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2 answers

Not necessarily valid, but it could be contestable.
The thing is the notary is certifying that they have verified the person before them is the person signing the document (if that makes sense). So if you have another page she signed, who's to say that the notary really saw that page?
If she is not longer alive, and that is the only will you have, you may be able to contest it, but I would hire an attorney.

2007-03-10 05:31:49 · answer #1 · answered by Valerie L 2 · 0 0

Presumably, she signed before the notary, and if the notarizing was done that way, it is correct.

Otherwise, and if it is contested, there's one notary that should lose his qualification and be slapped with a suit that even bill gates would have trouble paying through.

2007-03-10 05:36:40 · answer #2 · answered by Svartalf 6 · 0 0

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