Nevada Code § 240.075

Prohibited acts; authority to refuse to perform notarial act under certain circumstances; exception
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1. A notary public shall not:
(a) Influence a person to enter or not enter into
a lawful transaction involving a notarial act performed by the notary public.
(b) Certify an instrument containing a statement
known by the notary public to be false.
(c) Perform any act as a notary public with
intent to deceive or defraud, including, without limitation, altering the
journal that the notary public is required to keep pursuant to NRS 240.120 .
(d) Endorse or promote any product, service or
offering if his or her appointment as a notary public is used in the
endorsement or promotional statement.
(e) Certify photocopies of a certificate of
birth, death or marriage or a divorce decree.
(f) Allow any other person to use his or her
notarys stamp.
(g) Allow any other person to sign the notarys
name in a notarial capacity.
(h) Perform a notarial act on a document that
contains only a signature.
(i) Perform a notarial act on a document,
including a form that requires the signer to provide information within blank
spaces, unless the document has been filled out completely and has been signed.
(j) Make or note a protest of a negotiable
instrument unless the notary public is employed by a depository institution and
the protest is made or noted within the scope of that employment. As used in
this subsection, depository institution has the meaning ascribed to it in NRS 657.037 .
(k) Affix his or her stamp to any document which
does not contain a notarial certificate.
2. A notarial officer may refuse to
perform a notarial act if the notarial officer is not satisfied that:
(a) The person executing the record is competent
or has the capacity to execute the record; or
(b) The persons signature is knowingly and
voluntarily made.
3. A notarial officer may refuse to
perform a notarial act unless a refusal to perform the notarial act is
otherwise prohibited by law.
4. As used in this section, competent
means the principal reasonably appears in possession of the mental capacity to
understand the nature and consequences of the notarial act.

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