Court Order: What this document is and why it may require an apostille
A Court Order is an official directive issued by a judicial authority. When such an order must be recognized internationally, it often requires an apostille to confirm authenticity.
How We Help With the Apostille Process
Court Order
Court Order: When this document is typically used internationally
Court orders may involve custody, property disputes, judgments, or other legal determinations that need recognition abroad. Foreign courts and legal institutions typically require authenticated documentation.
Court Order: Issuing level and authentication requirements
Court orders are generally issued at the state level, though federal court orders follow federal authentication procedures. The issuing authority determines the correct apostille process.
We can notarize all sorts of documents and legal instruments such as:
- Separation Agreement
- Settlement Agreement
- Signature Affidavit
- Simple Will
- Spousal Consent Form
- Subordination Agreement
- Tax Form (W-9, W-2, etc.)
- Temporary Guardianship Agreement
- Trust Amendment
- Trust Certification
- Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) Financing Statement
- Vehicle Bill of Sale
- Vendor Agreement
- Waiver of Right to Claim Against Estate
- Warranty Deed
- Will Codicil
- Work for Hire Agreement
- Zoning Compliance Certificate
- Affidavit of Domicile
- Child Support Agreement
- Corporate Resolution
- Employee Non-Compete Agreement
- Environmental Impact Statement
- Escrow Agreement
- Estate Plan
- Exclusive License Agreement
- Final Release of Waiver
- Grant Deed
- Health Insurance Claim Form
- HIPAA Authorization
- Homeowner Association (HOA) Agreement
- Incorporation Documents
- Installment Payment Agreement