Originally posted by: sadiltl
Writers, here to go! ChatGPT gives the answer. Vik will get visitation rights if Mannat agrees and he proves himself as a sane parent 
Here is the prompt I gave.
"Here is a legal conundrum about parentage, how will Indian legal system views it. Boy A and girl A who are in love bore a child out of wedlock. Due to some misunderstanding girl A leaves boy A without informing him about her pregnancy. They separate and meet after 7 years. The child that had born is now raised by boy B who co-habitates with girl A without any conjugal relationship. the child's birth certificate has the boy B's name and she considers him as her father. She was raised by both girl A and boy B as their own child, even though they are not a couple. Now boy A comes to know that he is biological father to the child and goes to the court for custody. What will indian court say. Which father gets the rights to the child "
-------------------------------------------------------------------
This won’t be decided by a simple “biological vs. non-biological father” rule. Indian courts consistently center one principle above all
The controlling standard
Under the Guardians and Wards Act, 1890, custody is decided on the “welfare of the child”—not on who has the stronger biological claim.
How the court will analyze your scenario
1) Biological father (Boy A)
- He can assert paternity (the court may allow a DNA test if disputed).
- But being the biological father does not automatically give custody.
- The court will ask:
- Why did he have no relationship for 7 years?
- Did he make any effort to locate or support the child?
- Is entering now in the child’s best interest—or disruptive?
2) Social/record father (Boy B)
- His name is on the birth certificate.
- He has raised the child as her father since birth.
- In Indian jurisprudence, this creates a strong “psychological and emotional parent” argument.
- Courts increasingly recognize de facto parenting—the person who actually performed the parental role.
3) The mother (Girl A)
- As the natural guardian (especially for a young child), her stance matters heavily.
- If she supports Boy B continuing as the father figure, that carries weight.
4) The child’s perspective
- At ~7 years old, the court may consider her comfort, attachment, and stability.
- The fact that she believes Boy B is her father is extremely important.
Likely outcome (realistic, not theoretical)
In most such cases, Indian courts tend to:
❌ Not uproot the child
They are very reluctant to disturb a stable upbringing.
❌ Not hand over custody to Boy A immediately
Even if paternity is proven.
✅ Maintain custody with the existing family unit
(Boy B + mother), because that is the child’s known environment.
What Boy A may get
Instead of custody, the court may grant:
- Visitation rights (gradual introduction)
- Possibly shared parenting over time, if it proves beneficial
- The option to build a relationship slowly
Courts often prefer a phased approach, like:
- Supervised meetings
- Regular visitation
- Gradual emotional integration
When could Boy A actually win custody?
Only if he proves something like:
- The child is not being properly cared for
- The current environment is unsafe or harmful
- The mother/Boy B are unfit guardians
Without that, biology alone won’t win.
One subtle but important legal tension
There’s a conflict between:
- Truth (biological identity)
- Stability (existing emotional bonds)
Indian courts almost always resolve this in favor of stability—especially for young children.
Bottom line
- Boy A = biological father → gets a voice, not automatic custody
- Boy B = de facto father → strong practical advantage
- Child’s welfare → decisive factor
So in your scenario, custody will most likely remain with Boy B and the mother, while Boy A may be allowed to enter the child’s life gradually through court-regulated access.
1.4k