Only if it is a joint account or payable on death to the "common law spouse". If it is a sole account in your mother's name then it is a part of her estate.
No, he only have rights to say about the child and not the mother's personal life.
If you mother died without a will, you as a child would have more rights to her personal items than your aunt.
A step mother has no legal rights regarding her step children.A step mother has no legal rights regarding her step children.A step mother has no legal rights regarding her step children.A step mother has no legal rights regarding her step children.
If the account is "Joint Tennants in Common" then all of the joint owners must be present to close that account/write checks/withdraw fund. Most banks do not offer Joint Tennants in Common, but offer "Joint With Rights of Survivorship" this means that only on owner must be present to close the account.
Standard Account
It is your mother's home so you have whatever rights she allows you.
Only the court can deny rights, the mother can not.
Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights was created in 2002.
if the mother terminates her rights can he collect child support from the mother if child lives with him?
Joint Account If your name isn't on it then you have no rights. If she has passed away then the Power of Attorney can access it.
"Mother" Jones was a labor and union activist of the 1880s to the 1920s. Radical and devoted to the "common laborer," her personal appearances and her autobiography inspired others to battle for workers' rights. Mary Harris Jones was a dressmaker and a community leader. She was the cofounder of the Industrial Workers of the World.
Best practice is to create two different levels of accounts on a computer - one with administrative rights and the other with much more limited user rights. For most operations, the limited rights account is sufficient and while operating under that account, there is considerably less opportunity to infect or corrupt the computer. The Administrator level account should only be used when performing actions that require the considerably greater power of that kind of account to change the configuration of the computer, its file structures, and operating system. By creating the second, limited rights account, you allow the user to operate more safely than if all actions were performed at the administrator level of rights.