If you are talking about being signed by the spouses, then no. Before a divorce is final it has to be approved by a judge. The judge actually grants the divorce, your signatures only show that you both agree to the divorce.
Then you're NOT divorced. Both husband and wife MUST sign the divorce papers for the disillusion of marriage to be legal.
Not until the divorce is final!
No. You aren't divorced until the decree is signed by the judge and entered into the record.
Your second marriage is not valid. You need to complete the divorce and then get married to your present partner again.
yes
Yes. A bill was signed in April 2005 allowing a pregnant woman do divorce, saying that it was unlawful to deny her divorce because of her gender.
Generally, the divorce is legal once the decree has been issued.
Yes, you would need to divorce the second spouse because the first marriage is still legally valid. Since the first spouse never signed the divorce papers, you are still married to them, making the second marriage invalid under most legal systems. To resolve the situation, you should seek a divorce from the first spouse to legally end that marriage before considering your options regarding the second marriage.
No. The judgment would be entered by the court. You can visit the court and request a copy of the judgment of divorce.
signed by both parties
Absolutely not. You would still be married to your first spouse and your remarriage would be invalid. You cannot be legally remarried while you are still married to your spouse. Papers "about to be signed" are not signed and carry no legal significance whatsoever. You are not divorced until the judge signs the decree and it is entered into the record.
30 days in some states