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My child is 13 and lives in Texas and he wants to live with his father. Can he do this legally?
If the court has awarded child support, then the good intentions of the father are irrelevant. Legally, child support must be paid.
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.
The biological father is the legal father. The husband is not the father unless he decides he wants to claim that title and wants to raise this child. Slim to none on that one. More likely you are going to be a single parent, so go after the bio dad for child support. He owes his child that.
No, legally a minor has no choice in the matter.
Yes. He can "claim" all he wants, but he has no evidence that the child is his without a paternity test.
After the baby is born the father can go to court and request a paternity test. If the test confirms the father's paternity he can request custody and a visitation order and the court will establish a child support order. The mother cannot refuse to obey the court orders that establish the father's rights. If she does, she could eventually lose custody.
Probably not. Unless they were legally separated, the husband is presumed to be the father of the child in question.
Sons often carry their father's casket at a funeral, so there is no reason why not if that is what a son wants to do.Sons often carry their father's casket at a funeral, so there is no reason why not if that is what a son wants to do.Sons often carry their father's casket at a funeral, so there is no reason why not if that is what a son wants to do.Sons often carry their father's casket at a funeral, so there is no reason why not if that is what a son wants to do.Sons often carry their father's casket at a funeral, so there is no reason why not if that is what a son wants to do.Sons often carry their father's casket at a funeral, so there is no reason why not if that is what a son wants to do.Sons often carry their father's casket at a funeral, so there is no reason why not if that is what a son wants to do.Sons often carry their father's casket at a funeral, so there is no reason why not if that is what a son wants to do.Sons often carry their father's casket at a funeral, so there is no reason why not if that is what a son wants to do.Sons often carry their father's casket at a funeral, so there is no reason why not if that is what a son wants to do.Sons often carry their father's casket at a funeral, so there is no reason why not if that is what a son wants to do.
You would need to have the birth father's parental rights legally terminated. This can be done eithervoluntarily: he signs the paperwork.or involuntarily; this is difficult, and whether it is possible at all varies from state to state.
If the father wants to be involved in the child's life, the mother cannot legally stop him on her own. Only a judge may determine if the father is unfit to be a parent, but even then the court may still order visitations. If you believe that the child is in immediate danger from the father, call the police.
you could have it used against you in court if the biological father of your daughter still wants custody. he can claim you are unstable and unless you stay in a stable relationship with the man in question. but if he can prove he is in a more stable relationship he can claim that he can care for her better.