A notary protest is a real thing, yes; it's an old-fashioned procedure, but still on the books in many states (see, e.g., Missouri Revised Statutes 490.560: "The certificate of a notary public, protesting a bill of exchange or negotiable promissory note, without as well as within this state, setting forth the demand of payment, refusal, protest therefor, and notice of dishonor to parties thereto, and the manner of each of said acts, and verified by his affidavit, shall, in all courts in this state, be prima facie evidence of such acts; provided, such certificate be filed in the cause for at least fifteen days before the trial thereof.").Patriotdiscussions wrote:So there is no such thing as the admin procedure act or notary protest either I take it?
It's the equivalent of stamping "NSF" on a bad check, and is only applicable to checks and other negotiable instruments. What are you thinking is the relevance of notary protests to taxes?