You do not express of what? If he has joint custody of his children, as a stepparent, you carry some consideration for similar access rights in his absence, such as on extended military deployment. It is best though to clarify this in a modification.
a joint family for example is when a man who has kids but no wife and a woman who has kids and no husband get married that would be a joint family........or a family that smokes weed together........
Your husband cannot get joint custody of your children from a prior marriage. Custody arrangements are made between parents of children. Your present husband can legally adopt your children with their father's consent. He would then have all the legal rights and obligations of a biological father. The children would become his legal heirs-at-law.
No, unless the baby's biological father relenquishes his parental rights, he would get custody of the child if the mother dies, not her husband. The biological father must sign his rights away to the mother's husband.
If your husband has joint legal custody he can contest you moving the child form the state where you share custody
Joint Custody A New Kind of Family - 1984 was released on: USA: May 1984
The answer really depends on the state in which you reside. In some states, the mother is considered the natural parent regardless of marriage (in the absence of custody orders). In other states, custody is a joint issue. However, because you weren't married, you probably retain custody unless the father pursues a court custody order. You can call the family services division of your local courthouse for precise information pertaining to your state.
Yes he can.
The same rights as you.
The rights your ex-husband will have once you divorce will all depend on what the judge rules. He could have joint custody or split custody.
when joint custody is in place both parents have the same rights. unless stipulated in court records. Joint means both so when ever the other parent is suppose to have visitation with the child the child / children must go. review documents that grant Joint custody.
Most states lean toward Joint Legal Custody with primary residential custody
go to court and ask for it, tell them i want the joit custody of my boy/girl and state your case and say i love him/her... and so on