Possibly because the life insurance has your mother as the beneficiary and to the estate if she is dead. Ask his wife. She shouldn't have a problem telling you .
You don't give enough details to give an accurate answer. However, some state statutes require documentation the existance or death of potential heirs during the probate process. It also may be that your father listed your mother as a beneficiary on some policy or account and the death certificate is necessary to prove that she is deceased.
Most likely it relates to title to real property. If your father and mother owned real property, but did not pay attention to detail at the time of divorce and convey the property to your father by executing and recording a deed, record title to the property would still be in the name of your father and mother. If your father (believing he owned the property) attempted to convey it to he and his new wife, the conveyance would not be fully effective unless your mother's death certificate was recorded. Of course, after the divorce, your father & mother owned the property as tenants in common, so the death certificate might not be all that would be necessary to clear title to the property in your father's widow. There could be other reasons for the need for a death certificate (such as other jointly owned property). There is no way of knowing without conducting some investigation of the facts.
To prove she is legally married. Maybe there are accounts jointly titled in your mom and dad's names that you dad never changed to his name, and she need to prove you mom died first, so they became your dad's.
Good question. I do not know. Don't give it to her. You may be entitled to some type of inheritance. Check it out by looking in the court filings for probate actions wherein you may be a possible heir as a result of your father's death or may be a beneficiary of a life insurance policy.
Any number of reasons. Maybe she was still named as a beneficiary of something. Maybe it is needed for a pension issue. There could be any number of reasons. Why not ask her?
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