a court ordered it
A. the minor consented
B. the parents consented
C. the court ordered it
D. the child was a rape victim
The answer to this question is C.
Generally, neither a minor nor parents may consent to sterilization, transplants, experimental medical care, or refusal or withholding of treatment with out a court order.
Found on page 77 in the Law, liability, and Ethics Text Book
A notarized document is not necessarily a legally binding document. A properly written and properly signed and propely notarized document may help you in court, but the only thing a notarized document proves is that the people who signed the document were who they said they were.
she was on tour for a while in NY but it is done in NY now
No, not legally.
The duration of Legally Blonde is 1.6 hours.
You can watch it EVERYwere legally!!!!!!!!!!!!
No, the age of majority and the age of consent for the state is 18. That being the case, the minor female could not legally move in with the adult male whether or not her parents consented to the act.
a contract is LEGALLY BINDING, an agreement is not necessarily legally binding depending on the circumstances
As long as the mother has not consented, the 17 year old is not legally allowed to move out. Alternatively, the child can petition a court for emancipation.
Not necessarily as you can pay for legal downloads from reputable sites and some legally offered downloads are totally free anyway.
I was a Police Officer in the UK, and in the UK the answer is no, absolutly not, this is a breach of 'The Queens Peace' both would be arrested, put before a Magistrate, and bound over to 'keep the peace' at the very least. This might sound harsh as you both consented to fight, however, not everyone who passes by will know you have consented, the matter could escalate. Better do it behind closed doors or in a boxing ring.
Cognac's age is legally defined, but that doesn't mean it is necessarily aged longer than other Brandies.
Legally speaking you can't. That is the whole point. If you are in the US illegally, you can't legally work there. Even if you are in the US legally, you can't necessarily work there, for example, if you are on a tourist visa, or some student visas. Practically speaking, I suppose you need an employer willing to ignore the law.
A notarized document is not necessarily a legally binding document. A properly written and properly signed and propely notarized document may help you in court, but the only thing a notarized document proves is that the people who signed the document were who they said they were.
yes it happened to me.
Unless it discloses private, confidential, or proprietary information about the debtor and did not slander or libel them, it would not necessarily be a violation of criminal law to do so.
Not necessarily. You will have your car covered at that particular moment and enable you to legally drive, but when you have an accident you may regret not reviewing other options.
Legally responsible in what context? Parents are responsible for providing their children with food, shelter and adequate supervision. However, if the minor gets into legal trouble, the parents aren't necessarily vicariously responsible.