Yes, when you give up parental rights that means all.
Not necessarily - you might retain visitation rights. And you definitely retain the right to pay child support.
As an illegal, he probably does not have access to the legal system. The grandparents should probably determine if the father is a fit parent and, if so, do the right thing.
It depends on the state. In some states, a father who is unmarried to the mother acquires legal rights by signing the birth certificate. In other states, signing the birth certificate conveys no legal right, and the father still must proceed with a legitimation or paternity proceeding in order to become the legal father.
The grandparents have no right to the child, only the parents can decide about adoption. If she does not want custody the father can get it.
Yes, but the reverse is not possible. She has an universal right to abort her responsibilities to a child, regardless of age.
Pete Childs is 5 feet 7 inches tall. He weighs 175 pounds. He throws right.
Cupid Childs is 5 feet 8 inches tall. He weighs 185 pounds. He bats left and throws right.
The best way to determine which multivitamin is the right choice for your children is to consult your childs doctor. This way they can tailor the various multivitamins to your childs specific needs.
I assume that you mean "from the biologicalfather". The father have every right to have you see his child when the child stays with him. The mother can do nothing about that unless she can prove you are unfit or dangerous to the child and then she will need a court order to keep you away.
Not unless your grandparents are granted custody/guardianship by the court.
Welcome the father's involvement. Tell him it's unrealistic not to tell his parents; the baby has a right to know his or her grandparents, after all.
The same under all possible scenarios. Unless specifically stated in a custody decree, they get the child. In Kansas, if the children are under five and the mother is married to the man, and together, the maternal grandparents have first right to take the children under the tender years doctrine. Unless specified, no divorced or single father has a presumed right to the children when a custodial mother dies.
Check out the site in the related links box below, it has Mozart's family tree The 2 names on the far left are his mother and father.... grandparents to the right and so on... If this is helpful recommend me