This depends upon what you mean by a guest. In legal terms, a guest is someone who is staying at the apartment or dwelling for a brief amount of time, usually less than two weeks. Normally a landlord does not have the right to charge you if you have such guests. If you have guest for a longer period of time, then this guest could be considered a subtenant and you could be doing what is called subletting: renting out part of your dwelling and charging that person rent for it. Most landlords do not allow subletting dwellings: they have the right to control who lives in their property. Some landlords may allow this and charge extra to the tenant for it. In that case, it cannot be considered a "guest charge."
If the driveway is an optional service for the guest. If so then you can charge the guest extra for the service to cover the costs.
yes
as our guest ... free of charge
Guest speakers charge different amounts depending on the subject. Celebrity guest speakers can charge hundreds of thousands of dollars to be a guest speaker. A non celebrity may only charge a couple of hundred.
It depends on your role in the house: are you the landlord or are you the host? A landlord may not be allowed to kick anyone out if he is a guest of the tenant, unless the landlord had previously issued a trespass warning against that guest. The host is definitely allowed to ask a guest to leave. But one of the biggest issues is when does the guest become a resident, which then leads to a different process by which that person is removed from the house. In some states a person can spend three nights in a home and claim residency, while in other states it's more complex. Once a house guest can establish or claim residency, that person may not be removed from the house that easily.
yes they can but make sure to ask the landlord first so you get no surprizes it also depends on how long that person has stayed over
Most hotels charge a deposit, which the guest would lose (15.00)
I'm no lawyer so I can't give you a definitive answer, but ... The answer may depend on whether the landlord has accepted rent form you before. If you are living on the landlord's property and you have paid him rent and he as accepted it, that may be enough for you to claim the rights of a tenant and to take on the responsibility (to pay). Also, it would matter if you signed some kind of sub-lease with the tenant whose name is on the lease. If you don't live there and are just a guest, you don't pay rent.
That would depend on who the artist is.
40,000
Voltaire spent almost a year as a guest of the Bastille,
He spent 11 months as a guest of the Bastille.