Yes
Both the female and male must be 18 for marriage without parent approval. If both parents of the male and female say they may marry, they can marry at 16.
Yes, in many cases the young couple can marry for the sake of the child, but it will have to go to court and a judge will have the final ruling on it.At 17 the female is a minor and must either get parent's permission or go to court for parental rights.
The marriage should pose no problem, providing of course you are also eligible. However you will need to find out who has custody of the child and what rights the father has. It would be advisable to consult a local lawyer.
Same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry in the United States, Canada, Mexico and Brazil. In some other countries, they have a legislated right to marry.
The person may marry if they choose to, but a child cannot be adopted by a new spouse unless the biological parent voluntarily relinquishes their parental rights. In cases of extreme neglect and/or abuse the court has the power to permanently terminate parental rights, the child would then be eligible for adoption with the court's permission.
It depends on wether he and the Irish child mother were marry before or after the child was born, which will gives him automatic rights as long as he lives- on the other side of it, he do'NT have that right automatic if not marry as the mother will have to agree with him for those rights through a declaration as provided under Irish law or the courts. If he get the rights from the court,he can loose it through the courts as it has given him those rights. No matter where he may goes or who he marries to - as long as he has rights from day one he stills has them over his child until the child seases his consent which is normally eighteen. The court can determine who may have full rights if he do'NT have them automatically.
Any two humans on earth, provided one is male and one is female, can marry, or mate, to create a child. Blood type does not affect fertility.
All about the Wills. If a parent writes it in their will, it will be excecuted.
It depends if he gets marry to a female suffering from morquio syndrome then in this case each child will have 50% chance of having morquio the other side if he marries with normal female then non of his child will suffer from morquio syndrome, but there will be 25% chance that the child carry morquio syndrome gene.
You cannot force the father to marry you just because he got you pregnant. You can however have the court order him to take a paternity test to prove he is the father for child support issues. Good Luck!
Susan didn't marry because in her time, women had more rights if they did not marry such as, owning their own land, and not sitting in a house all day cleaning up after a husband and child.
No. If the fiance is the natural father, then he does have rights to his son. Getting married doesn't give him legal rights to your child (assuming he is not the father). He must adopt in order to have legal rights.