Yes, in some cases, a child can have more than two legal parents through methods such as adoption, surrogacy, or legal agreements.
If the child's parents allow it, yes. Godparents have no legal relationship with the child, so you are not afforded any more legal rights than if you were not the godparent.
no, the parents of the child have more rights to the child than the grandparents.
Unless someone other than the child's parents has legal custody, I see nothing illegal about this.
You need to add more details. The parents are divorced. The child has a "legal guardian" rather than being in custody of the custodial parent. The child may have another living parent. The court would need to appoint a legal guardian or custody to the other parent. Your question leaves too many questions unanswered. You can add more details on the discussion page.
The parents are fined and sometimes the child is placed in an orphanage
They don't kill the child, instead the parents are being fined.
No. Even if they are not his biological parents they still have a parents rights which is more then a siblings rights.
In California, parents are legally obligated to financially support their children until they turn 18. After that age, parents are not legally required to provide support, but if they decide to ask their child to move out it is more of a family or personal decision rather than a legal requirement.
If you live in the US... Parents are required to financially support ALL their children. So if you have more than one child, you will pay child support for more than one child. Did that answer your question? I'm not entirely sure what you're asking.
Legal Custody is different than Parental rights. The courts decides child visitation, etc. and parents could pay child support to grandparent. It is all up to the courts..
They earned more money than their parents.
Whoever has physical custody of the child for more than 50% of the year (at least 183 out of 365 days) can claim the child on a tax return. If both parents have 50% custody, whoever has custody of the child on tax day (April 18th in 2011) can claim the child.