You are responsible for the damage you cause to the car. This is what the liability coverage on your policy is for. If you are wondering about the "no-fault" law in MI, no-fault laws are in place to pay for injuries, not property damage. No-fault states simply mean that you and your insurance company are responsible for your own injuries regardless of who is at-fault in the accident.
you mean valet parking dont they take away your car if you valet parking on the blue??? ^_^
The person who drove their car into the parked car.
Assuming the parking lot was open, and the car had every right to be parked there. The owner of the snowplow, and possibly the operator of it would be liable for damages to the parked car.
depends on whether or not the car is parked well. if the car is parked properly, in the right spot then it should be the car that hit it that is at fault.
no matter where a vehicle is parked, the moving vehicle is at fault every time.
In brief, if they can get to it, yes they can.
A car parked alongside a highway at night should have their parking lights on.
As long as the parked vehicle is parked properly and not illegally parked in any manner, then the vehicle that rear-ended the parked car is at fault. Now if the parked car is sitting illegally (such as double parked or parked in a no parking zone, etc.) then the parked car is at fault or even both the parked car AND the car that hits it are BOTH at fault.
definitely not, perhaps if you parked in a no parking zone.
You've crashed into an illegally parked car.... You can be sued...
A car parking sensor is of great help - especially when driving a large car. During parking it indicates when the own car is getting too close to the other parked vehicles.
lol that is random