You could arrange a DNA test through the family court and then ask the court how to have the birth record modified to exclude you as the father.
You could arrange a DNA test through the family court and then ask the court how to have the birth record modified to exclude you as the father.
You could arrange a DNA test through the family court and then ask the court how to have the birth record modified to exclude you as the father.
You could arrange a DNA test through the family court and then ask the court how to have the birth record modified to exclude you as the father.
You could arrange a DNA test through the family court and then ask the court how to have the birth record modified to exclude you as the father.
Yes he may. Age has nothing to do with paternity. If you are the child's biological father, you have the right to sign the child's birth certificate or an affidavit of parental acknowledgement.
Yes, it can be changed after paternity of the biological father has been established by the courts, you fill out a change of birth certificate affidavit and send it in with your court documents to the bureau of vital statistics stating who the real father is and the birth certificate will then be changed.
It is possible to legally establish paternity even if the father's name is not on the birth certificate.
You would have to find people that knew or were there at your time of birth and have them write a affidavit.
no
Lucas Smith affidavit, containing Obama's Kenyan birth certificate and represented by Dr. Orly Taitz, filed with U.S. District Court in Southern California; Judge David O. Carter to look at.
Putting a father's name on the birth certificate does not make him legally the father if you are not married to him. You can put his name on the birth certificate, but realize that it has no legal impact. In order to have paternity established, it has to be done with a court order.
Yes. It is now a common practice for courts to order DNA tests to determine paternity. It doesn't matter if you're not on the birth certificate.
Yes, but paternity must be established first.
The father's name goes on the birth certificate only if he signs an acknowledgment of paternity.
By law, the "father" is the man who signed the birth certificate unless/until paternity is established in some other way.
Yes, if/when paternity is established.