Yes
It depends on how close the family member is. Sister, brother, mother, father, child. Can't be cousins, etc. You can also sell it to them for $1.
No. It is kind of like you mow your lawn for your grandfather, and he pays you $20. No income or sales tax. To the extent of my knowledge the government does not tax you on family money matters.
It's not "sales tax" but there is a vehicle transfer tax on any car bought by an Illinois resident. How much is owed depends on what kind of vehicle, how much it's worth and how old it is.
the relationship b/w purchasing, marketing and sales
Absolutely-the government has to get their money. It's even possible that you may have to pay taxes in both states.
No, it only applies to unsolicited sales and not to the purchase of a vehicle unless there was fraud or deceit involved. yes it does apply
Sales tax should be collected when and where the vehicle is registered. Maybe MI has some weird law, but that would be different than the many states I've registered cars in.
Direct family vehicle transfer in michigan is tax exempt. Pay no tax if parent to child, spouse to spouse.
You can go to Sales Force to find information on purchasing a email list. Sales Force has listings for over thirty million accurate leads for purchasing emails.
no
Yes.
It depends. Legally if you purchase it you have too. But, you can always claim that you bought it for less than what was actually agreed upon, or try and claim it as a gift. Just remember that that is fraud, so, the answer is yes, you have to pay on any purchase.