Call and ask them what is going on. If they stonewall you, take them to small claims court.
1150 A+
yes
If the machine is rented, it will need to be returned to the company from which it was rented. Contact your insurance company if they are paying for the rental or, if you are, contact the company from which you rent the machine.
If you don't have a credit card you'll be required to pay a deposit. If you use a credit card they may charge your credit card for a deposit. Typically this is the estimated rental costs plus 15 %. Once the car is returned in proper condition the charge is removed from your credit card. Like most all other rental agencies, yes they do. The benefit to this is that Thrifty will not charge your credit card the deposit, they simple have the deposit amount on file, and your credit information if they have reason to charge the deposit they will other wise when you return the vehicle in the condition it was rented out in you will not even be charged the deposit.
If the unit is rented immediately the landlord cannot charge you the rent for the rest of the terms on the lease, but may keep your deposit.
Whatever was rented up front has to be returned.
Yes, they usually do have to be returned to the car rental location, unless you are doing oine-way car rental.
Rented Equipment is not an asset. If there is a refundable security deposit, that amount would be posted as an asset. The rental payments are usually posted to Equipment Rental Expense and no further accounting is necessary.
Look at the lease agreement. Whoever is listed as the landlord, that is who should return the security deposit.
Generally speaking, a waiver of security deposit means that the management of the property being rented (apartment, etc.) has agreed to allow a renter to skip putting up a normally required deposit for the property. Sometimes management is willing to do this for a prospective tenant.
Normally not: a security deposit cannot be used as last month's rent, nor vice versa, without mutual agreement.
it means if the start-up costs are incurred before a business can start to operate, such as the deposit on rented property, and the purchase of equipment and initial stock