Almost certainly. Your local registrar of deeds will have the rules for what must be included in a proper deed (description, location, names of grantors, grantees, source of title to grantors, notarized signatures of grantors, statement of consideration paid, etc).
No . . . any Notary will do. But the Notary must actually see the person signing the deed.
Yes
Yes, it is....providing the deed was legally notarized and witnessed by 2 separate entities.
Fill out a Quit Claim Deed - have it notarized!!
Execute a new warranty deed. Write your name and the name of the person you want to add. Take the warranty to the notary public. Take the notarized deed to the land records.
yes. but it must be notarized before the counsel general at the us embassy. no other notary is acceptable for out-of-country acknowledgments
Most lenders do not require the promissory note to be notarized. The deed of trust, however, is usually required to be notarized.
A Deed it can be warranty or a general warranty deed or a Quit Claim Deed depending on variables in the transaction. A Title company or county clerk can probably lend advise as to the best sort of deed for your purpose. It needs to be notarized and recorded at the local county court house.
You are referring to a "quitclaim" deed. If the deed is valid then the person named in the deed is the rightful owner.
Generally, a notarized letter cannot, in and of itself, be proof of purchase of a home. A deed is the legal form that must be used to convey title to property. A deed contains all the legal elements that are required to establish the conveyance in fee. If the deed was lost before it was recorded in the land records then you would need to file an action in the court of jurisdiction to establish your title to the property. The notarized letter may provide evidence of your claim. You need to speak with an attorney who specializes in real estate law and litigation.
An unsigned deed is just a piece of paper. It has no significance until it is properly executed.
A quit claim deed gives whoever is on it the same rights to the property as the original holder had. If you create a quit claim deed for property you hold title to and put your own name on it along with someone else, you are essentially splitting the property in half.
It should be signed by the grantor exactly how their name is written in the granting clause and exactly the same way by which they took title. It should be witnessed and notarized.
Quick Claim Deed is usually misspelled and should be Quit Claim Deed. If you are granting the deed you are "quitting" any interest in the property. A quitclaim deed is a fast and effective way of transfering property.