depends on the items or things you take
If bought legally, yes.
What jurisdiction?
she bought a honda from her
The personal pronouns are she and her.
not legally
Last night, I bought my daughter a chainsaw. She was pleased.
a personal property is something you bought or got ,and you keep it personal
Yes. The person you bought it from should have given you a clean bill-of-sale. Take all your personal stuff out of it, as it will soon and legally be gone.
if you bought the car legally. If you stole it, then you definitely wouldn't, but either way, you bought the car with your money. You have the right to drive it wherever you want.
If they are the ex's exclusive items (such as a personal piece of jewelry given by a family member or bought by that person before you were together), then yes. If you are referring to items bought together for your mutual use as a couple, then it becomes a grey area because they legally belong to the both of you.
If she bought the phone technically it belongs to her not her daughter so probably notAnother View: If your ex-wife bought the service in her own name (which she probably did since minors are legally incapable of entering into contracts), then she has the legal right to access the voice mail left on the service. Minors DO possess "rights," but freedom from supervision by their parents/guardians is not one of them.
Kratom cannot be legally sold or bought in Australia.