Property legal descriptions can be found on a property's officially recorded documents. A document search online or at the Recorder's Office may be necessary. Due to space limitations, the county is sometimes unable to use complete legal descriptions on the website, Assessor notices, and tax bills from the Treasurer.
The affidavit of financial information or “AFI” is a document each litigant must complete under oath and file in any Arizona family court case involving requests for child support, spousal maintenance, and/or attorney's fees. A copy of the form used in Maricopa County Superior Court can be found here.
How to Apply Visit your Student Center and log in using your MEID@maricopa and your Password. Click on the High School Dual Enroll Forms tile to locate the Maricopa Grant Form. Complete the form.
To start your deed search, first determine the county covering the land at the time the deed was made. Then contact that county recorders office. All Arizona counties have at least some land records online, check the websites below.
Documents recorded with the Maricopa County Recorder's Office are available and searchable through the Maricopa County Recorded Document Search. To locate a copy of your deed, search using your last name and first name. If you know when you recorded your document, you can use the dates to narrow your search.
After the durable power is in effect, it will be valid through even through incapacity. It will only end at death or if the Principal revokes the durable power of attorney. As long as a Principal remains competent, he or she has the authority to make legal decisions, even if a durable power of attorney is in effect.
An Arizona durable (financial) power of attorney is a document that allows a person ("principal") to give another person ("agent") decision-making power regarding financial matters. The form is especially useful if the principal can no longer make decisions for themselves due to mental instability.
A Durable Financial Power of Attorney gives your agent the authority to handle financial transactions on your behalf, even if you become incapacitated.
§ 14-5501, govern the creation and use of durable powers of attorney. To execute one, the principal must sign the document before a notary public, and in some cases, a witness may also need to be present. If the agent's authority involves managing real property, the document must meet additional recording requirements.