Notary Reading:
The Future Notary: Mastering RON, eNotary, and Complex Scenarios on Amazon
Quick & Easy Solutions: How to Increase Mobile Notary Business for More Success & Profit: with 37 Professional Tips on Amazon
Executive Producer Derrick Spruill
Writers Marylyn Lee Trotter and Eddie Montes Travis
Graphics & Illustrations by Eddie Montes Travis
Music by Thomas Bynum
This Show is Produced by Magnificent Workz
Business Solutions
Are you an aspiring notary looking to join millions of other notaries? Start your journey with the Notary Public Foundation by Derek Spruel. This essential guide provides the step-by-step process to becoming commissioned in your state. Don't stumble into the role. Walk into it with confidence. Grab your copy of the Notary Public Foundation by Derek Spruell on Amazon today.
SPEAKER_01Welcome to Notary Knowledge.
SPEAKER_00We are uh we're really glad you're here.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, we definitely are. And you know, before we get started, we want to remind you to check out our video podcast, No Notary, with Eddie Montez Travis, and um, of course, Maryland's 90 seconds of notary.
SPEAKER_00Right. And please take a second to rate the show, subscribe, and share the podcast with others. It uh it really helps us out.
SPEAKER_02It totally does. Also, if you haven't yet, you really need to buy the notary knowledge books by Derek Sproul and visit the notary knowledge website. We're gonna be talking about his stuff quite a bit today.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, his eight book series, the Notary Knowledge Reference Guide and Notary Bible series, is just I mean, it's essential.
SPEAKER_02It really is. So what if I told you that the only thing standing between you and a scammer, like legally stealing your home, is a metal staple and a single drop of ink.
SPEAKER_00I mean, it sounds like an exaggeration, right? But when you actually look at the mechanics of property and contract law, it's uh it's a terrifying reality.
SPEAKER_02Usually when we think about a rubber stamp, there's this expectation of just, you know, mindless bureaucracy. Think of a post office.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, exactly.
SPEAKER_02You hand over a package, they stamped it, toss it in a bin, and move on. It's an automatic action. We just assume it's low stakes.
SPEAKER_00But step into the world of legal and financial documents, and suddenly uh that simple rubber stamp is basically a vault door.
SPEAKER_02Right. Today we're doing a really fascinating exploration into the surprisingly intense, meticulously regulated world of notaries public.
SPEAKER_00Because we want to frame the notary not merely as a person with a stamp, but as a critical frontline defender against fraud. Especially if you're a novice or entry-level in this field, this is stuff you absolutely need to know.
SPEAKER_02Exactly. Our mission today is to look at three high-stakes scenarios. We're going to talk about navigating foreign language documents, mastering the physical security of loose certificates, which will tie into our foundational Friday's topic, and the really strict protocols for fixing mistakes.
SPEAKER_00And like we discussed in prior episodes, it always comes down to two foundational things, right?
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_00Verifying a signer's identity and confirming their intent.
SPEAKER_02You gotta know who they are and that they understand what they're signing. But uh a massive dilemma comes up when the notary and the document don't speak the same language.
SPEAKER_00Oh yeah. That's a huge issue.
SPEAKER_02Imagine you're a notary. Someone walks into your office and hands you a 20-page contract written entirely in Mandarin, which let's say you don't speak. Right. They have their ID, they're ready to sign, but you have literally no idea what is on those pages. Do you stamp it?
SPEAKER_00Well, to figure that out, we have to look at what a notary is actually responsible for. You aren't validating that a business contract is fair or, you know, that a loan has a good interest rate.
SPEAKER_01No, not all.
SPEAKER_00But you have absolute 100% responsibility for the notarial act itself. Which means a foreign language obscures critical details and it turns a routine check into an unacceptable liability.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, because even if you aren't reading the fine print, you still have to perform an initial assessment.
SPEAKER_00Right. You must locate the signer's name in the text to ensure it matches their ID. You have to check the document date to make sure it isn't post-dated into the future.
SPEAKER_02And crucially, you have to make sure there are no missing pages or blank spaces.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Because a blank space is just like an invitation for someone to secretly add fraudulent text later.
SPEAKER_02Exactly. And if you can't read the language, you can't tell the difference between a standard paragraph break and a deliberately left blank line meant for a hidden clause.
SPEAKER_00So if a notary cannot confidently identify those elements, they just have to refuse the notarization. The risk is too high.
SPEAKER_02Now, people might think, well, why not just pull out your phone and use Google Translate? Or have the signer bring a friend to interpret.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, that seems logical. But the legal frameworks anticipate this. That's why there is an absolute prohibition on third-party interpreters in almost all states.
SPEAKER_02Which makes total sense. Think about the power dynamics. If the person signing brings their own translator, there's an immediate conflict of interest.
SPEAKER_00As a notary, you have no way of knowing if that translator is relaying the information accurately.
