Wiki User
∙ 11y agoNo. You can't give up your parental rights if your paternity hasn't been legally established.
No. You can't give up your parental rights if your paternity hasn't been legally established.
No. You can't give up your parental rights if your paternity hasn't been legally established.
No. You can't give up your parental rights if your paternity hasn't been legally established.
Wiki User
∙ 11y agoWiki User
∙ 11y agoNo. You can't give up your parental rights if your paternity hasn't been legally established.
No, paternity have to be established first. Otherwise a man can be forced to pay for a child that is not his. It's easily done by a DNA test.
Yes, if he can establish his paternity legally through a DNA test. Once his paternity is established he can petition for visitation or custody and if the mother retains custody she can request a child support order. A father's parental rights do not depend on the name of the child only on the biological relationship.
Absolutely nothing. You have no control whatsoever over naming the child. You have no parental rights unless you establish your paternity in court. Once established legally as the child's father you can request a visitation schedule and the mother can obtain a child support order. The child's name is the mother's choice.Absolutely nothing. You have no control whatsoever over naming the child. You have no parental rights unless you establish your paternity in court. Once established legally as the child's father you can request a visitation schedule and the mother can obtain a child support order. The child's name is the mother's choice.Absolutely nothing. You have no control whatsoever over naming the child. You have no parental rights unless you establish your paternity in court. Once established legally as the child's father you can request a visitation schedule and the mother can obtain a child support order. The child's name is the mother's choice.Absolutely nothing. You have no control whatsoever over naming the child. You have no parental rights unless you establish your paternity in court. Once established legally as the child's father you can request a visitation schedule and the mother can obtain a child support order. The child's name is the mother's choice.
That someone should have confirmed paternity at the time the child support was ordered.That someone should have confirmed paternity at the time the child support was ordered.That someone should have confirmed paternity at the time the child support was ordered.That someone should have confirmed paternity at the time the child support was ordered.
Child support does not begin until the child is born and paternity is established. In Kansas, support has to begin during the pregnancy.
Courts do not grant parental rights, custody and restraining orders without evidence. They do not grant custody to a man who only "says" he's the father or to someone who is "presumed" to be the father. They establish paternity first. You should contact an attorney who can review your situation and explain your options.Courts do not grant parental rights, custody and restraining orders without evidence. They do not grant custody to a man who only "says" he's the father or to someone who is "presumed" to be the father. They establish paternity first. You should contact an attorney who can review your situation and explain your options.Courts do not grant parental rights, custody and restraining orders without evidence. They do not grant custody to a man who only "says" he's the father or to someone who is "presumed" to be the father. They establish paternity first. You should contact an attorney who can review your situation and explain your options.Courts do not grant parental rights, custody and restraining orders without evidence. They do not grant custody to a man who only "says" he's the father or to someone who is "presumed" to be the father. They establish paternity first. You should contact an attorney who can review your situation and explain your options.
A person from Wyoming is called a Wyomingite.
Paternity must be established before an order for support is entered. This is done by: genetic testing; presumption, where the parties were married when the child was born/conceived; acknowledgment of paternity either in writing or in open court; default, where the alleged father fails to cooperate in the process.
If you were not married when the child arrived the legal custody lies with the mother. The father have to prove paternity in court before he can get his parental rights.
Yes
From what I was told by the "Courts", in order for an established parent to terminate their rights, there has to be someone on the other end to pick up where they left off, like an adoption.
someone... read a book on Wyoming or something.