If he has partial or shared custody, or if he has been granted visitation rights, she is breaking the law. He should consult his lawyer and have the suit pressed in court. If he has no parental rights whatsoever, then too bad for him.
Here in the Philippines, a mother can not just name any person as the father of her child in the Birth Certificate. They will look for a marriage contract as their reference when you named your child under his/her father's surname. Or if not married, they let the father fill up the Affidavit of Acknowledgement/Admission of Paternity at the back of the Birth Certificate.
If the father has sole custody of a child, and agrees to let a step-mother spank his child then yes, she can. However, if there is joint custody it has to be an agreement between all parents, otherwise there can be legal repercussions.
You will still have to pay back if any owed. After you sign you won't have to pay anymore because all your legal rights to the child will be terminiated. If Mom agrees to let you voluntarily terminate your parental rights, then, no, you won't have to pay child support going forward (but will still have to pay any arrearage unless Mom agrees to forgive it). But DO NOT do this if it not what you want to do. If you want to be a father, fight for it. Get court ordered visitation, then if Mom refuses to allow you to see your child, she can be held in contempt of court.
No not necessaryily. It's your kid and the government cannot tell you to not let the parent see their child.
He has the exact same rights to the child as the mother does. Don't let the mother or ANYONE tell him any different. All he needs to do is contact an attorney or legal help service and file a parenting plan. They will guide him through the legal rights to help serve a parenting plan giving him the option to be a part of his child's life.
If the mother have visitation right granted by the court the father can not stop her from seeing her child. If he does she can get help from the police and also report him back to the court so they know he broke the court order.
You get the police involved and go to court and let the mother have time to spend wth the child.
I'd advise you to go to a family law attorney in your state and discuss the situation, rather than attempt to handle it yourself. Let your lawyer handle all communications with the father of your child and his spouse.
nothing. there is no law that says you have to let him see the child, unless he has partial custody.
A single father, what does that mean? Are you divorced, ever married to the mother of your child, or is the child adopted by you, or is the mother dead or out of the picture? If your question is "How does a Father obtain residential custody after a divorce or in a paternity case", then I can answer this question. Let me know what your grounds for custody are. What is it about the mother or other parent that makes it harmful for the child to remain in their care?
This is a question which needs careful answering. I will try my best so as not to offend people who may read what answer I give. 1. If you are asking as a sexual act, then the answer is no, you cannot dishonor your father by performing such an act even is your mother in law is willing to let you. 2. If you are under the age of say three years, your real mother died, your father remarried and your mother in law was expecting or had just had a child, then in rare cases you may feed from your mother in law. I have no doubt it would be a one time feed only.
Yes. The father has no right to go to a personal doctors appointment.
Depends on your state. In MI, the legal father of the child is the mother's husband. If your child's father is not going to be your husband, do the right thing and let him be involved.
The two concepts are not related. Payment of child support is a financial responsibility. It does not depend on whether you see your children or not.
In most cases the mother of the child is considered permanently emancipated as far as the child is concerned. What this means is you can tell her she cannot spend the night with the father, but not that the child cannot spend the night with the father. That is up to the mother and father of the child. If you have what you consider valid concerns about the health and safety of the child while it's with the father, you will have to take your daughter to court.
Single father? Not without court orders. see links
They have every right to talk to their father, unless he is some kind of freak