Yes
No. Minors are not able to enter into valid contractual agreements. A minor would need to have a parent(s) or guardian obtain a card and give them permission as an authorized user.
If they have granted permission. Ideally they'd contact the credit card company to add you as an authorized user.
In order to check-in into a hotel, the person must be 21 years old. If the person is younger than 21, then a parent or guardian can give permission for them to check-in.
Yes, sharing someone's credit card information online with the intention of it being used by someone else is illegal and can result in criminal charges. It is considered fraud and can lead to serious consequences, including jail time. It's important to always respect and protect other people's private information.
Not if you give permission.
If you do not give the name of the person you know or suspect used your credit card without permission, then the credit card company could hold YOU liable for ALL charges that person made. The decision seems pretty simple to me... save the other person, or save myself from paying for their illegal purchases.... it is a no-brainer. Turn the person in, so they know the consequences of illegal acts.
My guess is that company was a collection agency? Never give anyone your bank info, or credit card info. If the company was a legitimate company you were doing business with and you did not authorize payment dispute the charge with your credit card company.
In most cases a card holding spouse can add the other as an "authorized user" without permission, however those types of cards are not liable for repayment of the balance, even on transactions preformed on their card. It is not legal for one spouse to add the other on any credit applications has a "co-signer" without that persons permission. However, the liability would not be in the hands of the credit card company, since if you are listed as a "co-signed" and claim you did not agree, sign-up or give you spouse permission, you risk your spouse being turned over to the States Attorneys office for consideration of Credit Card and Identify Fraud.
No credit card company will give you a credit card without a regular income, as they need to know that you have the means to repay whatever you borrow
No
You can qualify for a home depot credit card it really depends on your credit card and your credit history which they will run before they give you the card
You can if you used the information without their permission to obtain goods, services or monies. If that person gave you permission to use their card for a purchase you both agreed upon and they gave you all the credit card information, then that is one thing. However, if you then use that person's credit card info to purchase something else, then you have frauded the person and the credit card company. The person would have grounds to prosecute in court, and if they did not and the purchase was not paid, then also the credit card company would have grounds to prosecute. It is NEVER a good idea to give out your personal credit card info, even to someone you know, for this reason.