If you still have a loan on the car, the money will go directly to the repair place. That is to protect the lender in helping to maintain the value of the car. If you are looking for direct payment for repairs that you are doing yourself, make sure you are presenting the charges to them in the manner they expect. It will expedite things.
Whoever the victim is, their auto insurance will cover medical bills. This happened to me... As long as there was no auto accident and no damage to the vehicle, your auto insurance will pay for your injuries. If there is an auto accident that causes you to fall out of the moving vehicle, I am not sure how that would work...
It depends, your best bet is to pay the money and get a lawyer at this point. No one wants to pay for damages anymore even if it was their fault.
Yes it should, but the auto insurance company may have to pay the medical insurance after the claim is paid.
No, it doesn't work that way.
If your asking will your auto liability insurance pay for a traffic citation, No. They don't pay for the illegal acts of the insured. Your auto liability insurance is accident insurance.
No. You auto insurance has to pay first before the health insurance will begin to pay. Usually they want a letter from your auto insurance carrier to prove that all medical payments coverage on your auto insurance has been exhausted.
Their insurance policy will pay for their own car. However you must know it's against the law not to have insurance coverage for your auto.
dont do nothing just relax and watch a movie
Depends on what insurance company it is.
Auto insurance protects you against financial loss if you have an accident. It is a contract between you and the insurance company. You agree to pay the premium and the insurance company agrees to pay your losses as defined in your policy.
You will continue to pay insurance premium to renew the policy,irrespective of the claim to be submitted after truck accident.
That shouldn't keep you from getting auto insurance as long as she is not listed as a designated driver of your vehicle. If your uninsured wife should drive and be involved in an accident with another driver, your insurance will not pay.