The Agreement for Consent Judgment Establishing Paternity, Granting Joint Legal and Physical Custody of Minor Child to Mother and Father and Establishing Child Support Payments to Mother is a legal document that formalizes the relationship between parents concerning their minor child. This agreement is intended to establish paternity, clarify custody arrangements, and outline child support payments. It serves as a binding contract between the parties involved, setting forth their rights and responsibilities regarding the upbringing of their child.
This agreement includes several essential components:
To successfully complete the Agreement for Consent Judgment, follow these steps:
A: From birth until the child's 18th birthday, the parents can establish paternity by completing the Acknowledgment of Paternity form.
Get on the birth certificate. Once your child is born, the easiest way to establish paternity is by getting your name on the birth certificate. Get an order through an administrative agency. Get a court order.
Indiana allows a man to execute a Voluntary Declaration of Paternity within the first 72 hours after a child's birth. If both parents sign the paternity affidavit (a form provided by the hospital from the state health department), the father's name will be put on the birth certificate and he will be the legal father.
The prosecutor will file the paternity case for free or for a $25 fee. The prosecutor will also usually ask for a child support order, but the prosecutor will not help with custody or visitation problems.
There are two kinds of custody: legal and physical. Unmarried mothers will almost always receive primary physical custody of a newborn baby. However, unmarried fathers can and do receive joint legal custody of a newborn baby and visitation rights.
Joint Legal Custody is where the parents work together and share the care and control of the upbringing of the child, even if the child has only one primary residence. Each parent has an equal voice in making decisions.
Birth certificate. If a birth certificate declares the father and he signs it, this is a legally binding qualification of paternity. DNA test. Court order.
Joint custody can exist if the parents are divorced, separated, or no longer cohabiting, or even if they never lived together. Joint custody may be: joint legal custody. joint physical custody (where the children spend a significant portion of time with each parent), or.
Indiana allows a man to execute a Voluntary Declaration of Paternity within the first 72 hours after a child's birth. If both parents sign the paternity affidavit (a form provided by the hospital from the state health department), the father's name will be put on the birth certificate and he will be the legal father.