Under UK Child Support law, the CSA would order the test and if he is proved to be the father he would pay for the test after the event.
If the father is unknown, you can't file for support.
First, don't pay anything until paternity is established. If the child is still a minor, you will most likely have to pay current (ongoing) support. However, based on the facts you describe, you have a good argument that you should not have to pay retroactive support.
Generally, a birth certificate includes the father's name only if that man has signed an acknowlegment of paternity.
Nothing happen's but the child will live with the tag of "father unknown" for the rest of their life. Paternity is presumed if the parents were married at the time of the child's birth. If the parents were not married, paternity can also be established by signing an acknowledgment of paternity or/and by genetic testing (DNA).
A paternity test would need to be done before this process could even begin. Without any verification that the child is his, she'd have no case, although he could be compelled by the courts and/or his unit to submit to a paternity test.
"D K" on a death certificate typically stands for "Don’t Know," indicating that the informant or official responsible for the certificate did not have information about the mother's name. This designation is used when the identity of the deceased's mother is unknown or cannot be verified. It highlights the lack of available information regarding the individual's familial background.
Yes, "mother unknown" can appear on a birth certificate in cases where the mother is not identified at the time of registration. This may occur in situations such as abandoned infants or when the mother is unwilling or unable to provide her information. In such instances, the birth certificate may reflect "mother unknown" to ensure that the birth is still officially recorded.
aok dont play... Before support is ordered, paternity must be established. I.e., promiscuity has its price and, unfortunately, it's the child(ren) who will suffer the most ... I assume she is demanding all the men in her town take a DNA test to see whose the father?
By signing a birth certificate you are stating that you are the parent and waving right to a paternity or maternity test. or signing you up as a commercial vessel into the sea of commerce, down a berthing canal to go and try and make the man money... our parents in signing the birth certificate unwittingly signed our rights away to be held by the state. we are then brought into "dock" when we do something wrong. A birth certificate is a powerful document that is used to trade and they are held in a trust holding with you being the unknown beneficiary of all that is within that trust. see http://www.winstonshroutsolutionsincommerce.com/
In many states, yes, but there's a drawback. If she really does know who the father is, she can still stop the support against the stepfather, as any time, than file for retroactive child support against the bio dad. This has been turning up in a number of paternity fraud cases of late.
Toward the Unknown - 1956 is rated/received certificates of: Finland:K-12 Sweden:15 USA:Approved (certificate #17997)
No, since they are not your biological parents.