15. The chief duties of every notary, in addition to those required of him by this Act, shall be:(a) not to divulge confidential knowledge acquired by him in the practice of his profession, unless expressly or implicitly authorized to do so by those who made such confidences to him;
(b) to observe in the practice of his profession the rules of the most scrupulous honesty and impartiality;
(c) to comply with the orders and regulations of the Bureau and to answer, within a reasonable delay, the demands of the president of the Order or of its officers;
(d) to avoid all occasions of dispute and to maintain the most perfect courtesy in his relations with other notaries;
(e) to have his office in a suitable place and to keep his minutes, repertory and trust books of account in a proper state of preservation in a fireproof and damp-proof strong room or safe, the whole in conformity with the regulations of the Bureau;
(f) to keep his repertory and index in the form prescribed by this act;
(g) to pay any contribution required by the Bureau;
(h) to comply with the regulations of the Bureau governing the receipt, preservation and disposal of and accounting for sums and securities entrusted to him by his clients;
(i) to comply with the provisions of the tariff in force;
(j) to accept office as a member or officer of the Bureau or any of its committees;
(k) to keep in his office, available to the public, the list of persons interdicted or to whom a judicial adviser has been appointed, which list must be given to him without delay and gratuitously by the clerk or prothonotary of the district where the notary’s office is situated;
(l) to appoint a notary as attorney to certify and issue copies of deeds in his records, whenever he expects to have to be absent from his office for a period of more than fifteen days.