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joeyjoejoe



Joined: 24 Sep 2006

PostPosted: Wed Jun 20, 2012 6:00 pm    Post subject: Australians Reply with quote

I'm hoping this could be come a helpful thread for Australians seeking info

Are there any Australians living in Korea who are a

� Justice of the Peace
� Notary Public
� Legal Practitioner (holding a current Practising Certificate)
� A person authorised to administer an oath under Section 26 of the Oaths Act 1900

The embassy has informed me (as at 21/06/2012) the cost of witnessing or certifying a copy of a document is 34,000won
This is ridiculously high considering it's free in Australia

So I'm wondering if there are any Australians present who are able and willing to witness/certify documents for Australians?
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John Junior



Joined: 31 Jan 2012
Location: Somewhere

PostPosted: Thu Jun 21, 2012 4:34 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

MATE, you will have to go to the Aussie embassy at Kyobo. It is near the huge yet crappy bookstore. And as for paying well we are in S.K now, yes I know in Australia you walk in to any chemist and it's certified for free, but things are different here.
As for teaching here I say a little prayer for you because it sucks and Koreans are social retards. Mind you education is my profession and I have never worked with such morons in my life. Good luck you will need it.

Johnny
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Skippy



Joined: 18 Jan 2003
Location: Daejeon

PostPosted: Thu Jun 21, 2012 7:19 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Really to avoid paying a 34,000 won cost you are looking for an AUSTRALIAN notary or justice of the peace. Why would any of those people be working and living in Korea. Wow the money to be made signing documents for free in a country that I could maybe get 1 or 2 people who need me a day. Never mind the legal issues of a different country.

I am not certain, but I do not think those people can legally notarize/certify in a foreign country. Remember the embassy/consulate is considered Australian soil. More research needs to be done.

Maybe you might find a Australian Bar certified lawyer here in Korea, but why would he waste his time signing for free a document. He would likely charge even more then the embassy and heck probably harder to find and deal with.

Wow! Talk cheap.

34,000 Won is not that bad. I remember I got charged 40 or 50 bucks in Canada for Notary down the street from the Korean Consulate.

*added on*

Not all verifications are the same. So maybe you get somebody to sign or verify a document. Will the relevant government body. I highly doubt Korean immigration will accept a JP signature from anybody. Even less likely to try translate and or figure out what it is. Remember lazy - he will look for official stamps (ala Australia consulate) and that. Does it need to be an Australian Notary or JP. At times Korean Notaries will do. Different bodies have different procedures. You want to be careful and think saving a few bucks might end up cost you more is redoing properly, time spent, and possible legal entanglements.

Add on your have JPs for different States and Territories. Once again are the even legal if done outside of the JPs registered state.

Why, sometimes it is free in the Australia. Is because most Justice of the Peaces are voluntary and are not allowed to charge fees. Yet embassy and lawyers are allowed to charge.

"Yet again more research to be done"
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pegasus64128



Joined: 20 Aug 2011

PostPosted: Thu Jun 21, 2012 4:28 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

John Junior wrote:
MATE, you will have to go to the Aussie embassy at Kyobo. It is near the huge yet crappy bookstore. And as for paying well we are in S.K now, yes I know in Australia you walk in to any chemist and it's certified for free, but things are different here.
As for teaching here I say a little prayer for you because it sucks and Koreans are social retards. Mind you education is my profession and I have never worked with such morons in my life. Good luck you will need it.

Johnny


I love Aussies. That's how I know most apologists really are from crap.
In my mind, despite it's flaws, Australia is the one country that really does have the academic standards, quality of life, and opportunities that are well ahead of Korea, not to mention the beaches. And how do most of them feel about Korea? Most Aussies I've met say it's crap. My first recruiter in Korea said he didn't like Aussies because they were picky. No, they have standards.

Korea is for the most part a craphole. It's a comfortable, safe craphole. I find ways to be happy here but it's really an oasis mindset if I'm honest with myself.

Korea insists on being this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pKd06s1LNik

and succeeds marvelously.
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atwood



Joined: 26 Dec 2009

PostPosted: Thu Jun 21, 2012 5:04 pm    Post subject: Re: Australians Reply with quote

joeyjoejoe wrote:
I'm hoping this could be come a helpful thread for Australians seeking info

Are there any Australians living in Korea who are a

� Justice of the Peace
� Notary Public
� Legal Practitioner (holding a current Practising Certificate)
� A person authorised to administer an oath under Section 26 of the Oaths Act 1900

The embassy has informed me (as at 21/06/2012) the cost of witnessing or certifying a copy of a document is 34,000won
This is ridiculously high considering it's free in Australia

So I'm wondering if there are any Australians present who are able and willing to witness/certify documents for Australians?

