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Not if the father is still married to the mother. If they are divorced, or separated for over a year, they can be sued for child support.It doesn't matter what situation either spouse is in.
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.
Certainly, by court order.
It depends on the details of your situation, such as whether you are married, divorced or never married and whether the father has any custody rights or visitation rights.
Father must petition for custody and court will weigh what situation is best for the child
Yes, Theodore Roosevelt had a father. Everyone has a father regardless of living or dead, married or divorced. It takes a male and a female to make a child.
Not really. It depends on the situation.
No. The father should seek a visitation order and discuss the situation with an attorney.
That depends on the custody order, but she can file for a change of custody.
The husband is the child's father by law.
Generally, no. The father does not automatically hold that degree of authority over the child's mother and the mother does not hold that degree of authority over the father. If the father believes there is a situation that creates an unsafe environment for his child then he must take the matter to court and ask for a court order.Generally, no. The father does not automatically hold that degree of authority over the child's mother and the mother does not hold that degree of authority over the father. If the father believes there is a situation that creates an unsafe environment for his child then he must take the matter to court and ask for a court order.Generally, no. The father does not automatically hold that degree of authority over the child's mother and the mother does not hold that degree of authority over the father. If the father believes there is a situation that creates an unsafe environment for his child then he must take the matter to court and ask for a court order.Generally, no. The father does not automatically hold that degree of authority over the child's mother and the mother does not hold that degree of authority over the father. If the father believes there is a situation that creates an unsafe environment for his child then he must take the matter to court and ask for a court order.
In Missouri, it's mandatory. see link