No,The courts can force him to support the child financually but not emotionally , you can't force him to take an active role in the child's life.
All babies have fathers....not all have dads though. Absolutely not! If the father is that adamant about not wanting to see their child, trying to force him by any court order is only going to make matters worse for you and for him. You could be opening up the probability of child abuse by him. Leave it be - get on with life.
Yes , the biological father will be held legally responsible for the support of his child .
A step-father will not be able to adopt a child unless the father signs away his rights. You can take it to court and win the case.
Yes, he still has a right to be the child's father. Illegally or Legally he is the child's biological father and no matter what anyone says You, the mother and The father laid down and had the child so i think he has every right to be the child's father legally or illegally. And for him to be deported and he has a child is down right wrong. But if he is deported i think when the child is old enough you should sit down and talk about daddy. There are such things as passports, go see the father if he is deported. i really hope that i was a little help Sincerely, M.A.H.
Parents of minor children are legally required to support said child/children regardless of the circumstances surrounding the matter. The biological father of the child in question must be financially responsible for his child according to the laws and ruling of the court of the state in which the child is a resident.
A motion to modify parental rights and financial responsibility, though a divorce would be better. see links
It isn't the birth father, no one will ever change the childs birth father, but he will legally be the step father,until the divorce comes through.
No
A childs mother must file a petition for child support in the local family court.
Who legally adopted the child?If the mother's new husband legally adopted the child, then the biological father's parental rights had to be terminated first. Which means that the biological father is NOT obligated to pay child support anymore. The new adoptive father has taken on all rights and responsibilities for the child.
If you are the child's father then you really have little legal support to not support your child. Your child is legally entitled to your financial support.
If he is married to the child's mother the decision is theirs to make, but if he is not married to her the mother decides the child's last name.
My child is 13 and lives in Texas and he wants to live with his father. Can he do this legally?
not without permission
yes
The court is the only authority that can make the determination that the father cannot pay. No one is "legally responsible" for the father's obligation except the father.
If the judge in the court with jurisdiction feels it would be in the best interests of the child to issue such an order, yes.
You can, but eventually the court will question what you are doing.