All he needs to do is convince the court that the mother is "unfit", meaning that she is menatally unstable, participates in dangerous or illegal behavior or is otherwise a threat to the safety or mental health of the child.
Your mother's mother is your grandmother. Her husband is your grandfather or a person unrelated to you who married your grandmother either before or after your mother was born. If her husband is not related to you his son may be your mother's half-brother or may be unrelated. If unrelated the son's son's sister is also unrelated to you. If your mother's half-brother, then the son's son and his sister are your second cousins. If your grandmother's husband is your grandfather, then his son's son (his grandson) and the grandson's sister are both your second cousins.
She can call Child Protective Services if she believes you are endangering the child. However, only the court can take your son away from you.
Answer:Because daughter-sister-father feel son-brother-mother-daughter is take away their daughter-daughter-uncle but brother-mother-father think son-mother-father-daughter go away to brother-sister-mother. Answer:This question is based on a rather doubtful assumption, unless, perhaps, it applies to some specific region or culture. As a general proposition, any answer would be purely speculation and of little value.
Your mother's aunt's husband's sister is your mother's aunts sister-in-law but is not related to you. Her son is not related to you either.
Your mother's husband is your father. His father-in-law is your mother's father, your grandfather. Your grandfather's son is your mother's brother, and your uncle. Your uncle's daughter is your first cousin.
Your mothers husband would be your step father and you would be a step son or step daughter.
IT DEPENDS WHO IS ON THE POLICY AT THE TIME OF DEATH. IF HIS SON IS ON THERE THEN HIS SON GETS THE MONEY
Whether a daughter-in-law pushes her husband's mother way depends on how the mother interacts with the daughter-in-law, and on the personalities of the two people. That one would push the other away is not a universal rule.
Your mother's new husband is your step-father and you are his step-son or step-daughter.
Typically, the right to inherit or take under a Will lapses when the person passes away. So, no, the IRS would not have a right to collect from the father's assets which pass to the mother's son.
You can call her by her first name or if your comfortable some son-in-laws call them mom.
Blood relationship.