You may be responsible. If you serve alcohol to your guests (which you would if you were hosting a party) you can be arrested especially if there is a fatality. I've read about it happening.
The identified third party at fault is responsible for paying the deductible in the event of a motor vehicle accident.
It will not be possible to report an accident after 48 hours due to the accident. The opposite party cannot be held under the court of law to be responsible without specific evidence or before your legal claim rights.
Both the driver and owner of vehicle are responsible. The injured party would sue you both.
No. The person driving is the responsible party.
An attorny should be consulted if you have been serverely injured in an accident and the party responsible for the accident is choosing not to work with you or your insurance to rememdy it. An attorney should also be contacted if the injury you suffered leaves you permently or severaly damaged and unable to live life normally
It depends on a few factors, like what state you live in and whether the police were called to do a report. If there is a report, the officer will have found someone at fault, regardless of whether someone was ticketed. Your insurance company can also determine fault based on your state's laws and they way in which the accident occurred.
Simply put, it is the at-fault party's responsibility to pay for the damage caused in an accident. If you live in a no-fault state, then you and your insurance company will pay for your own injuries, but the at-fault party is responsible for property damage.
In any state, if a driver is found at fault then he is responsible for the other car's repairs, either using his insurance company or out of pocket.
I believe whomever caused the accident is at fault, whether their car was damaged or not. * The evidence compiled in the accident investigation will determine the responsible party. To determine who is at fault in a vehicle accident investigators use a method referred to as "chain of causation" and begin the investigation with the vehicle that was last in motion. This does not necessarily mean that the driver of said vehicle is the one responsible for the accident. It is quite possible that the driver of the vehicle that was not damaged will be the one determined to be responsible for causing the accident.
Yes, The at fault party is responsible.
You are responsible for the damage you cause in an accident, regardless if you are insured or not. Having insurance transfers your responsibility to pay for the damage from you to your insurance company. If there are injuries to the other party, then the other party's insurance should pay for their injuries, but you are still responsible for the property damage you have caused the other person.
when someone poopes in a pull out bed and leaves it there for the next party to enjoy