More specifically, a mother being an alcoholic who drank during pregnancy can cause her child to be born with fetal alcohol syndrome. Consequences are varied from physical deformities, learning disabilities, nervous system disorders and mental illness.
No. What you suggest is not possible.
yes, if the step parent name is assigned to the child.
Yes
It can be. It depends if the parent wanted to name the child this.
The court will require notice to be given to the other parent if the child is a minor.The child can seek a name change on their own at age eighteen.The court will require notice to be given to the other parent if the child is a minor.The child can seek a name change on their own at age eighteen.The court will require notice to be given to the other parent if the child is a minor.The child can seek a name change on their own at age eighteen.The court will require notice to be given to the other parent if the child is a minor.The child can seek a name change on their own at age eighteen.
Not at all. The child's last name does not grant more rights to one parent over the other with a different last name. It's just a name. The child doesn't even have to have either parent's last name.
Chorea is an old name for Huntington's Disease. It is genetically transmitted from parent to child. The only way to get HD is to inherit the gene that causes it from one of your parents that also had HD.
If the title is in the child's name, the child is the legal owner and the parent cannot take the car, regardless of who pays the insurance.
Yes, the name is irrelevant.
A parent cannot remove their name from a child's birth certificate unless they have official evidence such as a court ordered DNA test proving they are not the biological parent.A parent cannot remove their name from a child's birth certificate unless they have official evidence such as a court ordered DNA test proving they are not the biological parent.A parent cannot remove their name from a child's birth certificate unless they have official evidence such as a court ordered DNA test proving they are not the biological parent.A parent cannot remove their name from a child's birth certificate unless they have official evidence such as a court ordered DNA test proving they are not the biological parent.
When one parent files a petition to change a child's name, they are also supposed to have the other parent sign a consent to change the child's name form and then file it in the name change case file at the courthouse.
Yes, "Jr" is a suffix typically used when a child is given the same name as their parent. It signifies that they are the "junior" with the same name as the parent.