Assuming that I read your question right, you want to let your web site visitors a way to download some documents, which are created or maintained by your web site, and you want those documents to be digitally signed.
If the document is pre-created, it's possible to sign it during creation (either with the tool that generates them, or create a separate piece of code for signing). If the documents are generated on-the-fly, then your web site should include signing capabilities.
To perform signing you need a certificate with a private key. But not every certificate would work. The certificate you need should be suitable for data signing, rather than just for SSL/TLS. You can try to obtain the certificate for your site from some CA and then use it for signing the documents. Whether the users' software would accept such certificates depends on how Key Usage and Extended Key Usage properties (extensions) of the certificate are put by the CA. Another option would be to create a self-signed certificate.
In case of a self-signed certificate you would want to place the certificate itself (without a private key) to your web site for the users to download and install. This is needed for validation of the signature in your signed documents. No need to say, that you don't put the private key to download, neither you provide it to your users by any other means. It's kept only on the server (and preferably secured to make stealing it harder for the possible attacker).
The technologies / components / tools to use in these scenarios depend on which of the above options you need.