Examples of Designated Society in a sentence
Where a dispute with or complaint against a notary is dealt with in accordance with an Approved Procedure it shall be a duty of the notary to cooperate with the Designated Society in the operation of the procedure.
A notary shall offer the client an alternative remedy which is reasonable in the circumstances of the complaint if he does not accept on reasonable grounds the conclusion of the Designated Society.
The Master may from time to time approve by written notice a complaints resolution procedure produced by a Designated Society or any amendment or variation thereof and may at any time by written notice withdraw approval of any procedure or amendment or variation.
At the end of the Approved Procedure a notary shall comply with any reasonable action proposed by the Designated Society in its conclusion unless the notary does not accept on reasonable grounds the action proposed.
The Registrar may decide to advertise the notary's application under this Rule in a newspaper circulating in the area of the applicant's practice or former practice or in the London Gazette, a publication of a Designated Society or in any other relevant publication as the Registrar sees fit.
Where the Registrar receives evidence or an allegation concerning the conduct or practice of a notary which in his opinion does not amount to an allegation of Notarial Misconduct or where the precise nature of the allegation is unclear he shall refer the matter to a Designated Society or to a notary appointed under Rule 7.5, to be dealt with in accordance with an Approved Procedure.
The Registrar may decide to (or, at the direction of the Court, shall) advertise any sanction against a notary under this Rule in a newspaper circulating in the area of the notary's practice or former practice or in the London Gazette, a publication of a Designated Society, or in any other relevant publication as the Registrar sees fit.
The Registrar may decide to advertise any sanction against a notary under this Rule in a newspaper circulating in the area of the notary's practice or former practice or in the London Gazette, a publication of a Designated Society, or in any other relevant publication as the Registrar sees fit.
Where the Registrar receives evidence or an allegation concerning the conduct or practice of a notary which in his opinion does not amount to an allegation of Notarial Misconduct or where the precise nature of the allegation is unclear he shall refer the matter to a Designated Society or to a notary appointed under Rule 7.4, to be dealt with in accordance with an Approved Procedure.
These provisions were revised for the 2011 Rules and they are unchanged except that the Society of Scrivener Notaries is no longer a "Designated Society" for the purposes of these rules which means that it is not to have its own first-tier complaints resolution procedure under these rules (that is to be operated by the Incorporated Company of Scriveners instead).