Assuming it is about a car, they will take it away, you will lose your deposit and your credit will be ruined.
To bring something to a stop is to halt or cease its movement. The payment of money is simply giving someone cash or funds in exchange for goods or services. So, in a nutshell, stopping is stopping, and paying is paying. Easy peasy lemon squeezy.
From my understanding the only way to break a lease is to pay it off or stop paying. The latter suggestion obviously has detrimental effects on your credit. The best way to "break" a lease is to pay whatever payments are left on the lease. Financially this might be a real good idea. If you are still under the mileage for the lease and it is cheaper to pay the remainder of your lease payments, rather than pay the mileage penalty.
No. A stop payment can be issued only before the check payment is made by the bank. If you try a stop payment after the bank has paid for the check, the bank wont accept it because the stop payment instruction is useless now and cannot be executed.
To stop paying on a debt is to "Default" on the credit agreement.
Yes, you can stop payment on a check that you have already issued by contacting your bank and requesting a stop payment order. However, there may be a fee associated with this service.
The landlord has an obligation to try to rent it. If she cannot, she can sue you for each month, through the end of the lease.
If you give the car back to the car dealership before your lease has expired, then the lease is over. You stop paying the monthly payments. This is very common in people who want a low monthly payment, thus they get a long car lease and then end up trading back in the car for a new car before the lease has expired.
They Will reposes it and sell it them make you pay the difference any way.
because jesus died for me and you.
To bring something to a stop is to halt or cease its movement. The payment of money is simply giving someone cash or funds in exchange for goods or services. So, in a nutshell, stopping is stopping, and paying is paying. Easy peasy lemon squeezy.
If your request to stop it reaches the bank before the check is processed for payment, AND you pay the stop-check fee. However, be aware that if you already signed the rental contract you may be liable for the payment of any cancellation fee it calls for, if any.
Then you will stop being a member, until you pay again.
When u have not paid to loan payment for last 3-4 months or you just stop paying altogether
The debtor should cease payment of creditors when they decide they are going to file for bankruptcy.
From my understanding the only way to break a lease is to pay it off or stop paying. The latter suggestion obviously has detrimental effects on your credit. The best way to "break" a lease is to pay whatever payments are left on the lease. Financially this might be a real good idea. If you are still under the mileage for the lease and it is cheaper to pay the remainder of your lease payments, rather than pay the mileage penalty.
There is no standard. There are best practices, which may preclude your use if you are not paying, but associations' boards have the responsibility to collect from owners and to monitor use.
No. A stop payment can be issued only before the check payment is made by the bank. If you try a stop payment after the bank has paid for the check, the bank wont accept it because the stop payment instruction is useless now and cannot be executed.