SPEAKER_02Right. The signer could be signing away the rights to their house, and the translator could be telling them, oh, it's just a standard tax form.
SPEAKER_00The risk of miscommunication or straight-up coercion is massive. State laws dictate everything here, though, so there are a few exceptions.
SPEAKER_02That's Arizona, right?
SPEAKER_00Yeah, Arizona explicitly permits interpreters, but they must be physically present. You can't have someone on speakerphone. And Florida requires that the document's nature and effect be translated before the notarization begins. You can't just do it on the fly.
SPEAKER_02So it seems like notaries generally fall into two camps here. The first is risk aversion. You just refuse anything you can't read.
SPEAKER_00And the opposing view is the adherence to ministerial role framework. This is the belief that, hey, we notarize signatures, not documents.
SPEAKER_02I like to use a bouncer analogy for this. It's like being a bouncer at a club, but the ID is written in a fictional language. Even if your only job is to check the data on the card, how can you do it if you can't comprehend the characters?
SPEAKER_00Exactly. So the ultimate best practice rule is when in doubt, refer out, find a notary who actually speaks the language.
SPEAKER_02But wait, if a notary does decide to proceed, where do they put their stamp? Because the preprinted certificate on the paper is probably in that foreign language, too.
SPEAKER_00And you cannot sign a certificate you cannot read. States like California and Texas explicitly ban the use of foreign language certificates.
SPEAKER_02So what do you do?
SPEAKER_00You must attach a loose certificate.
SPEAKER_02Which moves us right into our foundational Friday's topic. Loose certificates. Let's talk about the physical mechanics of fraud prevention.
SPEAKER_00For anyone entry-level listening, a loose certificate is just a separate sheet of paper that contains the formal, stay compliant wording for an acknowledgement or a giraffe.
SPEAKER_02And an acknowledgement is when someone declares they signed willingly, while a girat requires them to swear an oath that the contents are true.
SPEAKER_00Right. And you don't just use them for foreign documents. A common trigger is missing wording. Lay people draft documents, leave a blank line, and expect you to stamp it.
SPEAKER_02Which is illegal.
SPEAKER_00Completely. Also, statutory noncompliance. Like California requires exact wording. Hawaii requires a highly unique certification statement.
SPEAKER_02You might also just run out of space on the page for your stamp or have too many signers. In all these cases, a separate sheet is mandatory.
SPEAKER_00But the protocol for attaching it is super strict. The notary must physically staple the certificate to the left's margin directly behind the signature page.
SPEAKER_02I gotta pause here because this feels incredibly outdated. In a world of digital signatures, the ultimate defense against legal fraud is a metal staple. They strictly prohibit paperclips.
SPEAKER_00They absolutely do.
SPEAKER_02What could a bad actor actually do with a paperclip certificate?
SPEAKER_00Well, consider the power of that certificate. Yeah. Once it's signed and stamped, it's a golden ticket. It's a state-backed seal of authenticity. If it's held on by a flimsy paperclip, document swapping becomes effortless.
SPEAKER_02So you're saying someone could take a legitimate document, I signed like a background check, slide the paperclip off, and clip that notarized certificate to a fraudulent deed transferring ownership of my house.
SPEAKER_00Yes. They could attach it to a fate deed, a fabricated will, a massive loan. That is why the staple is mandatory. It leaves physical damage if removed. But the staple is just the first line of defense. The notary must also create an unbreakable legal link with their pen.
SPEAKER_02Oh, right. Writing see attached notarial certificate on the parent document.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. And on the loose certificate, they have to write a specific description of the parent document the title, the date, the page count, the signers' names.
SPEAKER_02So if a scammer rips the staple out and attaches it to a fake deed, an auditor will see the certificate says it belongs to a two-page background check.
SPEAKER_00The fraud falls apart instantly, which leads to invalidation. If you attach a loose certificate, there's usually an empty, unused certificate block on the original document.
SPEAKER_02And leaving a blank certificate block is like leaving your keys in a running car. You have to draw a neat line through it and write see attached certificate.
SPEAKER_00If you don't, a bad actor could take that same document to a corrupt notary and get a second fraudulent notarization on the same page.
SPEAKER_02Also, never mail or distribute a blank, unattached loose certificate. It becomes a weapon for fraud the second it leaves your site.
SPEAKER_00We are looking at a truly analog fortress here. Staples, cross-references, lines, but human error happens. So what do you do when a pen slips?
SPEAKER_02Well, the golden rule is absolute. A document can never be altered by the notary after it has been notarized and returned to the client.
SPEAKER_00Once it leaves your presence, your authority to touch it is gone.
SPEAKER_02But there's a difference between minor and major errors, right?
SPEAKER_00For a minor error, like a typo, if state law permits, the notary can draw a single line through the error, write the correction, and initial it before the client leaves.
SPEAKER_02And we really have to emphasize this for our novice listeners. Using whiteout is universally forbidden.
