Texas Administrative Code
Title 37 - PUBLIC SAFETY AND CORRECTIONS
Part 1 - TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY
Chapter 15 - DRIVER LICENSE RULES
Subchapter B - APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS-ORIGINAL, RENEWAL, DUPLICATE, IDENTIFICATION CERTIFICATES
Section 15.22 - Notarizations
Universal Citation: 37 TX Admin Code § 15.22
Current through Reg. 50, No. 13; March 28, 2025
Original driver license applications must be verified by the applicant before a person authorized to administer oaths. Such oaths or affirmations may be administered by the following officials:
(1) within the State of Texas:
(A) a judge, clerk, or commissioner of any
court of record;
(B) a notary
public;
(C) a justice of the
peace;
(D) authorized employees of
the Department of Public Safety;
(2) from outside the State of Texas but within the physical limits of the United States and its territories:
(A) a clerk of any court of record having a
seal;
(B) a commissioner of deeds
duly appointed under the laws of the state;
(C) a notary public;
(3) from outside the physical limits of the United States and its territories:
(A) a
minister, a commissioner, or charge d'affaires of the United States, resident
and accredited to the country where the oath, affidavit or affirmation is
made;
(B) a consul-general, consul,
vice-consul, commercial agent, vice-commercial agent, deputy consul, or
consular agent of the United States, resident in the country where the oath,
affidavit, or affirmation is made;
(C) a notary public;
(4) within the armed forces of the United States:
(A) commissioned officers may
acknowledge the oath, affidavit, or affirmation of any member of such forces at
any place. They may also make such acknowledgments for the husband or wife and
their minor dependents, of any member of the armed forces;
(B) a seal may be used but is not required
for military notarizations;
(5) general:
(A) in the absence of evidence to the
contrary, it is presumed that all notarizations are legally made;
(B) the omission of the seal by officers
normally required to use same for notarization invalidates the oath;
(C) notarized driver license applications
must be dated not more than six months prior to date of application.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Texas may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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