Question is unclear. If you mean how do you get YOUR signature notarized for the other person - just sign the paper in front of a Notary and send it to them.
If you are asking about getting THEIR signature notarized, they must do it in the presence of a Notary in Minnesota, where they are.
Notaries can only notarize signatures that they actually witness in person.
It depends on what the document is and what you want to use it to prove. It may be hearsay or otherwise inadmissible.Added: Yes, and if calledupon to testify, the Notary can only attest to the fact that the person that signed the document they notarized was identified by proper identification papers, and was in their presence when the doucment was signed . . . nothing else.
You must obtain a death certifcate and will showing that it was left to you , if the co signer left their part to someone else you must have an afidavit of heirship signed over to you and this document must be notarized.
It all depends on what you will be using it for. A facsimile is not accepted for recording in most land records offices. Some judges will not accept a faxed copy of a document, such as a promissory note or check with a notation on the memo line. Many contracts are faxed but the parties should agree ahead of time and the faxed copies that go back and forth should contain a clause that they will be binding although faxed.
yes, in Minnesota you can
You can notarize for a family member, but it is not a good practice to do so. If the notarized document goes to court, the opposing lawyer will use the notarization to call the document into question and possibly invalidate the document. NY notaries are not prohibited to notarize for family members. However it is not recommended to notarize for a family member in certain situation that may have certain conflict of interest and lead to complication with legal documents.
Notarized letter of guardianship and a power of attorney.
it means that you send a document to someone else.
This question could be interpreted 2 ways: 1.) Does power of attorney give you the right to notarize a document on behalf of a notary? No, a notary is someone that is licensed from the State to witness forms. 2.) Can you use a power of attorney form to notarize a document? No, you need a notary form. (see link below to free notary form)
If this is guardianship, a simple notarized letter stating the fact, along with exact parameters and limitations of any potential interference on your part, plus a notarized Power of Attorney over the child.
it depends on what on a legal document yes
A notarized agreement just verifies that the signers are who they claim to be. The notary is required to witness a signature and verify the identity of the individual. The value of the document is not relevant, whether it will hold up in court is not relevant, nothing else is important to the Notary, only that the people who sign are who they claim to be. * In the US notarized agreements are legally binding when they have been properly executed and have supporting evidence as to the intent and nature of the matter.
The other person has to do it. MN is a BS state.