No. Having sole custody means you are the only person with full parental/legal rights regarding the child. You can make decisions for that child without having to check with anyone. No other person has any legal rights regarding decisions made for the child.
Having no rights to a child means exactly what it says. You would have no right whatsoever to affect any decisions made regarding the child. You have no right of visitation or information and no right of inheritance.
No. Having sole custody means you are the only person with full parental/legal rights regarding the child. You can make decisions for that child without having to check with anyone. No other person has any legal rights regarding decisions made for the child.
Having no rights to a child means exactly what it says. You would have no right whatsoever to affect any decisions made regarding the child. You have no right of visitation or information and no right of inheritance.
No. Having sole custody means you are the only person with full parental/legal rights regarding the child. You can make decisions for that child without having to check with anyone. No other person has any legal rights regarding decisions made for the child.
Having no rights to a child means exactly what it says. You would have no right whatsoever to affect any decisions made regarding the child. You have no right of visitation or information and no right of inheritance.
No. Having sole custody means you are the only person with full parental/legal rights regarding the child. You can make decisions for that child without having to check with anyone. No other person has any legal rights regarding decisions made for the child.
Having no rights to a child means exactly what it says. You would have no right whatsoever to affect any decisions made regarding the child. You have no right of visitation or information and no right of inheritance.
No. Having sole custody means you are the only person with full parental/legal rights regarding the child. You can make decisions for that child without having to check with anyone. No other person has any legal rights regarding decisions made for the child.
Having no rights to a child means exactly what it says. You would have no right whatsoever to affect any decisions made regarding the child. You have no right of visitation or information and no right of inheritance.
Yes signing over custody is not the same as giving up your parental rights. You still have the right to visitation for example.
In the US the law says that lesbian partners have the same rights to custody or visitation as their heterosexual counterparts.
There are different types of custody: sole physical custody, where the child resides primarily with one parent but the non-custodial parent is typically awarded visitation rights, and sole legal custody, where one parent makes decisions in the child's life pertinent to their welfare. So, rights are delineated dependent upon the same.
same as a father under the same conditions. What the court orders say.
Not at all. Terminating parental rights is a court process by which you either voluntarily relinquish your parental rights or there is serious danger posed to your child such that the court does it without your consent. Either way, when parental rights are terminated, the parent has no more rights to the child. Losing custody can be a temporary thing and does not change your parental status.
You have the same chance you had before. Child support and custody are 2 different cases in court.
No, a man does not always get custody. If one of the people in a marriage has an affair, it is usually the person not having an affair that gets custody of the child or children.For example, if the husband is having an affair, and the wife wants a divorce, the woman (wife) would get the custody of the child or children, and not the man (husband). This is the same vice versa, too.
The rights of the natural father depends on if the father has given up his rights or not. If he has not given up his rights, he has the same rights as the mother, or as outlines in the custody order.
Yes. Illegal parents is usually acknowledged by the court and get the same parental rights as other parents. If they do get sole custody the child will go with them when deported.
If he is not married to the mother, he has no assumed rights to the child even if she were a citizen, so the same challenges would remain in obtaining custody.
It's not a case of wanting those rights, but of having them. An adopted child has the exact same legal rights as a biological child.
No. Custody means the child lives with you. Support means you are paying the parent who has custody.