In post below, mention was made of UPS envelope arriving broken to 2nd notary of a split signing. Someone else said it may not have been the 1st notary's fault but rather damage done during shipping.
A few months ago, I was at our local Fedex hub dropping off a package. There was a young lady there also. She was dressed in faded jeans, flip flops and a nice summery top. The only reason I noticed her was because the Fedex clerk had stopped her from stuffing a handful of docs (approx. 150+ pages) into a cardboard envelope. The clerk told her that envelope would probably burst and her documents would be scattered as they weren't bound by any clip or rubber band. Clerk further told her the shipment would be more protected in one of those polyethylene paks. This latter as clerk handed her one. Customer hurriedly commented she didn't have time to relabel as she had to rush to her next appointment. Clerk told her she'd take care of it and customer left.
At first I was impressed with clerk's helpfulness. Then, I thought Wow! the audacity of that young lady allowing someone else to repackage what appeared like a loan package (the NPPI). Now, I don't know for sure that it was and I don't know if that young lady is a notary. At the time, it appeared to me that she's a notary who was rushing to drop shipment and rushing to her next signing. I could be wrong.
But, I digressed. Yes, docs sometimes are put in wrong shipping containers and those containers may be damaged during shipping -- for whatever reason, overpacking or mishandling. |