Sure, you can make a claim for the damage done to the car if you have physical damage coverage. As for the home, only your home insurance will pay for the damage to the house. The house insurance will not pay for a car and an auto policy will not pay for a house. Even if the same incident gets both.
A claims maker is someone who knocks at the door of a factory that has burnt down and says "I will help you battle for your claim against your insurance company, for a fee of course".
well i don't know the propper answer but some say it was so when peoples houses were burnt down you could go get it after the house was burnt (because the were made of metal) and the show it so you could get your house built up for free
It would definitely depend on your insurance company. My insurance company like me to call them when I need to file an insurance claim and then I talk to an agent who takes down the specifics. If you have a personal agent you would want to contact him or her.
You would need to file a police report and file a vandalism claim.
no it did not get burnt down -trinity(:
Normally 3 years
It depends on the details of the case- was there fire detectors and such? How did it burn down? In general, unless you have an unbelievable lawyer, get ready to pay for the apartment.
Most companies do not require you to report the accident to your own insurance company, but if you later find out the person did not have valid insurance or the other insurance company refuses to pay and then you later have to file a claim on your policy, it will slow down the claim process. Plus, each state has a statute on the time limit you have to file a claim and want it to be covered.
Yeah, there should be no problem cancelling a claim on your insurance if it isn't under way already.
It could have been burnt down because it was made of wood.
The Globe Theatre was burnt down by a canon in one of his plays
the globe theatre burnt down for 1 hour