The general rule for notaries and family documents is:
A notary public who has a direct or indirect beneficial interest in a document may not notarize such a document. The better practice is not to notarize for a spouse or family member in order to preserve the integrity of the notarization and to prevent a challenge to the notarization.
The document must be signed in front of the notary by the person. That is the whole point of it being notarized.
no
Only if the wife is actually a Notary!
Only if the wife is actually a Notary!
There would be no issue with doing that. A notary can notarize the signature for anyone, though there may be restrictions about doing it for a relation, in this case there are none.
A Notary Public (at least in Illinois--I have not researched the issue regarding other states) may notarize any signature other than his or her own. That said, in some communities, such a notarization is considered to be inappropriate (though not ineffectual). It would be vulnerable to challenge if the notary derives any benefit from the document.
No. It it is not. The law states that a notary may not notarize for friends or relatives.
If the ex wife is a notary public she can notarize a legitimate document in accordance with the requirements of her notary license for anyone she chooses.
Yes, certainly it is acceptable. As a wife you can choose your husbands clothes for him.
It is illegal for anyone to knowingly sign someone else's name without a power of attorney granting rights in which to do so.
Yes a wife has monetary rights to her husbands home in a divorce.
My wife says "cuz husbands usually deserve it".
no
It's called 'My Two Husbands'.