How To Become a Mobile Notary: Generate Income - A Side Hustle Series
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About this ebook
Where are mobile notary needed?
Mobile notaries are needed in a wide variety of areas. In the family area, they notarize adoptions, sign marriage and divorce contracts, take care of wills and the distribution of estates. Notaries are also important and in some cases unavoidable points of contact when founding companies and registering in the commercial register.
Notaries are just as important in the real estate sector. Regardless of whether it is about a purchase or a gift - nothing is legally binding without a notarial deed. "For most of those involved, buying or selling a property puts all other businesses in the shade in terms of its financial significance," says the notary candidate Dominik Hüren. "To ensure that buyers and sellers are properly advised on such an important process and informed about existing risks, the involvement of a mobile notary is required by law." A mobile notary can also set up a right of first refusal, usufruct or other easements in relation to a property.
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Book preview
How To Become a Mobile Notary - Assured Financial Solutions
How To Become A Mobile Notary
TABLE OF CONTENT
CHAPTER ONE: A bit of history
What is a mobile notary?
CHAPTER TWO: Where are mobile notary needed?
How to find general notary works
How long does it take to make money as a new mobile notary agent?
The first steps are critical
Common mistakes new mobile notary agents make
So, how does the schedule look?
CHAPTER THREE: Notary deed
The concept of a notarial deed
The procedure for notarial preceeding
The principles and features of notarial proceedings
The relationship of a mobile notary with other participants in notarial proceedings
Relationship with individuals and legal entities:
In relations with the notary chamber, the notary is obliged to:
In relations with colleagues and the notary community, a notary is obliged to:
CHAPTER FOUR: How to become a mobile notary
When do people need to have a document notarized?
Differences between a notary and a lawyer
The main duties of a notary
What are the fees for a notary?
Why becoming a notary?
How does being a notary make you more employable?
But what about the competition?
How to create a successful mobile notary business
Errors that can lead to a notary being prosecuted for fraud and malpractice
Summary
CHAPTER ONE
A bit of history
Most scholars believe that notary in the modern sense appeared in Ancient Rome, although even in Ancient Greece and Ancient Egypt there were people who had the authority to draw up and certify legal information (hieromemnes and agoranomos, respectively).
The development of property, civil law and document flow in ancient Rome required a large number of scribes to draw up written contracts and other legal acts. Some of them worked for private individuals, others were elected by the magistrate and stayed in the public service, for example, the tabellions, who worked exclusively in offices and drew up judicial and legal papers. All documents drawn up by them were recorded in the minutes so that they became public acts and could not be disputed.
The term notary
appeared approximately in the II-III century. It comes from the Latin word notta, which means a sign used to speed up writing. In the Roman Church, the functions of a notary consisted of recording the conversations of bishops with people and drawing up various legal acts. Subsequently, the profession migrated from church life to secular practice.
In some nations, the first information about notaries dates back to the 15th century. In those