As a general rule modifications are not made to birth records. You can petition the court to allow a name change. However, even if a name change is allowed by the court it will not change the name on the birth certificate.
Yes
This would depend on the Will. If not addressed, were the parents married? If not, the paternal grandparents have not claim as unmarried fathers have no assumed rights. Otherwise, if the parents were married, and no Will exist, than it would be a matter for the Probate court.
The father has a right to pay support and to seek visitation rights. [BTW, the child's last name isn't relevant to this.]SEE LINKS BELOW
Yes, if the father signs an acknowledgment of paternity.
No - they simply list the names of the biological father and mother. A birth certificate does not prove the parents were married at the time the birth was registered.
You may be able to get Right of Abode or a British Passport. It depends how old you are and whether your parents were married. You can find all the info at http://www.ind.homeoffice.gov.uk/britishcitizenship/
With the court's permission, if the parents are not married. Single fathers have no assumed rights to a child. Married parents have equal rights to the child until otherwise ruled on.
No. The real parents sign the birth certificate of their child unless they refuse, I think. So sorry if I'm wrong!
yes u can cuz my aunt did it
No, married daughters should not be spanked by their fathers. If someone is old enough to be married, then their parents should no longer be disciplining them.
I am not a lawyer, but this is a direct qoute from Virginia Law concerning preparing birth certificates: 3. The names of the parents, except that if the mother of the child was not married to the father of the child at the time of birth, or during the 10 months preceding such birth, the name of the father shall not be entered on the delayed certificate unless the child has been adopted or legitimated, or parentage has been determined by a court of competent jurisdiction pursuant to Section 32.1-257 of the Code of Virginia, or both natural parents present a sworn acknowledgment of paternity. NOTE ligitimated means the parents subsiquently married and both agreed to acknowledge him as the father.
If the marriage is legal in the other country, they are married everywhere in the world.