The owner of the car listed on the insurance policy.
The owner of the car is the lien holder and that will be listed on the car's title.
It would depend on the damage and how it occurred. If it happened while towing or trying to retrieve keys locked in the vehicle then they are not responsible.
Whomever signed the contract is responsible for the balance.
The LENDER is responsible for every detail of a repossession. They may pass the costs of repair on to the repo company.
Yes. The company is responsible for avoidable damage done to a customer's property. After the customer is reimbursed, the employer can charge the person responsible by deducting the paycheck.
Yes it can.
It depends on the situation. The rider is responsible for his actions while on the bike, but if the bike rider has the right of way and crashes into a car that has failed to yield then it's the car driver whose responsible both for the damage to the car but also to the bike.
Yes, repossessions can (and often do) occur on private property. There are limitations imposed on the recovery agents, and they know how to plan accordingly. IMO, better that car (which is actually the lien holder's, which is why it can be repossessed in the first place) be repossessed while you're at home than while you're out in public somewhere and left stranded.
Why would an induced over voltage occur and what damage may occur if this happend while working on an unprotected computer?
The car behind you is responsible for the damage to both cars. They are also responsible for putting you and the other driver in a rental car while your cars are being fixed.
hell no
Strange question. IF it was a mistake, then it wasnt a repo (ie: wrong car, not in default,ect) OTOH, the lender is responsible for any PROVEN damage done to the car while in their possession.
I sold mine off a while ago, so I don't have to worry about that.