A person can write an affidavit, but it must be witnessed and signed by someone of legal age (usually over 18). In most states, the affidavit must be legally notarized.
It will probably need to be notarized. If you are a member of a credit union, you can have it notarized there for free. As far as the content of the affidavit, I would ask the insurance company to explain what they want you to write. In other words, do they want you to write a detailed recount of a claim? Do they want you to write from start to finish, what was the initial cause, how you discovered the damage, what you did when you discovered the damage, etc?
You would have to find people that knew or were there at your time of birth and have them write a affidavit.
You need a motion to modify approved by the court.
After the affidavit, the next step in legal proceedings is typically a rebuttal affidavit. This allows the opposing party to address and dispute the claims made in the initial affidavit.
Do you mean an affidavit? It is a statement of something that you sign as to its truth.
Having just done this ourselves we simply filed a new Affidavit. The only difference being in the title we were told to write "Amended Affidavit of Claiming Successor". The new/amended affidavit was basically the same as original but will the changes and the title change. The court used this copy in place of the original that we had filed. There was no additional filing fee for this, we only paid for the certified copies that we needed.
An affidavit that states the heirs of a decedent. An Affidavit of Heirship is used instead of probate when a person dies without a will. http://www.heirship.com/2009/11/affidavit-of-heirship.html
sample of affidavit of acquittance
an affidavit should be prepared much like a witness statement. however these documents should be obtained from an attorney and then filled out with guidance from a practicind civil atty. yes have it notarized
The lawyer produced a sworn affidavit in court today.
Some antonyms of the word affidavit is denial, veto, and negation.
If you wrote the check to an individual, that person would need to complete an affidavit of forged endorsement. Then, your bank can return that check to the bank that cashed it. If your bank cashed it, the affidavit will force them to take the loss - they may require you to file a police report. If the check was payable to a company, a representative from the company must complete the affidavit.