Legal Question in Wills and Trusts in California

Power of Attorney

When signing a document with a power of attorney, how should the signature be written.


Asked on 2/06/07, 11:58 am

2 Answers from Attorneys

Jennifer Sawday Tredway, Lumsdaine & Doyle LLP

Re: Power of Attorney

Generally, and without reviewing the power of attorney -- you could sign as follows:

John Smith by Jane Smith as his attorney-in-fact.

John Smith being the principal and Jane Smith being the attorney-in-fact.

The person who is the attorney-in-fact is the signer or holder of the power of attorney.

A carefully drafted power of attorney will have a statement in Article 3 about how to sign under the power of attorney.

I hope this helps.

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Answered on 2/06/07, 12:02 pm
Chris Johnson Christopher B. Johnson, Attorney at Law

Re: Power of Attorney

"John Smith, Jenny Smith, under power of attorney dated 1/5/07." The principal's name is first (who you're signing for), followed by the agent's name (yours), followed by the power of attorney information.

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Answered on 2/06/07, 12:07 pm


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