it huts a lot and your really sad
child is slow grandparent is slower and parent is the fastest.
explain the procedure to the parent and child
yes
Yes. If and only if the parent transfers the property to self and the child as joint tenants with the right of survivorship.
If there is no spouse the child would be the next of kin.
ANSWER:Let me explain this to you if I can, siblings has one or two different parents. But a parent and a child is a lot more connected because of where the child came from
No, that would be criminal fraud.A parent has a right to have access to their children, unless it is proven that that parent is dangerous to the health and safety of the child.
Can who recover for wrongful death? Is the driver child different then the child that died? The estate of the child that died could sue the parent. Not much to recover.
Of course. Unless the non-custodial parent takes sole custody, the non-custodial parent is still responsible for paying child support to whomever the child goes to. There is no reason the death of a parent should terminate the other parent's child support obligation.
I know that in Canada there are no forms. It is in the will that you say what your wishes are for your child, i.e. live with your sister. You have to hope that the sister will fight in court for this to go through after your death. The court's ethos is to keep the child with family so it is actually a stronger case than for the child to stay with a step-parent. If the wish is for the child to stay with the step-parent - it would be best to protect your interests and have a baby with the step-parent so that the child is with immediate family upon your death. If that is not possible it is important to do your best to not die! Good luck
Very difficult, you would need to explain what "ON the hospital" meant, was the parent on the roof for some reason and if so why.
* Unfortunately, you did not give any reason as to why the birth parent is giving up their young child to a relative. If at all possible; even if it means government assistance the birth parent should try to keep their child. If it's absolutely impossible then all the birth parent can do is try to explain to the child the best they can, but it will never be enough and the child will feel unloved by the birth parent. Eventually the child will grow accustomed to being raised by a relative, but will eventually grow up and want to know why their birth parent did this. The least the birth parent can do is write a heart-felt letter explaining the circumstances as to why they had to give the child up and give the letter to the relative and when the child is old enough to understand and asks 'Why did my birth parent give me up' then they can read the letter. The birth parent should keep in touch with the relative to see how their child is and at some future date and providing the child wants too then the birth parent and child should meet when that child is no longer a minor.