You will need to take a 3 hour educational course online followed by applying for the notary and filing for a bond.
Yes, as long as the person signing the document is in the presence of the notary in FLORIDA, and that the notary wording complies with Florida law (i.e., it must say "STATE OF FLORIDA, COUNTY OF ______________" and have all other requirements of the Florida Statutes).
No. You must be a resident of Florida to be appointed as a notary public there.
Notaries may only act within their state, and if you have moved to Florida and wish to become a notary you must go through the entire process again in Florida. After you leave New York you are no longer a notary.
No because to be a notary you need to be a resident of that particular state.
No.
There is a National Notary Association full of resources and help on how to become a notary in your state. You can find the information at nationalnotary.org.
Yes, as long as the Georgia resident is actually in the State of Florida when the Florida notary notarizes the document, and the venue on the document must state "STATE OF FLORIDA, COUNTY OF ________".
No. Florida notaries have no authority outside the State of Florida. This is basic notary law and I hope that you are not a notary yourself asking such a question. See the Florida Governor's Reference Manual for Notaries at www.flgov.com/notary_ref_manual.
No. When a Georgia notary leaves the boundaries of the State of Georgia, his jursidiction ends and he can not act officially. Likewise, Florida notaries can not perform notarial acts outside Florida.
You must be at least 18 years old and a resident of the state in which you want to be a notary. Get the application for a notary commission from your state or from the nonprofit National Notary Association (NNA). You also must pay a filing fee.
You can become a public notary in any state by sitting for the notary exam. You need to pass with a certain score and can generally retake the test until you pass.
Anyone who has applied for and received their state notary certification. More specifically, notary public is not a title that arrives for free when you become a doctor, lawyer, or judge, you must still apply to become a notary and pass the notary test.