The best thing to do at this point would be to contact a lawyer and see if there is anything you can do. In most cases if the parent doesn't relinquish rights you have to have them declared unfit and their rights striped.
The adoptive parents must voluntarily relinquish their parental rights and you must seek to have your legal custody restored through the court at the same time.
No. If the fiance is the natural father, then he does have rights to his son. Getting married doesn't give him legal rights to your child (assuming he is not the father). He must adopt in order to have legal rights.
The step father would have to adopt the child. For this to happen, the biological father would have to relinquish all rights through the court system.
More than likely the child will be placed in the biological fathers custody in the event of your death. If the father is not in the child's life it will be best to have him relinquish his parental rights so in the event of such accident the child can legally reside with your family.
You need to ask clearer, your question makes no sense. What rights are we talking about?
see link below
No, unless the baby's biological father relenquishes his parental rights, he would get custody of the child if the mother dies, not her husband. The biological father must sign his rights away to the mother's husband.
Only if the non-custodial parent give up his parental rights.
yes biological fathers may seek visitation and custody rights
A step-parent has no legal rights regarding your child. The biological mother has visitation rights and other rights when the child is in her custody.
No, he would not have the same rights as the biological grandmother, if she had any such rights.No, he would not have the same rights as the biological grandmother, if she had any such rights.No, he would not have the same rights as the biological grandmother, if she had any such rights.No, he would not have the same rights as the biological grandmother, if she had any such rights.
No he does not.