Home breathalysers can quickley and easily inform someone if they are over the drink-drive alcohol limit. They give a correct reading of the level of intoxiation and can therefore warn someone if they are over or are approaching the legal alcohol driving limit.
If you've driven into your home, I don't think a breathalyzer is really needed. That aside: Yes, you can be arrested for drunk driving/public drunkenness without a breathalyzer test being done. However, if you were asked to take a test and refused, the police would report that and it would be used against you. So you should do the same to them: "I asked for a breathalyzer test, but they wouldn't give me one!"
If the home is permanently attached to the real estate (not a mobile home) then the owner of the real estate owns the home. if you build a home on another person's land, they own it. Perhaps the owner would allow you to move the structure. However, you would need to restore the land to its natural state.
Your son would have to buy his own clothing with his own money and could wear it in the privacy of his own home, not out anywhere.
Insuring a Home You do not own.You can purchase a policy for a home you don't own but the legal owner must be listed as the Covered Person. Otherwise the Insurance Contract is invalid and no claim would be paid.
That depends on who has title to the premises, marital status, when the property was acquired and state laws. If you lived with a person who already owned their own home, then split up, you would not acquire any interest in their home.That depends on who has title to the premises, marital status, when the property was acquired and state laws. If you lived with a person who already owned their own home, then split up, you would not acquire any interest in their home.That depends on who has title to the premises, marital status, when the property was acquired and state laws. If you lived with a person who already owned their own home, then split up, you would not acquire any interest in their home.That depends on who has title to the premises, marital status, when the property was acquired and state laws. If you lived with a person who already owned their own home, then split up, you would not acquire any interest in their home.
Yes, a person can own a driveway and restrict access to their home. Property owners have the right to control access to their private property, including driveways.
If a person builds a home on land that they don't own, the home will become the property of the person who owns the land.
"You can buy your own alcohol tester from a company called breathalyzer. They are also available from alcatester or hwsensor, as well as from amazon. They run about $35 to $40."
A person can legally own one, but I would assume that it would not be allowed into the air without special permission.
A person might place a lien on their own home if they were misinformed. The lien would be null and void. For a creditor, a lien creates an equitable interest in real property owned by another party. That other party owns the legal interest in the property. If a peron who owns the legal interest in property recorded a lien the two "interests" would "merge" in that same person and the lien would be nullified.
There own home
A person can rent to own houses, by renting a home or domicile for a certain period of years, paying off the value of the home in payment installments in a predetermined time. Once the entire value of the home has been off, ownership is transferred.