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Commonly Asked Questions about Paternity Law Resources

In Georgia, there is no clear time limitation established by law to determine paternity.
HB 2698 by *Parkinson Paternity - As introduced, clarifies that a party to a civil or criminal proceeding in which the paternity of a child is at issue may voluntarily seek a genetic test from an accredited laboratory before a court issues an order requiring the genetic test.
In the United States, where a child is conceived or born during wedlock, the husband is legally presumed to be the father of the child. Some states have a legal process for a husband to disavow paternity, such that a biological father can be named as the parent of a child conceived or born during a marriage.
Your name must go on the childs birth certificate. Unless you have a divorce decree that specifically states that you are not the biological father of the child in question. The DNA test results must be attached to the decree.
(2) If a child has a presumed father, a court may determine that the child is born out of wedlock for the purpose of establishing the childs paternity if an action is filed by the presumed father within 3 years after the childs birth or if the presumed father raises the issue in an action for divorce or separate
If a child is born to unmarried persons and there is no COURT ORDER identifying a father, Tennessee law states that the mother automatically has both legal and physical custody of the child. In order for a potential father to have any custody/visitation rights to a child, there MUST be a COURT ORDER.
Parents can establish paternity in Tennessee until the child docHubes age 21; however, the VAoP process is available only until the child docHubes age 19. It is in the best interest of the child to establish paternity right away, preferably at the time of birth.