The same as the rights of any other random unrelated person, i.e. none absent some kind of contractual agreement or stipulation in the decedent's will.
No. The person adopting a child does not have to be legally married. If that were the case, only married couples would be able to adopt.
No they can not if any court has jurisdiction over the child or the other parent has visitation rights. In that case they need toe parent's consent and court approval.
All the digits are significant in this case. A zero between other digits is always significant, and all zeros after the decimal point are significant.
SInce you don't tell me what method of handling rights you wish me to compare handling them on a case by case basis to, I cannot tell you what makes it different from any other method. What I can note is that handling rights on a case by case basis means handling each case alone, on its own merits.
All of the digits are significant digits in this case. A zero between other (non-zero) digits is considered significant.
That completely depends on whether or not you voluntarily terminated your parental rights or the courts removed them before custody was re-assigned. If this happened, you have no rights. If it did not, you would need to refer to your court documents to see which rights, if any, were retained when you relinquished custody as this may be modified on a case-by-case basis.
I think it is short hand for 'protect'. My law professor uses 'px' in her notes... example "px rights of intimacy" protect the rights of intimacy
Answer: There are six. Answer: There is no such thing as "significant numbers". I assume you mean "significant digits". All digits are significant in this case - a zero (or more than one zero) between other digits is always significant.
Only Texas has that law, but with significant restrictions. In all other states, it's a case by case basis, with the Judge interpreting the maturity of the child, and their intent, but this still does not override other evidence in the child's best interest. It's just a piece of the evidence.see links below for additional info
In general, parental rights are terminated either preparatory to a divorce, or after a trial in which it is determined that the parent is unfit. In any case, termination of parental rights does not, in itself, terminate child support.
The "other" is not a part of your case.
Any non-zero digit is significant. Example: 352.12 has 5 significant digits. A zero is significant if it appears between non-zero digits. Example: 504.2 has 4 significant digits. A zero is also significant when it appears after the decimal point, AFTER other digits. In this case, it was only added to indicate a significant digit. Example: 5.30 has 3 significant digits. A zero after other numbers may or may not be significant. Use scientific notation to unambiguously indicate the number of significant digits. Example: 4500 has 2 significant digits. It may have 3 or 4 significant digits, but to be safe, assume 2 significant digits. A zero is NOT significant if it comes after the decimal point, BEFORE any other digits. In this case, it is only used to put the digits in their proper place. Example: 0.0024 has 2 significant digits.