If the father has legal custody, no. Not without his consent. If she has joint legal custody, no. Not without his consent. If she has sole legal custody, yes.If the father has legal custody, no. Not without his consent. If she has joint legal custody, no. Not without his consent. If she has sole legal custody, yes.If the father has legal custody, no. Not without his consent. If she has joint legal custody, no. Not without his consent. If she has sole legal custody, yes.If the father has legal custody, no. Not without his consent. If she has joint legal custody, no. Not without his consent. If she has sole legal custody, yes.
No. The father must consent.No. The father must consent.No. The father must consent.No. The father must consent.
You can not unless he is unfit.
Yes they can
No
now a stepfather can't adopt a child without the concent of the child's father
Without Juliet's consent, there could not be a marriage at all. This is why her father browbeats her into giving it.
No.No.No.No.
Yes.
If the father in subject is the legal and FULL guardian of the child in question, yes as there is no consent needed if the father is the full legal guardian of the child. If, however, it is a joint guardianship between the mother and the father, no, the father will need consent from the mother.
absolutely not, no one can adopt any one without the proper court orders
No. The father must also consent. The mother cannot "sign over" the child without a court order granting guardianship. The court will require the father be given notice and the opportunity to object.No. The father must also consent. The mother cannot "sign over" the child without a court order granting guardianship. The court will require the father be given notice and the opportunity to object.No. The father must also consent. The mother cannot "sign over" the child without a court order granting guardianship. The court will require the father be given notice and the opportunity to object.No. The father must also consent. The mother cannot "sign over" the child without a court order granting guardianship. The court will require the father be given notice and the opportunity to object.