You can't make anyone give up their parental rights. And in some states, they wont allow it at all, unless the child has another adult willing to adopt the child. The father can however, relinquish his parental rights while still paying child support, this might be a good option in your circumstance.
The legal guardian has all rights over the child unless the mother has visitation rights. If so, they must be followed.The legal guardian has all rights over the child unless the mother has visitation rights. If so, they must be followed.The legal guardian has all rights over the child unless the mother has visitation rights. If so, they must be followed.The legal guardian has all rights over the child unless the mother has visitation rights. If so, they must be followed.
If he doesn't take away visitation rights he should
If your parental rights are taken away from you, you lose all contact and say over what that child does. You will not have visitation with the child at all and you cannot make decisions about their school, medical, or religion.
No. Not if a family court has jurisdiction over the child and the father has visitation rights. If the parents were never married and there has been no court involvement or paternity established the mother can try to move. However, the father could file an action in court to establish his paternity, visitation rights and prevent the removal of the child from the state.
If you mean, what are the Dad's rights, he has the right to continue paying child support and the right to visitation, both as established by the courts.
Yes signing over custody is not the same as giving up your parental rights. You still have the right to visitation for example.
No. You would be signing away your rights to visitation. A parent generally signs away their rights in preparation for a legal adoption.
Visitation and child support are two different issues. Legally you can't keep your child from visiting the father on that charge. Some fathers have gotten modified change of custody orders because the mother wouldn't allow visitation.
It's not so "only", he still has rights as a parent. If you make it impossible for the court order to work you are in violation of said order. Will you fly the child over every other weekend? This is something he will have to give his consent to and also the court. Any changes in the visitation order have to go through the court that issued the order.
That would need to be approved by a court and would not relieve him of his obligation to pay child support. Courts make such decisions and even if you have sole legal and physical custody and the father relinquishes visitation rights, he must obey any child support order.That would need to be approved by a court and would not relieve him of his obligation to pay child support. Courts make such decisions and even if you have sole legal and physical custody and the father relinquishes visitation rights, he must obey any child support order.That would need to be approved by a court and would not relieve him of his obligation to pay child support. Courts make such decisions and even if you have sole legal and physical custody and the father relinquishes visitation rights, he must obey any child support order.That would need to be approved by a court and would not relieve him of his obligation to pay child support. Courts make such decisions and even if you have sole legal and physical custody and the father relinquishes visitation rights, he must obey any child support order.
Grandprents generally do not have rights to a grandchild if the child has 2 parents in the child's life. A judge may grant some grandparent time but only if it does not interfer with the parents visitation times and the child's development time (such as school).In this society, children are very busy and go from parent to parent so much that it is hard for a judge to grant any time.This really is something that you need to talk to the parents of the child about. Remember, your grandchild already has parents. These parents need to do their jobs. It is not up to the grandparents to step in unless there is a very good reason.
Absolutely nothing. You have no control whatsoever over naming the child. You have no parental rights unless you establish your paternity in court. Once established legally as the child's father you can request a visitation schedule and the mother can obtain a child support order. The child's name is the mother's choice.Absolutely nothing. You have no control whatsoever over naming the child. You have no parental rights unless you establish your paternity in court. Once established legally as the child's father you can request a visitation schedule and the mother can obtain a child support order. The child's name is the mother's choice.Absolutely nothing. You have no control whatsoever over naming the child. You have no parental rights unless you establish your paternity in court. Once established legally as the child's father you can request a visitation schedule and the mother can obtain a child support order. The child's name is the mother's choice.Absolutely nothing. You have no control whatsoever over naming the child. You have no parental rights unless you establish your paternity in court. Once established legally as the child's father you can request a visitation schedule and the mother can obtain a child support order. The child's name is the mother's choice.