A legally adopted child is a minor who has been permanently placed in a new family through a legal process that grants the adoptive parents full parental rights and responsibilities. This process typically involves a court procedure that terminates the biological parents' legal rights and establishes a legal relationship between the child and the adoptive parents. Once adopted, the child is treated as a biological member of the adoptive family, with all associated rights and privileges.
Main reason: the child is being legally adopted by another responsible adult.Main reason: the child is being legally adopted by another responsible adult.Main reason: the child is being legally adopted by another responsible adult.Main reason: the child is being legally adopted by another responsible adult.
Generally no, not unless he legally adopted the child.
Your adopted brother is legally your brother, period. So his son is legally your nephew.
Generally the niece, unless the step child was legally adopted.Generally the niece, unless the step child was legally adopted.Generally the niece, unless the step child was legally adopted.Generally the niece, unless the step child was legally adopted.
I don't think that any doctor can ask anything about an adopted child that they wouldn't to a non adopted child.
Who legally adopted the child?If the mother's new husband legally adopted the child, then the biological father's parental rights had to be terminated first. Which means that the biological father is NOT obligated to pay child support anymore. The new adoptive father has taken on all rights and responsibilities for the child.
No, if the spuse you divorced adopted the children or they are his/her own, he/she gets possession of them by law, unless he/she is unable to care for them.
Legally, you are not related. You only adopted one child, the fact that there are siblings does not mean you have any relationship to them.
A legally adopted child has all the rights of a biological child for purposes of inheritance under the state laws of inheritance and intestacy.
If the child was adopted legally by both parents, then the child becomes subject to any actions that might be taken had they been a 'natural' child.
A legally adopted child will be treated as any other minor. Their adopted parents have the same rights and responsibilities as a biological parent. So, the answer is probably 18.
Yes, a child can be legally adopted twice, but the process typically involves the termination of the first adoption. If the first adoptive parents are no longer able to care for the child or if the adoption is dissolved for legal reasons, the child can then be adopted by another family. Each adoption must go through the appropriate legal procedures to ensure the child's best interests are prioritized.