Yes. As long as you, your spouse of anyone in your family will not benefit from the documents. For example, if he is selling his land to a third party you can notarize the deed. However, you should check your state laws that govern notaries public.
Being able to notarize a document has no relationship to whether or not someone is married. If you are properly authorized to notarize documents, and you follow proper procedure for confirming the signatures on the documents in question, then you can notarize the will, if not, you cannot.
No. It it is not. The law states that a notary may not notarize for friends or relatives.
Yes. As long as you, your spouse of anyone in your family will not benefit from the documents. For example, if he is selling his land to a third party you can notarize the deed. However, you should check your state laws that govern notaries public.
It is not prohibited by law. Florida law specifies that a notary may not notarize the signature of their parents, spouse, or children. The law is silent on siblings. However, it is probably not advised, and if you choose to notarize a sibling's signature, particularly if they have the same last name as you, you might want to add a statement to the certificate such as: "The person whose signature is being notarized is not my spouse, mother, father, son, or daughter, whose signatures I would be prohibited from notarizing per F.S. 117.107(11)". This will clarify that the signature you are notarizing is NOT that of your parent, child, or spouse.
In British Columbia, notaries public and lawyers authorized to practice law can notarize signatures. Additionally, certain authorized officials such as municipal clerks or commissioners for taking affidavits may also have the authority to notarize signatures in specific situations.
Of course it is. The notary is witnessing the signature. It bear no reflection on the relationship.
If your brother-in-law is your spouse's brother, then his father is your father-in-law - because he is your spouse's father. If your brother-in-law is your sister's husband, then his father is not your father-in-law.
It is important that the notary is not related in any way to the client.
If your brother-in-law is your spouse's brother, then his father is your father-in-law. If you brother-in-law is your sister's husband, then his father is not your father-in-law, and is not related to you in any way..
The singular possessive of father-in-law is father-in-law's. "This is my father-in-law's house."
The girl's father-in-law is the father of her spouse, while her spouse's father-in-law is the father of her spouse's spouse. Therefore, the girls's father-in-law is also the son of the boy's father-in-law.
Yes. Notaries are only prohibited from notarizing for a spouse, parent, or child. The governor's office does not recommend that notaries notarize for any family members, but notarizing for in-laws is not prohibited by law.