It depends on the reason the child was placed under guardianship and not with his father in the first place. If the father wants to take custody and has not been deemed unfit, he must file a petition for custody in the court that has jurisdiction over the child which is the court that appointed the guardian.
Not unless he is the legal guardian.
If you are their legal guardian, you can collect child support from both parents of the child. If you are not their legal guardian and they just live with you, you do not have rights to child support.
Proxenus of Atarneus raised Aristotle for about six years after the death of Aristotle's father. Aristotle's father died when he was a child and Proxenus became his guardian during this time.
You can't. If you are not the child's legal guardian you can't do anything.
If a father's name is on the birth certificate that does not make him a legal guardian, it makes him a father. The two are technically different. In this state a father can have guardianship without establishing it. A father can be forced to pay child support while a guardian can not.
It dooms them to a life of abusive and unsatisfying relationships. It's far better to try to get close to the child while he or she is still young enough to attach to the guardian. Then, when they least expect it, the guardian should smack the kid around and yell nasty things, especially in public places like Wal-Mart. The gratification will be huge, and people will get a good first impression of the guardian's parenting style. Surely, the guardian will be asked to write a book and appear on Oprah to give insider tips on messing up a kid's life.
no way . boyfriend is not yet a related bond , one must not depend on an unrelated relationship for a great responsiblity
The father has the right to visit with his child unless the court issues an order to the opposite.
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.
no, your mother (or legal guardian) has to sue
Yes. The child would need a court appointed guardian to advocate for him in court.
Do the kids make fun of him for having your maiden name? Did you give him custody of the child? Is he his guardian? If so, then yes.