Jump to content

Australian Notice Of Intended Marriage Form


Recommended Posts

Does anybody know anyone in Khon Kaen/Nong Khai who can witness a signature on an Australian Notice of Intended Marriage form?

It says that an Australian Diplomatic Officer, an Australian Consular Officer, an employee of the commonwealth authorized under paragraph 3 © of the Consular Fees Act 1955, or an employee of the Australian Trade Commission authorized under paragraph 3 (d) of the Consular Fees Act 1955 or a notary public can witness the signature only.

Does this warrant a trip to BKK or does anybody know if these type of people would reside out of the capital.

Thanks

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Does anybody know anyone in Khon Kaen/Nong Khai who can witness a signature on an Australian Notice of Intended Marriage form?

It says that an Australian Diplomatic Officer, an Australian Consular Officer, an employee of the commonwealth authorized under paragraph 3 © of the Consular Fees Act 1955, or an employee of the Australian Trade Commission authorized under paragraph 3 (d) of the Consular Fees Act 1955 or a notary public can witness the signature only.

Does this warrant a trip to BKK or does anybody know if these type of people would reside out of the capital.

Thanks

if this is a stat.dec.form proving you are free to marry(i.e single or proof of divorce if you've been married before)then it has to be done at australian embassy in bangkok.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

ok i have seen the instructions,it says it can be witnessed by a notary public.That means you just have to find a local thai solicitor in your town/city to witness your signature and that would be acceptable to the australian authorities,but the solicitor has to be a notary public,and they put a stamp or seal in the place where you sign the document.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

yes i know what you mean,maybe ask her to find the largest law firm in town there will be someone who will speak some english to understand the form and they will have at least one solicitor in the firm who has authority to sign and stamp notary public.Why not google yourself Kon kaen solicitors and see what comes up.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

FOUND a clause :o now im super happy!

in the small print

'if a party to an intended marriage cannot conveniently sign this notice at the time it is intended to give notice of the intended marriage, the other party may sign the notice and give it to the proposed authorized celebrant. However, in this case, the party who has not signed the notice must sign it in the presence of that celebrant or another authrozied celebrant before the marriage is solemnized'

Hence, she can sign it once she arrive in Australia. Ahhhh thats sweet. A lesson for others.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

FOUND a clause :o now im super happy!

in the small print

'if a party to an intended marriage cannot conveniently sign this notice at the time it is intended to give notice of the intended marriage, the other party may sign the notice and give it to the proposed authorized celebrant. However, in this case, the party who has not signed the notice must sign it in the presence of that celebrant or another authrozied celebrant before the marriage is solemnized'

Hence, she can sign it once she arrive in Australia. Ahhhh thats sweet. A lesson for others.

If you sure about it go for it. From experience I would do everything in your power to confirm with the requirements. If a form changes or you have a case officer who does not see the fine print because he/she is used to see the proper application with the sign/seal you got problems. If you can afford delays,disappointments and runarounds go with your version.If you have all the required/proper paperwork good... if you have more and backup even better. There are no real shortcuts in this game.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

FOUND a clause :o now im super happy!

in the small print

'if a party to an intended marriage cannot conveniently sign this notice at the time it is intended to give notice of the intended marriage, the other party may sign the notice and give it to the proposed authorized celebrant. However, in this case, the party who has not signed the notice must sign it in the presence of that celebrant or another authrozied celebrant before the marriage is solemnized'

Hence, she can sign it once she arrive in Australia. Ahhhh thats sweet. A lesson for others.

Yes this is correct, My fiance has just submitted her application and did not need to sign the NOIM form just myself and our marriage celebrant wrote a letter in regards to the wedding dates etc and also included a section of the law indicating that she did not need to sign the form and will do so before the marriage takes place,

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.










×
×
  • Create New...