Personal simple power of attorney
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ Unit:
I can't go to _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I acknowledge all the relevant documents signed by the client within the scope of authority in. All the responsibilities arising therefrom shall be borne by myself.
Principal (signature or seal):
Consignee (signature):
Date:
Extended information:
Matters needing attention in personal authorization:
1. Basic information of principal and trustee
generally includes the name and gender of principal and trustee. The basic information should be as complete and detailed as possible to facilitate the third party to check the relevant information and the notice of related matters.
In practice, it is not necessary to express all these basic information, but the ID number and contact number are indispensable. The power of attorney is signed by the principal and issued to a third party, indicating that the agent has the power of attorney, so the power of attorney should include not only the basic information of the agent, but also the basic information of the principal.
2. Entrustment
Entrustment is simply what the trustor entrusts the trustee to do with the third party. The entrusted matters must be clearly expressed, and what the trustee wants to do should be clearly listed in the power of attorney, so as to anticipate the scope of the trustee's behavior and control his own risks. If the entrusted matters are not clear, the power of attorney will be considered as unclear based on the protection of the trust of the third party in legal documents, so that the principal and the trustee will bear joint liability to the third party.
3. Entrustment authority
What the trustee is allowed to do has been clearly expressed in the entrustment matters. The following needs to explain the extent to which the trustee can do this, which is the entrustment authority. The agency authority of the agent can be divided into:
(1) one entrustment, that is, the agent can only handle civil legal acts on a certain entrusted matter;
(2) Special entrustment, that is, the agent is entrusted to handle the same kind of civil legal acts repeatedly in a certain period of time;
(3) long-term entrustment, that is, the agent is entrusted to handle a variety of civil legal acts related to a certain kind of affairs or a certain subject matter within a certain period of time.
No matter what kind of delegation, the delegation authority should be clearly expressed, and the delegation authority should be clearly listed one by one, so as to avoid adding the word "such as" after listing the delegation authority, which will bring legal risks of unclear authorization.
4. Term of entrustment
For the principal, if there is no term of entrustment, the risks brought by the misconduct of the trustee cannot be expected. It is very important for all parties to define the term of entrustment.
5. Signature and date of signature of the client
No matter what form the main text of the power of attorney appears, whether it is printed or handwritten, it will only take effect if the signature is signed by the client himself, so it is necessary to ensure that the signature of the client at the signature is effective. Similarly, the signing date of the client at the signing office seems trivial, but the act of signing or not signing casually is the risk.
Through the above article, you should know how to write a simple personal power of attorney. Power of attorney is a very common civil legal act. Even if the power of attorney is relatively simple, it should include the name of the client, the information of the trustee, the entrusted matters, the entrusted period and other elements. When people write the entrustment, they should write clearly and make clear what the trustee does. A signed power of attorney is valid.