Being a guardian for someone is basically their legal representative, UNLESS these guardianship documents allow for actual physical custody. If that is the case, and the documents is notarized, given by the parent who has official custody, then it should be fine. But they need to file that document with the courts as soon as they can, publish it and make it official. That way, everyone knows what is going on and with whom.
AnswerYou cannot be a legal guardian until you have been appointed by a court of law.
A signed, notarized document is a legal document.A signed, notarized document is a legal document.A signed, notarized document is a legal document.A signed, notarized document is a legal document.
A notarized document can be revoked. This is when any of the clauses in the document has been breached.
A notarized document never expires. It is always a valid document.
A notarized document is not necessarily a legally binding document. A properly written and properly signed and propely notarized document may help you in court, but the only thing a notarized document proves is that the people who signed the document were who they said they were.
Yes, needs to be notarized
Documents are not notarized. Signatures on documents are.
Not necessarily. Just because it's notarized doesn't mean it's a public document or filed anywhere.
The notary seal and notary's signature does not make a document a binding contract. The signatures on a contract can be notarized. However, when a document if notarized, the notary is simply stating that to the best of their knowledge the signature is that of the person signing the document. In other words, the notary verifies a signature that they witness. A contract would be binding once the participants sign it in front of the notary and the document is notarized.
yes
The name of a venue would normally be found at the beginning of a notarized document. It should be clearly notated.
Generally, you can get a document notarized at your bank or attorney's office. You can also usually get a document notarized at the local courthouse or at the land records office.
state law declares that the document is presumed to be genuine if it is notarized.