Nope, no way, abolutely not.
A signature loan is a fixed interest rate loans offered to borrowers who are able to meet the specific credit standards required by the lender of the funds.
If the signature was not only forged but done without the knowledge of the person, the party involve has a bigger problem than a "repo". Be that as it may, the agreement was made fraudulently and the lender has the right to reposession and recovery of expenses, by whatever means necessary.
a common seal of a private limited company is the official signature of the company being a separate entity. it must contain a company name and should be used on all valid documents or on any document to be valid. any person authorised by the company to enter into an agreement with others should have his signature and company's common seal to justify its validity.
A legal signature must be written by hand, not typed.
This depends on the state you live in and the lenders requirements. Some states allow "anyone" on title to secure a second mortgage or equity line. Other states require that "everyone" on title sign for second mortgages and EQ lines. Lenders are increasingly requiring all titled partied to sign for a new loan. Some lenders only require that the second party simply sign an acknowledgment. This can be helpful in a case where one of the borrowers has recent credit problems. Now the other borrower can still obtain a 2nd mortgage.
A landlord can put a witness signature in a lease agreement. A property owner can also sign as a witness to a lease agreement.
sue
no, without a signature there is no agreement of it.
His signature on the contract confirmed his agreement to the terms.
A signature loan is a fixed interest rate loans offered to borrowers who are able to meet the specific credit standards required by the lender of the funds.
An agreement does not get notarized. A signature does. Most contracts do not need notarized signatures to be binding.
No. Any agreement has to be "agreed" to by both parties.
no forging signatures has always been illegel
If the agreement (contract) was signed in the presence of a Notary Public, no.
It would depend on local legislation.
If you are challenging the signature as valid - tell them to produce the ORIGINAL document that contains your ORIGINAL signature. If they cannot, or will not, you will be able to walk away. Reproduced signatures are not legal for enforcing contracts or agreements. The holder of the the original paper MUST be able to produce the original agreement and original signatures.
Yes but it is pompous.