Yes, but not in portions that exceed your annual exclusion.
The biggest ACH operators are the Federal Reserve Banks. ACH stands for automated clearing house. The Federal Reserve handles 60% of these transactions.
Renovations, repairs and/or improvements made to one's home are not tax deductible and neither are your power bill, phone bill, house payment, etc.
According to Article I of the US Constitution, the power to tax was given to Congress. In the 16th Amendment, the need to make these taxes uniform was removed.
I think that it depends. If the child is hard working around the house and helps out as well as cleans their room and does what ever other chores they are given than yes. If the child does not do anything around the house and is lazy than i wouldn't give them one.
Sure...you can call income from your employer anything you want, (and it doesn't matter if you get paid by say, having the use of a car or house), it is income and taxable.
NO!
Yes.
Not without parental consent or becoming legally emancipated. Having a child is not an emancipating event.
No. And this how grounding a child works.
18 years old when they are an adult. But to leave the house to go to the shops or something it is up to the parents.
If you are filing for a divorce and you sell your house without the court's order, yes. There is an "Automatic Court Order" that is served with the divorce complaint that avoids parties from incurring expenses and/or spending money in joint accounts or selling property whether pesonal or real.
Not without parental consent or becoming legally emancipated. Having a child is not an emancipating event.
18.
Child in the House was created in 1956.
If it is their house, no. If it is your house and you no longer wish them to live there, yes. A parent is no longer responsible to support an child that has reached the age of majority. We were told by Palm Beach County Florida sheriff's dept that you can't kick an adult child out of your house without going to court to get an "order of ejection." You can deny them a key, but if they break in, the police can't do anything without it.
There are two houses in Australia's federal Parliament: the House of Representatives (lower House) and the Senate (upper House).
In the US Federal Government it is The House of Representatives.