Exam Prep Test Bank:
Mastery of Law
PART 0: TABLE OF CONTENTS
● (#part-i-the-preview)
● (#part-ii-the-elite-test-bank)
○ (#tier-1-foundational-syntax--application)
○ (#tier-2-complex-application--simulation)
○ (#tier-3-grandmaster-synthesis)
PART I: THE PREVIEW
Mastery of the Ohio Notary Public Modernization Act, particularly the rigorous House Bill 315
(2025) updates, is the absolute demarcation between administrative failure and elite
professional competence. This document forges statutory comprehension into immediate,
liability-reducing operational intuition.
The "Critical Axioms" Cheat Sheet
Legal Variable 2026/2027 Statutory Threshold Operational Consequence
Identity Expiration Current or expired NOT MORE Utilizing an ID expired for 3
than 3 years. years and 1 day constitutes a
void act.
Traditional Fees $5.00 maximum per notarial Overcharging triggers
act. Secretary of State (SOS)
review and potential revocation.
RON Fees $30.00 per act + $10.00 tech Tech fee is chargeable even if
fee (per session). identity proofing fails.
RON Journal Retention Exactly 10 years after the last Failure to retain or transmit to
recorded act. an approved repository violates
ORC 147.66.
Electronic Estate Docs $25,000 Surety Bond + Required specifically for
$25,000 E&O Insurance. electronic wills and trusts (ORC
147.591).
Disciplinary Hearings Abolished under HB 315. SOS may revoke commissions
upon court judgment without
administrative hearing.
,Legal Variable 2026/2027 Statutory Threshold Operational Consequence
Address/Name Change Mandatory reporting within 30 Continued operation under
days. obsolete data invalidates the
commission.
PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
Tier 1: Foundational Syntax & Application
Q1: Under the provisions of Ohio House Bill 315, an applicant is preparing to finalize their
commission. Which action is MANDATORY regarding the oath of office? A) The oath may be
taken virtually via a standard audio-video platform. B) The oath must be endorsed and mailed
directly to the county clerk. C) The oath must be taken and subscribed in person before another
notary or authorized official. D) The oath is automatically verified upon passing the BCI
background check.
● The Answer: C (The oath must be taken and subscribed in person before another notary
or authorized official.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: HB 315 explicitly requires physical, in-person administration of the
oath.
○ B is incorrect: The commission process is centralized under the Secretary of State,
not the county clerk.
○ D is incorrect: The BCI check is a prerequisite, but it does not replace the sworn
oath requirement.
The Mentor's Analysis: The 2025 legislative shift eradicated remote convenience for the oath
of office to enforce the gravity of the commission. By utilizing in-person administration, the state
guarantees formal identification at the inception of the notary's authority.
Professional/Academic Intuition: Never assume digital convenience applies to the
commissioning process itself; the oath requires physical presence.
Q2: A notary is presented with an Ohio driver's license that expired exactly two and a half years
ago. Based on ORC 147.50, what is the MOST ACCURATE conclusion regarding this
identification? A) It is invalid; all identification must be currently unexpired. B) It is invalid
because the expiration exceeds the one-year grace period. C) It is valid as satisfactory evidence
because it has been expired for less than three years. D) It is valid only if supplemented by a
secondary credential like a utility bill.
● The Answer: C (It is valid as satisfactory evidence because it has been expired for less
than three years.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Ohio law does not require IDs to be strictly unexpired in all cases.
○ B is incorrect: The statutory threshold is three years, not one year.
○ D is incorrect: Secondary credentials are not statutorily mandated if the primary ID
falls within the acceptable expiration window.
The Mentor's Analysis: Novices frequently reject valid, recently expired IDs out of an
overabundance of caution. When assessing satisfactory evidence, Ohio law provides a strict
three-year grace period for government-issued photo identification. Professional/Academic
Intuition: An ID is legally "current" for notarial purposes until the stroke of midnight on
its three-year expiration anniversary.
Q3: During a Remote Online Notarization (RON), the signer fails the knowledge-based
, authentication (KBA) process, and the session is terminated. According to the 2025/2026 fee
schedules, which charge is MOST APPROPRIATE? A) $0.00, because the notarial act was not
completed. B) A $10.00 technology fee. C) A $30.00 RON fee plus a $10.00 technology fee. D)
A $5.00 traditional fee for time expended.
● The Answer: B (A $10.00 technology fee.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: The law explicitly allows the technology fee to be captured regardless
of act completion.
○ C is incorrect: The $30 base fee is only applicable if the notarial act is successfully
executed.
○ D is incorrect: Traditional fees do not apply to RON sessions.
The Mentor's Analysis: System resources and identity proofing algorithms incur costs. By
utilizing the technology fee provision, the notary recovers overhead even when a signer's
identity cannot be verified. Professional/Academic Intuition: You charge for the act only
upon completion, but you charge for the technology the moment the session begins.
Q4: A notary is commissioned to perform a traditional, in-person notarization of a real estate
deed. What is the maximum statutory fee the notary may charge for this single notarial act? A)
$2.00 B) $5.00 C) $10.00 D) $30.00
● The Answer: B ($5.00)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: This is an outdated legacy fee from prior to the Notary Modernization
Act.
○ C is incorrect: This confuses the traditional fee with the maximum RON technology
fee.
○ D is incorrect: $30.00 is the ceiling for a Remote Online Notarization, not a
traditional act.
The Mentor's Analysis: Fee structures are strictly bifurcated based on the medium of the
notarization. When executing traditional paper acts, the ceiling remains aggressively capped to
protect consumers. Professional/Academic Intuition: Traditional ink commands five
dollars; digital audio-video commands thirty.
Q5: An Ohio notary is designing their official notarial seal. Which of the following elements is
STRICTLY PROHIBITED or unnecessary according to ORC 147.04? A) The Great Seal of the
State of Ohio. B) The words "Notary Public" or "Notarial Seal". C) The notary's specific county of
residence. D) The notary's name.
● The Answer: C (The notary's specific county of residence.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: The coat of arms (Great Seal) is a mandatory central element.
○ B is incorrect: These exact words, or words to that effect, are required.
○ D is incorrect: The notary's name must be present on or near the seal.
The Mentor's Analysis: Ohio notaries possess statewide jurisdiction. Consequently, binding a
seal to a specific county creates a jurisdictional illusion that conflicts with the statutory reality.
Professional/Academic Intuition: Your authority spans the entire state; your seal must
reflect statewide, not county-level, jurisdiction.
Q6: An active Ohio notary is convicted of a crime of moral turpitude. According to the Secretary
of State's mandates, what is the FIRST obligatory action the notary must take? A) Wait for the
commission to expire and simply not renew. B) Surrender their journal to the county recorder
immediately. C) Self-report the disqualifying offense to the Secretary of State. D) Request an
administrative hearing to defend their commission.