the military, the Catholic Church
yes,because every court system has their own rules and regulations in every state
You don't. If you rent the person who rents to you pays taxes on the property which includes school taxes and your rent helps him pay for the taxes. So, in a round about way you pay for them by paying him.
Most states have three levels; some have more. The exact number of levels and their names depend on the state. The most common three levels are the trial court, the appellate court, and the supreme court. The higher-level courts hear appeals of the cases decided in the trial courts. In some states, the names are different. For example, in New York, the trial courts (depending on where you are and what kind of case you have) are called Supreme Courts, Family Courts, County Courts, District Courts, City Courts, Town Courts, or Village Courts; the intermediate appellate court is the Appellate Division, and the highest appellate court is the Court of Appeals. You can check out the New York court system at the related link below - or you can go from there to check out the court court system in any state on CourtReference.
You can be taken to court and be held liable for the goods you acquired. You will then have to pay for the items, plus court fees and a possible fine.
The court can issue an attachment that will be given over to the sheriff who will then serve it upon you. The attachment will freeze any assets you own, real or personal including any bank accounts. The attachment will be followed up by an execution and the sheriff can sieze and sell any property you own to pay the debt. The court could also transfer the matter to the criminal court division for prosecution.
In colonial Mexico the groups that did not have to pay taxes and had their own court system were the "First Estate" and the "Second Estate". (The First Estate was the clergy members and the Second Estate was the nobility.)
NO
All of them.
The US Supreme Court is the highest court in the US. Each state has its own Supreme Court, but the US Supreme Court is the end of the line.
If its IRS, then that's Federal and the Federal Courts handle that. If its state taxes, then the state courts handle that one. Each jurisdiction has their own laws pertaining to the taxes.
Well no. But you would want to have filed all your returns. If you have $ coming back...(which is common for people who don't file, especially those that have limited financial income), you would want it. If you owe anything, what you owe can become part of the BK and may be relieved.
No. Guam has its own tax system.
It gave towns the right to collect their own taxes and set up thir own law court to settle problems quickly.
US Federal Bankrutpcy Court...which has divisions or districts serving area. It is it's own system. No other system hears BK cases.
You should also modify the agreement regarding taxes as well. You could request the court modify the agreement so that you can claim both children since you now have custody of both. These court orders do not change on their own. You must initiate a request for a modification.You should also modify the agreement regarding taxes as well. You could request the court modify the agreement so that you can claim both children since you now have custody of both. These court orders do not change on their own. You must initiate a request for a modification.You should also modify the agreement regarding taxes as well. You could request the court modify the agreement so that you can claim both children since you now have custody of both. These court orders do not change on their own. You must initiate a request for a modification.You should also modify the agreement regarding taxes as well. You could request the court modify the agreement so that you can claim both children since you now have custody of both. These court orders do not change on their own. You must initiate a request for a modification.
Minnesota is a sovereign state within the United States. It operates its own state court system. The state of Minnesota is part of the Eighth Circuit of the US District Court System.
to collect their own taxes