Parents can serve liquor to their own underaged children in their own homes or other private settings, but they cannot serve it to other people's children. If they serve liquor to their own children and then allow the child to drive, that could be an entirely different matter.
Press release 2007:
"Attorney General Thurbert Baker, the Federal Trade Commission and Ralph Blackman, President and CEO of The Century Council, a national not-for-profit organization dedicated to stopping drunk driving and underage alcohol consumption joined forces today to launch a public awareness campaign in Georgia to prevent underage drinking. The initiative, called "We Don't Serve Teens," was developed by The Federal Trade Commission and is designed to inform adults that providing underage drinkers with alcohol is unsafe, illegal, and irresponsible. Baker and Blackman were joined at the launch of the initiative by Bob Dallas, the Director of Georgia Governor's Office of Highway Safety, Deputy Chief Carlos Banda of the Atlanta Police Department, Fred Kitchens of the Wine and Spirits Wholesalers of Georgia, Tom Copeland of National Distributing, and Stony McGill of the Georgia Alcohol Dealers Association."
A child can legally live alone by themselves at age 18 in Georgia. At age 14, a child can choose which parent they would rather live with.
Pregnancy/having a child does not emancipate a person.
The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.
Legally, no.
No, an adult child cannot legally use the credit card of a deceased parent in the state of Georgia without authorization. Unauthorized use of a deceased person's credit card could be considered fraud and may have legal consequences.
In Georgia, parents are legally responsible for their child until they reach the age of 18, regardless of whether the child moves out of the home before turning 18. This means that parents are still responsible for providing financial support, supervision, and guidance to their child until they reach the age of majority.
I did when my child was on it. Don't if it's legal but he was my child
No
Legally speaking, yes, they certainly can. (This assumes the child is not emancipated and is legally in the custody of the parent.) In practice, it may be difficult.
Is this a trick question? If the child is legally an adult (and therefore 'emancipated') then there is no "custodial" parent.
No, in the US there is no such legal action.
no