IF HIS NAME IS NOT ON THE BIRTH CERTIFICATE , HE HAS NOT BEEN ESTABLISHED AS THE FATHER AND THERE FOR HAS NO PARENTAL RIGHT'S (LIKE VISITATION ...ETC) "BUT" IF HE REQUEST'S A DNA TEST TO ESTABLISH PATERNITY AND HE IS DETERMINED TO BE THE FATHER HE WILL HAVE ALL THE SAME RIGHT'S TO THE CHILD YOU DO. SO YOU WOULD HAVE TO LET HIM HAVE VISITATION WITH THE CHILD, REGUARDLESS IF YOU THINK HE IS FIT TO BE A FATHER , THAT IS SOMETHING YOU SHOULD HAVE THOUGHT ABOUT BEFOR MAKING A CHILD WITH HIM.
yes =)
Do the children have his name on their birth certificate? If so he can do what he wants, but they still have that name. He has to live with it.
Like what?
Once paternity is established, the non-custodial parent has the right to request visitation, just as the custodial parent has the right to request support.
No because the person who provides the information on a birth certificate is attesting to its veracity. A birth certificate is an official record. There may be sanctions imposed if the information is found to be untrue. You would also be committing a serious injustice to the child to lie about its parentage.
answer is simple. GET A LAWYER
If the child is his, A DNA test would prove it You cannot be put on a birth certificate if the DNA proves you are not the father unless the mother agrees to it.
The mother is the legal guardian from birth and can give the child any name she wants but she can not sign for the father on the birth certificate. He have to sign it and if she was below age of consent when the child was conceived he can go to prison for statutory rape.
When I had my daughter, her father was not able to be there at the time, so I was the only one to sign the birth certifiate as a parent. The father's name can be added by the father at a later date if that is what either of you wants to do. No one but the biological parents can sign a birth certificate.
Thanks.
Anybody who wants to can be responsible financially.If they don't want to, the fact that they're listed on the birth certificate is essentially meaningless. In many places, the mother can list whoever she wants as the father on the birth certificate; she's not required to actually prove it. Courts do not necessarily assume that it's correct, and particularly if the person listed can prove he's not the biological father, it would be a travesty of justice if they forced him to pay child support anyway.No, no, no. A man's name can be on the birth certificate only if he signs an acknowledgment of paternity. This makes him the child's father until/unless a court rules otherwise.
Here in the Philippines, a mother can not just name any person as the father of her child in the Birth Certificate. They will look for a marriage contract as their reference when you named your child under his/her father's surname. Or if not married, they let the father fill up the Affidavit of Acknowledgement/Admission of Paternity at the back of the Birth Certificate.