首页 About SBCS | Investigation | Risk Management | Training | 中文 
Hi, guest
Register | Login
Academic Articles

 Civil Records in China (I)

 

 

Keywords:  Birth Certificate, Adoption Certificate, Notarial Certificate, death, marriage, divorce

 

Documents

 

Most of the documents listed below can be obtained from one of China's Notarial Offices (Gong Zheng Chu). All Chinese documentation to be used abroad is processed through the notary offices and issued in the form of notarial certificates. Notarial offices are located in all major Chinese cities and in rural county seats. These offices are part of the Ministry of Justice structure, but are separate from the people's court system.

 

Notaries in China do not perform the same functions as their American counterparts. Chinese notaries affix their signatures and office seal to certificates that attest to the probity of claims made by the applicants. By regulation, notaries are empowered to issue certificates only after they conclude that the applicant's claims are true.  Notarial certificates of birth, death, marriage, divorce, no criminal record and pre-1981 adoptions are, at best, secondary evidence of the events they purport to document.  Although these certificates are secondary evidence, they are used because primary evidence is not standardized, is easily forged, and difficult to evaluate. Notarial certificates are easier to interpret than primary evidence and theoretically represent an expert judgment on the part of the notarial official as to the facts documented.

 

The certificates can be based upon primary evidence, secondary evidence, testimony of the applicant or other parties, or investigation by the notary. For most notarial certificates of birth or adoption, the primary underlying documentation is the household register (HHR) which appears to be extremely susceptible to fraud and manipulation, especially if the holder of the HHR lives outside of a major metropolitan area. Notarial certificates rarely cite the basis for their issuance.

 

Thus a certificate in itself may not be adequate evidence of the facts claimed, and is best used in conjunction with primary and contemporaneous secondary evidence:  old land deeds and old family registers; letters or money receipts; family records from countries that have reliable public documents; school and medical records. In relationship cases, especially where the petitioner left China years before, the best evidence of relationship, or lack of it, would be the Hong Kong Certificate of Registered Particulars (for petitioners who lived in Hong Kong), or the petitioner's immigration and/or naturalization file.

 

Local conditions often do not permit consular officers to conduct on-site inquiries. However, if there is a reason to doubt the claims in a certificate issued by a Chinese notary, the American consular post in the issuing office's area may verify the information through the notarial office, or, if possible, by field investigation. A copy of the document in question should be submitted to the post, as well as detailed reasons for the suspicion.  For suspected relationship fraud, the first step should be a check of the information contained in the INS file or Joint Voluntary Agency (JVA) files for former refugees.  Given sufficient reason, notaries do investigate, and in some cases, revoke certificates.  Several months should be allowed for a reply.

 

Individuals residing outside of China may obtain notarial certificates from the notarial office with jurisdiction over the county of previous residence. Chinese relatives or friends may request issuance of certificates on behalf of someone now living abroad.  Relatives and friends should have specific written authorization from the interested party before they request certificates. Alternatively, persons in need of notarial documents may contact the PRC Embassy or Consulate nearest to their residence abroad and ask that the request be forwarded to the appropriate notarial office.  Obtaining a notarial certificate through a PRC Embassy or Consulate can require considerable time.

 

Birth Certificate

 

Available in the form of notarial certificates, which are secondary evidence. Notarial certificates of birth (Chu Sheng Gong Zheng Shu or Chu Sheng Zheng Ming Shu) for persons living in or recently departed from China are generally reliable, but are best used in conjunction with other evidence. They are most often based upon an AHHR, (Household Record) which is easily susceptible to fraud, especially in villages.  Notarial birth certificates for persons long departed from China are most likely based merely upon the testimony of interested parties.

 

While some notarial birth certificates will list stepparents or adoptive parents along with natural parents, this is not always the case. In some cases, the certificates will list only the natural parents, covering up an adoption.  

 

Some applicants will present notarial certificates of relationship (Guan Xi Gong Zheng [or Zheng Ming] Shu) in lieu of notarial birth certificates. These certificates of relationship are unreliable and tend to be based solely upon the testimony of interested parties. Notarial birth certificates should be required. Care should be taken with any certificate that lists step relationships. These relationships are as of the date of issuance of the certificate only.  Marriage certificates should also be required.

