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I have yet to visit my wall co-occupant.
If the co-occupant is 62 years old or older, or is disabled, the period of joint occupancy only has to be one year.
In Matlock the U.S. Supreme Court laid out the so-called "co-occupant consent rule".
True, Justice Souter said, the court had long permitted one party to give consent to a search of shared premises under what is known as the "co-occupant consent rule."
The Court stated in United States v. Matlock (1974) that a third party co-occupant could give consent for a search without violating a suspect's Fourth Amendment rights.
For example, the U.S. Supreme Court in United States v. Matlock held that co-occupant of a house had actual authority to consent to a search of the house.
In United States v. Matlock, the Court announced the "co-occupant consent rule" which permitted one resident to consent in the co-occupant's absence.
Also, if you are a regulated tenant, do not collect more than a proportionate share of the rent from your co-occupant to avoid charges of “profiteering” – which could subject you to eviction.
If the co-occupying family member has not been there at least two years (or at least one year if the family member is over 62 or disabled), the co-occupant cannot inherit.
In Rodriguez and Matlock the police obtained voluntary consent from a co-occupant at the residence, and found evidence implicating another resident who was not present when the police obtained consent.
In Randolph the court decided that when co-occupants who are disagreeing whether to let the police search their dwelling the police can't conduct a search, if a "physically present" co-occupant objects that search.
However, if the objecting party is subsequently lawfully arrested and removed from the premises, the Court has held in Fernandez v. California that the police may search with the consent of the co-occupant remaining on the premises.
In Rodriguez the co-occupant who later objected to the search was asleep in a bedroom within the residence; in Matlock the later-objecting co-occupant was located in a nearby police vehicle.
The word ('synthronos') used as "co-occupant of the divine throne"'sunthronos', the Greek term 'metaturannos', which can be translated as "the one next to the ruler." - Philip Alexander, "3 Enoch" however like the above etymology it is not found in any source materials.