What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? tx
I am providing a link to my original request here but basically, husband and I were married in August. He ex-girlfriend was pregnant and now trying to work through the legal stuff, visitation, child support -- fun stuff.
Prior Post:
https://forum.freeadvice.com/child-custody-visitation-37/husbands-child-outside-marriage-442096.html
Husband finally received paperwork in the mail from the attorney general for his 3 month old daughter. They went to their appointment, established paternity, set up child support, scheduled for payment of arrears of child support, medical support and he received a visitation schedule of 1st, 3rd, and 5th weekends, Saturday and Sunday for 8 hours - Supervised. He is concerned with who determines who supervises and how difficult that might make his time with his daughter but he believe that will take some time and they can work through that.
The one subject that set the mother off is the baby's last name. She didn't call and have him there when their daughter was born, she said that was why is name wasn't listed on the birth certificate. She gave their daughter her last name. He always voiced a disagrement over that for several reasons. He's the father and will be involved, pay child support and feels she should have his last name.
The representative for the Attorney General assured her that if that was taken to court it would likely be in his favor for the reasons of his desire for involvement and paying child support and simply - she's as much his daughter as she is yours. She gave them an option of hyphenating the last name so their daughter would have both of their last names. He said he wanted to try and work with her. If she wanted it to be hyphenated like that in lieu of having her with just his last name he could deal with that. So that is what he did. She still wasn't happy about it but their daughter now has a first, middle and two last names.
Now he's come to me scared he might have made a bad decision. How can tihs affect them down the road? Did he just make things difficult for his daughter to grow up with two last names? Can the mother choose to use one or the other and not both together? If they both agreed together that that may have been a bad idea and they want to change it to just choose one last name or the other can they and what process would they have to go through?
I am providing a link to my original request here but basically, husband and I were married in August. He ex-girlfriend was pregnant and now trying to work through the legal stuff, visitation, child support -- fun stuff.
Prior Post:
https://forum.freeadvice.com/child-custody-visitation-37/husbands-child-outside-marriage-442096.html
Husband finally received paperwork in the mail from the attorney general for his 3 month old daughter. They went to their appointment, established paternity, set up child support, scheduled for payment of arrears of child support, medical support and he received a visitation schedule of 1st, 3rd, and 5th weekends, Saturday and Sunday for 8 hours - Supervised. He is concerned with who determines who supervises and how difficult that might make his time with his daughter but he believe that will take some time and they can work through that.
The one subject that set the mother off is the baby's last name. She didn't call and have him there when their daughter was born, she said that was why is name wasn't listed on the birth certificate. She gave their daughter her last name. He always voiced a disagrement over that for several reasons. He's the father and will be involved, pay child support and feels she should have his last name.
The representative for the Attorney General assured her that if that was taken to court it would likely be in his favor for the reasons of his desire for involvement and paying child support and simply - she's as much his daughter as she is yours. She gave them an option of hyphenating the last name so their daughter would have both of their last names. He said he wanted to try and work with her. If she wanted it to be hyphenated like that in lieu of having her with just his last name he could deal with that. So that is what he did. She still wasn't happy about it but their daughter now has a first, middle and two last names.
Now he's come to me scared he might have made a bad decision. How can tihs affect them down the road? Did he just make things difficult for his daughter to grow up with two last names? Can the mother choose to use one or the other and not both together? If they both agreed together that that may have been a bad idea and they want to change it to just choose one last name or the other can they and what process would they have to go through?