No.
No. While some states do have grandparents' rights with respect to visitation of their grandchildren, they have NO ability to affect their own children's exercising of their parental rights. So, in this question, only the son has the legal ability to relinquish his own parental rights, and cannot be stopped from relinquishing those rights by his own parents (the grandparents). This presumes the son hasn't been declared mentally incompetent, and there isn't some court-ordered guardianship of the son.
Your daughter unless courts say other wise
You can ask him but not force him. If he is harmful to the child you can bring it to court and the court can take his parental rights away.
Courts generally try to do what they think is best for the child in such cases, however, the son-in-law has parental rights, regardless of his Visa status. Unless he gives up his parental rights, or is found by a court to be an unfit parent, it is unlikely that a grandparent will be given custody of the child.
Only by a judge and there has to be darn good reason.
No. Inheriting from a deceased child is a parental right under the state laws of intestacy. If you relinquished your parental rights you no longer have any.No. Inheriting from a deceased child is a parental right under the state laws of intestacy. If you relinquished your parental rights you no longer have any.No. Inheriting from a deceased child is a parental right under the state laws of intestacy. If you relinquished your parental rights you no longer have any.No. Inheriting from a deceased child is a parental right under the state laws of intestacy. If you relinquished your parental rights you no longer have any.
If the biological father relinquishes his parental rights and the court agrees and allows the adoption to proceed.
Yes. He can file a Termination of Parental Rights (TPR) petition in the appropriate state court in the city or county where he resides.
Yes you can sign over your rights. Only the courts can terminate parental rights. In this case, the child should be adopted.
If the other parent gives up their parental rights.
This depends on where you live. And no, I think he has to give up his parental rights.