Yes
No. It is fraud and identity theft . You can go to jail.
90% of the time you can transfer a car lease. It is dependent on your leasing company. You will have to find someone that is interested in taking over the remaining lease term. They will have to go through a credit check precess with the leasing company. If they are approved there will be final documents to sign and then the lease is in the new parties name and you are out.
You go to the enterprise or whatever company you want to lease it from, show them your drivers license, sign papers and get the car.
If they co-signed a lease they should check the property regularly and also make certain the rent is being paid on time. A co-signer on a lease is responsible for paying the rent if the primary lessee doesn't and is also responsible for paying any damages that go beyond the security deposit.
The dealer cannot renew the lease without your signature. Just don't sign it! To be doubly sure however, go to the dealer (don't call) and speak to the Leasing Manager (NOT the salesman) and specifically tell thm this! Then whatever happens after the lease expires is the respsonsiblity of the the person who actually possesses the car.
No. Why would the lender allow that? Lender's require co-signers so they can go after 2 people instead of 1 for the same debt. If they thought the primary borrower credit worthy, there would be no need to co-sign. Cosigning is usually a really bad idea.
Sure, if they co-signed the lease and left you holding the bag. You can go to Small Claims court--look online for advice as to how to prove your case.
In order to get an apartment lease you need to go out and look for apartment. Once you have found one that you like and one that is in your price range you would sign a lease with the apartment complex.
co-signors are required of anyone of any age who does NOT meet the credit requirements of the entity extending credit. doesnt have to be parents, that's just where kids normally go first. LOL No you are not required to cosign for anything for anyone, not even your own child after the age of 18.
It can go either way, depending on what the landlord wants. If they want you to sign another lease, they can require you to do so if you wish to continue living there. In absence of another lease, you are considered to be on "month to month" under the same terms as the original lease.
Your daughter would have no legal obligation to pay the lease, unless her name is on the lease and she was over eighteen when she signed it. Otherwise the lease you signed is not enforceable against your daughter.
You can sign a lease before someone else is expired but the lease will have to specify that the start of the renting period is after the other persons lease expired. So if the prior lease says it ends the 1st then the new lease must be dated to start after that. This is not that unusual. Most landlords want to fill the unit as quickly as possible and it can take sometime to go through the process so the will often started as soon as they can. I've done this before. Generally speaking once I get my tenant screening results back, I want to get them locked in as soon as possible.