More parenting drama for Chris Brown! The 26-year-old singer "Loyal" singer has reportedly filed legal docs to order a second paternity test to prove Royalty is his daughter, HollywoodLife reported.
According to family Attorney Carl Anthony Moore, who represents Royalty's mother Nia Guzman, the singer filed paternity documents for the joint custody of his 1-year-old daughter. As previously reported, Brown asked a judge to declare him as Royalty's father on her birth certificate. Currently, Guzman's boyfriend Brazil Riesling is listed as Royalty's father.
Royalty's mother filed documents in Houston asking a judge for Brown to have supervised visitation of their daughter, according to Gossip Cop. Guzman reportedly does not trust the singer alone with her daughter and thinks he is too irresponsible to take care of the child on his own.
Last month, TMZ reported that the parents had finally reached an agreement on child support after reports claimed that Guzman wanted $15,000 a month in child support, an increase from the $2,500 Brown was paying before. Based on the agreement, Brown is required to pay $10,000 a month, starting July 1.
Brown cut the agreement after learning that Guzman shipped his daughter to his mother Joyce Hawkins instead of bringing Royalty to him. Brown, who first learned that he fathered a child earlier this year, is reportedly currently seeking joint custody and does not want supervised visitation rights. Guzman is seeking primary custody.
The two have had a strained on-and-off-relationship since becoming parents.
"For me, there comes a time where people have to grow up and start becoming more of an adult and taking responsibility, and I think this was just a blessing in disguise with my daughter," he told Ryan Seacrest in June about being a father. "I get a chance to like look at her and you know, teach her stuff, the right path, and also be a father in my daughter's life."
"Just to see the smile on her face, just to see the littlest things, it's emotional for me," Brown added. "So I just love that aspect of being able to be a father now."