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Whis is the clause in the Indian Judiciary, laid out by supreme court , that says the notary is not required as a witness in civil issues where the notary had signed the will? Also any online links or website can i get the various clauses of indian judiaciary related top civil mattrers?

2007-08-29 21:54:18 · 2 answers · asked by learn d 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

2 answers

I would think it means that since the notary sign and put the notary seal on a document, means the notary does not have to physically appear as a witness. I know nothing about Indian Judiciary, so it is probably best for you to google it and do your research. I am sure you can research it as easily as I can.

2007-08-29 22:11:52 · answer #1 · answered by lilly4 6 · 0 1

I imagine it would be under tribal law!

What are you talking about in civil issues. They and any lawyer, can notarize something, however, they aren't always notarizing that it is a true copy, or even the original, just that you signed it.

I can't think of any reason! Usually court clerks are notary's as well, and filing it in a court gives it some legal standing!

I know nothing about the Indian judiciary, or tribal law!

2007-08-30 05:04:53 · answer #2 · answered by cantcu 7 · 0 0

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