see link below
If he has adopted her then he is her father and has all of the biological fathers rights transferred to him at adoption. If adopted yes
Then unless the biological father is ok with this and signs his rights over, the new husband has no legal rights to the child.
No. If the fiance is the natural father, then he does have rights to his son. Getting married doesn't give him legal rights to your child (assuming he is not the father). He must adopt in order to have legal rights.
He would have all of the rights that a biological father has. If he was not the biological father, then his name should not have been put on the birth certificate in the first place, unless he adopted her and the birth certificate was changed.
If the biological parents' rights were severed, the parent is a legal stranger to the child, and she and the father have no duties or benefits to each other.
If the biological father relinquishes his parental rights and the court agrees and allows the adoption to proceed.
The first step is to contact a Family law lawyer, they will then walk you through the necessary steps such as terminating the rights of the biological father (or assisting you with the paperwork necessary for the biological father to sign his rights away) you will then go to court for the final adoption paperwork and voila! It's all usually very simple as long as your daughter's biological father does not contest it.
Your husband has no rights over the child because he did not help in the creation of the child, but he can legally adopt her.
You need to ask clearer, your question makes no sense. What rights are we talking about?
yes biological fathers may seek visitation and custody rights
it depends on the state and how long the biological father has been gone. It is never a bad idea to petition the court to see what happens.
You have to be established, legally, as her biological father so if you have not done that do that first. Have DNA tests done if needed. Then you can apply for custody or visitation rights.