A widow (woman) or widower (man) would be someone whose spouse had died after they were married.
Signatures of both parents are required for a passport. can one spouse take kids out of county without letting the other spouse know?
Yes.
That depends on whether your parent was married at the time of death and if yes, whether the surviving spouse is also your parent. If the surviving spouse is not also your parent then the estate will be shared 50/50 with the surviving spouse getting half and the surviving children by a first wife sharing the other half. If the surviving spouse is also your parent then the surviving spouse gets 100%. If there is no surviving spouse the children get 100%.It is likely the estate will need to be probated. You should seek advice from an attorney who specializes in probate matters and who can provide up to date information.https://www.thebalance.com/dying-without-a-will-in-florida-3504952
Not without court approval, otherwise the other parent can file an injunction.
You cannot divorce a parent, you can only divorce a spouse.
Generally, no. Child support is based on the resources of the parent, not the parent's spouse.
If a biological parent gives up their parental rights, then the spouse of the other parent is able to adopt the child. The parent who gave up their rights has no say in the matter.
I assume it's not the step parent that is granted visitation. This is something the step parent and spouse have to work out since it's the spouse who has asked for visitation and therefor it's her responsibility to make it work. If the step parent own the house he can choose who's in it and who is not and same goes for the spouse if she owns it. The step parent have no authority over the visitation order.
It can be loss of companionship, a parent, a child, a spouse, or loss of a parent's, spouse's or child's ability to provide for someone else like a parent, child or spouse. Step-family relationships count. In the case of spouses, it can also mean loss of intimacy and physical enjoyment of another.
The parent who isn't in jail.
I assume it's not the step parent that is granted visitation. This is something the step parent and spouse have to work out since it's the spouse who has asked for visitation and therefor it's her responsibility to make it work. If the step parent own the house he can choose who's in it and who is not and same goes for the spouse if she owns it. The step parent have no authority over the visitation order.
You can, but its fraud.