Yes, voluntarily relinquishing a vehicle does not relieve the borrower from the original contract obligations. The lender/leaser can sue the borrower for the amount still owed on the contract and any applicable fees.
read your lease contract!
Probably not. But, if this was an attempt by the signer to create a loophole for getting out of the lease later, a judge might hold the person to it.
it depends on the managment rules or policys. The correct answer is look at the lease you signed. That lease is a contract. WHAT DOES YOUR LEASE SAY ?????? (my answer rests on the assumption that you are a tenant and have a lease; if you are not a tenant, you do not have a lease, therefore you are parked on private property and have voluntarily (knowingly or not) subjected yourself and your vehicle to whatever rules or policies exist upon that property)
DHCP will request a refresh at the half-life of the lease time. So, in your case, 12 * 60 mins, or 720 minutes.
What typically happens is that the party financing the lease will repossess the vehicle. The vehicle will typically be sold and the party financing the lease will attempt to collect the balance remaining under the lease either through a collection agency or through formal legal action.
The purpose of the Lease Obtained is to give you a "Temporary" IP Address that will change when the lease Expired date comes close. EX: (Lease Obtained: Sunday October 18, 2012 at 12:30:15 PM / Lease Expires: Friday November 12, 2012 at 10:45:55 AM) "The client starts to renew a lease when half of the lease time has passed. For example, for a 24 hour lease, the client will attempt to renew the lease after 12 hours. The client requests the renewal by sending a DHCPREQUEST message to the server. The renewal request contains the current IP address and configuration information of the client."
8 days Above answer is not exactly correct. The default period of time (T1) is 1/2 the time of the original DHCP lease time. So if you have a lease time of 2 days then the first attempt to renew the lease will be in 1 day.
You have to do an eviction if lease stood up to scrutiny
Not really 30-days, but a full rental period.
It is going to depend on the management company. However, they will have to put in the same amount of time cleaning and making the apartment ready for the next person. So, you will pay at least a penalty for leaving early. Again, whether they are going to require payment for the remaining months depends on your lease and on their willingness to work with you.
Leveraged Lease Financial Lease Operating Lease
lease