I cannot imagine that this country has fallen to the point that the law can force a parent to provide a separate bedroom for each child, unless the child is a foster child or another ward of the state. I grew up in a 2 bedroom house with 5 of us kids and my parents were not breaking any laws.
Signing the child up for a school is something the custodial guardian do so if you share custody you have to agree on this.
Signing the child up for a school is something the custodial guardian do so if you share custody you have to agree on this.
If you are married to the mother, no. Then you share everything naturally. But if you have a child and you are separated or not married to the mother, and you do not have custody of the children, you have to pay child support
None unless addressed by the court
When a couple is not legally married they have no statutory rights in the other's estate. Their separate property would pass to the child. Any property held as joint tenants with the right of survivorship would pass to the survivor.
Not legally
The answer is a secret. You can have a secret, but if you share it, it is no longer secret.
You are permitted to share the same house with anyone you want, whether legally separated or not.
The mother is the legal guardian from birth and can give the child any name she wants but she can not sign for the father on the birth certificate. He have to sign it and if she was below age of consent when the child was conceived he can go to prison for statutory rape.
It's secret
Absolutely. Legally, the child does not have the right to decide with whom he/she will live in California until he/she turns 18. HOWEVER, after age 14 there are no criminal ramifications against the parent who does not force the child to go to the other parent. In simple language, the parent is no longer responsible for the child not going. Of course, it would be in the best interest of the child to have a close, loving relationship with both parents and share holidays, but that is not reality in many cases.
In most places, adopted children have the same legal rights to inheritance as biological children. This means they are entitled to inherit from their adoptive parents' estates just like biological children are. Adoption is a legally recognized process that grants the adopted child the same legal status and rights as a biological child in the eyes of the law.