SPEAKER_00Never use whiteout. It hides what was there originally, making it look tampered with. A single line shows exactly what the mistake was.
SPEAKER_02But what about a major error? Let's say I did an acknowledgement instead of a jurot, or I just forgot to stamp the paper.
SPEAKER_00You cannot just fix it. You must conduct a complete renotarization with a brand new certificate.
SPEAKER_02Wait, really? If I checked our ID perfectly but just forgot to press my rubber stamp, I have to make the client drive all the way back to see me in person.
SPEAKER_00You do. Because the state doesn't care that you almost got it right. The act requires the simultaneous convergence of the signer, the notary, the document, and the seal in physical space and time.
SPEAKER_02If the seal wasn't there, the act wasn't completed.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. You can't stamp it two days later when they aren't in front of you.
SPEAKER_02That is brutal. The signer reappears, you re-verify ID, create a new journal entry. Florida even requires photographically reproducible black ink and forbids amendments once parties separate.
SPEAKER_00And you have bizarre state anomalies, too. In Texas, notaries cannot perform signature witnessing.
SPEAKER_02Why ban just watching someone sign?
SPEAKER_00Texas favors strict categorization. They want the higher legal standard of an acknowledgement or a girat. There is no middle ground.
SPEAKER_02And then Michigan repealed statutory certificates entirely. Notaries just write their name, date, and county.
SPEAKER_00Which is wild. And this incredible variance is exactly why we recommend Derek Spruell's eight book series.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, you can't just wing it.
SPEAKER_00No, his curriculum dedicates specific days to these exact issues. Monday is operational excellence, Tuesday is fraud shield, Friday is law and liability.
SPEAKER_02Speaking of real-world scenarios, it's time for our segment. Good question. What would you do?
SPEAKER_00Yes. Okay, first up, Owen in Colorado asks, can I use heavy duty tape instead of a staple for a loose certificate?
SPEAKER_02Ah, absolutely not. Owen. Tape can be peeled off with a hairdryer or solvents without damaging the paper. It has to be a staple.
SPEAKER_00Bella in Michigan asks about paper size. Does my loose certificate have to be on legal size paper?
SPEAKER_02No, it just needs to be a standard size, usually letter or legal, whatever matches the document or state standards. Just, you know, don't use a sticky note.
SPEAKER_00Right. Mason in Texas wants to know about a seal cross. Can my stamp overlap the text of the document?
SPEAKER_02No way. You cannot stamp over signatures or important text. If there isn't clear space, you've got to use a loose certificate.
SPEAKER_00Ruby in Georgia asks, what if a document requires both an acknowledgement and a giraffe for different signatures?
SPEAKER_02Then you need to ensure both notarial acts are properly executed, usually with separate certificates or very specific combined wording, if your state allows it.
SPEAKER_00And finally, Levi in Virginia says, a client brought a document with the incorrect statutory form pre-printed. Can I just cross it out?
SPEAKER_02Yes, cross it out with a single line, write C attached, and attach the correct loose certificate with a staple.
SPEAKER_00Great answers. And dealing with all of these scenarios properly really ties into Derek Sproul's 2026 Enterprise Rebrand, adopting the slogan integrity in action.
SPEAKER_02Integrity in action. That perfectly encapsulates this entire system. The metal staple, the single line, refusing an interpreter, these are physical manifestations of integrity.
SPEAKER_00They are deliberate actions that preserve trust. Without these strict, seemingly analog rules, the entire system of contracts and real estate would just collapse under the weight of fraud.
SPEAKER_02It really shows that notaries are the active guardians of legal integrity, which brings up a provocative thought to leave you with.
SPEAKER_00Oh, I like these.
SPEAKER_02As our world moves increasingly toward remote digital transactions, like the e-notary topics covered in Saturday's reading of Sproll's books, consider how these physical principles are going to evolve.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. How do you translate a metal staple into lines of code?
SPEAKER_02Exactly. How do you ensure that unbreakable link when there is no physical paper to invalidate with a pen? Will digital security ever truly replicate the psychological weight of a face-to-face oath?
SPEAKER_00It makes you wonder if a digital lock can ever be as secure as the human eye.
SPEAKER_02Definitely something to think about the next time you sign on the dotted line. Well, that's all for today. Email your questions to Derek at derekspruell.com. We will try to answer as soon as possible at the end of our shows.
SPEAKER_00And a big thank you to our team. Credits go to executive producer Derek Spruell, lead writer Marilyn Lee Trotter, graphics by Eddie Montez Travis, and music by Thomas Bynum. Produced by Magnificent Orca's Business Solutions.
SPEAKER_01Don't just be listeners of the knowledge, be doers of the knowledge. This is notary knowledge. Until next time.
SPEAKER_04This essential guide provides the step-by-step process to becoming commissioned in your state. Don't stumble into the role. Walk into it with confidence. Grab your copy of the Notary Public Foundation by Derek Spruill on Amazon today.