Depends on the circumstances and limitations of the court. A single father with no court orders have no rights period to the child. see links
He has the right to petition the courts for a determination of paternity and, if he is the father, the right to pay child support and petition for visitation.
No, he has no right to decide over her body at all and has no legal right to decide over the child until the child is born and paternity has been established.
If DNA confirms a man is child's father, the father will have a few decisions to make. The father can assume responsibility for the child and work together with the mother for the sake of the child, or the father can sign over his parental right to the mother, and choose to have no further contact with the child.
Yes if he wants to. The one who has the child that day/night decides who they can have over and who will meet the child as long as that person is not unfit to be around children. That goes for the mother too when she meets a new man in her life.
A father cannot, period as it's an issue for the courts. As for the mother, she has the universal right to abandon her child under the Safe Haven laws.
not without court approval. see link
The right to complain to your father.
Generally, no. The father does not automatically hold that degree of authority over the child's mother and the mother does not hold that degree of authority over the father. If the father believes there is a situation that creates an unsafe environment for his child then he must take the matter to court and ask for a court order.Generally, no. The father does not automatically hold that degree of authority over the child's mother and the mother does not hold that degree of authority over the father. If the father believes there is a situation that creates an unsafe environment for his child then he must take the matter to court and ask for a court order.Generally, no. The father does not automatically hold that degree of authority over the child's mother and the mother does not hold that degree of authority over the father. If the father believes there is a situation that creates an unsafe environment for his child then he must take the matter to court and ask for a court order.Generally, no. The father does not automatically hold that degree of authority over the child's mother and the mother does not hold that degree of authority over the father. If the father believes there is a situation that creates an unsafe environment for his child then he must take the matter to court and ask for a court order.
Not at all. She would have no legal right over the child unless rights had been granted to her by a judge.
You can't legally change your child's name with out her father's consent. The only way around it would be to ask him to sign over his rights, but if he does you may hinder your child's right to collect child support.
How often is the father awarded custody of the child over the mother in North Carolina?
Generally, no.