Take you to court for what? Custody? If you have had your parental rights terminated, you no longer have any authority over the child for that purpose if it was done through the courts. If you just gave the child to someone else without court authority or legal modification to an existing custody order, yes, he could do that.
The rights of the natural father depends on if the father has given up his rights or not. If he has not given up his rights, he has the same rights as the mother, or as outlines in the custody order.
Typically, a parent gives up her rights preparatory to an adoption.
Yes, equal to the mother.
If he is not the natural son of the father, no. He is not a descendant and therefore has no rights to it. The divorce decree would have severed all of the rights between his mother and your father.
If the father does not go before a judge and ask to legitimize a child, he does NOT have rights to that child, neither does HIS family....BUT he still has an obligation to pay child support. Legitimize that child! Not legitimizing a child can cause all kinds of problems if something were to happen to the child's mother. My son had signed my grand-daughter's birth certificate, AND we had a DNA test, my son was sent to prison, my grand-daughter's mother ran off leaving me to care for my grand-daughter. I took care of her for 3 years, but because my son had not legitimized her formally in court....the courts said I had no legal rights to my grand-daughter and this caused a LOT of heartache and problems for me and my grand-daughter later when her mother popped back in and snatched her up!
no
The father's step sister has no legal rights in this case. A mother automatically has custody of her child.The father's step sister has no legal rights in this case. A mother automatically has custody of her child.The father's step sister has no legal rights in this case. A mother automatically has custody of her child.The father's step sister has no legal rights in this case. A mother automatically has custody of her child.
You mother.
No. That can only be done by a court order.
exactly the same as the father
My mother and father
In the state of Illinois, a biological father cannot give up his rights to the mother, but he can sign over his rights to another male. For example, a step father