In California, once you sign a lease, you are legally bound to it and cannot back out unless both parties agree to terminate the lease early.
Depends on where you live. In Los Angeles there is none. Once you sign the lease you are bound to the terms.
The length of time you have to sign a lease before it expires varies depending on the terms of the lease agreement. Typically, landlords will provide a deadline for signing the lease, which is usually a few days to a week after the lease is offered. It is important to review the lease agreement carefully to understand the specific deadline for signing.
Depends on where you live. Each province has their own rules.
Is it possible to terminate an office lease that is 36 months and we are 6 months into it. Three partners, one deceased, cannot afford the monthly rent; we'd split the rent in 3 and honestly it is a big office and we dont need as much space anymore either. Located in Texas.
An email is just as good as a signed document, as long as the other party did not immediately email back contesting the validity of the email.
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.
It will depend on your state law, but generally 30 days.
You need to check the language in your lease to determine what your rights are in terminating the lease.
You can negotiate a smart car lease but typically you will lease for 3 years because it is not smart to get into a long term lease. It is also important to get low monthly payments.
I'd suggest finding an easy lease with flexible terms which will serve you better in the big picture than differing between a long term or a short term lease. Leasing shouldn't be complicated and finding an easy lease (http://officewarehousespace.net/easy-lease-program/) where you can name the terms is the ticket.
Usually the tenant(s) name(s), the term of the lease, e.g. a 6 month or 1 yr lease; the cost of the apartment. I believe that's the minimum but you can have a contract several pages long covering things you haven't thought of. If you secure the services of an attorney you'll know what I mean.
The co-signer is responsible until the lease expires or until a new lease is executed.