There are no laws that would prevent the child from vistation with her biological father as long as her custodial parents agree. The biological father has no legal grounds to seek vistation or custody if the adoption were done according to the laws of the state in which it occurred. Visitation must be voluntarily agreed to by the custodial parents and the child under the terms that they establish. The visitation rights can also be withdrawn by the custodial parent(s) if and whenever they so choose. It would be in the best interest of those involved for the custodial parents to establish guidelines (boundaries) before visitation is allowed.
no
Once paternity has been established: 1) pay child support; 2) have reasonable visitation
Yes. And, in some states the child can inherit from both the biological parent and the adoptive parent. See the article at the related link. for more information
If he has been established as the biological father you can not stop him from petition for visitation. That is his right as a parent. If he somehow is unfit you will have to prove that to the court.
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.
That is up to the courts and not the adoptive father.
A birthfather is the biological father of an adopted child, or a person's biological father.
He essentially give up everything. The child is no longer his legally. He has no responsibilities toward the child and has no visitation rights.
yes biological fathers may seek visitation and custody rights
Need to file a petition for visitation. If the father is the biological father he has a right to visitation. There is no court that will not grant visitation to a father. Unless it is proved in court that the father is unfit. There has to be proof of that.
If he has adopted her then he is her father and has all of the biological fathers rights transferred to him at adoption. If adopted yes
A child's biological father can have his name added to a child's birth certificate regardless of whether or not the mother agrees to it. If the biological father voluntarily relinquishes his parental rights and the child is legally adopted by another man, his name can be added to the birth certificate in place of the biological father.
Griffin Daughtry is Chris Daughtry's adopted son, and was adopted when his biological father passed away.
Superman's biological father is Jar El. Superman's adopted father is Johnathan Kent.
no
Perhaps, but not necessarily. Adopted children are the same as biological children when it comes to inheritance.
If you are adopted, your biological father has no legal standing. And there is no requirement that any parent sign a wedding certificate. If you are underage, you may need signatures to obtain the marriage license and it would be the adoptive parent that would have to sign.