YEAH, it is your home you make the rules and they should follow them.
The parent. In most states, the parent is responsible for the child until the child officialy becomes an adult.
There is no legal age. It depends on if how responsible a child is.
cons:a parent can't control a child when they are away from home. pro:a parent should have shown a child right from wrong before they leave home.
No, at 17 your parents are still responsible for you.
In Texas, parents are legally responsible for their children until they turn 18, regardless of whether the child has moved out of the home. This means that parents are still responsible for their minor child's welfare until they reach the age of majority.
Yes, they are considered an adult. The parents are no longer responsible for the individual.
No. Not legally responsible for the 20 year olds actions. However, if they have signed some kind of legal or loan document with them they are responsible for that. .
When children turn 18, they can leave home and are technically adults for whom the parent no longer has legal responsibility.
No. Not unless the parent brings a court action against the son and wins a judgment lien. In that case the court will issue a judgment lien that can be recorded in the land records. The son could not sell or mortgage his home unless the lien was paid. On the other hand, the parent could ask the son to grant them a mortgage on his home in the amount of the student loan.
when the parent isn't home, and the child is alone in the house. In some cases it's child neglect, if the child records or has some kind of documentation of he/she doing the act, the parent can go to jail, or the child.
Yes legally you are still responsible for your daughter as long as she is living in your home. Now if she no longer is living with you than you are responsible in ethical aspect as you are their parent.
In most cases the debts of the deceased are the responsibility of the estate. Anyone that was also a co-signer on any of the agreements might also be responsible. Consult a probate attorney that knows the Pennsylvania probate laws for help.