Mobile Notary in Costa Mesa
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Whether you have no time to search for a notary...
...or you need help obtaining a California apostille for your foreign-bound documents, you WILL NOT find a more reliable, reasonably priced mobile notary and apostille service -- from Hollywood Boulevard to San Francisco to Irvine to Costa Mesa— Mobile City Notary will be there.
You get the expertise of a California notary certified as a Notary Signing Agent PLUS the convenience of having a California notary available in Costa Mesa , CA.
...or you need help obtaining a California apostille for your foreign-bound documents, you WILL NOT find a more reliable, reasonably priced mobile notary and apostille service -- from Hollywood Boulevard to San Francisco to Irvine to Costa Mesa— Mobile City Notary will be there.
You get the expertise of a California notary certified as a Notary Signing Agent PLUS the convenience of having a California notary available in Costa Mesa , CA.
What types of documents do you work with?
- Affidavits of Every Variety
- Certification of Document Copies (by the document custodian/owner)
- Compliance Forms for Costa Mesa, CA
- Divorce and Separation Agreements
- Loan Packages and other Bank Documents
- Power-of-Attorney Forms
- Ordained Minister in Costa Mesa
- Prenuptial/Premarital Agreements
- Trusts and Wills
- Foreign Bound Apostille
- Wedding Officiant in Costa Mesa
Costa Mesa is a city in Orange County, California. The population was 109,960 at the 2010 United States Census. Since its incorporation in 1953, the city has grown from a semi-rural farming community of 16,840 to a primarily suburban and edge city with an economy based on retail, commerce, and light manufacturing.
Members of the Gabrieleño/Tongva and Juaneño/Luiseño nations long inhabited the area. After the 1769 expedition of Gaspar de Portolà, a Spanish expedition led by Father Junípero Serra named the area Vallejo de Santa Ana (Valley of Saint Anne). On November 1, 1776, Mission San Juan Capistrano became the area's first permanent European settlement in Alta California, New Spain.
In 1801, the Spanish Empire granted 62,500 acres (253 km2) to Jose Antonio Yorba, which he named Rancho San Antonio. Yorba's great rancho included the lands where the communities of Olive, Orange, Villa Park, Santa Ana, Tustin, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach stand today.
After the Mexican-American war, California became part of the United States and American settlers arrived in this area and formed the town of Fairview in the 1880s near the modern intersection of Harbor Boulevard and Adams Avenue. An 1889 flood wiped out the railroad serving the community, however, and it shriveled.