im your father, your last name is bunny, and no, you cant sleep over your friend marks house tomorrow
16, thats when most children decide which parent, biological or legally, they want to stay with.
18 years. But children are always a parent's best friend.
Each situation is different and there is no set answer. The judge will decide. If the biological father is a fit parent then he will most likely be awarded custody. The grandmother would most likely have visitation rights. The judge will look at the situation and decide what is best for the welfare of the child.
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 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.
A birth father is a genetic father of a child, as opposed to an adoptive father or stepfather.
This is a good answer to my questionJrjwnwj
A step-parent is mostly no different than a biological parent as they tend to take on the parental role even if your biological father is in your life on a regular basis.
It would be the biological parent, in this case, the father
A DNA test can prove if the biological father is actually the father. If it is proven he is the father, then he should have all parental rights as any other parent.
Not if you are receiving SS Death Benefits for the child.
The birth certificate can only have one father and only the biological father is allowed to be on it. And only he can sign it. A step parent have no legal right to the child.