This is very unlikely, unless you were born in the same city that issued the municipal ID card. Even then, the City Department of Health (or Vital Records) will almost assuredly request additional identification in order to prevent identity theft.
You will need an I.D., your birth certificate, and an non-laminated Social Security card. Go to the court house, and ask for the licensing section.
Take your court documents and birth certificate to social security and the dmv. If you have credit cards and utility bills to change over too, you will need the social security and dmv proof of the name change in some cases.
He will need to go to the local vital records to find out. My father also had no record of his birth (the court house burned down). Relatives had to verify his birth so he could qualify for social security.
You can change your name, you file a motion for a name change in civil court and a judge signs it, and you can legally have your birth certificate altered, and social security information. Social Security, you cannot change your number, you only get one.
To obtain a Real ID in Pennsylvania, you will need to provide the following documents: proof of identity (such as a valid passport or birth certificate), proof of Social Security number (such as a Social Security card or W-2 form), proof of Pennsylvania residency (such as a utility bill or lease agreement), and proof of legal name changes (such as a marriage certificate or court order).
To obtain a Real ID in Pennsylvania, you will need to provide the following documents: proof of identity (such as a valid passport or birth certificate), proof of Social Security number (such as a Social Security card or W-2 form), two proofs of Pennsylvania residency (such as a utility bill or lease agreement), and any name change documents if applicable (such as a marriage certificate or court order).
I would advise you to go to court anyway, and take any documentation that you have, even if you do not have a social security number or a date of birth. And yes, the plaintiff can win if you don't show up. You need to defend yourself from the accusation.
I think you can ask for a copy of your birth certificate at any age.
Putting a father's name on the birth certificate does not make him legally the father if you are not married to him. You can put his name on the birth certificate, but realize that it has no legal impact. In order to have paternity established, it has to be done with a court order.
The birth certificate is not something that gives him parental rights, he have to go to court for that and prove it by DNA test. A birth certificate does not require DNA so it does not hold up in court. So yes, if he has gone to court he has rights.
Birth Certificate will work
No- she had nothing to do with Obama's birth certificate. She was a law professor before her appointment to the supreme court.