her father....who else?
in Tuscumbia, Alambama they called there house Ivy Green:))
By law, the "father" is the man who signed the birth certificate unless/until paternity is established in some other way.
see link
Yes, in Texas, you can still obtain a paternity test even if you have signed the birth certificate. Signing the birth certificate does not legally establish paternity if there are doubts about the biological relationship. You can request a paternity test through the courts or a private agency, and the results can be used to amend the birth certificate if necessary.
Birth certificate, marriage certificate (if applicable), any previous passport issued, photograghs (signed for 1st issue) and the application form signed by an authorised person (UK). Also attend interview (first passport UK), mothers birth certificate.
No, that statement is not true. The signing of a birth certificate does not determine any financial compensation from the government. Birth certificates serve as legal documents to establish identity and record vital information about a person's birth.
The man who signed the birth certificate is the child's legal father until/unless a court rules otherwise, and can be made to pay support.
She was born on June 27, 1880 and died June 1, 1968.
yeah sure whatever homboyy
Yes, there's a 30% rate of paternity fraud where a mother gets a man whose not the father to sign the birth certificate.
A Birth Certificate contains date, time and location of birth. It also has the Mothers full name and Fathers full name. Then the Doctor who did the procedure signs his name as proof that the child was born in the United States. --- The information on a birth certificate varies by state, and by whether or not it is a long-form or short-form document. A "Record of Live Birth" is usually issued by the hospital and signed by the health care provider, but this is not the same thing as an official, state-issued birth certificate. Generally speaking, state-issued birth certificates are not signed by doctors but are rather validated/signed/certified by a court or government official.
Yes, but the father can motion the family court to stop the action, or have it changed back when he finds out.