The Requirements of Certificates of Conformity and Authenticity (Re: the Admissibility of Out-of-State Affidavits) Explained

The Second Department, in a full-fledged opinion by Justice Dillon, reversed Supreme Court finding that an out-of-state affidavit re: the assignment of a note and mortgage was in admissible form and could therefore be considered in support of plaintiff’s summary judgment motion. The court explained that, because the document was notarized, no “certificate of authentication” was needed, and the “certificate of conformity” which was provided was adequate under New York law:

Here, the affidavit of Josh Mills was necessary for the plaintiff to establish the assignment to it of the subject mortgage and note and the defendants’ default in payment. The primary issue on this appeal is whether Mills’s out-of-state affidavit was sworn to and conformed in a manner rendering it admissible in this state under CPLR 2309(c). * * *

The “certificate” required by CPLR 2309(c), commonly referred to in case law as a “certificate of conformity,” must contain language attesting that the oath administered in the foreign state was taken in accordance with the laws of that jurisdiction or the law of New York (see Real Property Law § 299-a[1]). A “certificate of conformity” is separate and distinct from a “certificate of authentication,” which attests to the oathgiver’s authority under the foreign jurisdiction to administer oaths … . * * *

A combined reading of CPLR 2309(c) and Real Property Law §§ 299 and 311(5) leads to the inescapable conclusion that where, as here, a document is acknowledged by a foreign state notary, a separate “certificate of authentication” is not required to attest to the notary’s authority to administer oaths … . * * *

Nevertheless, CPLR 2309(c) requires that even when a notary is the foreign acknowledging officer, there must still be a “certificate of conformity” to assure that the oath was administered in a manner consistent with either the laws of New York or of the foreign state. In other words, a certificate of conformity is required whenever an oath is acknowledged in writing outside of New York by a non-New York notary, and the document is proffered for use in New York litigation. * * *

Here, the Supreme Court erred in concluding that the Mills affidavit was not accompanied by a certificate of conformity, as the “Uniform, All Purpose Certificate of Acknowledgment,” appended to the Mills affidavit, substantially conformed with the template requirement of Real Property Law § 309-b and constituted a certificate of conformity. * * * Midfirst Bank v Agho, 2014 NY Slip OP 05778, 2nd Dept 8-13-14

August 13, 2014 Tags: Second Department
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