No. When you surrender your parental rights it is forever (unless you can prove you were not competent to make the decision, i.e. you were under duress, you were mentally incapacitated, etc.).
* If the father has full custody of the children, yes. * If he has partial or shared custody with the mother, it may be a violation of parental rights; that area is quite dicey, so talk to a lawyer. * If the father has no custody but does have visiting rights, then again, talk to your lawyer. * If the father has no rights to the children, then there is no crime committed.
No as that would be considered child abandonment.
I have some children signed over to us and the parent up and left without no one knowing where she was. Can I adopt them if cps let's me? Cps has put the kids in custody since the parent said she wasn't comfortable with them being here. The parents have had several children and rights terminated on all. They also have sexual abuse charges pending. Do the parents have much of a say about the kids coming back to me?
If you are a adopted minor it is your adoptive parents that are your guardians. The court is the only one who can take away and give guardianship. Once your birth parents signed the papers they agreed to never getting their parental rights back. The courts don't allow it.
the people that signed it was a traitor to the british and the people that signed it got there rights back. John Hancock was the first to sing it.
No. A voluntary relinquishment of parental rights is permanent and cannot be rescinded.
Termination of parental rights does not terminate child support until/unless the child is adopted. At that time, the biological parent still owes whatever he had been ordered to pay and has not paid.
That depends on where you live and your custody order. Were you granted temporary custody with parental rights intact? Were the parents divested of their parental rights and you were granted sole legal and physical custody? There are all different kinds of custody agreements and they can be modified. Refer to your documents or seek the advice of an attorney for an informed opinion.
In most cases, a divorce will not delay getting children back from Children's Service. It will really depend on the reasons why the children were taken from the parents.
You will need to go back to court.
Some times but it all depends on the situation
That depends on why guardianship was awarded to the grandparents.That depends on why guardianship was awarded to the grandparents.That depends on why guardianship was awarded to the grandparents.That depends on why guardianship was awarded to the grandparents.