If you feel very strongly about not wanting to see one of your grandparents, try to talk to one of your parents or to both of your parents about this. Tell them what you want and see what can be done. If you cannot manage to talk with your parents about it, try discussing your concerns with another adult, such as a relative, a friend of your parents, a teacher, a religious leader, or a counselor. Legally it is your parents who decide who you can or shall see.
no but dont be cheap.
Tell them to stop. Dont be hard...there old people!
No. Not unless the court ordered it. Due to the adoption you are now the LEGAL adult of the child therefore unless it was agreed an open adoption then no you dont. Once a child is adopted none of the biological family has ANY rights over the child you do. In most states, if the adoptive parents do not want grandparents to have visitation, the grandparents would need to file for visitation rights through the courts.
dont give it away you will regret it and the grandparents would be so disapointed in you, giving up your child means you love the sex and not what happens at the end, iff you are giving up your child, why didnt you use pills or a condom, it is pathetic, please dont petray your child!
I dont think it would be.
There are 2 things that matter in a legal standpoint when it comes to custody. Biology and paperwork. The Biological parents inherit the right to care for their child. If the parents are underage this is still true, but the biological parents of the underage parents still have "parental" rights over the child until the child becomes 18 years of age. Lets say the grandparents want to care for the child because the parents dont know what theyre doing. Well, this case is not a "I said so" case. The grandparents would have to consult a social worker and begin an investigation that proves the parents to be unfit. This is usually a long shot because priority is given to the biological parents and unless the child is placed in severe physical or emotional harm, convincing a judge will prove difficult.
i dont think so as long as they are your legal gaurdians
He has no legal right to be with/see/have contact with the mother of his child if her parents--or his (since he's also a minor)--are opposed to it. Once paternity is established he has the obligation of paying child support and the legal right to petition for court-ordered visitation with the child, but that is only for visitation with the child, not the mother of the child. well i think its there choice to be honest so just leave them alone and dont talk about them behind there back, ok? You should of thought of the consequinces before that night.
The mother's right is to sole legal and physical custody of the children and the right to obtain child support for her children. Depending on her state of residence, the mother may also petition the court to have the father's parental rights terminated or request the state do the same if she cannot do it herself. Termination of parental rights does not terminate child support obligations.
how old is she? If the girl is under the legal age for the state in which you reside, you are going to have to get the parents permission - there's no legal way around this. Your parents will be grandparents when the baby is born ... one would think that this would be the best for the child ... to pull away now, is only going to hurt more people in the long run. Wait and do this when of legal age. The future "husband" could be charged with rape of a minor child, statutory rape, child kidnapping, etc etc etc, if the girl is underage. my girlfriend is 16 years old and am 17 but my girlfriend dont hame permission to married what can i do
i dont think so.
You dont have to marry the farther of the child but you should either get married when the time is right for you or get married when the child is young because when the child is growing up they will call the man dad unless you dont want that