I had to get something notarized for the U.S. (where your bank will do it for free), went to a Korean lawyer, and it was 45,000won. So 34,000 ain't so bad.
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pegasus64128



Joined: 20 Aug 2011

PostPosted: Thu Jun 21, 2012 5:36 pm    Post subject: Re: Australians Reply with quote

atwood wrote:
joeyjoejoe wrote:
I'm hoping this could be come a helpful thread for Australians seeking info

Are there any Australians living in Korea who are a

� Justice of the Peace
� Notary Public
� Legal Practitioner (holding a current Practising Certificate)
� A person authorised to administer an oath under Section 26 of the Oaths Act 1900

The embassy has informed me (as at 21/06/2012) the cost of witnessing or certifying a copy of a document is 34,000won
This is ridiculously high considering it's free in Australia

So I'm wondering if there are any Australians present who are able and willing to witness/certify documents for Australians?

I had to get something notarized for the U.S. (where your bank will do it for free), went to a Korean lawyer, and it was 45,000won. So 34,000 ain't so bad.


It aint so bad for you because you have to pay something similar. In Australia it's free apparently.

Rather than applaud Australia's better deal in this department, you reduce everything to the level of America and Canada - as if that's always the answer...

And this is just the beginning. There are more Americans every year in Korea so we're all going to be hearing a lot more: "Wow, I walked down the street last night and I didn't even get raped. I love this country" as if their healthy and safety record is worth a damn, compared with almost ANY country.
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motiontodismiss



Joined: 18 Dec 2011

PostPosted: Thu Jun 21, 2012 5:41 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

pegasus64128 wrote:

I love Aussies. That's how I know most apologists really are from crap.
In my mind, despite it's flaws, Australia is the one country that really does have the academic standards, quality of life, and opportunities that are well ahead of Korea, not to mention the beaches.


Australia's great. Except for all the poisonous snakes, jellyfish and sea creatures.

Korea IS a shithole. And I'm Korean.


Last edited by motiontodismiss on Thu Jun 21, 2012 5:42 pm; edited 1 time in total
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Hokie21



Joined: 01 Mar 2011

PostPosted: Thu Jun 21, 2012 5:42 pm    Post subject: Re: Australians Reply with quote

pegasus64128 wrote:
atwood wrote:
joeyjoejoe wrote:
I'm hoping this could be come a helpful thread for Australians seeking info

Are there any Australians living in Korea who are a

� Justice of the Peace
� Notary Public
� Legal Practitioner (holding a current Practising Certificate)
� A person authorised to administer an oath under Section 26 of the Oaths Act 1900

The embassy has informed me (as at 21/06/2012) the cost of witnessing or certifying a copy of a document is 34,000won
This is ridiculously high considering it's free in Australia

So I'm wondering if there are any Australians present who are able and willing to witness/certify documents for Australians?

I had to get something notarized for the U.S. (where your bank will do it for free), went to a Korean lawyer, and it was 45,000won. So 34,000 ain't so bad.


It aint so bad for you because you have to pay something similar. In Australia it's free apparently.

Rather than applaud Australia's better deal in this department, you reduce everything to the level of America and Canada - as if that's always the answer...

And this is just the beginning. There are more Americans every year in Korea so we're all going to be hearing a lot more: "Wow, I walked down the street last night and I didn't even get raped. I love this country" as if their healthy and safety record is worth a damn, compared with almost ANY country.


Why don't you reread it again. He paid 45,000 in KOREA, it's also free in America. He said that 34,000 in KOREA isn't bad as some places IN KOREA charge more.

Get off your high horse.
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atwood



Joined: 26 Dec 2009

PostPosted: Thu Jun 21, 2012 5:46 pm    Post subject: Re: Australians Reply with quote

pegasus64128 wrote:
atwood wrote:
joeyjoejoe wrote:
I'm hoping this could be come a helpful thread for Australians seeking info

Are there any Australians living in Korea who are a

� Justice of the Peace
� Notary Public
� Legal Practitioner (holding a current Practising Certificate)
� A person authorised to administer an oath under Section 26 of the Oaths Act 1900

The embassy has informed me (as at 21/06/2012) the cost of witnessing or certifying a copy of a document is 34,000won
This is ridiculously high considering it's free in Australia

So I'm wondering if there are any Australians present who are able and willing to witness/certify documents for Australians?

I had to get something notarized for the U.S. (where your bank will do it for free), went to a Korean lawyer, and it was 45,000won. So 34,000 ain't so bad.


It aint so bad for you because you have to pay something similar. In Australia it's free apparently.

Rather than applaud Australia's better deal in this department, you reduce everything to the level of America and Canada - as if that's always the answer...

And this is just the beginning. There are more Americans every year in Korea so we're all going to be hearing a lot more: "Wow, I walked down the street last night and I didn't even get raped. I love this country" as if their healthy and safety record is worth a damn, compared with almost ANY country.

Can you read? I posted it's normally free in the U.S.

As for the last part of your post, two questions: Isn't Canada a part of America, and what's a "healthy" record, mate?
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koala5



Joined: 21 Aug 2006

PostPosted: Thu Jun 21, 2012 6:23 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

hahaha yes all the dangerous animals are here too. What snakes can't live too?

what a crazy world!