Judges: JAMES D. "BUDDY" CALDWELL, Attorney General
Filed Date: 2/25/2010
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Dear Ms. Atkins,
You have requested an opinion of the Attorney General regarding whether the Clerk of Court for the Forty-First Judicial District Court ("Clerk"), as parish recorder of notarial records is required to book bind and maintain permanent custody of notarial records.
As your request states, the three separate offices for recording real property documents in Orleans Parish (the custodian of notarial records, the recorder of mortgages, and the register of conveyances) were abolished and merged into the office of the Clerk under a specific division and providing the same services as the former offices.1 When these offices were merged into the Clerk's office, several provisions of law governing the book binding and maintenance of notarial records were repealed along with the structure of these offices prior to the consolidation.2
La.R.S. 35:323 was the old law regulating the handling and preservation of notarial records.3 This law stated that the custodian of notarial records was mandated to take permanent custody of an act, contract, or instrument, after it had been filed in mortgage *Page 2 or conveyance records.4 The custodian was then required to file the document in his office in permanent, bound form.5
The new law establishing the general powers for the Clerk is contained in La.R.S.
[t]he clerk of court as the parish recorder shall be the successor to and shall exercise all powers, duties, functions, and responsibilities of the offices of the custodian of notarial records, the register of conveyances, and the recorder of mortgages, consistent with the provisions of this Chapter.7
The new law clearly provides the Clerk with the same statutory powers and responsibilities as other recorders for the State of Louisiana, but similarly vests the Clerk with the authority, duties, and responsibilities formerly granted to the custodian of notarial records, the register of conveyances, and the recorder of mortgages for the Parish of Orleans individually, provided that these powers do not conflict with the provisions of law consolidating these three offices into the office of the Clerk of Court of the Forty-First Judicial District Court.
In your request letter, you specifically ask two questions. First, you ask whether the Clerk is required to "book-bind" notarial records. As noted above, this "book binding" requirement was clearly required under the former law.8 However, because La.R.S. 35:323, which stated that the custody of notarial records were to be maintained in permanent bound form, was repealed in 2006 (effective January 1, 2009). La.R.S.
[t]he original of every authentic act, except chattel mortgages and acts relating to immovable property outside of Orleans Parish, passed before a notary public in Orleans Parish, and also every act, contract, and instrument except money judgments and chattel mortgages filed for record in the offices of either the recorder of mortgages or the registrar of conveyances for the parish of Orleans, shall, as a condition precedent to such filing in the office of the recorder of mortgages or the register of conveyances for the parish of Orleans, be first filed in the notarial archives of the parish of Orleans.9
This continues to support the conclusion that the Clerk, now overseeing the notarial archives for the parish of Orleans, should continue to take permanent custody of any acts, contracts, or instruments as La.R.S. 35:323 formerly required before each is also filed in mortgage or conveyance records, since this remains consistent with the law governing recorders and recordation in Title 44 of the Louisiana Revised Statutes.10 Considering the originals of these documents must be maintained by the custodian of these records, it is the opinion of this Office that the Clerk should continue to file these documents in her office in permanent, bound form as previously required by law.11
Your second question dealing with whether the Clerk should maintain permanent custody of the records is addressed in several places in the Revised Statutes. Similarly, as stated above with regard to bookbinding notarial records, there are no provisions of law in Title 44 which appear inconsistent with La.R.S. 35:323. Therefore, the Clerk shall also continue to maintain permanent custody of notarial records in addition to bookbinding them. In support that La.R.S. 35:323 remains consistent with Title 44, La.R.S.
While there is no express law currently enacted which requires book binding or maintaining permanent custody of notarial records by the Clerk, La.R.S.
We trust this adequately responds to your request. If you should have any questions about the response contained herein, please feel free to contact our office.
Yours very truly,
JAMES D. "BUDDY" CALDWELL ATTORNEY GENERAL
BY:__________________________ DANIEL D. HENRY JR. Assistant Attorney General
JDC/DDH/jv