The really long answer short on this is: the exact same rights as if he were on the birth certificate. However, since his rights have not been legally established, he will have to go to court to establish and enforce them. He may do thing through signing an acknowledgment of paternity, or by establishing his parentage through court ordered/recognized genetic testing. Once he is established as the legal father, he can use family court to establish a schedule of visitation or custody. He will often be required to pay support as well. Hope this helps.
K
no, changing the birth certificate requires adoption, and can only be done if the birth father's parental rights have been terminated.
He would have all of the rights that a biological father has. If he was not the biological father, then his name should not have been put on the birth certificate in the first place, unless he adopted her and the birth certificate was changed.
see link
Yes - the man signing the birth certificate is the child's legal father unless/until established otherwise in court.
A father has parental rights regardless of marital status most states.
the bio-father still has more rights as obvisouly he is the true father
If it's established who the biological father is, regardless what name is on the birth certificate, he will have to give up his parental rights in order for someone else to adopt the child. He can also go to court and have the name on the birth certificate changed to his.
The same if he is listed on the birth certificate. NONE
Single fathers have no rights in any state see link below
DNA testing can be done before or after a birth certificate is signed if there is any question about who the father of a child is or if visitation rights are being contested.
Yes, but it grants him no rights see link below
He has the right to sign the birth certificate. Apart from that he has no right at the birth. The mother is the patient and she decides what goes.