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3 answers

Absolutely not. As a notary public, you are only to notarize a document at the time it was signed. The notary has to sign and date it. It is unlawful to notarize any document with a future date. If the notary public is caught doing this, he/she will lose their notary and may be fined.

2007-02-06 10:44:15 · answer #1 · answered by Çåŗőľîņẫ§ħŷġĭ®ł 5 · 0 0

When a notary notarizes a signature on a document, the notary must witness the signature and see an ID to prove the identity of the signer (unless they personally know the signer). The notary adds his signature, his notary stamp, and the DATE the document was signed in front of him to the document. If he fails to do these things, the notarization is invalid, and the notary can lose his commission to be a notary public.

2007-02-06 18:52:20 · answer #2 · answered by Mama Pastafarian 7 · 1 0

Yes, but it is unlawful.

2007-02-06 18:37:52 · answer #3 · answered by beez 7 · 0 1

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