No. Any agreement has to be "agreed" to by both parties.
No. An agreement is a negotiated and typically legally binding arrangement between parties. You can't get any agreement without the other party's signature.
A landlord can put a witness signature in a lease agreement. A property owner can also sign as a witness to a lease agreement.
no, without a signature there is no agreement of it.
An agreement does not get notarized. A signature does. Most contracts do not need notarized signatures to be binding.
If it is only in your name you should not need her to sign anything.
If the agreement (contract) was signed in the presence of a Notary Public, no.
It would depend on local legislation.
If you are challenging the signature as valid - tell them to produce the ORIGINAL document that contains your ORIGINAL signature. If they cannot, or will not, you will be able to walk away. Reproduced signatures are not legal for enforcing contracts or agreements. The holder of the the original paper MUST be able to produce the original agreement and original signatures.
Yes.
Yes but it is pompous.
Not really enough information -but- it sounds like you are somehow "involved' in whatever 'agreement' is being referred to either voluntarily or involuntarily. (it also probably needs your signature.)
my friend has been separated for nearly 3 years can he put his divorce in nw and how long does it tke for a divorce to come though
There are a number of legal rules which apply to agreements or contracts, so I cannot say that any signed agreement is valid; but if the agreement meets other requirements for legality, and is signed, then that signature is legally binding. A signed agreement does not have to be witnessed by another person (for example, anytime you write a check, that is an instruction to your bank to make a payment to another person, and that instruction is validated only by your own signature, with no witness being required) but if the agreement is very important, a witness is desirable as a form of confirmation.