No. When a Georgia notary leaves the boundaries of the State of Georgia, his jursidiction ends and he can not act officially. Likewise, Florida notaries can not perform notarial acts outside Florida.
Yes, as long as the Georgia resident is actually in the State of Florida when the Florida notary notarizes the document, and the venue on the document must state "STATE OF FLORIDA, COUNTY OF ________".
A notary does not notarize a document. A notary notarizes a signature. The notary is not prohibited from notarizing a family member's signature.
A notary can notarize any document. They are simply attesting that the person who signed it was the person they said they were.
A notary does not notarize a document. A notary notarizes a signature. The notary is not prohibited from notarizing a family member's signature.
NO, NO, NO. I can not believe that you are an actual notary and asked such a question. As a Florida notary you may only notarize within the geographical boundaries of Florida. Therefore, if you are in New York, you have no authority to act as a Notary Public.
A notary public does not notarize a document. He/she can notarize a signature.
No. This is basic, basic, basic notary law and I hope that you are not a notary asking such a stupid question. Notaries may never notarize for their spouse, parent or child, regardless of whether or not there are witnesses present.
I am a notary in Iowa and a family member needs a notary.. Can I notarize the document
Notaries do not notarize documents. They notarize signatures, and they are only permitted in the state by which they are licensed. It does not matter what the document is. If the document is signed in Pennsylvania in the presence of a Pennsylvania notary, that notary can notarize the signature. If the document is signed in any other state, or outside of the presence of the notary, the notary cannot notarize the signature.
In most states, YES. Only cannot notarize their own signature In many states, such as Florida and South Carolina, notaries public may not notarize signatures of themselves, their parents and grandparents, their siblings, or anyone else when the documents are in the interest of the notary (for example, a deed, a title or will in which the notary would be the beneficiary).
I have not found anything specifically stating that a notary can not notarize something for their sister. The Florida statutes do state "A notary public may not notarize a signature on a document if: The person whose signature is to be notarized is the spouse, son, daughter, mother, or father of the notary public. §117.107(11)"It seems to be allowed, but I would personally find someone else to do it just to be sure.