before a public official authorized to make deeds where the deed is made (Subekti &
Tjitrosudibio, 1999). In preparing a deed, a notary must have broad insight into the current laws
and regulations; besides that, a notary must know the developments in society so that the public
interest and legal certainty can be achieved. If, in the making of an authentic deed, the notary
does not follow the provisions in the law, the deed does not become authentic. Namely, it
becomes a deed under the hand, so the deed can become null and void.
Notaries are authorized to make deeds related to land and deeds of auction minutes. In
addition to these two deeds, notaries are authorized to make deeds in their original form. The
meaning of deed in the original is a deed that is not made with deed minutes because the original
deed already has the signatures of the confronts and witnesses. Besides that, the notary has
submitted the original deed directly to the confrontants as interested parties, so it does not
become part of the notary protocol. The deed in the original is a deed of cash payment offer, a
deed of protest against non-payment or non-receipt of securities, a deed of power of attorney, a
deed of certificate of ownership, a deed of payment related to pension, rent, interest, then other
deeds that have been determined by law. Furthermore, notaries are also authorized to make a
Deed of Cooperation Agreement. A deed of Cooperation Agreement is a deed containing various
agreements and agreements that have been agreed upon by the parties so that by making it into
an authentic deed by a notary, the objectives and agreements of the parties can be achieved and
ensure legal certainty between the parties who make it (Oktasa, 2021).
A notary, in carrying out his obligations, must act honestly, carefully, and independently,
safeguard the interests of the parties who will make a deed, keep the contents of the deed
confidential and make a deed accompanied by the deed minutes as stated in Article 16 of the JN
Law. In carrying out his/her position,, a notary must also pay attention to the prohibitions
stipulated in the provisions of the law. The prohibition of notaries is regulated in Article 17 of the
JN Law, which states that notaries are prohibited from doing other work contrary to the norms,
decency and provisions of laws and regulations. Besides that, notaries are prohibited from
concurrently serving as civil servants, advocates, or state officials, becoming substitute notaries,
and becoming Land Deed Officials outside the notary's office area. Then notaries are prohibited
from carrying out positions outside and leaving their office area for 7 (seven) consecutive working
days without valid reasons. Based on this, the law expressly regulates that a notary, in carrying
out his position, must be in accordance with the designated area of the office where he was
appointed and sworn in (Melinda & Djajaputra, 2021).
The office of a notary is an area covering the entire territory of the province where he is
domiciled, and a notary also has his domicile, namely in the regency and city; this is regulated in
Article 18 of the JN Law. Therefore, a notary is provided with provisions by the JN Law that must
have 1 (one) office by his domicile. He must follow the notary's domicile if authorized as a Land
Deed Official or PPAT. Suppose the notary performs his position outside the designated office
area and is not by his domicile. In that case, he has committed a prohibition determined by law