The law presumes that the husband is the father of a child conceived or born during a marriage, unless/until proven otherwise. So, the husband would have the same rights concerning that child as any other.
In the United States the father has no rights until the child is born.
Marriage by itself does not bring custody rights to non-biological children. Where the children go when the biological mother dies depends on who has custody, whether the non-biological father has adopted the child, whether the biological father wants the child, and on the laws of the state where all of this is happening.
genitor is the man whom the society knew to have married the mother of the child while pater is the man that can prove genetically as the father of the child.
Yes if it's YOUR child.
Paying child support will not cause the father to lose his parental rights - neither will not paying child support.
Your husband has no rights over the child because he did not help in the creation of the child, but he can legally adopt her.
Childern have the rights toevery thing that is their father's no matter what! if this chind is the frist child of the deceased he/she has even mre rights, and if their is only one male child it gos to him first.
No, you really can't. But you can go to the hall of justice and get full custody of your child. * The biological father of a child who is not of a marriage has no legal rights to the child until paternity is established and a petition for custodial or visitation rights are granted by the court.
I don't believe so.
Yes. The older child's rights are not diminished with the arrival of younger child[ren].
His father had a child from a previous marriage, but Robert is the only child from this marriage.
In the United States the father has no rights until the child is born.
He doesn't have any children but he is a founding father because he is like a father to his wife child from her first marriage.
Marriage by itself does not bring custody rights to non-biological children. Where the children go when the biological mother dies depends on who has custody, whether the non-biological father has adopted the child, whether the biological father wants the child, and on the laws of the state where all of this is happening.
The right to petition the courts for the right to see and support his child.
genitor is the man whom the society knew to have married the mother of the child while pater is the man that can prove genetically as the father of the child.
Yes if it's YOUR child.