A parent is the only one who can obtain a birth certificate. Your husband will have to do this.
Unlikely. Your husband is the legal father of the child.
The easiest way (small fee for the document) is to apply to Vital Statistics to get the birth certificate of your husband's child. The other woman does not have to give the birth certificate if she chooses not to.
None. But the wife will continue lactating whilst he does it.
The name of the actual father of the child should go on the birth certificate. If you are not legally divorced, then your legal husband would be automatically considered to be the child's father by law. If the child has a different father, he can complete a voluntary acknowledgement of the paternity of a child, in which he signs that he is the child's father and is therefore put on the birth certificate and named as the legal father. The hospital will help with this after the baby is born.
No, cows continue to lactate after giving birth (between pregnancies). Many cows are 'dried off' (where they stop lactating) during the later stage of pregnancy before she gives birth again.
Yes, he blamed him for the death of his sister, who died while giving birth to her husband's child a year and a half after their marriage.
Yes see links below
If a woman has an extramatrital affair and becomes pregnant with her lover's child before she is divorced from her husband, paternity tests must be collected at the time of the birth to determine whose child it is. If it is proven not to be your husband's child, he has no legal claim to that child...HOWEVER many of the State's still hold him financially responsible for the actual birth.
Moses McWilliams, husband of Sarah Breedlove, died two years after the birth of their child, in an accident.
Moses McWilliams, husband of Sarah Breedlove, died two years after the birth of their child, in an accident.
yes,i think your husband can adopt your child.Without notification, the father can challenge. The man need not have ever signed or seen the birth certificate to still be ordered to pay child support.