not without court approval. see link
Of course. Her sexual preferences have nothing to do with her right to be supported by her parents and the father's obligation to support her financially.Of course. Her sexual preferences have nothing to do with her right to be supported by her parents and the father's obligation to support her financially.Of course. Her sexual preferences have nothing to do with her right to be supported by her parents and the father's obligation to support her financially.Of course. Her sexual preferences have nothing to do with her right to be supported by her parents and the father's obligation to support her financially.
Relinquishing one's parental rights does not terminate one's child support obligation.
Two come to mind: the right to petition for visitation; and the right to ask the court to determine his child support obligation.
He can give up his parental rights (this usually happens as part of the adoption process), but his support obligation continues until/unless the child is adopted. There is no "right not to pay child support."
If the Mother has received ANY State assistance, and the Father was NOT paying Child Support at any time...The State has every right to demand repayment.
Sure or the courts can involuntarily terminate them, however in doing so, that would only terminate the father's right to see his child or have any say-so in their lives. It would not terminate his child support obligation unless the child is being adopted, either by another party or the mother's new spouse.
The right to petition the courts for the right to see and support his child.
Child support and visitation are two separate issues. The father has the right to request a visitation schedule with his child. Visitation is not dependent on paying child support.
If you are the father of this new baby, you have the right and obligation to support it, regardless of your relationship with the mother. If you are concerned whether the child is yours you can insist on a paternity test to see if you are the biological father. Of course, in addition to having the obligation to support your child you will be granted visitation rights if you request it when the case is brought to court.
of course
They certainly can. The judge is the 500 lb elephant in the room. He or she can make any ruling they so desire as long as it is not in violation of state law and the laws of Georgia state that the named father has an obligation to support their child whether the child is legitimized or not, unless the father can prove via a court ordered paternity test that he is not the father. Legitimization of the child is to protect the father's right to visitation and custody and has absolutely nothing to do with support obligations.
Not sure if you want to hurt him or not but it's the biological parents obligation to provide for their child regardless of how many they have. It's the child's right. And if you need benefits from the state they will go after him first. If he can not support another child he should not have gotten one or he needs to get a second job.