yes you can if you can prove the value of your sheets and mattress and if you can prove that there was damage done . you can also sue for emotional distress because you either had to endure the smell of fecal matter and clean fecal matter as well as sleep on the floor or elsewhere until you were able to purchase a new bed
Another View: You, as a private citizen, can NOT "charge" anyone with anything.
Only the Prosecutors Office can "charge" people with an offense. The most you can do is report the incident to law enforcement and make an ACCUSATION against a specific subject whom you have reason to believe MAY have committed the act.
Yes, on the same principle as putting someone's hand in water. Have seen this work in college.
a more freudian approach may be to say that the feces represents something unpleasant to you, and the fact that it is under the bed could be significant in 2 ways. either it is a place that is close to home that this bad thing is (your bed is a place of comfort, afterall), or that it is under the bed becuase you are trying to hide it from someone. perhaps even yourself.
Putting the Days to Bed was created on 2006-07-25.
I heard that by putting a coconut under the bed will help you know if someone is casting a spell on you. If the coconut sprout, that means a spell is casted on you.
Someone could sell a commercial tanning bed in a variety of ways such as: posting through eBay, Amazon, putting an ad on Kijiji or Craigslist and as well as running an ad in your local newspapers.
depends
I assume this is a medical question - siderails will prevent a patient from falling out of bed.
Someone who is bed ridden is someone who has to stay in bed for a period of time (mostly for medical reasons), for a certain goal.
Just putting the kid asleep in its bed.
A librocubicularist is someone who reads in bed.
ask them
yup