 

Adoption Certificate

 

Available in the form of notarial adoption certificates (Shou Yang Gong Zheng [or Zheng Ming] Shu). Until January of 1981 there were no laws or regulations regarding adoptions. Adoptions taking place after January 1981 are considered valid only with the issuance of the notarial certificate. The date of issuance of the notarial certification is the date of adoption.  Although notarial offices issue certificates for pre-January 1981 adoptions, these are extremely susceptible to fraud.

 

Commonly, adoptions were orally agreed to by the natural and adoptive parent(s).  There may or may not be a written record dating from the time of the adoption.  Parties to the adoption, however, may secure notarial certificates at a later point in time that will list the natural parents' names, adoptive parents' names, and the date of the adoption. The certificate is supposedly issued only after the notary ascertains that an adoption took place conforming to local practice and regulation.

 

Chinese customs and practice regarding adoption differ substantially from U.S. practice. Typically, there is no clear distinction between adoptive, foster and godparent/godchild relationships. Owing to the ease of fraud in cases involving adoption (especially pre-January 1981 adoptions), contemporaneous evidence of the adoption and co-residence, especially in the form of school records, should be required. The inability to obtain a notarial certificate of adoption, on the other hand, is prima facie evidence no adoption ever took place.

 

Care should be taken in cases where a petitioning parent departed China without the adoptive (then minor) child, especially if other natural children accompanied the parent.  Most likely, this indicates the Chinese government did not recognize the adoption at the time the alleged adoptive parent departed. The INS file of the petitioner and/or the Hong Kong Certificate of Registered Particulars (for petitioners who transited Hong Kong) will generally be the most reliable evidence of the existence or nonexistence of the adoption in these cases.

 

A new China-wide adoption law was implemented on April 1, 1992. Under this law, notarial certificates of adoption are still required, and a written record dating from the time of the adoption should be available in these cases of an adoption of an orphan.  The Ministry of Civil Affairs must approve the adoption of a parentless or abandoned child who becomes the ward of the Chinese state. Adoptive parents must travel to China to complete the adoption of a Chinese child, and should receive three notarial certificates upon completion of the adoption process:  birth, abandonment and adoption. The notarial certificate of abandonment should state under what circumstances and when the child was either orphaned or abandoned. It is extremely rare in China for male children to be given up for adoption.

 

Traditionally, the vast majority of orphaned children adopted in China by foreigners have been female.  Cases involving the adoption of a male child, particularly if adopted by a relative, should be thoroughly documented.”

 

Source: http://shenyang.usembassy-china.org.cn/civil_records_china.html

 

 

 

 

 

For more:

China weighs credit database options (Ⅰ) -- Analyzing credit reporting system models

China weighs credit database options (Ⅱ) -- Analyzing credit reporting system models

Growing of China Credit Database  

Credit Report

Personal Credit is to be kicked off in China

Introduction on the Business Databases Search in Hong Kong , Macao and Taiwan

Risk Investment and Risk Management in Business Industry

2009 Chinese Tax Regulations for Non-Resident Enterprises

Construction of Credit System Sees No Basis in Law and Government’s Regulation

The ABCs of Due Diligence

How to Do a Credit Background Check

Insolvency and Corporate Bankruptcy in China

Building a Credit Infrastructure in China

How Your Credit Report and Credit Score are Used 

Credit Guarantee Legal System in China

Check Your Mortgage Credit Score - Get the House You Want

Employment Background Checks

Find out Who Phone Number Belongs to

Top 5 Most Valuable Professional Qualification Certificates in China at Present

Top 10 Certified Public Accountants in China

Pre Employment Screening

Pre-Employment Check - A Must for All Businesses

Getting Married in China (I)

Getting Married in China (II)

Civil Records in China (II)

Regional Security of China Tourism

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SBCS Investigation Services cover Beijing, Tientsin, Shijiazhuang, Taiyuan, Huhhot/Hohhot, Shenyang, Changchun, Harbin, Shanghai, Nanking, Hangchow, Foochow, Nanchang, Tsinan, Chengchow, Wuhan, Changsha, Canton, Nanning, Haikou, Chongqing, Chengtu, Kewiyang, Lhasa, Si’an, Lanchow, Xining, Yinchuan, Urmuqi, Taipei, Hong Kong, Macau and so on.