You can rent a vehicle and drive it to another state. Avis Rental Car and Budget Rental Car are your best bet. They rarely charge for miles and their prices are reasonable. All companies charge a one way fee: If you rent a car in Chicago and drive it to Texas, then company has to to get the car back to Chicago some how that's why the price is higher. Call Avis at 1-800-331-1212 and Budget at 1-800-527-7000.
There are places that specializes in boat rental but most will require that you have boating expereience and that you return the boat to the same location. Where are you located and where do you what state are you wanting to boat to?
Yes, there are "one way" car rentals, where you rent a car at one branch of a company and return it to a different one. This usually costs more than if you return the car to the same place, but depending on the details it may not be much more or it may even be the same price.
As long as it's in the same country, yes.
You can rent a car in the United States and return it in Canada. You just need to make sure that you return it to the same car rental company.
Yes: as long a you are a tenant in a dwelling at the hands of a landlord, you are renting from him and must pay rent.
Yes. It is just another term used for in accounting.
It is the same thing as a Writ of Extradition. It is used to request and authorize the return of a wanted prisoner from another state. See the related link below.
You sue a landlord in which ever state you signed the lease and retained the property in. If the landlord resides in Toledo, Ohio and you rent a property and signed your lease in Monroe, Michigan, you sue in Monroe, Michigan. However, if your lease specifies that any civil proceedings must take place in the landlords state of residency, you're bound by the contract to file suit in the landlords state of residency.
If you're no longer on a lease, the amount of your rent is dependent on what your contract says. Some contracts say that you will continue paying the same rent until you are notified in writing that it will change. It may make sense for you to sign another lease to lock in the amount you pay for another set period of time.
That would depend on what it says in your lease agreement.
This question contains a fault in logic. If you are a man and you live in a state where same-sex marriage is not legal then you cannot be married to another man. Even if you marry a man in another state, as soon as you return, you and he are no longer married. I think what you are trying get at is ... if you are a man and marry another man in (for example) New York, then you move to (for example) Texas, are you free to marry a woman? The answer to that question is yes. An out-of-state same-sex marriage is not a bar to marriage in states where same-sex marriage is not legal.
Yes, it COULD be. If you offer one person lower rent and another person a higher rent for the same type of accomodations, you could be supsected of favoritism, or discrimination.