Maybe, maybe not. Different places have different laws. In some places, all children (estranged or not) are assumed to be heirs unless the will specifically states otherwise, and sometimes even that's not sufficient and the child is entitled to a share in the estate anyway.
No, you have no rights to change your father's will.
Nope! He DID, however, adopt his second wife's (Mary Joan Schutz) daughter, Katharine Anastasia, shortly after they married. Sadly, father and daughter became estranged when the latter was in her early 20s.
According to Bangladesh's law, the distribution ratio of a father's property among his wife, son, and daughter after his death is 1 eighth for wife, and the rest to son and daughter with the son getting twice that of the daughter.
When your daughter is 18 she is no longer a minor and can make her own decisions. However, if you are having problems with your daughter and she is anxious because she is curious about her father perhaps it would be wise to let her see her father. Most children have a bond with both parents no matter what the spouses know about each other and why they have divorced.
It will depend on the wording of the will, if there is one. Without a will, the property go to spouse and then children.
Most likely it was an accident, because that's her piece of property, and a normal father would not want to break his daughter's property.
The cast of Estranged - 2005 includes: Nicholas Bufalo as Son Cliff Ellen as Father
yes
The daughter of your father's daughter is his granddaughter. She is either your niece, or your daughter.
the elationship between father and daughter is a daughter must love her father and respect him and be honest to him ,,and the father must obei his daughter and follow her advice for them to be in peace
If had access to their birth certificates and he was clearly the father, yes he could.
Your father's aunt's daughter is your father's first cousin and your first cousin, once removed.