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Can I make changes or corrections to an already notarized document? No. A notary public must never change, correct, or amend a notarial certificate at a later date. Such alterations can only be made at the time of the execution of the notarization when the principal signer is present.
It is not the notarization which makes a document legally binding. In fact, many documents which are not notarized are legally binding. A person may sign a legally binding document without appearing before a notary public, and many do. No, a notarization does not make a document legally binding.
1 attorney answer The same way you terminate a non-notarized document. Notarization just guarantees the genuineness of signatures, it does nothing to make an unenforceable agreement enforceable, if it's not, and it does nothing to make an agreement
In short, the agreement is not enforceable by a court. A signed and notarized agreement, if drafted properly, is enforceable as a contract between the parties for the distribution of property (equitable distribution) and alimony/support.
When a person must make a sworn statement, either verbally or in writing, he usually seeks out a notary public. Notaries often skip the essential act of administering the oath, resulting in the document being declared invalid by the court or rejected by the receiving party.
For a written agreement to be legally binding, it must contain an acceptance of the terms in the document. The most common way to accept is through a signature. If all the parties involved sign your written agreement, there is a clear acceptance of the terms.
Making false statements in notary advertising is illegal, and the penalty for California notaries is $1500 per incident. Additionally, such a notary's commission could be suspended, revoked, or there could be a refusal to issue a commission.
There are so many vectors where a signature or document could be forged: it could be a fake notary, a real notary that gets duped by a fake ID, a real person signing in their real name who does not have the authority they say they do, documents with a fake notary stamp, faked documents, and so on.
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