Receiving mail as a guest in your parents' home does not give you any legal rights in their property. You may be entitled to notice under state laws if they want to evict you but you have no other rights in the property.
You can apply for and receive a drivers license in your school state and with your school address as long as you meet the requirements of residency. Michigan students may have their own permanent or semi permanent residence.
No, you cannot. You would need a passport, because a German residence permit can only get you around Germany, if you had a brain. So ask you parents about getting a passport, knucklehead.
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In a patrilocal residence, who leaves the household so that the married couple lives with or near the husband's parents?
You need to use the address on your registration, not license. Whether the address on your license has to be the one on your registration is another question. I believe you are allowed to list one address as your "primary residence" and another as a "secondary." However, if you've moved away from that address (as opposed to perhaps having gone away from school, leaving parents behind there), it's fraud to continue using that address for insurance.
What is a parents email address
Parents
State laws govern the legality of served summons. There may be grounds for appeal if the laws were not correctly followed. If someone at the residence accepted the summons on behalf of the defendent, it will probably be ruled valid.
Well, temporarily at least. We don't know what happens after the last scene in the play, but they are at least temporarily friendly.
There are often ordinances and laws that allow a landlord to specify whether they will rent or allow felons to live on the property. Also, the lease should have that information.
Parents are obligated to follow the most recent order, regardless of their current residence.
Usually not. Your kid, while still in school, will probably consider your home his primary residence. Generally, insurance companies do, too. In your case, in particular, being in the same state makes it highly unlikely that your carrier will base your rates on two separate residences. The above answer is incorrect, the majority of insurance companies will rate the Kid at the address of the school if in the same State as the parents. It is'nt based on where the kid thinks his primary residence is. If the kid is going to be going to school -out of state- then the insurance company will use the parents address as the rating address