Yes, as long as the vehicle will be re-titled in NYS. This note is from the central NYS DMV office: "The PA title will not be required to be notarized, but if you wish to have it notarized you can use either a PA or a NY notary." I also got a similar response from PennDOT. Once the title leaves their State, they don't require any notarization of the signatures.
yes you can lose one.
At a notary's office.
To become a notary in PA one must be at least 18 years old, be employed or a resident within the Commonwealth and must be a person of good integrity and character.
This depends on the state in which the car is titled. OH, PA, and AL all require titles to be notorized before submission to any department of motor vehicles.
The address of the David Wills House is: 8 Lincoln Sq, Gettysburg, PA 17325
J. Brooke Aker has written: 'Law of Wills in PA' 'How to build a more profitable wills and estates practice' -- subject(s): Estate planning 'Pennsylvania estate planning and drafting' -- subject(s): Estate planning, Tax planning 'Law of wills in Pennsylvania' -- subject(s): Wills
An employee working in New Jersey can hold a Notary Public from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, their state of residence. The question is - are documents she notarizes in NJ as part of her employment, legally recognized in NJ? For that info you will have to contact the employers legal staff or attorney -or- the NJ State Attorney General's Office for the OFFICIAL answer.
Addendums to a will, codicils, can only be made by the testator. Codicils should be drafted in the same form as the will and they should be notarized.
None. PA does not require gun registration- like MOST of the US does not.
around the pittsburgh, pa area.
I called a local notary and they said it's 5 cars per year.