Deleted
Joined: May 4, 2024 2:37:14 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Aug 31, 2019 19:04:36 GMT -5
There are notaries that come to the house- we used one when DH was in his last months and he had to sign off on my election of a pension with no Survivor benefit. He was too weak to travel and immune-compromised as well. The issue with witnesses may be a little trickier. I'm sure they want to make sure your DH was lucid enough to understand what he was signing. The lawyer may want to provide them because they've done this before and know what to look for. He would have to provide the witnesses. When we did DH's health care directive, we did it at school where I could ask people to go downstairs with me. I don't have that luxury now.
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seriousthistime
Senior Member
Joined: Dec 22, 2010 20:27:07 GMT -5
Posts: 4,709
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Post by seriousthistime on Aug 31, 2019 19:09:01 GMT -5
And also to avoid any appearance of undue influence. Best for the lawyer to provide them.
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