Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Grandparents’ Rights 2009 Book

I highly recommend this e-book Grandparents' Rights 2009 for grandparents who have these questions.


 

Are you having difficulties visiting with your grandchildren?
Do you have a grandchild who is being treated poorly or even abused? Do you know your legal rights as a Grandparent?


 

In every state, grandparents NOW have the right to ask for visitation or custody. Enough research has been gathered over the years to prove that children NEED their grandparents and have problems as they grow up if this Grandparent-Grandchild relationship is interfered with. Judges have learned to take seriously the "best-interests-of-the-child" concept. This has opened the door for Grandparents to help their grandchildren.


With the number of divorces escalating at a frightening rate, more grandparents are experiencing serious problems involving their grandchildren.
~ You may have difficulty seeing them on a steady basis or you may have been denied visits altogether.

~ You may suspect or even know that they are neglected and possibly abused.

~ You may have found that they are being "warehoused" in daycare.

~ It is not uncommon for grandchildren to have been "given" to the other Grandparents and maybe necessary to go to court to help their grandchildren. This report is designed to let grandparents know their legal rights.

What options do they have concerning their grandchildren?

Click here to get the information you have been looking for! Grandparents' Rights 2009


 

Please visit our sponsor if you need to create PDF documents in any program for FREE! FREE PDF Creator

Saturday, July 11, 2009

10 Things to Ponder while Starting a Paralegal Business

  • Review your current software programs and determine which programs are suitable and necessary for your business
  • Hire a professional to design your new business resume and cover letter
  • Decide on the name of your business and whether to file an LLC or S Corp or keeping it simple as a sole proprietor
  • Design letterhead and business cards
  • Register your business in your county and State. Many of the state websites will have the information for you.
  • Purchase office equipment. You will definitely need a telephone, fax machine, desktop computer, copy machine, desk, comfortable chair, locking filing cabinets
  • Write a business plan. Go to the SBA.gov website for help with this. It is not a hard thing to do, but it does take time and a lot of thought
  • Create and send sales letters and brochures to available attorneys and businesses in your surrounding area in the county in which you live
  • Join local paralegal associations and be sure to mark your calendar to attend the monthly luncheons and any special committee meetings. By doing this, you will gain a network of people for your business contacts and get your foot in the door to new clients
  • Place ads on Craigslist.com and local newspapers and yellowpages

A more detailed blog will provide a breakdown of each and every point in the above list by separate blog entries. They will provide information that I have accumulated in order to do the entire checklist of the 10 Things to Ponder while Starting a Paralegal Business. These points are my opinion only and I am sharing them with you so that you do not have to reinvent the wheel when you make your decision to work from home.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

What is a Notary allowed to do?

Notaries are "ministerial" officials who are required to follow a lengthy set of oath instructions and understand state Notary Laws.  The definition of a notary's job is:  to identify document signers, complete certificates and follow instructions.  It is the execution of these responsibilities, with the multiplicity of ID's, Forms and procedures that require a Properly Trained and Professional Notary. The notary's two basic job functions are to witness or verify the signing of documents. Notaries are also authorized to administer oaths when they are required by notarizing text, committing the signer, signatures and certificates.  A false statement made to a Notary, under Oath, is Perjury; exactly the same as a false statement made under Oath in a Court of Law. Notarization is serious legal business.

 Some of the usual and customary notarial functions include:

  • Administering Oaths and Affirmations.
  • Taking Affidavits and Depositions.
  • Receiving and certifying Acknowledgments or proof of such written instruments as Deeds, Mortgages, and Powers of Attorney.
  • Demanding acceptance or payment of foreign inland Bills of Exchange, Promissory Notes and Obligations in Writing, and protesting the same for nonpayment.
  • Copy Certifications.

 
A notary is not responsible for verifying truth or accuracy of the contents of a document.  A notary does not make documents Legal, Official or Validated.  A document with errors or discrepancies prior to notarization will contain the same errors if notarized.  In the process of performing their job functions, notaries try to prevent fraud, and compel truthfulness. 

 
Oaths are verbal pledges to a Supreme Being with a legal purpose that a person will attest faithfully and truthfully Oaths must be given in person, and may be administered any time, day or night.  Notaries may give any oath required by state law, including oaths of office to public officials.  A notary "administers" or "gives" an oath.  The person who "takes" an oath or "swears to it" is called a constituent.

 
An affirmation is an act in which a notary certifies that a person made a voluntary vow in the presence of a notary under the penalty of perjury.  There is no reference to a Supreme Being in an affirmation.  It is a solemn declaration made by a constituent who declines to take an oath for religious reasons or conscientious scruples.  

 
In taking a verification upon oath, or affirmation for an affidavit, deposition or other sworn document, the notary must execute a Jurat.  The purpose of a Jurat is to compel truthfulness.  The notary appeals to the signer's conscience and requires him/her to swear to the truthfulness of the document's content under criminal penalties for perjury.  Sometimes a Jurat (Latin for oath) is executed without reference to a document, as with the oath of office given to a public official.

 
An affidavit is a written statement signed by a person who asserts it to be true and makes the assertion upon oath or affirmation.  It is a declaration reduced to writing, signed by the affiant (the person making an affidavit), and sworn to in person before an officer.  It is also known as "verification upon oath or affirmation".

 
Disclaimer: A Notary Public is not an Attorney at Law and it is illegal for a Notary to give any form of Legal Advice.