According to Arkansas Law he does have to pay...but new statutes give him a chance to rebuke this...rather costly, but the non biological Father usually wins and no longer has to pay and all monies paid for child is to be refunded
Oh yeah. The biological father and mother are put on the certificate.
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.
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.
Except in an adoption, there is no such person as a "non biological father." The only man who should be signing a birth certificate is the child's biological father. Any other man who signs it is making an illegal statement.
He would have all of the rights that a biological father has. If he was not the biological father, then his name should not have been put on the birth certificate in the first place, unless he adopted her and the birth certificate was changed.
A non-biological "father"; essentially, when a woman remarries after her husband's death/divorce, her new spouse is a step father to her children.
The biological father. He does not have to be on the bc to do so. In court he will prove paternity with a DNA test.
no
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.
Go to vital records and request a copy of birth records. Ask to see Childs school file with birth record in it. If you are not on the birth certificate, you cannot request a copy.
No, the father on the birth certificate is financially responsible unless proven that he's not the father by DNA. About 12 years ago in the state of NJ The court ordered me to pay child support to the biological father (Dna test showed I was not the biological father) The court called me the psychological father so in the courts opinion I was her father. And like the biological Mother he also drank it away.
If your present Birth Certificate has got your Biological father's name registered then this will cause complications in having that "FACT" removed.On the other hand,if his name was not on the Birth Certificate..then you may make an application with the Registrar of Births at your local registry office to have your step father's name put on your Birth certificate..however..it is unlikely that the Registrar will agree to this. Further, in the event your biological father decides to contest the paternity..this will cause complications for all.Also...what happens if your stepfather splits with you..and your mother re-marries?I think it makes no difference if your biological father's name remains on the Certificate..as he is your Biological father!Take Advice from a local lawyer or the CAB,However!