i have done that. and i am only 16 with a 8month 1day old son. his father wanted to see him and i did not think it was safe so i told him no. so yes a mother can deny the father access to the child.
A child inherits half of their DNA from the biological Mother and half their DNA from the biological Father. The DNA profiles are then compared (on a 16 genetic marker basis) to establish whether the alleged father is indeed the biological Father of the child. If the alleged father is the biological Father of the child, then all the loci will match and he will be included as being the Father with a guaranteed probability in excess of 99.99% when the mother is included. The probability is normally over 99.9% if the Mother is not included. If the man tested is not the biological Father of the child he will be 100% excluded resulting in a probability of paternity of 0%. http://www.homednadirect.co.uk/DNA-Paternity-test.html
A biological mother contributes the actual egg cell and maternal DNA of a child, so the child gets half its chromosomes from the biological mother, with the other half coming from the father. A surrogate carries the child in her womb but does not contribute any sex cells or genetic material. This is usually done if a woman who wants children is has viable egg cells but for some reason cannot carry a pregnancy or give birth.
NO
If you are a legal guardian of the child then you can take the child and go get a paternity test yourself.
No. The mother only has type O antigens and the father has type B (and possibly O). Neither of them could have supplied the type A antigens to the child.
no
Yes , the biological father will be held legally responsible for the support of his child .
The is dependent of whether there is a father in the picture. In considering this, be sure to determine of she has been denying the father access to the child, and he has finally given up after spend thousands to enforce his rights.
no
A step father has no legal obligation to support a step child.
No, if what is meant is, can a biological mother of a child give custodial rights to her mother without the necessity of court procedure and/or the agreement of the biological father.
YOUR
If a father finds out he is the biological father of a child, he has as many rights to the child as the mother does. He can take the mother to court for custody or to set up a parenting plan.
You need to see a lawyer. Look for "Legal Aid" in your state as they offer free or low-cost legal advice. If someone is the "biological" father, he doesn't adopt the child, it is his child. He is legally obligated (in the USA) to provide support (money) for the child's needs. The only exception is if the mother was married to another man at the time of the birth, then legally the husband is considered the baby's father (even if everyone knows and admits that the other man is the baby's biological father). If you're asking whether the biological father can be forced to take care of the child in his own house, the answer is "no" he can give up his parental rights to the child. If you're asking whether the biological father can take the child away from the mother and her boyfriend/husband, the answer is "maybe" if he can PROVE to a court that the baby's mother is unfit and he (the biological father) is a better parent. If the father WANTS to be involved in the baby's life even though the mother has a new boyfriend/husband, the father MUST be allowed to have visitation with his child. Not allowing him to see the child may cause the courts to consider the mother not fit to raise the child. Again, GET LEGAL ADVICE from a lawyer.
they can divorce or the father can leave the family.
Who legally adopted the child?If the mother's new husband legally adopted the child, then the biological father's parental rights had to be terminated first. Which means that the biological father is NOT obligated to pay child support anymore. The new adoptive father has taken on all rights and responsibilities for the child.
Yes the bilogical father will get the child .