It depends on the state. Some states, such as New York, allow for a gay or lesbian couple to have both names on the birth certificate. Others do not.
It depends on what state you are in. In some states you can get a pre-birth order, allowing the intended parent's names to be placed on the birth certificate. I other states, the surrogate mother and her husband's names on placed on the birth certificate, and later changed by a lawyer through the courts to the intended parents names.
You could check the hospital where you were born to obtain a copy of the Record of Birth Certificate they placed on file. This is the one with your foot prints. It would not be destroyed with the official record kept by the state.
No. Lesbians are the same as everyone else, and should be dealt with the same as a straight person.
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You have to prove paternity in court and then get their consent to sign.
North Carolina is not a putative father state and as such has no clear definition of a father, so any name can be placed on the birth certificate.
Start with the agency/agencies that placed you when young & or get a copy of your birth certificate if you know the city. Start there.
Riccardo Cocchi and Yulia Zagoruychenko.
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The Phillipines. It is a dance of hispanic origin... a fan or handkerchief is used as it resembles the couple being placed in a romance scenario.
The term "male" placed in the gender section of the certificate may be acceptable and may not. The system for printing the birth certificate has always had glitches in more than just the gender section. It really all depends on how finicky you are about the situation. If it bothers you, ok. If it doesn't, same. Everyone has the right to call a meeting with the head of the system and have it changed.
In order to get an answer to this question you must provide the details of how exactly you "placed mothers house in a Life Tenancy with me as the care giver". It must have been done through a deed and you need to provide the details. Whoever owns the real estate can sell it as long as the life estate holder consents in writing.