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<blockquote data-quote="witzend" data-source="post: 334492" data-attributes="member: 99"><p>It would be easily checked on his birth certificate. If her husband is not listed as the father, then he must adopt. By law he'll have to have a lawyer or a registered adoption agent act on his behalf. Most domestic relations laws have changed since the 1980s, and the one about the husband being the legal father may not be on the books any longer, and may never have been on the books in the state her son was born in. When L was born in 1983, you could name whomever you wanted in my state. A named father would have to disprove the claim with a paternity test. It's still the same.</p><p></p><p>She'd do best to check the birth certificate and hire a lawyer if her husband is not named as the father on it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="witzend, post: 334492, member: 99"] It would be easily checked on his birth certificate. If her husband is not listed as the father, then he must adopt. By law he'll have to have a lawyer or a registered adoption agent act on his behalf. Most domestic relations laws have changed since the 1980s, and the one about the husband being the legal father may not be on the books any longer, and may never have been on the books in the state her son was born in. When L was born in 1983, you could name whomever you wanted in my state. A named father would have to disprove the claim with a paternity test. It's still the same. She'd do best to check the birth certificate and hire a lawyer if her husband is not named as the father on it. [/QUOTE]
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