Yes, you can call your son "Junior" if you are the 2nd. Your son would also be also the 3rd. Presumably your father, the 1st, is no longer living so you are the "Senior." If your father is the 1st and is still living, then he is the "Senior" and you are the "Junior." You and your son cannot both be "Junior" at the same time.
You can put what ever name you want on a birth certificate if you are the parent.
No, they cannot prevent the father from being on a birth certificate if he consents to it. They cannot add him without his permission.
You will need to take your son's birth certificate down to your county courthouse and request a name change. You will have paperwork and a fee to pay. In many states you are required to appear in court for the name change to be official.
no you do not have to put the fathers name on the birth certificate. Unless you want to. my sons fathers name is not on his birth certificate. but i have been thinking about putting his name on there. because i don't want my son to see it when he grows up and ask me why his daddys name isn't on there.
You get a DNA test that states he is not the father! That's the only way!
The laws for obtaining and signing a birth certificate in a foreign country will differ within the country you deliver in. You can contact the Embassy for that country to obtain rules and regulations for foreign births.
She gave birth to twin sons and named the firstborn twin Esau and the second Jacob.
You need to have the cooperation of all parties in order to effect a name change.
Not signing a birth certificate does not remove one's responsibility. If you are not the bio parent of the child, attempt to arrange for testing that will be evidence of that. Otherwise, you are the parent of a child.
It will depend on the specific laws in their state. In some places a license can be issued with proof of a child.
The changing of a name is something that requires a petition to the court and hearing.
yes u can cuz my aunt did it
The sons of liberty didn't like the Stamp Act, because they were charged to have stamps for the silliest things. Like, they had to get a certain stamp to buy the newspaper, or a birth certificate... -the mysterious 7th grader