No. The landlord / manager should only rent to someone that has seen the apartment in person. The landlord / manager needs to see proof of your ID and SSN which eliminates the need for a notary. Although, in some States you may need a Witness.
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.
Some agreements are set up that way. After our lease was up, we were month to month without signing another lease.
In general, a rental agreement or lease is regarded as a legal document if it spells out the conditions and obligations of the parties and is signed and dated by at least the renter. If you wished greater assurance, you could have it notarized. For the best assurance, you would have your attorney assist you in drawing up such a contract, one in which all laws of your state and locality were taken into account, then have all parties sign it in his presence, and have it notarized.
This is dependant on the rental agreement. IF the rental agreement charges by the person then they may be able to charge extra for a child. Since the child is a minor, then most likely the lease is per time period and property size and NOT the addition of a child. Most rental agreements indicate that you cannot sublease or subrent to a second party outside the original parties involved in the lease BUT since the baby is NOT a new renter then this is bad attempt to extort money from the renter.
Yes. Persons who enter into joint rental/lease agreements are responsibile for the entire amount even when one of them defaults unless they want to risk eviction and perhaps civil penalties.
Rental agreements are designed to protect both parties and to set restrictions and rules so that no one is liable for the other's mess.
There are many sites offering sample rental agreements in Texas including http://www.agreementsetc.com/rental-agreements/lease-samples/ or you can talk to a realtor.
yes by a licensed notariater
no you do not need notarized i believe
I'm not sure what you are renting in an online business but there are many sites that property to sell or discuss rental agreements of all kinds. You could probably go to any store that sells will kits and the like. They would no doubt have the rental agreements that meets your need or know where to go to get one.
Enterprise handles rental agreements responsibly and professionally. Their representatives operate in a timely and organized fashion, and their customer service line is courteous and helpful.
Rental contact agreements for a business is similar to a rental contract for an apartment. A business agreement would want you to personally idemnify your business though and probably require you to get business insurance in case of a fire.
ORS 90.302 in Oregon outlines regulations for rental agreements, including requirements for written agreements, disclosure of landlord information, and terms related to rent, deposits, and maintenance responsibilities.
do i need wv title notarized
No, declarations do not need to be notarized, but notarizing them can add credibility and validity to the document.
You don't have to hire a lawyer to have an effective basic rental agreement. There are many sites online that offer custom and stock basic rental agreements. These low priced forms offer you the protection of a rental agreement without huge legal costs. Order your basic rental agreement online today.
An agreement does not get notarized. A signature does. Most contracts do not need notarized signatures to be binding.