Well in certain rural communities labolas count for legal marriage, since labolas are the traditional way for a man to 'purchase' his wife. A labola is an arranged payment (financially or payed with cattle) between the groom and the bride's family (mostly father and uncles). It is a way of saying, 'thanks for raising a good daughter.'
In the case of municipally-registered domestic partnerships, none. For state-registered DPs, particularly in California, Nevada, Oregon and Washington state, the rights are the same as for legal marriage.
There is no legal relationship between you and your domestic partner's child unless and until you have obtained a second-parent adoption that makes you the legal parent of the child.
Not enough information is given. WHAT document? Supposed to be registered WHERE? Registered by WHO? What is the documents alleged legal significance?
As long as it is where the registered owner of the vehicle legally resides it is legal.
If said first partner is dead, then it is legal.
A partnership is not a registered legal entity, how the partnership operates is determined by the partnership contract. Where companies are involved a 'joint venture' might be a better term to use.
A "life partner" has no legal rights under the law unless there is a registered civil union or legal marriage in those states that allow same. That is why it is so important for "life partners" to do estte planning and have wills drafted by a professional. In this case the children would be heirs-at-law unless the decedent had a will that named the life partner as the beneficiary.
Who is the legal owner or owners of a car if it is registered in one name but paid for jointly by 2 parties
Manufacturer's GVW is 31,000 lbs.... legal GVW depends on what it's registered as... if it's registered as a 26k truck, then that's the legal GVW. If it's registered as a 33k truck, then that'll be the legal GVW, and a CDL is required.
I belive it is
"Lifetime partner" is a vague, informal term used to politely refer to the person which someone lives with for many years without the benefit of marriage. Domestic Partner is a legal term defined by statutes in the jurisdiction where the couple lives. Domestic Partnership usually refers to a relationship that has been registered with the state or local government in order to obtain certain benefits of law.
No.