Yes the mother can because its like she have rights anyway. Because she get up clean,change,feed,bath ect all those things but she have to do what she have to do protect her child
No. If the mother is unmarried then she has legal custody of her child automatically. If the father wants parental rights he must establish his paternity in court.No. If the mother is unmarried then she has legal custody of her child automatically. If the father wants parental rights he must establish his paternity in court.No. If the mother is unmarried then she has legal custody of her child automatically. If the father wants parental rights he must establish his paternity in court.No. If the mother is unmarried then she has legal custody of her child automatically. If the father wants parental rights he must establish his paternity in court.
It is very rare that a Mother wants to give full custody of a child to the Father. To this all a Mother would have to do is choose to sign and give up her rights to the child in court.
No. The biological father have rights. Unless the court find him unfit to have custody then there might be a chance.
Either parent can have physical custody in a joint custody arrangement. If there is a court order granting the mother physical custody the father should notify the court of the mother's incarceration and have that order modified unless he wants the mother to resume physical custody when she is released.
You can only try see links below
Father must petition for custody and court will weigh what situation is best for the child
If He Have Full Custody Then He Doesn't Have To .
If you live in the US... Unless Mom's parental rights (different thing than custodial rights) have been terminated or she can be proven unfit, she's first in line for custody, so if she wants custody, she will get it (no matter what Dad wants)
Generally, custody orders end at age eighteen and the child can choose where she wants to live.
I wouldn't think so. You are the mother therefore you all ready have custody of your baby. Your coworker is wrong. Unless you have another person who wants the baby as the natural mother your rights are established. Custody issues come from a spouse or partner that wants the baby.
Until the baby is born he has no rights. His paternal rights starts after birth. If he then wants custody and you don't he has to go to court.
No. You were not ordered to give of your custody rights, just primary residency was transferred to the father. You still have your parental rights, the same as a father, and responsibility to pay child support, whether the father wants it or not.