yes
An affiant and a notary are not the same thing. An affiant is the person who signs an affidavit or statement. The notary (often called "notary public") is an official who witnesses the affiant's signature, often by affixing a seal of the state in which the notary is licensed. Note that a notary may not notarize his/her own signature. Therefore, even if an affiant (person who is signing a statement), a separate person who is licensed as a notary must witness and stamp the first affiant's signature. What the notary is notarizing is the person's signature--not the validity of any statement. Is this now clear as mud?
The jurat is a statement at the end of a sworn document, such as an affidavit, in which the notary states the the person making or signing the document did so on a certain day, under oath and before the notary. It usually reads: "Sworn to and subscribed by me this 16th day of May, 2008." Under that statement the notary signs and places the appropriate seals on the document.
A notary does not sign to acknowledge a document. A notary is a witness of the person who signed the document. He signs to say that the person who's signature appears on the document is, in fact, the person who signed it. (This is why a notary will ask to see your drivers license or other photo ID - to prove that you are who you say you are.) A notary would back date a document because the person signing the document already signed and dated it before it was handed to the notary. In this case, the notary would not have seen the person sign the document, so it is illegal for the notary to both sign and back date.
Declaration Under the Penalty of Perjury, Notary Statement(Download)STATE OF ___________________COUNTY OF _________________________________________, herewith declares under the penalties of perjury:That they are competent under the law to give this declaration and unless stated have personal knowledge of the facts stated herein:____________________________________NotaryExpiration ExpiresDeclaration Under the Penalty of Perjury, Notary StatementReview ListThis review list is provided to inform you about this document in question and assist you in its preparation. This statement can go at the end of a notary witnessing, if you so choose. It is a more formal and pointed way for the notary to witness a signature.
In most states, a CPA does not have the authority to notarize documents. Notarization requires a notary public, who is a designated public official. It is important to use a licensed notary public for this purpose.
"Subscribed and sworn before me..."
subscribed and sworn
"Notarische Bestätigung", also "Notarische Bescheinigung"
Yes, for real estate documents in particular. However, local regulations may provide for "acknowledgement" of an existing signature by the signatory, where such acknowledgement is stated to a notary under the proper conditions (evidence of signatory identity, statement of location and date where signature was made, sworn under oath, etc).
Your attorney will have the trust instrument notarized at the time of the signing.
To obtain an affidavit, you typically need to draft a written statement of facts, sign it in the presence of a notary public, and have the notary public notarize the document to make it legally binding.
The possessive form of the singular noun notary public is notary public's.example: This form requires a notary public's signature.
To ensure that the person who is signing their name to the document ACTUALLY IS that person.
To obtain a notarized sworn statement, you need to write out the statement you want to make, sign it in front of a notary public, and have the notary public witness your signature and stamp the document with their official seal. You can find a notary public at banks, law offices, or government offices.
An affiant and a notary are not the same thing. An affiant is the person who signs an affidavit or statement. The notary (often called "notary public") is an official who witnesses the affiant's signature, often by affixing a seal of the state in which the notary is licensed. Note that a notary may not notarize his/her own signature. Therefore, even if an affiant (person who is signing a statement), a separate person who is licensed as a notary must witness and stamp the first affiant's signature. What the notary is notarizing is the person's signature--not the validity of any statement. Is this now clear as mud?
An affidavit is a written sworn statement. It is like spoken testimony in court except that what you are going to say is written down and you sign the end of the statement. Like the statement in court you have to swear to tell the truth to a person legally entitled to take such oaths like a Notary Public. The Notary or whoever is taking the oath must attest on the affidavit (in a statement called the jurat) that the person named did appear before him, did swear that the contents of the affidavit were true and signed it. If you have an affidavit which needs to be sworn, be sure that you personally appear before the Notary, because it won't work if you just send a friend with the document.
The stamp goes next to or near the notary's signature. It should NOT cover any text or signature on the document, including the notary's signature and the stupid "notary seal goes here" statement.