That information is private and you are not entitled to it unless you have some legal business with the individual. You can ask the person if they have executed a power of attorney. You could check the person's name in the land records to see if any documents refer to a POA. Otherwise you may not know unless you have some business dealings with the person and an attorney in fact signs for them under a power of attorney.
The preferred form is for the attorney-in-fact to sign the principal's name on the signature line. Below that line should be typed or printed, "by James Brown as Attorney-in-fact for Charles Parker".
You sign the principal's name on the signature line. Underneath you write by (your name) 'as attorney in fact'.You sign the principal's name on the signature line. Underneath you write by (your name) 'as attorney in fact'.You sign the principal's name on the signature line. Underneath you write by (your name) 'as attorney in fact'.You sign the principal's name on the signature line. Underneath you write by (your name) 'as attorney in fact'.
If acting as an attorney-in-fact then you must sign the person's name on the signature line and write "Acting as POA for (principal's name)" underneath.
A person can choose whoever they want as their attorney-in-fact. There is no legal order they must follow. It is the free choice of the principal as to who they name as attorney-in-fact under their Power of Attorney document.
The principal is the person granting the power of attorney. The grant is valid until revoked or the person dies.
Not unless she is his attorney in fact under a power of attorney.
An agent under a Power of Attorney would sign the principal's name on the signature line and underneath add, "by Simon Crowell, attorney-in-fact".
Not unless you have executed a Power of Attorney naming her as your attorney in fact.
To notarize as an attorney-in-fact, you typically need to present the power of attorney document to the notary, along with your identification. The notary will then verify the document and witness your signature as the attorney-in-fact on behalf of the principal. Make sure to check the specific requirements in your state for notarizing documents as an attorney-in-fact.
Yes. A Power of Attorney gives an attorney-in-fact the authority to act in place of the principal to perform tasks such as banking, bill paying, writing checks, managing real property, etc. A person has the right to name an attorney-in-fact of their own choosing. A Power of Attorney is granted voluntarily by the principal and the principal must have the legal capacity to execute the POA.
You must have that person appoint you as their agent by executing a power of attorney document that is compliant with your state's laws. You can have the POA drafted by an attorney who can tailor it to fit your needs or you can find the forms online at a legal forms database. See link provided below.
If Sam Harris is the attorney-in-fact for Christopher Hitchens he would sign Christopher's name on the document and underneath the signature line he would add "by Sam Harris as attorney-in-fact for Christopher Hitchens". The reason the person with the POA signs the principal's name is that the attorney-in-fact is standing in for the principal and therefore signs the principal's name to the document.