A person who witnesses a signature is called a witness.
If the person who witnesses a signature is not present at the time of signing then the contract is no longer a legally binding document.
a forger
Any notary can notarize a signature on a will. However, a will also requires the signatures of witnesses to make it valid. In most cases you must have two witnesses to the testator's signature.
There is no minimum, and there is no maximum. The prosecution could call no witnesses or a hundred witnesses. A conviction of murder is based on the totality of the facts surrounding the person's guilt, not the number of witnesses called to testify.
A witness is one who quite literally witnesses to others about their testimony and religious views. (i.e. Jehovah's Witnesses)Answer:Evangelist; missionary.
The witnesses and the acknowledgment that should be on the same page, immediately following the signature, will connect the signature to the conveyance of the property.
Anyone who actually witnesses the person signing can be a signature witness. Only a notary can notarize the signature, and only if the document is signed in front of them.
Yes, there is. There is someone who is one of Jehovah's Witnesses. They call themselves this way according to Isaiah 43: 17,18.
You call it a "Signature"
witnesses and testifiers.
Jehovah's Witnesses DO call themselves Christian. They acknowledge they are a Christian religion and are baptised in Christ's name. Most secular authorities recognise Jehovah's Witnesses as a Christian denomination.
You don't notarize a will, you notarize a signature, such as witnesses to the will. Yes, in most places an executor can be a witness and have their signature notarized. There are sometimes problems when a beneficiary is also a witness.