top of page
Search

5 Things That Can Go Wrong Without a Certified Mobile Notary (And How to Avoid Them)

Nobody schedules a closing, signs an estate plan, or executes a business contract expecting things to go wrong. But notarization errors happen more often than people realize, and the consequences range from annoying delays to documents that are completely invalid.


This post is direct and educational because the truth is more useful than comfort. Here are five of the most common notarization problems that affect real estate professionals, estate planning clients, and businesses, and what avoiding them actually looks like.


1. The Notary Certificate Was Completed Incorrectly


Florida requires specific language for acknowledgment and jurat certificates. If the wrong certificate type is used, if the venue is incorrect, if the date is off, or if the notary's commission information is incomplete, the document may be rejected by a recorder's office, a lender, or a court.


A trained Notary Signing Agent knows which certificate type belongs on which document. This is not guesswork. It is training and experience. Simply Noble Services gets this right every time because the standard is zero tolerance for errors that delay closings or invalidate documents.


2. The Signer Was Not Properly Identified


Florida law requires a notary to personally know the signer or identify them using satisfactory evidence, which typically means a current, government-issued photo ID. If a notary fails to properly verify identity or accepts an expired ID, the notarization is defective.


Defective notarizations create liability for the notary, but more immediately, they create problems for the person or institution relying on that document. In a real estate closing, this can mean the entire transaction needs to be restarted. In an estate plan, it can mean the document is challenged in court.


Simply Noble Services follows proper identification procedures at every appointment. No exceptions and no workarounds.


3. The Notary Was Not Present for the Signature


This is a more serious problem than it sounds. Some people believe that if a document is already signed, a notary can simply acknowledge it after the fact with the correct date. In most cases, Florida law requires the notary to witness the act of signing or have the signer personally appear and acknowledge the signature in the notary's presence.

Notarizing a document without the signer present is improper notarization and can constitute a criminal act in Florida. Working with a mobile notary who comes directly to the signer eliminates this risk entirely.


Convenience should never come at the cost of compliance. A mobile notary who travels to the signer is the right way to do this every single time.


4. The Document Was Altered After Notarization


Any changes to a notarized document after the notarization is complete can render the notarization invalid. This is especially important in real estate and estate planning where documents are often reviewed by multiple parties before and after execution.

Best practice is to have documents reviewed and finalized before the notary arrives. Simply Noble Services encourages clients and their attorneys or closing coordinators to confirm document readiness prior to the appointment so nothing needs to change at the table.


5. The Notary Was Disqualified to Act


Florida law prohibits a notary from acting in a transaction where they have a direct financial interest or where they are named as a beneficiary, grantor, grantee, or party to the document. Using a disqualified notary creates a defective notarization even if everything else was done correctly.


This is one reason why using a professional, independent mobile notary matters. Simply Noble Services has no personal stake in any client's real estate transaction, estate plan, or business document. The only interest is in making sure the document is executed properly.


The Bottom Line


These are not rare or theoretical problems. They happen in real transactions with real consequences. The answer is not to hope the notary gets it right. The answer is to work with a notary who knows Florida law, follows the proper procedures every time, and takes the responsibility of this role seriously.


Simply Noble Services serves real estate professionals, estate planning attorneys, and businesses across Osceola, Polk, and Orange County with mobile notary services that are professional, accurate, and reliable. If you are building a referral network or looking for a signing agent you can call without hesitation, this is that relationship.


Ready to work with a mobile notary who shows up prepared and on time? Visit www.simplynobleservices.com or call to schedule your signing today.

 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page