Fiduciary bond details with AmeriPro Surety? Regardless of the amount required, once the bond has been approved and the premium paid, the bond is issued by our agency to you immediately. A copy of the surety bond can be sent to you by email; however, it is the original surety bond — which you will sign as Principal — that you will want to file with the California probate court. The premium for a California probate bond is not a onetime payment. The premium renews annually on the anniversary of the probate surety bond’s issuance for as long as the underlying probate matter is active; or until the court formally “exonerates” the surety bond, in which case all obligations will cease.
Contractors licensed in Virginia are regulated by the Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation (DPOR). Laws, restrictions, and applying for contracting in the Commonwealth are found under the Code of Virginia, § 54.1-1106. Contractors must also furnish evidence of a surety bond in order to be licensed. AmeriPro Surety Bonds offers you the contractor surety bond as both a new (first time) and renewal surety bond.
The California DMV registration services bond is a $25,000 surety bond which is $250 annually. There is no credit check for this bond; it is issued to you immediately upon completion of an application and payment of the premium. Please call our agency today at 844-589-9732. Through the Occupational Licensing Division of the California Department of Motor Vehicles, private individuals and companies are allowed to share certain duties which historically have been conducted by a DMV field office. Find additional information at AmeriPro.
In Florida, you will be required to submit the obligation to the surety agency from where you purchased your surety bond (namely, us) and we will submit the application and the surety bond to the Florida Secretary of State. The $7,500 Florida notary bond is a surety bond required by the Notary Commission as a prerequisite for licensing. The Commission is also the obligee for this bond. The notary bond protects others from acts of fraud and criminal malfeasance in their performance of notarial acts. Of note, the notary bond protects others, only, from wrongful acts committed by a notary.
Required by a municipality or other public body as a condition to granting a license or permit to engage in a specified activity, this bond guarantees that the party seeking the license or permit (the obligor) will comply with applicable laws or regulations. These bonds can also be structured to provide indemnity guarantees to third parties who sustain injury or damage as a result of the obligor’s activities as described in the license or permit when such a guarantee is required. For example, businesses that hang signs over public sidewalks may be required to provide indemnity guarantees for injuries to pedestrians. See additional information at New York Probate bonds.