Ph: + 353 1 671 2773 or 087 3899984
cy@yor.ie
1-2 Lower Leeson Street, Dublin 2
Please contact to make an appointment. Phone 01 671 2773 or email cy@yor.ie.
(Office hours from 9.00 a.m. to 1.00 p.m. and 2.00 p.m. to 5.00 p.m., Monday to Friday)
Mobile Notary Services can be provided outside these hours
We are obliged to obtain identification and you will be required to bring the following documentation with you:-
1. Passport,
or
2. Driving Licence (or other acceptable form of photo i.d.)
and
3. a Recent utility bill (within 3 months with your name and current address).
These will be copied and retained on file for five years. 
Anti-Money Laundering Measures
The Code of Conduct for Notaries Public in Ireland obliges Notaries, as a matter of good practice, to establish the identity of all persons appearing before them to conduct notarial business. This duty is made a statutory obligation for Solicitors and Notaries under legislation enacted to outlaw money-laundering and the financing of terrorism. Furthermore, measures to prevent money-laundering and report suspicious transactions are imposed under the Criminal Justice Act 1994 and EU Directives 91/308/EC 2001/97/EC and 2005/60/EC.
Cathal N. Young O'Reilly & Co. Solicitors - Dublin Solicitors
The Notary Public Profession
Notary Public Nataries Public in Dublin  notary public (or notary or public notary) in the common law world is a public officer constituted by law to serve the public in non-contentious matters usually concerned with estates, deeds, powers-of-attorney, and foreign and international business. A notary's main functions are to administer oaths and affirmations, take affidavits and statutory declarations, witness and authenticate the execution of certain classes of documents, take acknowledgments of deeds and other conveyances, protest notes and bills of exchange, provide notice of foreign drafts, prepare marine or ship's protests in cases of damage, provide exemplifications and notarial copies, and perform certain other official acts depending on the jurisdiction.[1] Any such act is known as a notarization. The term notary public only refers to common-law notaries and should not be confused with civil-law notaries.

Ph: +353 1 6712773 or +353873899884

Irish Notary Public Services in Dublin

Power of Attorney

A Power of Attorney is a document signed by one person (usually called the 'donor') giving another person (usually called the 'donee' or the 'attorney') power to sign documents on the donor's behalf and to do such things in relation to his or her affairs as are described specifically (a limited power) or generally (a general power) in the document.

If, for instance, you are buying, selling or mortgaging property in a foreign country, it may be convenient for you to give a Power of Attorney to a person in that country, usually a lawyer, to deal with the transaction on your behalf. This will save you having to travel abroad to attend to formalities, and may help to smoothen out any problems affecting the transaction generally. In most cases, you will be required to sign the Power of Attorney in front of a Notary Public.

The Power of Attorney will usually be drawn up by the foreign lawyer to whom authority is to be given. This is because an Irish Notary Public cannot be expected to have a knowledge of different foreign languages or to be familiar with the relevant formalities regarding Powers of Attorney in different countries.

A Power of Attorney is a document signed by one person (usually called the 'donor') giving another person (usually called the 'donee' or the 'attorney') power to sign documents on the donor's behalf and to do such things in relation to his or her affairs as are described specifically (a limited power) or generally (a general power) in the document.
You will usually receive the Power of Attorney by e-mail from the foreign lawyer, often accompanied by detailed instructions about signing it. Bring the e-mail with you to the Irish Notary. This will assist the Notary Public in complying with the formalities of the particular country for which the Power of Attorney is intended. You should also ask the foreign lawyer (or the person appointed Attorney) if it is necessary to have the document 'Legalised' or Apostilled. These are different forms of official verification of signatures which the Notary Public will explain to you if necessary.

Powers of Attorney are important legal documents with potentially serious legal and financial consequences for the persons signing them. It is important, therefore, that you have competent advice as to the legal, financial and taxation implications of any intended foreign transaction and as regards the wisdom of giving a Power of Attorney to a foreign lawyer or other person whom you may never have met. As the Notary Public is neither the draftsman of the foreign Power of Attorney nor your legal adviser, it is a matter for you to have any foreign language document, which you intend to produce, properly translated before going to the Notary.

The Notary before whom you appear will require your assurance that you understand the document and its purpose and may require you to sign a formal acknowledgement to this effect. The Notary will however ensure that all other formalities regarding the execution of the Power of Attorney are complied with such as establishing identity and legal capacity, attesting your signature and providing a notarial act.

 

Dublin Solicitors, Notary Public and Commissioner of Oaths  Notaries public (also called "notaries", "notarial officers", or "public notaries") hold an office which can trace its origins back to the ancient Roman Republic, before Cicero 106-43 B.C., when they were called scribae ("scribes"), tabellius ("writer"), or notarius ("notary"). They are easily the oldest continuing branch of the legal profession worldwide.[citation needed]

 

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Notary Public Services

Cathal Young, Notary Public
History of Notary Publics
Dublin Solicitors, Notary Public and Commissioner of Oaths

 

 

Apostille and Legalisation (Legalization)
Power of Attorney
Money Laundering Obligations
Making an appointment
Notary Public Profession

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Additional Services
Commisssioner for Oaths

 

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