Can, but the father can challenge it in probate.
If you relinquish your rights you are not entitled to visitation.
YOU cannot deny any custody or visitation. Only the court can make an enforceable decision regarding these matters. State laws vary. If physical abuse is the case, the custodial parent will need a record of the abuse and should call the police, take pictures to record the effects, and try to have dis-interested witnesses present at the time of any contact between the parents. If there is no abuse to the children, or no abuse in the presence of the children, it is unlikely to make any change in the court decision for joint custody. It may compel the court to make some order for supervised exchange of the children for visitation. Only the court can make any decision, especially regarding custody. If the non-custodial parent is abusive to the children it may be very good grounds for a sole custody arrangement. It may also encourage the court to provide for supervised visitation. Visitation is a different issue than custody. Visitation is the means for the non-custodial parent to have a relationship with the children and build that relationship. A court generally regards this as semi-sacred. A custodial parent should NOT deny visitation. If it is necessary to curtail visitation for the real safety of the children, the custodial parent should immediately file a request for a change of visitation. Otherwise, a court may frown on a parent who denies visitation. In some states, continual denial of visitation can be grounds for a change of custody.
I'm not sure what you mean by this since children don't have any rights over their parents, remarried or not. If he is ill and need guardianship you can apply for that in court but if he is a normal healthy adult you have no rights at all just like he has no rights over you once you became adults.
One wikianswerer's opinion: Yes they are but their dad says no.
Child support and visitation are separate issues. The non-payment of support would not prohibit a biological parent from being granted visitation rights. Any suspected abuse of a child should be reported to the state family and children's services (child protective services) to be investigated. If the investigation finds that abuse did occur or there is a possibility of it occurring, a judge can deny visitation or order court supervised visitation. Child support can be ordered by the court with or without visitation rights being granted to the non-custodial parent.
Not if the other parent has joint custody and/or visitation rights.
No she has four sons, 2 of which are bilogical children and the other 2 are adopted from Ike's previous marriage.
Buddy Holly's widow miscarried their child after he died. She later remarried and had children and is now a grandmother.
Yes he also has had 2 children
yep
No. There are no provisions in the laws of Georgia that provide step-parents with visitation rights. A step-parent has no legal standing. They would need to bring suit and take their chances with a judge.
No. Godparents are not recognized as having the legal status to petition the court for visitation rights to minor children. That being the case, visitation of minor children would only be possible if the custodial parents voluntarily allowed it.
The biological parents should be on the engagement announcement whether they are divorced or have remarried.
You must prove that the health or welfare of the children would be harmed unless the visitation was granted and that granting the visitation would be in the best interest of the children.
During the divorce proceedings, the wife got custody of the children but the husband still has visitation rights on weekends.
Yes. If there is a will and the children are not included, they're not included. If, say, a husband/father dies without a will and wife remains, wife inherits all whether she is mother of husband's children or not.
Yes, he was married with children. His widow has never remarried.