I'm not a lawyer, and I didn't sleep in that hotel chain last night, so I checked some of this with my lawyer. As I suspected, there is quite a bit of erroneous information here.
8) Of course, the member could pay, then sue the renter.
The lawyer said don't pay
anything without having a competent lawyer review ALL of the documentation -- POS, the contract (if any) between renter and owner, the DVC lodging contract between DVC and the renter, etc, etc. He said in some circumstances if you paid the bill, you might
waive any right to sue the renter. Even if that didn't occur, he said you'd want to be darn sure that you were the responsible party
of last resort, and that Disney had exhausted all their remedies before turning to you.
9) But, that means
. . . hiring a lawyer in the renter's state and county
Nope...not necessarily. If you had a contract, you could sue in your home state if that's what your contract specified -- a common contract clause. You could also sue in Florida because that's where the breach of the contract would occur -- convenient for Rusty and I and many others. And finally, in most states, if the amount of damages was $5,000 or less, you wouldn't even need a lawyer for the first step. You could sue in small claims court, and you wouldn't need a lawyer for that.
. . . having to travel to the renter's county for court
Nope, see above. If the renter lived in a different state from you, once you got your judgement, you
would have to domesticate the judgement in the renter's state in order to enforce it, but that's just phone calls and credit card numbers between you and a lawyer there.
. . . lawyer and travel and missed work income fees may not be reimburseable
Lawyers fees may be recoverable, as well as interest if the bad guy doesn't pay within 30 days.
. . . now, you must find out if the renter can pay
Uh...yeah.
. . . a lien is good, but do they have things to place a lien against
When my lawyer came back to the phone after his laughing fit, all he said was "A little information is a dangerous thing." A lien is as good as the value of the underlying asset and ease of gaining title to it -- so it could be good or truly ugly, depending on what the asset was and what you had to go through to get it.
. . . garnishement is good, but you need to find their employment
This one provoked another laughing fit, but the gist of his comments were that you'd garnish bank accounts, not salary, and you'd know where those were just in the normal course of the rental transaction.
I think the lesson is: if you need legal advice or assistance, go to a qualified lawyer, not the Internet.