When leasing a vehicle it will have a residual value at the end of the lease. In the case of the EV1 it was such a horrific car it's residual value at lease end would be non existent. This car is one of the top 50 worst cars ever produced.
It doesn't matter how long you've lived there: a lease is automatically renawable every year if it so states on the lease.
Yes and no. If you are a renter the lease is there to protect YOU. If you don't have a lease then you have no rights to the property at all, the landlord doesn't even need a reason to kick you out. So long story short... only if you want to live there.
DHCP will request a refresh at the half-life of the lease time. So, in your case, 12 * 60 mins, or 720 minutes.
The first step would be not to take out (or renew) the lease on any dwelling that you do not plan on living in. Legally if your name is on the lease you are responsible for the monthly rent. If the two of you have children together - who live with her, you need to come to a decision about what to do, so the children don't end up on the street. But you have no legal responsibility to sign a lease for her.
In most states a lease is a private contract by two individuals. Unless it is mandated by law, in most states do not require that either party keep a copy of this agreement after the lease is fullfilled. So if you need a copy of your lease, you must have it in your possession before you take legal action.
A Renewal is a Continuation of the Original Lease. So no. its not a execution.
Yes you can do this. Most companies will allow you to have a month to month lease and longer if need be so be rest assured you will not be stuck with a long term lease.
Are you asking what to do if your spouse removes your name off an apartment lease? If so, and you guys are on the lease together, he can't take your name off the lease. If he had the lease prior to you moving in and added you as someone dwelling in the apartment and is now removing your name from that list there isn't really much you can do I'm afraid.
IRC Section 1241 specifies that payments received by the lessee for the cancellation of a lease are to be treated as a payment in exchange for the sale of the lease. Assuming you were using the property (as opposed to holding it in inventory, for example you were a real estate broker), the lease would be a capital asset. So the payment would be a capital gain (long or short term depending on how long you held the lease).
Yes it will,the lease company will sell the car at the acution and put any money toward your ballance and if there is still a ballance left over they will sue you for it. If you have several months left on your term you can use the online lease take over search engine CarLeaseDepot.com. Car Lease Depot offers an amazing search and find car lease experience to anyone looking to get out of a lease early or take over a short team lease. They are the cheapest and appear to have a very high quality website compared to most other lease assumption sites. See some of the others and make an educated decision for yourself. See for yourself but please do not return you car and run because it will hurt your credit so bad that you will be able to get any new credit for a long time to come. This is a binding contract and just because you return it doesn't mean that you will receive a free pass.
The lease contract will state the terms of the lease. It might be a year-long lease or a month-to-month lease, so the price listed might be for either term. Often the sq. ft. lease price listed will be per month, like $3/sq. ft. x 500 sq. ft. = $1,500/mo.
You can, so long as you can document that there is in fact a serious rodent problem (and by serious, you fear for your health or safety) and that you've notified the landlord and given him a chance to fix the problem. Once you've satisfied that (and you can do that in a couple days), you can break the lease. The landlord may sue you for breach of the lease, but you'd have a pretty good case, so long as it's atrue rodent problem and not a mouse here or there.