You might want to rephrase this question. In general, I will try to answer it as best as I can understanding that this question is regarding liability on a month-to-month tenant basis.
On a month-to-month tenancy you are agreeing that there is no lease. Therefore you are free to move out of your apartment at any time without suffering any penalties such as forfeiture of your security deposit. If the last month's rent was collected in advance then you cannot move out of the apartment without a 30 day advanced notice or the landlord will keep that rent. I cannot see how you can have any type of 18 month agreement for a month-to-month tenancy. As I stated, with the 30 day notice you can terminate your residency at any time. Any changes to your month-to-month tenancy by the landlord, such as an increase in rent, requires that the landlord give you a 30 day notice before the next rent is due.
No, one can not remove a cosigner from any contract after 6 months. The cosigner will have to stay on the contract until the contract is paid.
will primary on a auto loan have right to the vehicle if cosigner has been paying loan for 15 months and has possession of vehicle will primary on a auto loan have right to the vehicle if cosigner has been paying loan for 15 months and has possession of vehicle
No, You are not liable.
Yes...unless your rental agreement has a clause addressing sub-letting
A car loan is a contract. A contract can only be modified (unless declared illegal or void) with the agreement of all parties, so - no - the cosigners can not remove themselves without your approval.
if lease agreement is for 11 months then is it compulsary to rigister the leave and licence agreement
The insurance should cover an accident while it was in force. If you had insurance 2 months ago and the accident happened 2 months ago, coverages should apply. If the accident happened today and the coverage stopped 2 months ago, there should not be coverage.
50 months is longer 4 years x 12 = 48 months
Depends upon the Language of the Lease. You have a lease, I'm assuming. You can figure, generally speaking that you will be Liable.. Sorry
Your bankruptcy attorney will have the repayment agreement figured and agreed upon by the judge when you get it. They will determine this based on your income and debt.
No the co-signer is on for the life of the loan
make it for 11 months